The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 87: Paul London & Brian Kendrick

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In our current climate of rising Judeophobia in America, I would be hesitant to give Brian Kendrick any space on my blog. But I will give him credit for doing a full-throated mea culpa on his former abhorrent remarks (easily googleable if you’re interested and can stomach it). Plus, Paul London is such a fascinating figure in wrestling that it comes close to half canceling Kendrick’s awful past out. Primarily for their work in WWE, they were ranked number 102 on Cagematch and came in at number 87 on this list.

London & Kendrick both made national names for themselves separately in Ring of Honor. Kendrick, who had gotten a bit of attention in Japan doing a Leonardo DiCaprio gimmick, was a big part of ROH’s first few shows because of his association with Shawn Michaels’ wrestling school and a brief stint in WWE’s developmental promotional of the day, MCW. London was also trained at that school, but gained popularity a little bit later thanks to a splashy feud with Michael Shane and then a face-melting match against AJ Styles. 

Kendrick signed with WWE again in 2002, and London did the same in 2003. A few months later they started to team, but Kendrick left WWE to work the indies and in Japan again for a bit while London won the Cruiserweight Championship and formed a team with Billy Kidman. Kendrick came back in 2005 and the two became a team again. But their peak came in 2006. 

May 21, 2006 – Phoenix, Arizona

Brian Kendrick & Paul London def. Mercury & Nitro {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Judgment Day. Were London & Kendrick doing an Eyes Wide Shut gimmick? This match was the platonic ideal for WWE tag team formula wrestling. MNM did just enough cheating to make the match exciting, but not so much that they looked weak or that the match started to feel cheap. The only cheap bit was Melina breaking up a pin by screeching at the referee and scaring him to stop the count. It was awesome. On the other side of the ring, the challengers did just enough high flying that each spot was exciting and the crowd never got burned out on it. London’s dropsault near fall was incredible. He knocked Nitro to the floor and caught Mercury with a sunset flip for the win and the titles at 13:44. I didn’t know that 2006 WWE crowds were this into undercard matches, but they ate this right up. Nitro and Melina turned on Mercury after the match so he could get off TV and sober up. He’d be back later in the year and later in this post. ***¾ 

July 23, 2006 – Indianapolis, Indiana

Brian Kendrick & Paul London def. Jamie Noble & Kid Kash {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Great American Bash. This is the opener once again. I totally forgot that Noble & Kash revived the Pitbulls gimmick in WWE. They’re not quite the dudes you’d expect to try to bring that back. They beat the champs in a non-title match and in two singles matches in the build to this match. This was another awesome formula match. The Pitbulls drew actual boos by doing classic heel things, like teasing allowing London to tag out but then cutting him off repeatedly. They didn’t do much cheating aside from that, but their heelish vibe came rather from their intensity. London & Kendrick had fully harnessed the aura of the Rockers by this point, and it was a blast to watch. London dropkicked Cash into Kendrick’s sunset flip for the win at 13:40. I’m really enjoying the 2006 WWE tag division. The Pitbulls broke up a couple months later when Kash got fired for smoking weed backstage in Canada. I’m sensing a theme in this locker room. ***½ 

October 8, 2006 – Raleigh, North Carolina

Brian Kendrick & Paul London def. Idol Stevens & KC James {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE No Mercy. James & Stevens are managed by Michelle McCool, so London & Kendrick have Ashley Massaro in their corner. RIP. The first half of this match had me wondering how something so generic wound up rated highly on Cagematch. The second half of the match answered that question. The bad guys went from doing generic cheating (which is appreciated even when it’s not remarkable), to doing cheating that made the match engaging and woke up the crowd. London started darting around at a million miles a second, and Kendrick provided a great comeback. Kendrick hit James (who came and went from WWE at the time so quickly that he never registered with me) with the Sliced Bread and London launched off of Kendrick’s back with a Shooting Star Press for the win at 9:45. If they could have kept up the pace of the latter part of the match for a few more minutes, this would have been very memorable. James & Stevens Broke up a few months later after McCool got injured. ***

December 17, 2006 – Richmond, Virginia

Brian Kendrick & Paul London def. Dave Taylor & William Regal, Joey Mercury & Johnny Nitro, and Jeff Hardy & Matt Hardy {WWE Tag Team Championship Ladder Match}
From WWE Armageddon 2006. This one is mostly famous for the gnarly injury to Mercury’s face. It was originally scheduled to be the champs vs. Regal & Taylor in a regular match, but ladders, MNM, and the Hardys got added by Teddy Long right before the match began. This was really chaotic, which is good. Usually these multi-man ladder matches are little more than extended periods of guys setting up plunder for big spots and then the crowd waiting for the spots to pay off. But this was just ladder-assisted violence for 20 minutes. It helps a lot that there were no tables involved, because setting up tables is such a time suck. The Mercury injury (broken face) is really bad and they show it so many times it feels cruel. Regal & Taylor are afraid of heights, adding a fun little nuance to the match. Kendrick hit Regal with the Sliced Bread off of the ladder to clear the way for London to grab the belts at 20:13. I’d say this is on the level of the early-aughts era ladder matches, and fits in much more with them than it does with the more modern letdowns. ****¼  

Four months later, Kendrick & London lost the titles to Deuce & Domino on an episode of Smackdown. Their team lasted another year before they were separated and London was fired. Kendrick was fired a year after that. But it wasn’t long before they started teaming again in Pro Wrestling Guerrilla and Dragon Gate USA. I haven’t seen a ton of praise for their indie work together, as only one of their matches from those years has any ratings at 8.0 or higher. 

August 9, 2013 – Reseda, California

Chuck Taylor & Johnny Gargano def. Paul London & Brian Kendrick
From PWG TEN. Ronin baby. Seven years later wrestling matches against opponents smaller (for the most part) than the ones they were wrestling in WWE, it shouldn’t have been so jarring to me that London & Kendrick’s style was different. But it was. The comedy stuff here didn’t do much for me, though I wasn’t surprised to see it since PWG doesn’t take things all that seriously even when on the surface they’re taking things seriously. And no such thing was happening on the surface here. I’m sure there are folks who like this kind of thing more, but I prefer the stuff they were doing in 2006. This felt low-effort from London & Kendrick, and goofy from Ronin. At least in WWE it was clear they were working hard to prove something. It was what I love about tag team wrestling. This was just mostly indie silliness. Taylor blocked the Sliced Bread and launched Kendrick into an Ace Crusher from Gargano, giving Ronin the win at 16:05. **¾