Apr 23rd 2026 04:52pm

Sign Up / Sign In|Help

 

“Make yourself undeniable” – Bodyslam.net speaks with Walker Stewart of NJPW

“Make yourself undeniable” – Bodyslam.net speaks with Walker Stewart of NJPW

Posted: Apr 3rd 2024 By: John Bullard

In the realm of professional wrestling, I wear two hats – one as a wordsmith for Bodyslam.net, the other as a voice that brings the action to life as a commentator. Just recently I had the honor to call a match for Taiwan’s Puzzle Dojo. My commentary partner for that match was the velvet voice of NJPW, Walker Stewart.

×

Walker is the youngest signed professional wrestling commentator in our industry. His deep knowledge of pro wrestling combined with that million-dollar voice makes me believe that he will be in the same ranks as the likes of Jim Ross and Gordon Solie one day. We sat down after our commentary session for an interview.

Q: Growing up was it your goal to be a wrestling commentator, and how did you start in the industry?

A: My favorite story my mom likes to tell about me is that I was 7 years old sitting in front of the television watching WWE going “I want to be like them!” any time they give Michael Cole, Jim Ross or Jerry Lawler on-camera spots. Any time someone asked me what I wanted to do as a dream job, I’d always tell them I wanted to be a musician, a YouTube content creator, or a pro wrestling commentator… and somehow, the first two sounded more realistic to me than the one I found myself doing in the end. In March 2021, when I was 18, I went off to college at the University of Oklahoma and was a Vocal Music Education and Vocal Performance dual-degree pursuant. To fill some time and to chase a passion between classes and video game streaming, I volunteered as a writer, much like yourself, working for any online publication I could find. I met some fantastic people while doing that (they know who they are). One publication I wrote for asked me to cover my local independent scene, so I attended an event with 35 people at it and wrote a glowing review of what was – in hindsight – a very rough show. The promoter would find the article, gleefully invited me to another show, and I told them I would write another article if I could be involved with the event. July 2021 came around, and I debuted in a three-man commentary booth with two of my good pals, Mike Andrews and Floyd Johnson Jr, and I’ve been traveling the world ever since!

Q: Who are your mentors that you’ve learned from and what lessons did they teach you?

A: One thing I have always prided myself on is that I refuse to stop learning, and I’ve never discredited anyone’s opinions in this industry unless they’ve proven themselves wrong before. My biggest mentor has to be a man who many could claim as an influence, that being former ROH wrestler “Brutal” Bob Evans. Evans currently works up in the Northeast U.S. at various independents and is a heavily accomplished trainer and mentor for many of the independents. His fingerprints are felt heavily in WWE and AEW, and I guess they’re felt in New Japan Pro-Wrestling now, haha! Bob was the first person I met with years and years of experience in this business who didn’t try to quiet me or stifle my growth. Sometimes in wrestling, if you’re the young, hungry kid that I was (and still am), people will side-eye you and do what they can to try and “put you in your place”. Bob didn’t do that, but rather encouraged me to travel and to invest in myself in ways that many called a waste of time. One of the smartest men I have ever met in professional wrestling, and one of my closest friends. James Southard, an announcer, commentator, producer and… well, pretty much anything you can do in the business, has to be one of the people who pushed me the hardest. Despite us being so close in age, James got into the business when he was a freshman in high school, and I didn’t have that same experience. James and I immediately bonded over being displeased with the complacency a lot of people had in our hometown wrestling scenes, and there came a moment where we looked at each other and said “Well… why don’t we just leave and do it together?”. From then on, nearly every trip I took for any independent booking was done alongside James. The best riding partner a man could have (even if he won’t let me drive anymore). My deep knowledge of the territory days, lucha libre, and anything outside of mainstream wrestling came from James, and I wish someone would hire that dude immediately. Everyone considers him a massive asset who meets him, and he continues to do great things down at Booker T’s Reality of Wrestling in Texas.
Finally, the man who was willing to take a chance on a 21-year-old kid who he’d never met before based on one audition tape and a resumé – Kevin Kelly. Kevin has always been good to me. As smart as he is to the business, he and Bob also forced my wit to grow too. Maybe it’s being a Northeasterner or his 30 years of experience that I don’t have, but man, I had to grow the “gift to gab” super quickly when talking to Kevin, haha. Highly intelligent, and a massive asset to the industry. Kevin cares so much about New Japan Pro-Wrestling, even still today, and it was incredibly difficult for him to leave the company. I know there was a lot of anxiety that he had regarding his choice for a Play-by-play replacement, and I’m blessed he was willing to invest in me and allow me to prove myself on the stage I wanted from the beginning. Rapid-fire round of people who have absolutely shifted my career for the positive: Texas-based independent wrestling referee MJ Bell, Gabe Sapolsky, the crew at Reality of Wrestling (Booker T, Kevin Bernhardt, Sharmell & Chris Russo), and my current broadcast partner Chris Charlton.


Q: What are your favorite matches that you have commentated on?

A: It feels like every single series that NJPW puts on, the answer to this question changes. If I had to give my Top 5 unranked:
• Shota Umino vs. Will Ospreay for the IWGP U.S./UK Heavyweight Championship at Power Struggle 2024.
• Bryan Danielson vs. Kazuchika Okada at Wrestle Kingdom 18
• Bryan Danielson vs. Zack Sabre Jr. at New Beginning in Osaka 2024
• United Empire vs. BULLET CLUB War Dogs in the 10-Man Dog Pound Cage Match at New Beginning in Osaka 2024.
• Yota Tsuji vs. EVIL in the Semi-Finals of New Japan Cup 2024


Q: Where were you when you got the call that you were going to become the English commentator for NJPW?

A: It was a very slow build. It started as “Hey, maybe we’ll consider you for this… send in the info that we need.” I sent in the info, and then suddenly, it was a call I received saying “Hey, we’re going to send you a contract”. I was working the 3:00 a.m. shift at a 7/11 gas station in the freezer stocking energy drinks. I often took freezer duty at the gas station because I could just put my headphones in and have phone calls with James and Bob, talk pro wrestling, strategize for my next move on the indies, watch wrestling I missed over the week, etc. Suddenly, my few freezer stocking adventures I had left in me were all spent watching NJPW’s G1 Climax 33 in preparation for my start with the company! Definitely my best memory from working as that gas station, haha.

Q: Your first trip to Japan must have felt magical. What places in the country do you enjoy visiting?

A: My first time in Japan was absolutely crazy. For comparison, 5 months before I went to Japan, I went to Las Vegas for the first time to work a bunch of independent wrestling events, and I had a “culture shock” feeling when I arrived. 5 months later, and I find myself in a foreign country for the first time? It was an absolute overload. I remember sitting in the taxi for the first time going “Everything is so tall… everything feels very colorless… everything is so busy!” Of course, that ‘colorless’ thought disappeared once I started hitting the heavily populated areas. My first time in Japan, I flew into Tokyo, spent one night there, and then took the bullet train (shinkansen) to Osaka. So far, Osaka is my favorite place in Japan. There is a huge gaming/anime influence in the area, and I loved going to random tech stores. An 8-story gaming store?! I was in awe. Beyond the big lights of Osaka, I’m actually very preferential to my brief time in Yamanashi. It was very pretty to me, and I enjoyed how simple it felt. It reminded me of home in the best way possible. Overall, Japan is my favorite place in the world to visit, by far.

Q: What advice would you give to up-and-coming commentators?

A: My advice to current commentators? Take my seminars/coaching calls! Joking, mostly. No, obviously, the biggest advice I can give to up-and-coming wrestling commentators would depend on the direction they want to go. Generally, I’d advise getting official broadcast training, either at a special school or college in some form. Learn to call other sports, and get experience in high school/collegiate/minor league sports. Aesthetically, appearance matters. Around 2022, I started growing my hair out and had this horrendously unkempt look between my hair and beard. It was atrocious, and I’m embarrassed looking back on it. I know it’s ironic for me to say (the guy who wears the same blue jacket, blue tie, and white shirt combo for every major show), but invest in your look. Professionalism is key. If your one-time being seen by a scout in some capacity is when you’re wearing gym shorts and a backward hat, it doesn’t matter how good your announcing is, first impressions matter and they could cost you. The biggest piece of advice is easier said than done but do your market research and pitch to be every single place you can be as often as possible. Never have a free weekend. Travel, learn, work for free in the beginning to get the experience and the reputation. If you’re chasing the dollar in the beginning of your career, you will be chasing the dollar your whole career. There’s much more I could go into, but that’s a bit of the advice I’d give to anyone on the independents today.

Q: Advice for wrestlers wanting to wrestle for NJPW?

A: If you have a goal, don’t start tomorrow, or a month from now, start today. Work on your shape, work on your footwork, perfect your basics, and make some noise to get the office’s attention. This isn’t just for NJPW; this is for any major office in the world. You want to wrestle full-time? Look, sound, and act like someone who should be wrestling full-time. This is all easier said than done, but there is a reason why only a small percentage of people who step into the ring make it to the heights of a New Japan Pro-Wrestling or World Wrestling Entertainment. If you make yourself a name that the people beg to see bad enough, to the point where you prove that you are a box office draw, you make yourself undeniable; that’s the goal since day one. Oh, beyond that, social media has made and killed careers. Begging for jobs on social media? Calling yourself the “best unsigned wrestler in the world”… to most talent scouts across the world of professional wrestling, it’s like being the nicest guy in your prison ward. Use your social media to promote the events you’re on and promote yourself. It has never been easier for [talent scouts] to find your content and invest in you, force us to invest by being undeniable. Cody Rhodes, Kenny Omega, Kazuchika Okada, The Young Bucks, Roman Reigns, SANADA… all men who the world didn’t see the vision for initially but continued to bet on themselves and work on their craft, and now look at where every single one is right now – highly successful and world-renown.

Q: What are your goals for 2024?

A: 2024 will see me hit my one-year anniversary with New Japan Pro-Wrestling, and that will be a very special time for me. You can already assume my goal is to grow the brand of New Japan Pro-Wrestling worldwide, but I would love to serve the masters of STARDOM in some capacity, whether it be live or in a post-production recording video-on-demand release fashion. I’ve been quietly waiting in the shadows for my time, studying and learning the history of both STARDOM and joshi puroresu as well. Beyond Bushiroad involvement, I would love to open the gates for English-speaking fanbase development in other parts of Southeast Asia. Back in October, NJPW entered into a partnership with multiple Southeast Asian independent wrestling companies (the Asia Pacific Federation of Wrestling) across Taiwan, Singapore, China, Thailand and beyond. A major goal of mine in 2024 is to not only serve as the Voice of NJPW, but the Voice of the Asia-Pacific coalition as well. I’ve already taken part in the recording of some post-production commentary work with PUZZLE in Taiwan, and have had conversations with other organizations in the coalition as well. I’d love to show the world what Southeast Asia has to offer. Extra goals for 2024 would include hosting more seminars in the United States, mentoring announcers on the independents the way I was mentored the same, working for CMLL in Mexico, and figuring out what’s going on down in Uganda. Softground Wrestling in Uganda? Those guys are cooking something special, haha!

Q: Where can fans follow you on social media?

A: I’m easy to find on social media. I’m @VelvetVoiceWS on all platforms. However, more than anything, I encourage everyone reading this to check out New Japan Pro-Wrestling on Twitter and other platforms at @njpwglobal and subscribe to www.njpwworld.com for our upcoming Sakura Genesis event on April 6th at Ryogoku Sumo Hall. I won’t be in attendance at that event due to circumstances outside our control, but I’ll be back in Chicago on April 12th for the Windy City Riot – the biggest NJPW STRONG event in the history of NJPW! It’s been a pleasure, and I hope everyone checks in with, checks out, and supports New Japan Pro-Wrestling throughout the rest of 2024!

Thank you, Walker, for your time.

 

Printable version Email to a friend

Supplemental Information

Latest News

3
The Scoop

The Scoop

NEWS Exodus Prime announced his impending retirement via social media last week: “I’m for real. This is my farewell tour. It was a fun ride but I’v... Read More

All Columns

Upcoming Events

There are currently no upcoming appearences.

Complete Calendar

1

Spotlight in History

  • 1966 Ramon Torres def. Lorenzo Parente for the TSW Missouri Junior Heavyweight Title
  • 1973 Rip Tyler & Eddie Sullivan def. The Hollywood Blondes (Jerry Brown & Dale Valentine) for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 1974 Thunder Cloud & White Cloud def. Bob Sweetan & Seigfried Stanke for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 1978 Ray Candy & Steven Little Bear def. Ernie Ladd & The Assassin for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 2004 Michael Barry became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 2006 Tyler Bateman def. Seth Allen for the MSWA Mid-South Cruiserweight Title
  • 2006 Michael Faith became the MSWA Oklahoma Champion
  • 2016 Athena def. Erica for the IZW Queens Title
  • 2022 The Blue Bolt def. Richie Adams for the WFC Prime Title
  • 2022 Koko def. Reed for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title
  • 2022 Rhett def. Hornsby for the WFC Drillsville Title

Week of Sun 04-19 to Sat: 04-25

  • 04-19 1987 Bubba Rogers def. One Man Gang for the UWF Heavyweight Title
  • 04-19 2008 New Canada (The Canadian Luchadore & The Canadian Red Devil) def. La M (El Choppo & Jesus Rodriguez) for the ComPro Tag Team Titles
  • 04-19 2008 The New Age Syndicate (Scott Sanders & Shawn Sanders) def. Nathan Sensation for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-19 2013 Bree Ann def. Barbi Hayden for the NWA-TXO Rose Title
  • 04-19 2014 Aaron Anders def. Michael Wolf for the OWA Junior Heavyweight Title
  • 04-19 2014 Jake O'Brien def. Brian Breaker for the OWA Heavyweight Title
  • 04-19 2014 Tim Rockwell def. Jon Cross for the UWE Heavyweight Title
  • 04-19 2014 Randy Price def. Drake Gallows for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 04-19 2014 Miss Diss Lexia def. Paige Turner for the IZW Queens Title
  • 04-19 2014 Erica def. Miss Diss Lexia for the IZW Queens Title
  • 04-19 2014 Brandon Groom def. Warhammer for the BPPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-19 2024 Killa Kate became the TexPro Rose Champion
  • 04-19 2024 Kari Wright def. Tommy Prince for the TexPro Dynasty Title
  • 04-19 2024 K. O. A. (Caine Carter & Devion Black) def. Rock-N-Rugged (Rook Tyler & Gabe Welder for the TexPro Tag Team Titles
  • 04-19 2025 Rook Tyler def. Auzzy for the TexPro Dynasty Title
  • 04-19 2025 Brandon Warhawk def. Floyd Maystorm for the WAH Hunger Dojo Title
  • 04-19 2026 Gideon Vane became the WTW Open Promotions Champion
  • 04-20 1980 Toru Tanaka def. Kevin Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
  • 04-20 2013 The Canadian Red Devil became the OWA Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-20 2013 Daemon Storm def. Justin Dynamic for the UWE United States Title
  • 04-20 2018 Jack Swagger def. MVP for the IWR Heavyweight Title
  • 04-20 2019 B. M. F. (Kareem Sadat & Maniac Mike) became the EmpCW Tag Team Champions
  • 04-20 2019 Double D became the EmpCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-20 2024 Malachi & Ozzy Hendrix def. The Voiceless Society (Tyler Watts & E-Bone) for the CAPW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-20 2024 Kevin James Sanchez def. Montego Seeka for the EPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-21 1967 The Assassins (Assassin #1 & Assassin #2) became the TSW United States Tag Team Champions
  • 04-21 1979 Mike George def. Jerry Stubbs for the TSW Louisiana Title
  • 04-21 2006 Ray Martinez became the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 04-21 2007 Kareem Sadat def. K-Rob for the AACW Hardcore Title
  • 04-21 2007 Team Shenanigans (Tyler Bateman & Kenny Campbell) def. The Re-Gex (Seth Shai & Mace) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-21 2017 Sam Stackhouse def. Spyder for the BPPW Oklahoma Title
  • 04-21 2017 The Cursed (Blade [2nd] & Kuda) def. The Saints of Pro Wrestling (Scott Sanders & Shawn Sanders) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 04-21 2018 The Untamed (Rex Andrews & Ryan Davidson) became the ComPro Tag Team Champions
  • 04-21 2023 Leo Fox def. Mr. Nasty for the UWE Apex Title
  • 04-21 2023 Mr. Wobble def. Tego for the TexPro Oklahoma Title
  • 04-21 2023 Mr. Wobble def. Tego for the TexPro Texas Title
  • 04-21 2023 Franco D'Angelo def. Mr. Wobble for the TexPro Texas Title
  • 04-21 2023 Franco D'Angelo def. Mr. Wobble for the TexPro Oklahoma Title
  • 04-22 1940 Jesse James def. Danny McShain for the NWA World Light Heavyweight Title
  • 04-22 1955 Ricki Starr def. Mike Clancy for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Title
  • 04-22 1968 The Spoilers (Spoiler #1 & Spoiler #2/Smasher Sloan) def. Fritz Von Erich & Billy Red Lyons for the WCCW American Tag Team Titles
  • 04-22 1980 Terry Gordy def. Junkyard Dog for the MSW Louisiana Title
  • 04-22 1985 The Great Kabuki became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 04-22 2006 Michael York def. Jon Davis for the TPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-22 2016 Brock Landers def. Mascara La Parka for the MSWA Mid-South Cruiserweight Title
  • 04-22 2016 Mascara La Parka def. Brock Landers for the MSWA Mid-South Cruiserweight Title
  • 04-22 2017 Double D def. Randy Price for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 04-22 2017 Nikki Knight def. Skylar Slice for the ComPro Ladies Title
  • 04-22 2018 Chaz Sharpe became the ASP Inter-County Champion
  • 04-22 2018 Johnny Kove & Tristan Thorne became the ASP Oklahoma Tag Team Champions
  • 04-22 2018 Damon Windsor def. Chandler Hopkins for the IWR Revolutionary Title
  • 04-22 2022 Drake Gallows & Fester Cluck def. Legend Has It (Thrash & Killbane) for the CPW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-22 2022 Duncan Kincaid became the RDW Iron Man Champion
  • 04-22 2023 The Psychotic Messengers (Tank Bryson & Malachi) def. X-Rated (Kevin James Sanchez & Ozzy Hendrix) for the EPW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-22 2023 Devion Black def. Adrian Vega for the EPW All-American Title
  • 04-22 2023 Logan Knight def. Gemini [2nd] for the EPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-23 1966 Ramon Torres def. Lorenzo Parente for the TSW Missouri Junior Heavyweight Title
  • 04-23 1973 Rip Tyler & Eddie Sullivan def. The Hollywood Blondes (Jerry Brown & Dale Valentine) for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 04-23 1974 Thunder Cloud & White Cloud def. Bob Sweetan & Seigfried Stanke for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 04-23 1978 Ray Candy & Steven Little Bear def. Ernie Ladd & The Assassin for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 04-23 2004 Michael Barry became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-23 2006 Tyler Bateman def. Seth Allen for the MSWA Mid-South Cruiserweight Title
  • 04-23 2006 Michael Faith became the MSWA Oklahoma Champion
  • 04-23 2016 Athena def. Erica for the IZW Queens Title
  • 04-23 2022 The Blue Bolt def. Richie Adams for the WFC Prime Title
  • 04-23 2022 Koko def. Reed for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title
  • 04-23 2022 Rhett def. Hornsby for the WFC Drillsville Title
  • 04-24 1999 The Casualties of War (Grunt & Shrapnel) def. The East-West Express (J. J. Mustang & Joey Steiner) for the OPW Oklahoma Tag Team Titles
  • 04-24 1999 Original Renegade def. Tarantula for the OPW Oklahoma Light Heavyweight Title
  • 04-24 2004 Dexter Hardaway became the NWA-OK X Division Champion
  • 04-24 2004 Tejas def. Al Jackson for the NWA Texas Title
  • 04-24 2015 Rick Russo & Largus RagnaBrok became the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champions
  • 04-24 2025 Floyd Maystorm def. Brandon Warhawk for the WAH Hunger Dojo Title
  • 04-25 1969 Alberto Torres & Ramon Torres def. Karl Von Stroheim & Treach Phillips for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 04-25 1971 Dusty Rhodes def. Sputnik Monroe for the TSW Brass Knucks Title
  • 04-25 2003 Ichiban [1st] became the TPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-25 2003 The Heatseekers (Karl Davis & Rick Styles) became the TPW Tag Team Champions
  • 04-25 2003 Outcast def. Tyler Bateman for the TPW Light Heavyweight Title
  • 04-25 2008 Ky-Ote became the 3DW Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-25 2008 Les Mayne became the 3DW Texoma Champion
  • 04-25 2008 2AM (Javi Hernandez & Kunna Keyoh) became the 3DW Dual Kombat Champion
  • 04-25 2008 Al Farat became the 3DW Violent Division Champion
  • 04-25 2008 Frankie Dee became the 3DW Femme Fatale Champion
  • 04-25 2008 Joshua Smith def. Al Farat for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 04-25 2010 David Kyzer def. Outlaw for the SWCW Luchadore Title
  • 04-25 2010 David Kyzer became the SWCW All-American Champion
  • 04-25 2021 Brandon Barricade def. Red for the ASP All Time Title
  • 04-25 2021 Maui Mike & Malik Mayfield became the ASP Tag Team Champions
04-23
  • Moose Apr 23rd Today!
  • Tony Atlas Apr 23rd Today!
  • Blade [2nd] Apr 23rd Today!
  • Terry Gordy Apr 23rd Today!
  • Ethan Price Apr 24th
  • Lou Thesz Apr 24th
  • Lance Von Erich Apr 24th
  • Bobby Joe Bristow Apr 25th
  • Walker Stewart Apr 25th
  • Zack Zilla Apr 25th
  • Max Mercer Apr 25th
  • Brett Stopp Apr 25th
  • Crash Davis Apr 25th
  • Eric Roberts Apr 25th
  • Carl Fergie Apr 25th
  • Justin Dynamic Apr 26th
  • Havoc Apr 26th
  • Karl Kox Apr 26th
  • Yasu Fuji Apr 27th
  • Chance Snodgrass Apr 28th
  • Siva Afi Apr 28th
  • Ichiban [2nd] Apr 28th
  • Sunshine Apr 29th
  • Anarchy [2nd] Apr 30th
  • Joe McCarthy Apr 30th
  • Billie the Kiid Apr 30th
  • Dustin Tibbs Apr 30th
  • Prince Maivia May 1st
  • Big Bossman May 2nd
  • Kari Wright May 2nd
  • Don Fields May 2nd
  • Americos May 2nd
  • Nightmare [1st] May 2nd
  • Barrett Brown May 2nd
  • Johnny Humble May 3rd
  • Lily McKenzie May 3rd
  • Lester Welch May 3rd
  • Bull Schmitt May 4th
  • Jay Hazzard May 4th
  • Dory Funk May 4th
  • El Hijo del Mascara Sagrada May 4th
  • Malik Mayfield May 4th
  • Bill Watts May 5th
  • El Matador Dos May 5th
  • El Gallardo May 5th
  • Olivier Vegos May 5th
  • Miss Diss Lexia May 5th
  • Zane Morris May 5th
  • Pat O'Dowdy May 5th
  • Princess Victoria May 5th
  • Maria Brigitte May 5th
  • Claire Watson May 6th

More Look Back In History