Click here to see the Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time list so far.
I’m about to hit you with a big fat pivot. It’s been a year since I started this series. I’ve been going very, very slowly. I hope to pick things up a bit. But that’s all besides the point. In the intervening year, Cagematch’s list of the top tag teams has predictably changed. Not so dramatically, actually, but a bit. But a combination of factors has me taking that change into account as I continue this series.
Factor 1: The next team on my list was to be Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch. But I couldn’t watch several of their top 5 matches because they happened in 2019 in wXw, and that company is in the process of moving their archive from Brightspot to YouTube. They’ve given no real indication when the 2019 shows will be up.
Factor 2: Burch & Lorcan (and a few other teams) fell out of the top 100 entirely since I began this project. So I’m ditching that review. For the sake of pleasing Burch & Lorcan fans, here are reviews their top two matches (as ranked by Cagematch), which I’d previously covered, plus their third ranked match that I was able to find.
Factor 3: I’m more interested now in some of the teams that have entered the list than those who have fallen out, so I’m mixing things up a bit. You probably wouldn’t have noticed if I hadn’t said anything, but telling you is part of my process. That leads me to the Brothers of Destruction.
The Undertaker & Kane are just barely hanging on in the 2023 list at number 100. They were ranked at number 80 on the Cagematch list 89 on the Cagematch list, putting them at number 81 on my list. Their story is well known. Kane entered the WWF in 1997, the long lost brother of the Undertaker, to attack his sibling and grab the attention of adolescent boys the world over with this convoluted, gothic gimmick and storyline.
In the summer of ‘98, Kane & Mankind feuded with Steve Austin & Undertaker over the tag titles. Kane’s team came out on top. But at the end of the summer, he & Mankind lost the belts to the New Age Outlaws. Kane turned on Mankind and aligned himself with his brother. The two feuded with Steve Austin over the WWF World Heavyweight Championship, ending Austin’s first reign in a wonky, Vince Russo-y triple threat match. But that was just the beginning of an on-again-off-again team that lasted for over two decades.
They are not well known for their great matches. As a matter of fact, they’re credited with having some of the worst high profile tag team matches of all time. One of those matches, against DDP & Kanyon at SummerSlam, is the fifth match in their top five. I couldn’t bring myself to watch it so I replaced it with a match I’d already seen that I liked wellenough. Spoiler alert: I also won’t be watching the matches against Kroni>| at Unforgiven or against DX at Crown Jewel.
April 15, 2008 – Greenwich, London
The Undertaker & Kane def. The Miz & John Morrison
From WWE ECW 97. I’m going to track Kane’s ever changing look throughout his career. Here he’s unmasked and wearing pants. This was fun. The tag champs (Miz & Morrison) didn’t look like total goofs, though they also didn’t have any extended periods of being in control. That’s a pretty striking balance, and most of that is thanks to Undertaker being full of energy and commanding such a presence when he was in the ring that the relative one-sidedness of the match was overshadowed. Undertaker pinned Morrison with the Tombstone Piledriver at 11:45. ***
November 22, 2015 – Atlanta, Georgia
The Undertaker & Kane def. Bray Wyatt & Luke Harper
From WWE Survivor Series. Kane is in his horror movie mask and stupid-looking stitched singlet era. This was the Undertaker’s 25th anniversary match, and he has the worst haircut of his career for the occassion. Anniversary matches are pretty common in Japan; I’m kind of surprised that they’re not more prevalent in North America. Triple H recently had an anniversary segment, but he was forced into retirement by a bum ticker so there was no match involved. I’m advocating for more anniversary matches Stateside. The BoD take out Erick Rowan before the match begins. This was mostly fine, if pretty slow. The BoD were both looking a little wider around the waistline. Braun Strowman got involved and fell victim to a double chokeslam through the announce table for his trouble. The finishing sequence was very forced, as it necessitated a double zombie situp that took forever to set up. Wyatt and Harper got hit with stereo chokeslams and Undertaker hit Harper with the Tombstone Piledriver for the win at 10:18. **½
October 12, 1998 – Uniondale, New York
The Rock & Steve Austin def. Kane & The Undertaker
From WWF RAW is WAR 281. We get classic, original recipe Kane here. This was the night that Austin filled Vince McMahon’s car with cement. It was also the night that they booked Austin as the referee in the match upcoming PPV between Kane and the Undertaker for the vacant championship. Rock was the number one contender for after that match. In another Russo-inspired twist, Rock didn’t get that match because there was no winner in the PPV match, but then Rock became champion by turning heel in a subsequent title tournament at Survivor Series. My memory of this time is crazy vivid, which surprises me because it was 25 years ago and I remember few things that have happened since as well. This was the first time ever that Rock & Austin teamed; it happened fewer than a dozen times on television in 2-on-2 matches. This was only the fifth ever Brothers of Destruction match. Do you remember a time when Kane would jump straight up to the top rope off the mat? I didn’t. He did that here. There was no reason aside from laziness that he wasn’t always at least a few steps better than what we got. His bits against the Rock were a lot of fun, mostly because Rock was selling like Blake with a handful of Glengarry contacts. Mark Henry came out and attacked Rock, taking him out of the match, which you’d think would be enough to let the BoD beat Austin 2-on-1, but instead Big Bossman ran out and attacked Austin to draw a disqualification at 11:13. Austin was so protected around this time it was wild. A fun match while it lasted, which wasn’t long, before the overbooking went nuts. The show still had ten minutes left after that, which is crazy. A heel beatdown lasted a while, but then the BoD and the Nation of Domination left and allowed Rock & Austin to beat up McMahon and his stooges to send the crowd home happy. **½
February 25, 2001 – Paradise, Nevada
D-Von Dudley & Bubba Ray Dudley def. The Undertaker & Kane and Edge & Christian {WWF World Tag Team Championship Triple Threat Tables Match}
From WWF No Way Out 2001. Here we have Kane version 3, with his classic mask and disturbingly sheer fabric singlet and tights (an evolution from his sheer-paneled one-armed getup). For a guy who is so anti-trans and anti-drag now, he sure did have a leather daddy look at this point in his career. Plus he wasn’t that far out from being an accused necrophiliac. Undertaker is a biker here, but not yet a red booger. This PPV has two of my absolute favorite wrestling matches ever on it, and I watched it live, but I have no recollection of this particular match happening. Edge & Christian are afraid of the BoD, but the Dudleys are not. This was fine, though never great. The BoD added little to the dynamic well established by the other teams. The Dudleys and the blondies had about two minutes of interesting interactions because things got chaotic and a little slow. Rikishi & Haku came to neutralize the BoD while the Dudleys hit Christian with a 3D through a table to retain the titles at 12:04. Rikishi got hurt shortly after this, leaving me wondering if he & Haku were meant to wrestle the BoD at WrestleMania X-7. Though if that happened I have no idea what Triple H would have done on that show. Maybe fight Kane, who wound up shoehorned into the Hardcore Championship division after this. **¾
April 29, 2001 – Rosemont, Illinois
Steve Austin & Triple H def. Kane & The Undertaker {WWF World Heavyweight Championship & WWF Intercontinental Championship vs. WWF World Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWF Backlash. Loser of the fall loses their title. Kane has the same gear as he did two months ago, with a little more red incorporated. It’s still quite see-through. His arm was heavily bandaged, which made him a liability for his team. I don’t remember this match being good at all. I remember people being really down on the main event of WWE at the time. But this was a shockingly good, traditional main event tag team match. I’m reclaiming this match. The crowd was not ready to boo Austin or to get behind Kane in any kind of meaningful way. Austin, being the pro that he is, forced them to do both successfully. This could be selective memory, but this is the only time I can remember hearing a crowd chant Kane’s name. It probably happened when X-Pac & Kane were a team. There was one weird moment where it seemed like Kane was meant to hit Triple H with an enziguri and then tag out after being worked over for a long time. He wasn’t able to hit the move, so they called an audible and Triple H hit Kane with a Pedigree then immediately tagged out to Austin. That was a very odd choice, but it led to Undertaker coming in and chokeslamming Austin to give Kane a near fall. Then Kane hit that enziguiri and made the hot tag. Honestly, were it not for Triple H not going for the cover after the Pedigree, that would have been a hell of a cover up for a missed cue. The referee had been bumped, so he missed the tag and wouldn’t make the count for Undertaker after he hit the Last Ride on Triple H. Vince and Stephanie McMahon interfered and Triple H beat up Kane with the sledgehammer for the win at 25:02. That finished sucked, but the rest of this match is crazy underrated. This led to one of the best tag team matches of all time between two somewhat makeshift teams a month later, and signaled that WWF’s weird second quarter of 2001 might not be a sign of things to come. ***¾
It was nice to revisit some of main event Attitude Era stuff here, even if Undertaker didn’t get really good until after the Attitude Era and Kane was never good.