The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 86: Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase

Click here to see the Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time list so far.

As you’ve no doubt already surmised, the next tag team in this series is Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase. They were ranked number 99 on the Cagematch list and come in at number 86 on this list. But what, my eagle-eyed reader, happened to Cagematch’s numbers 101 and 100?

They were the African American Wolves and Adrenaline RUSH, respectively, and neither of those teams had enough rated matches in the system to qualify for my list. Oddly, ACH was a member of both teams. Click here for a very brief look at both teams, for the sake of it. 

Shortly after being dubbed one of the Three Musketeers of New Japan alongside Masahiro Chono and Shinya Hashimoto, Muto began teaming with Hase in an attempt to win the 1991 Super Tag League. For the next few years, they went back and forth between being teammates and enemies, having memorable matches in both regards. 

I’ve been battling it out with myself whether or not I should do these in chronological order or in the order of their Cagematch ranking, and chronological has been winning out more often than not. I still reserve the right to go back the other way though. 

November 5, 1991 – Tokyo, Japan 

Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase def. Rick Steiner & Scott Norton {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From Tokyo 3Days Battle. This was the hardest of all the matches in this review to find, and when I did track it down I was disappointed to find it was joined in progress about ten minutes in. After a brief flurry, Muto falls victim to a blistering attack from the champion Steiner and his brother’s substitute Norton. Hase gets a miracle tag, but barely gets off any offense before Steiner ducks a roundhouse kick and hits a gorgeous German suplex. But Hase comes back with a pair of uranages and Muto hits the moonsault. Muto blocks Norton with a Frankensteiner, which is wild, and Hase hits Steiner with the Northern Lights Suplex for the win at 6:49 (shown of 17:53). What’s here is great, but it’s hardly enough for me to recall it as a top match in anyone’s career. I have to think there’s a more full version of it out there somewhere. Despite being a sub for an injured Scott Steiner, it was Norton and not Rick Steiner who challenged the new tag champs twice during their reign. Once with Brad Armstrong and once with Shinya Hashimoto, but both in failing efforts. It was a different pair of American giants who caught up with Muto & Hase in their third title defense. ***¼ 

March 1, 1992 – Yokohama, Kanagawa 

Big Van Vader & Crusher Bam Bam Bigelow def. Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From Big Fight Series: NJPW 20th Anniversary Show Special Event 2nd Super Warriors. Bigelow hit a slingshot splash on Muto in the first minute to show off what he was capable of. Vader came tagged in and was a giant, bullying ass right off the bat. What I found most interesting here was that, while the big boys were almost effortlessly rolling over the champs, Bigelow was clearly a bit more vulnerable to attack than Vader. Vader was unstoppable. That is, until Muto put him on his back with a suplex and drove the crowd insane. Muto got a few nearfalls that humanized Vader a bit too much for my tastes, but the fans sure dug it. Vader and Bigelow responded by squishing him between themselves and then Vader hit a gnarly chokeslam for the win at 24:48. I could watch Vader matches forever. Hashimoto & Masahiro Chono got the first crack at the new champs, but couldn’t get it done. So Muto & Hase got a rematch in May. ****

May 1, 1992 – Chiba, Chiba 

Big Van Vader & Crusher Bam Bam Bigelow def. Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From Explosion Tour. The complexion of this match was completely different from their first right from the word go. Hase came in on fire, slapping and suplexing Vader to the mat immediately. Hase has a big bandage on his forehead, but I have no idea where the injury came from. Maybe it was just foreshadowing what he’d do to his tag partner in a very famous match seven months after this. Either way, it gets reaggravated and Hase bleeds all over the place. This was a total conquering heroes match, which makes it very odd that the tacked-on ending went to the champions. Muto & Hase spent the bulk of the match throwing Vader and Bigelow around as if they were all the same size. The arena was insanely loud. But then, rather out of nowhere, Vader hit Hase with a lariat and his nasty chokeslam for the win at 20:40, despite Muto interfering with the pin. I didn’t love the finish, but the rest of the match is wild. **** 

The Steiners won the tag titles a month later. For the next two years, the belts switched hands between the Steiners, the Hell Raisers, and a pair of Scott Norton tag teams. Muto & Hase went for the titles a few times during that stint, with each other and with other partners. Also during that time, Muto, as the Great Muta, won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, briefly unified it with the NWA Championship, and lost both titles. And also during that time, Muto & Hase fought each other in the Muta Scale match that I think is kind of overhyped given how much Hase bled in the May ‘92 match. But it wasn’t until 1994 that he and Hase were able to reclaim tag team gold. 

January 4, 1994 – Tokyo, Japan 

Rick Steiner & Scott Steiner def. Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase
From Battlefield, when NJPW was still hedging on their branding for the marquee January 4th show. Hulk Hogan worked this show, wrapping up a brief stint in New Japan between his WWF and WCW runs. The crowd was rather subdued here until Scott screamed and then hit the Steiner Screwdriver on Hase. That woke them up. Hase recovering from the move was certainly a choice, especially given that the Steiners were always going to win. Why not use the move later to end the match? Rick saved his brother from the Northern Lights Suplex, and a couple minutes later Scott kicked out of Muto’s moonsault. Everyone got their finisher killed here, so I guess it’s fair. Scott hit Hase with a DDT off of Rick’s shoulders, and then Rick hit the Doomsday Bulldog for the win at 20:51. This was a case of spectacle over substance, which made it fun to watch; but I have a feeling I won’t remember much of this a month from now aside from the reaction to the Screwdriver. That said, consider me pleased that when we get to the Steiner Brothers entry in this series, there will be more matches against Hase and Muto, both teaming with Kensuke Sasaki. I just have a feeling Sasaki stacks up well against the Steiners. ***½  

October 8, 2001 – Tokyo, Japan 

Jun Akiyama & Yuji Nagata def. Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Muto
From Indicate of Next. I can’t think of an American analogue to this match. Muto & Hase hadn’t teamed in a traditional tag team since 1995. At this time, Muto was in New Japan and Hase was in All Japan, but they were both part of a multi-promotional stable called BATT. Nagata was NJPW for life, of course, and his partner Akiyama was the GHC Heavyweight Champion of the newly-established NOAH promotion. Muto got Hase to be his partner by beating him in a singles match a few months earlier, though I have no idea what led to Akiyama and Nagata teaming. Despite not having teamed in a long time, Muto & Hase worked much better together for most of the match. They spent a solid amount of time obliterating Nagata’s knee in entertaining fashion. Watching Muto and Akiyama try to big time each other was also a blast. They did some exciting finisher stealing that was kicked off by Muto hitting the Shining Wizard off of Hase’s back. Moments later, Hase fell victim to Akiyama’s Exploder and two of Nagata’s backdrop drivers and lost the match for his team at 28:04. Fun stuff! Akiyama defended his title against Nagata in the main event of the following January’s Tokyo Dome show, while the IWGP Heavyweight Championship was vacated because champion Kazuyuki Fujita was injured (dude’s career as a champion has always been bad). An upstart company’s title headlining the flagship show of a country’s largest company is another thing that there’s just no American analogue for. Maybe Freddie Prince Jr. ‘s champion will headline WrestleMania 41 because WWE Champ Austin Theory is injured, but I wouldn’t bet even a penny on it. ***¾

Muto & Hase teamed about a dozen more times after that, mostly in the following year as Hase retired for a decade in 2006. His return to wrestling weirdly coincided with his political career taking off. In 2019, Muto & Hase teamed twice for the final time. Muto is set to retire next week, at the age of 60, after a match against Tetsuya Naito.