Click here to see the Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time list so far.
The number 96-ranked (by Cagematch) Bad Intentions come in at number 84 on this list. I find this team endlessly interesting, more in theory than in the ring. Giant Bernard (as he was called in Japan) and Karl Anderson formed Bad Intentions in 2008. Bernard and his partner Rick Fuller turned heel to join Great Bash Heel. Typical New Japan multi-man matches eventually led to Anderson and Bernard forming a duo after Fuller left the company at the end of the year. They won the G1 Tag League in 2009 and then six months later they won the IWGP tag titles and held them for a still standing record of 564 days.
I got to be a little creative with which matches I cover here because so few people have reviewed Bad Intentions’ run on Cagematch. So whereas their matches in NOAH all seem kind of middling, I’m more interested in their Dominion 2011 match wherein they unified the IWGP and GHC tag titles. And even though no one on Cagematch has reviewed their 2009 Tag League win, so few of their matches have ratings that I feel fine assuming this was one of their better outings based on the environment and their opponents. And since I have no real sense around a consensus of which of these matches are better than the others, I’ll go in chronological order again.
November 1, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan
Giant Bernard & Karl Anderson def. Prince Devitt & Ryusuke Taguchi {Tournament Finals}
From the G1 Tag League. Bad Intentions had already defeated Apollo 55 in the B Block (rather easily), but the tournament was set up so that the top two teams in B Block would fight the top two teams in the A Block in the semifinals of a knockout tournament. Both B Block teams won, so here we are again. Oh my god, Anderson’s machine gun taunt was brutally cringe. But the way he and Bernard work together is far from cringe. It’s great, logical, bad guy biz. Anderson is a jerk, but he needs Bernard to clean up after him. And sometimes, Bernard has too much momentum behind his huge ass self and winds up colliding with his partner. And when that happens, Apollo 55 takes the opportunity to run circles around their opponents. It’s a fun match, and shows that the much smaller babyfaces learned from their first loss to Bad Intentions. There were a couple of moments when it looked like Taguchi might pin Anderson, driving the crowd crazy. There was even one believable, double-team near-fall on Bernard. But in the end, Bernard caught Taguchi with the Emerald Frosion, Anderson hit a running knee on Devitt, and then they both hit Devitt with the Magic Killer for the win at 16:01. Today I learned that AJ Styles and Tomko innovated that move, and then it passed on to Tomko and Bernard, then to Bernard and Anderson, and then to Anderson and Luke Gallows. I like everything about that except for the Good Brothers having been a thing for 15 years and using it that whole time. I was getting ready to say that this was just good tag team wrestling and nothing fancy, but Apollo 55 did sneak in a bit of Dragon Gate style madness. I quite enjoyed this. ***½
It took Bad Intentions seven months to win the tag titles after this, and they failed three times while the titles bounced around before finally beating Wataru Inoue & Yuji Nagata and Tetsuya Naito & Yujiro Takahashi for them at Dominion in June. Almost a year after dropping the belts, NO LIMIT came back for them.
May 3, 2011 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka
Giant Bernard & Karl Anderson def. Tetsuya Naito & Yujiro Takahashi {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From Wrestling Dontaku. In my Shingo Takagi review series, I skip all of his matches against Takahashi. I’m hoping he didn’t stink as much 12 years ago. This started out pretty slow, with Bad Intentions controlling and NO LIMIT doing little. Naito got powerbombed against the apron in a nasty moment that led to the heels picking up the pace a bit. Takahashi came in and suplexed both opponents around, which was fun. Then Naito came in and got his ass kicked again. This wasn’t the dynamic that I expected from NO LIMIT. Naito did hit a surprisingly gnarly German suplex on Bernard and kicked out of the Magic Killer, so he wasn’t totally the low man. Bernard shrugged off his frustration and hit the Bernard Driver (Rikishi Driver) for the win at 19:49. This did pick up, but ultimately felt very much like the midcard match that it was. It certainly never felt particularly competitive. ***
June 18, 2011 – Osaka, Osaka
Giant Bernard & Karl Anderson def. Yoshihiro Takayama & Takuma Sano {IWGP Tag Team Championship vs. GHC Tag Team Championship Match}
From Dominion. Post-stroke The match starts with Bernard vs. Takayama because these guys know what people came to see. In a weird turn, Anderson played the underdog for most of the match because NJPW was their home turf against the NOAH team. Bernard played to the crowd more than usual and Anderson was working extra snug. The Sano & Takayama just sort of ran through their usual shtick, which is unfortunate. Also unfortunate was the Bernard vs. Takayama segments being so brief. A breezy match, but just barely above average and only because of Bad Intentions’ efforts. Sano kicked out of the Magic Killer but not the Bernard Driver (which is now the Emerald Frosion again) at 12:03. ***
July 3, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan
Giant Bernard & Karl Anderson def. Hiroshi Tanahashi & Hirooki Goto {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From New Japan Soul. It’s weird to see NJPW run Korakuen Hall without a hard cam, with a cameraman mostly stationed on the bleacher side facing away, and the house lights on. It totally changes the vibe in there. This was what I uncreatively call a tale of two matches. The first half was pretty slow, focused primarily on Bernard trying to injure Tanahashi’s leg. Tanahashi was IWGP Heavyweight Champion, and Bernard had a title match coming up. The second half of the match was almost the inverse of what I liked about the Bad Intentions vs. Apollo 55 match. Here, it was Bernard who was in need of Anderson’s help, as Tanahashi got a good head of speed and started running through the big man. But Anderson rushed in like a pitbull and attacked Tanahashi with cutters. They hit Tanahashi with the Magic Killer and Bernard hit a Last Ride version of the Bernard Bomb to pin the champ at 17:12. Had the first half been a little more fun this would be a total blow away match. ***½
February 12, 2012 – Osaka, Osaka
Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima def. Giant Bernard & Karl Anderson {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From the New Beginning. Tenzan & Kojima had ended Bad Intentions’ stranglehold on the titles a month earlier at Wrestle Kingdom. Three weeks after that, Bad Intentions dropped the GHC titles to Jun Akiyama and Akitoshi Saito. This match was sick. It wasn’t the most dramatic match they could have had, but everyone was light on their feet, moving a mile a minute, and with one exception were operating on the exact same wavelength. Yes, Bernard did almost kill Kojima by failing to get him up for a powerbomb, but they recovered quickly and Kojima seemed to be fine. This was way faster paced than probably any other Bernard match ever. He made the mistake of getting into a striking exchange with Kojima and fell to the Cozy Lariat at 17:47. This was a terrific way to say goodbye to the team and for Bernard to leave Japan. Everyone made nice after the match. ***¾
The match at the New Beginning turned out to be the final Bad Intentions match ever as Bernard left to become Tenzan in WWE shortly after this, and then he retired two years after that. Anderson stayed in NJPW and soon started teaming with Luke Gallows, another WWE castoff. As part of the Bullet Club they formed the Good Brothers, and still team to this day. Luckily for me, they’re currently ranked at number 263 on the Cagematch list, so I don’t have to watch many of their matches as part of this series. Bad Intentions turned out to be the most motivated either guy was in their entire careers, and while their title run was historic, I’m bummed they didn’t remain a team for longer.