The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 76: The Rockers

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The Rockers land at number 76 on my top 100 tag teams list. They were at number 82 on the 2022 Cagematch list and then fell to number 91 on this year’s list. I’m not sure what to make of the drop beyond Marty Jannetty’s insistence on ruining his reputation with Facebook posts. But let’s not think about that and instead check out some of their matches. 

Michaels & Jannetty started teaming in NWA Central States Wrestling in 1985, where they quickly won (and then quickly lost) the tag team titles. They were signed by the AWA shortly thereafter, where they also won and lost the tag titles relatively quickly. They hit the big time in 1988 when they were recruited by the WWF, and the rest is history. Here are their best matches, as rated by Cagematch users, up until their famous breakup in 1992. 

March 24, 1991 – Los Angeles, California 

Marty Jannetty & Shawn Michaels def. Haku & The Barbarian
From WrestleMania VII. Jim Duggan shouting in monotone during the match on commentary got old incredibly quickly. The Tongans were more impressive than I expected them to be here. Barbarian threw himself over the top rope to help Haku hit a gnarly Stun Gun on Jannetty. Michaels got a hot tag and cleaned house like a man on a coke binge. I’m not saying that he was on a coke binge, but I’m also not deleting those words from this document. Jannetty catches Haku with a missile dropkick and Michaels wins the match with a diving crossbody at 10:41. A fun, zippy opener that got the WrestleMania crowd excited. ***

April 28, 1990 – Austin, Texas 

Marty Jannetty & Shawn Michaels ddq. Bret Hart & Jim Neidhart
From Saturday Night’s Main Event 26. This was a weird instance of the broadcast cutting away to commercial, but when they returned no time had passed. Tag champs Demolition came out in the middle of this stiff, rapid match for no real reason other than to telegraph that the match wouldn’t have a finish. And sure enough, they get drawn into the ring and the match gets thrown out at 9:30. What we got was shaping up to be dope, but it didn’t get to amount to anything. On the bright side, you don’t have to wonder too much what would have happened had they been allowed to more fully bake this match because a match of theirs from a house show in Madison Square Garden was eventually released outside of the New York broadcast area. **¾ 

November 25, 1989 – Manhattan, New York

Bret Hart & Jim Neidhart tld. Shawn Michaels & Marty Jannetty
From WWF on MSG. I found this in a deep dark corner of the internet, and I have no idea what DVD it was ripped from. I say DVD because the WWE scratch logo is in the corner. This was awesome. Jannetty & Michaels were moving a mile a minute, trying to keep Hart & Neidhart in their corner but almost always failing to deal with Neidhart’s bullet-like power and Hart’s prowess. Neidhart and Michaels were especially impressive here, Neidhart with his sudden movements and Michaels flipping around the ring in a way that was both awe inspiring and natural-looking. Goddamn, was I mad when the bell rang suddenly at 19:35. That finish was a real bummer. They announce it as some kind of nebulous draw, and then Gorilla Monsoon tries to say that the time limit expired. Why not just say it was a disqualification when Neidhart came in and attacked without tagging in? The Hart Foundation and Rockers continued to brawl, and then a bunch of other tag teams ran in to fight with them for no discernible reason. They really did not want to job either of these teams. ***¾ 

January 19, 1991 – Miami, Florida 

Marty Jannetty & Shawn Michaels def. Kato & Tanaka
From the Royal Rumble. Like the match against Haku & Barbarian, this also featured a really sick Stun Gun against the Rockers. I’m surprised that this went as long as it did, as it had the crowd going absolutely insane about 15 minutes in and then lost them a bit by the end because of Tanaka’s slow second stretch in control. Nerve holds are never not boring. Once Kato came in and the double teaming began, things picked back up. Michaels made his comeback shortly thereafter, using the Express’s cheating against them and tagging to Jannetty. Michaels saved Jannetty from getting chopped to bits, and Jannetty caught Tanaka (who I don’t think was the legal man) with a sunset flip for the win at 19:13. Pretty damn fun. ***½ 

August 30, 1986 – Las Vegas, Nevada 

Buddy Rose & Doug Somers ddq. Marty Jannetty & Shawn Michaels {AWA World Tag Team Championship Match}
From an episode of AWA Championship Wrestling. The Midnight Rockers, as they were called at the time, were paired up against Rose & Somers almost immediately after becoming a team. They worked together for about a year, during which time the Rockers won the tag titles from Rose & Somers. But this was only half way through their rivalry, so the Rockers didn’t win the belts here. Rose & Sommers have Sherri Martel in their corner, and the women in the crowd absolutely hate her. Michaels bleeds very early on after Somers gets a cheap shot from the apron. The crowd goes insane, in fear that Michaels will be killed. Eventually, Michaels drunk punches his way back to his corner and Jannetty blows the roof off the place. Somers and Jannetty both blade on camera, but I’m not sure this crowd knew to be looking for things like that. It turns into a chaotic brawl and the referee gets taken out. Another tries to run out and restore order, but he gets tossed and the original referee throws out the match at 16:10. I have no way of knowing if this was the best match the two teams ever had, but according to Cagematch it is, and according to Cagematch it’s the Rockers’ best match as a team. I can’t even say that it’s the best match of the bunch that I watched today, but it was a gnarly brawl with great selling from all four guys and a believable response to traumatic blood loss. ***½ 

In 1992, Michaels turned on Jannetty, setting the blueprint for tag team breakups.That breakup, and the fact that Michaels became one of the most popular and most talented wrestlers of all time, are the reason this team is on this list. They didn’t actually accomplish that much as a team in the universal sense, but the fallout from their breakup changed wrestling.