The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 90: JeriShow

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It’s been a while since I’ve done one of these, let’s see if I remember how I do this. Chris Jericho & The Big Show, or JeriShow, were a tag team for a short time but made quite the impact during the run. They were ranked number 105 on Cagematch (reminder, I pulled Cagematch’s top tag team rankings back in April, so any changes since then aren’t taken into consideration) and came in at number 90 on this list. Their run lasted from July 26, 2009 to January 4, 2010, and in that time they did enough to get ranked relatively high for a thrown together team. Since this is really just the story of a single title reign, I’m going chronological instead doing it ascending order by Cagematch rating.  

August 23, 2009 – Los Angeles, California 

Chris Jericho & The Big Show def. JTG & Shad Gaspard {WWE Unified Tag Team Championship Match}
From the 22nd SummerSlam. The mash up JeriShow entrance theme is… weird, but I appreciate the effort. Jericho had actually won the tag titles with Edge, but Edge got injured and Jericho brought in Show to replace him rather than vacate the titles. I didn’t get much out of this one. The heels steamrolled Cryme Tyme and the match gave the crowd almost nothing to get excited about. Show hit JTG with the big punch from the floor, giving Jericho the win at 9:45. The biggest problem with that punch was always the question of why Show didn’t just go for it all the time? It’s a punch, not a pumphandle powerslam. Always broke my disbelief that it was some unstoppable finisher but he’d always wait a while to go for it. **

September 13, 2009 – Montreal, Quebec

Chris Jericho & The Big Show def. MVP & Mark Henry {WWE Unified Tag Team Championship Match}
Breaking Point. This was a submission match-themed PPV, but only a few of the matches played into the theme. This wasn’t one of them. Jericho and Show were already champions here. The commentators didn’t do enough to play up that each team had one giant and one regular guy. Instead, Michael Cole says some nonsense about nobody being able to go toe-to-toe with Show throughout his career, and that Henry might be the first. What was he talking about? By every metric, Show had been taken down many times at this point in his career. Despite the weirdness from the commentators, the wrestlers played up the size dynamics. The crowd got behind MVP more than I would have expected. Gotta love Canadian crowds, booing a Canadian because the babyfaces are cooler. Henry’s hot tag was very over. After Henry blocked the Codebreaker in spectacular fashion, Show clocked Henry from the apron and Jericho got the pin at 12:15. They should have given Henry a hope spot there; it would have gotten a huge pop. This was really fun for what it was, even if the finish took the wind out of everyone’s sails. Maybe kicking out of Show’s punch would be considered going toe-to-toe with him. I hate WWE speak and I’m so happy Vince McMahon is gone and it’s starting to abate… 13 years later. ***

October 4, 2009 – Newark, New Jersey 

Chris Jericho & The Big Show def. Batista & Rey Mysterio {WWE Unified Tag Team Championship Match}
From the inaugural Hell in a Cell PPV. This is the third match I’ve reviewed from this PPV. I think that makes this the fourth most reviewed main roster WWE PPV I’ve done (after Clash at the Castle, Evolution, and Survivor Series 2019). The heat for this match was terrific. The Show vs. Mysterio bits were also terrific. The Show vs. Batista stuff made Show look like a monster, as Batista didn’t get any offense in. They wrapped this up long before it had a chance to overstay its welcome. Batista speared both champions, leaving Show open to eat the 619. But then the big man swatted Mysterio out of the air with his punch for the win at 13:41. ***¼ 

November 16, 2009 – Manhattan, New York 

John Cena & The Undertaker def. Chris Jericho & The Big Show and Shawn Michaels & Triple H {Triple Threat Match}
From Raw 860. Undertaker and Cena were the two champions at the time, and they were both defending in triple threat matches at the upcoming Survivor Series (Taker against Jericho & Show, Cena against H and Michaels). This is at Madison Square Garden, and they do the WrestleMania X/Royal Rumble 2000 set for it. Love that. Undertaker gets a full, PPV-style entrance. Luckily, the MSG ramp is really short so the whole thing only eats up three minutes. Each team has one member in at all times. They played up the Undertaker vs. Michaels bits because of their amazing WrestleMania match earlier in the year (and probably because they knew they were running it back in a few months). It was wild to watch this in 2022 and think about how collecting four huge stars (and also Jericho and Show) in a main event on TV would be really difficult now. It was also wild to see H lay down clean for Cena after the Attitude Adjustment when there were two easier fall guys in the match. That happened at 7:10. This had major “let’s just go out there and have fun” house show vibes, I just wish it had been a little longer. The Undertaker only wrestled on Raw four more times after this. He hit Cena with a surprise Tombstone Piledriver to close out the show (and show BRAND SUPREMACY, though it would be seven more years until that became the Survivor Series theme). Both of them retained their titles at Survivor Series. ***¼ 

December 13, 2009 – San Antonio, Texas 

Triple H & Shawn Michaels def. Chris Jericho & The Big Show {WWE Unified Tag Team Championship TLC Match}
From the inaugural TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs PPV. These titles have VERY rarely main evented WWE PPVs, and I believe this was the last time it ever happened for the men. The Women’s Tag Titles main evented the TLC PPV in 2019. This is the third match I’ve reviewed from this PPV too, after Christian vs. Shelton Benjamin and John Cena vs. Sheamus for other projects. So it’s tied for fourth. The D-Generation X glow stick shtick gives me a lot of second hand embarrassment. Jericho and Michaels had a fun exchange early on. After that the match slowed way down, correlating directly with the weapons being introduced. DX double suplexing a ladder onto Jericho was kind of neat, though. The commentators played up Show being too heavy for the ladder to support him, but that never went anywhere. Nor did Show being so tall that he’d only have to climb a couple rungs to grab the belts. Those were missed opportunities. Show destroyed a ladder, only for Jericho to bring in a different one. Why do that at all? Ah, the why is shortly revealed. After destroying another ladder, Jericho climbs onto Show’s shoulders to try to grab the belts that way. Michaels superkicks Show, knocking Jericho to the floor (missing the table he was supposed to crash into… yikes). Triple H holds up what remains of the broken ladder and Michaels climbs it to grab the belts at 22:52. This was psychologically sound, focused more on everyone trying to incapacitate their opponents before climbing, rather than going for big spots for the sake of them. But it suffered from a dull middle portion and a crowd that didn’t really care. The finish was creative, at least. ***¼ 

It was really fun to see the tag titles as a headlining attraction in WWE, especially because it will probably never happen again. It’s a shame that the matches weren’t better, but they were good enough to keep me entertained for this little project.