Click here to see the Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time list so far.
I don’t think you can call Austin Aries disgraced, but if you look at where he’s able to get booked these days it sure does seem like he’s toxic enough for me to say that this is four teams in a row on this list where one guy is persona non grata to most fans. Aries & Roderick Strong are coming in at number 77 on my list, having been ranked 87 and 90 on the 2022 and 2023 lists, respectively. As always, that’s because of teams that get disqualified higher on the list, mostly because they’re European teams that get a lot of votes from that set of Cagematch users despite not actually being all that prolific.
This is an easy one for me as I’m coming in nostalgic for an era of Ring of Honor wrestling that I was deeply entrenched in. Strong & Aries each only had a couple of matches in ROH before they were chosen to join Jack Evans and Alex Shelley in the Generation Next stable. They were immediately the top heels in the company, used first to turn CM Punk babyface and then to just have dope matches against a ton of top guys in the company. It was awesome. Shelley was the de facto leader for a while, but Aries staged a coup and took over the group just before becoming ROH World Champion by ending Samoa Joe’s (still standing) record championship reign.
After losing that title to Punk (and kicking off the first Summer of Punk), Aries and the rest of the group turned babyface in a feud against the Embassy, during which they recruited Matt Sydal. A year after his World Championship win, Aries & Strong won the ROH Tag Team Championships, starting an awesome nine-month reign with those belts. Every match voted into their top 5 is a title defense during that reign.
August 26, 2006 – Chicago Ridge, Illinois
Austin Aries & Roderick Strong def. Matt Sydal & Christopher Daniels {ROH World Tag Team Championship Match}
From ROH Gutcheck. I wrote in 2006 that this was kind of like having to see an ex-girlfriend who cheated on you for Strong and Aries as far as Sydal was concerned. But despite having been a part of Generation Next, Strong and Sydal beautifully countered each other’s moves early on. But most of the match didn’t see much in terms of selling, which made it difficult to feel like anything hurt anyone. That was true of most matches for the tag titles at the end of Aries & Strong’s title reign. But this had a coherent story, it all made sense, and there were quite a few amazing spots that, at the time, hadn’t been done to death. Strong hit the Sick Kick to break up Daniels’ Angel’s Wings and the champs hit the half nelson backbreaker/450 splash combo for the win at 22:03. ***¾
November 6, 2004 – Elizabeth, New Jersey
CM Punk & Ace Steel def. Roderick Strong & Austin Aries {No Disqualification Match}
From ROH Weekend of Thunder. I was already checked out on the Generation Next vs. Second City Saints feud by this point, as they were having match after match with nothing on the line. They tried to up the ante by attributing an injury to Colt Cabana to Aries & Strong, but I wasn’t buying the hate between these two teams. Punk and Steel came through the crowd to jump Generation Next before the bell. Still not buying it. Jack Evans interfered early and often, bringing a ladder into the mix. The match had some rather wild bumps, but it just dragged on forever without much in the way of structure. Punk tripped while hitting Strong with the Pepsi Plunge on a ladder. It looked horrible but got the win at 20:02 anyway. I’ll give them credit for the punishment taken in this match, but it was too long, a lot of it was sloppy, and most of the work was really lethargic. **¼
February 25, 2006 – Edison, New Jersey
Austin Aries & Roderick Strong def. AJ Styles & Matt Sydal {ROH Tag Team Championship Match}
From ROH Fourth Anniversary Show. I guess the titles were still a short time away from being defended abroad at this point. Sydal was in Generation Next with Strong & Aries at this point, but he’d just had an acclaimed match against Styles the month before and thought he could win the belts as a team. The second half of the match was a beautiful spotfest. The crowd, and myself, couldn’t get into the match when the challengers were in control of the straight segment, but that dull bit of business was sandwiched between two great portions of wrestling. That was a problem with some of these main event tag team matches ROH put on at the time. They had enough of the goods for a terrific 15-minutes match, but matches of that length rarely main evented ROH shows, and might have left the fans feeling cheated. Also, AJ Styles around this time wasn’t bringing his best to ROH, saving it instead for his home promotion TNA. Or maybe he was bringing his best; I’ve never been as big of a Styles fan as most others. This match ended when Strong hit the half nelson backbreaker on Sydal and Aries finished things up with the 450 splash for the win at 23:11. ***¾
February 25, 2006 – Edison, New Jersey
Austin Aries & Roderick Strong def. CIMA & Naruki Doi {ROH Tag Team Championship Match}
From ROH Better Than Our Best. Blood Generation beat Generation Next in a wild six-man tag match to earn this title shot. They had to slow it down a bit to get the finish right, but as a die hard ROH fan at the time, this match made me miss the Dragon Gate guys before they even went back to Japan. The match had all of the virtues of a Dragon Gate spotfest plus extra credit for Aries’ great face-in-peril segment. Strong hit the half nelson backbreaker on CIMA and the Sick Kick on Doi, allowing Aries to hit the 450 splash on CIMA for the win at 20:22. It’s funny that not long before this, MLW tried running shows under the banner of being hybrid wrestling, mixing different genres to have something for everyone. While ROH probably couldn’t satisfy those looking for truly larger than life characters, they were presenting a hybrid mix of a lot of different genres of wrestling. They did so even in this match. ****¼
August 12, 2006 – Liverpool, Merseyside
Austin Aries & Roderick Strong def. Jay Briscoe & Mark Briscoe {ROH World Tag Team Championship Match}
From ROH Unified. Ah, there it is, the match that made these titles “world” titles. This was the Briscoes’ final shot at the tag titles as long as Aries & Strong remained the champions, as they’d had two title matches against the champs already. But this absolutely blew away those previous two matches. It’s hardly even comparable. Seriously they threw everything they had at each other and it turned into a scorching hot match. Aries & Strong probably deserve their spot on this list because of their incredible work as a team within Generation Next, but this was one of maybe three truly elite matches that they had during this reign. The other two being the Blood Generation match and one not on this list against Bryan Danielson & Jay Lethal from ROH Tag Wars the previous January. That Tag Wars match definitely should be on this list instead of the Second City Saints match. All that aside, Strong booted Mark to the floor and hit the half nelson backbreaker and a powerbomb on Jay, and Aries followed up with the 450 splash for the win at 23:58. Luckily for the Briscoes, Aries & Strong lost the titles to the Kings of Wrestling a month later. Neither Aries nor Strong ever won the titles again, but the Briscoes, who had already had two reigns with the belts, won them a total of 13 times before Jay Briscoes tragic death. ****¼