The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 80: MSK

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

Last week, I announced that one-fifth of the way through this list I was altering it some. As a result of the way I changed the data that informed my rankings, a bunch of tag teams on Cagematch’s tag team list (which informs the data I use) that don’t quality for my list got bunched up at this point or higher in the rankings. So click here to see the top match from each of those teams. 

In the meantime, our next on the list is MSK. This is part one of two teams in a row in which one of the participants is disgraced (though to extremely differing degrees. MSK was ranked number 88 on Cagematch’s top 100 list in April of 2022. Two days after I captured that list, Nash Carter was fired from MSK because of photos of him mimicking Hitler surfaced online because of domestic issues between him and his wife stemming from alleged abuse and an alleged affair with Gigi Dolan. It was all very sordid, it led to the breakup of the team, and unsurprisingly led to them dropping to number 121 in the current Cagematch rankings. 

But as things shake out, they’re number 80 on my list. Wes Lee (as he is now known) is still with NXT. He was called Dezmond Xavier, and he began teaming with Carter, then (and now) called Zachary Wentz at the end of 2015. They made a name for themselves in Combat Zone Wrestling before turning heads as the Rascalz in Pro Wrestling Guerrilla and Impact Wrestling. Then they gained national attention in NXT before all the controversy came down last year. 

July 13, 2018 – Los Angeles, California 

Dezmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz def. Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson {PWG World Tag Team Championship Match}
From PWG Threemendous V. The Bucks make a joke before the match about being gifted a book about psychology on their YouTube show and not wanting to do highspots in this match. That could have made for an interesting dynamic, but it didn’t surprise me at all that the shtick was abandoned after two minutes. They do engage in some classic heel psychology, which is nice. I like them a lot more as heels. About halfway through, Matt hits a Psychodriver and puts on a Sharpshooter while Nick hits a springboard X-Factor, and Xavier annoyingly no sells all of that and gets to the ropes pretty quickly. That was an amazing set of spots and would have been so exciting had it come later in the match and had Xavier looked like he was in more danger. It’s a real shame because a lot of the match was more focused than your usual Young Bucks affair. That is, until the last five minutes, when everyone came into the ring and it turned into the usual PWG tag team nightmare. I did like the finish though, which saw a worn out Wentz counter More Bang For Your Buck to a crucifix pin to retain the titles at 17:23. ***½ 

September 16, 2018 – Los Angeles, California 

Dezmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz def. Penta El Zero M & Rey Fenix {PWG World Tag Team Championship Match}
From PWG Battle of Los Angeles. The Rascalz are masked up in their opponents masks. Xavier straight up mirrros Penta’s shtick in the early going, which gets kind of old but culminates in a very funny bit seeing both guys tag out to the wrong partners. A couple minutes later the Rascalz get unmasked, and from there it’s all mindless spots. They all hit at least, but there’s no drama. Xavier kicks out of things that no one has any business kicking out of, and he’s fine seconds later. This kind of stuff is just not my bag. They even stop tracking who the legal man here is. The Rascalz eventually hit the push moonsault on Fenix for the win at 11:13 in a totally arbitrary point in the match. Meh. All points because the beginning made me laugh and the match was pretty short. ***

April 8, 2017 – Voorhees Township, New Jersey 

Dezmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz def. Angel Ortiz & Mike Draztik, Dave McCall & Nate Carter, and Kyle the Beast & Monsta Mack {CZW World Tag Team Championship TLC Match}
From CZW Decisions. The Rascalz were called Scarlet and Graves at this point, as part of a larger stable. Cringe. It’s hard for me to internalize Draztik as Santana’s original name. KTB is subbing in for Dan Maff. There were eight guys in this match and at almost every point in the first ten minutes, at least five of them were just laying on the ground. It took even longer than that for anyone to set up a ladder and try to win the match. I just hate this crap. Nothing embarrassing happened, which exceeded my expectations for CZW (though the talent in here are all at least fine), but I find these TLC matches that are all spots and no story pointless. The most infuriating moment came when Draztik and Wentz both could have easily won the match by grabbing a title belt, but instead grabbed a rafter so that they could fall from said rafter and be powerbombed. Just lowest common denominator vacuous crap. Moments later, Mack stands alone in the middle of the ring doing absolutely nothing rather than climbing only because it’s not time for him to climb. And they had to set up a contrived, bad-looking table spot. Okay, that was embarrassing. And then, in a moment devoid of emotion, Wentz & Xavier climb together without any opposition and take the belts at 19:23. I’m actively mad at the Cagematch community for recommending this match, and I’m glad that I could single-handedly drop it half a point with my rating in. **

February 14, 2021 – Orlando, Florida

Nash Carter & Wes Lee def. Zack Gibson & James Drake {Number One Contenders Match}
From NXT Takeover Vengeance Day. MSK got to show off more than their flips and dives in this one. I like that Carter is more of a loose cannon while Lee is rivaled by only Ricochet in the knowing where his body is in space department. The opening heat on Carter lasted a bit long for me and had my mind drifting, but from the moment Lee got the hot tag I was very invested. That makes for at least half the match being very exciting. It was mostly the same Takeover format, which emphasizes flash and spectacle over story, but these four are very good at flash and spectacle. MSK hit a leveled up version of the Hart Attack Blockbuster for the win at 18:27. ***¾

April 20, 2018 – Reseda, California 

Dezmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz def. Jeff Cobb & Matt Riddle and Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson {PWG World Tag Team Championship Triple Threat Match}
From PWG All Star Weekend 14. Riddle & Cobb were champs going into this. If you’re a long-standing PWG fan, there’s probably a lot here that you’ll like. The referee abuse that got the crowd whipped into a frenzy is clearly geared towards the regular fans. And that’s fine. I certainly don’t get it; the referee’s in PWG enforce nothing, so why would anyone have a reason to be mad at them? Unless you’re me, in which case you hate that the rules mean nothing and are arbitrarily enforced. Even that would be fine, if the rules didn’t exist at all. But they’re there and just never acted upon. Inconsistent garbage. This match was all spots all the time, the usual PWG tag team situation. I can’t stand it. Having Cobb in there doing power moves at least gave this a dimension that isn’t always there. But there was nothing in this that couldn’t be confused for stuff in dozens of other PWG tag matches. Rick Knox came in and ruined the Bucks’ chances of winning, which the crowd liked but did nothing for me. The Rascalz blocked Cobb’s Tour of the Islands and hit a Meteora in a crucifix pin for the win at 18:26. **¾ 

PWG is a blight on this list. PWG tag matches infect Cagematch’s top-match rankings so profoundly that it’s having an outsized negative impact on my experience of these teams. PWG’s influence on the indies is a disaster. I would love for someone who loves PWG to look at the indie scene in the mind ‘00s and look at it now and tell me that the way this company has been imitated is a good thing. That’s my takeaway from this review, especially given that this team doesn’t exist anymore.