The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 72: The Broserweights

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Sorry for the crotches in your face in the banner image, these images are designed for the grid view in the link above. 

Last time around, I lamented that a flash in the pan team made it on this list by virtue of consisting of two long time darlings of hardcore wrestling fans. This time around, it’s a flash in the pan team that made the list thanks to regency bias. I should mention that after the list is complete, I’ll do a few posts on the egregious misses from this list. But this time around we have Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne, the Broserweights.

The Broserweights began teaming in NXT as a makeshift team in the 2020 Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Invitational Tournament in January of 2020, and by March the team was finished because the pandemic hit and Dunne couldn’t travel to the United States from his home in the UK. I want to hammer this home (and I like both wrestlers so I’m not hating for the sake of it), this was a team that existed for two months on WWE’s B-show, and it’s on a list of the top 100 tag teams of all time. This team ranked 76 on the (April) 2022 list and 85 on the (April) 2023 list, and because of teams ahead of them not meeting my criteria they wind up at number 72 on my list. And to be totally transparent, I’ve since put in my two cents on Cagematch and now they’re ranked #98 in June of 2023. 

Since these matches are all part of the same run, I’m reviewing them in chronological order rather than in order of how they’re ranked on Cagematch. This was an interesting time in the company because the pandemic wasn’t really on anyone’s radar so WWE, specifically NXT, was planning a ton of stuff between their American and British brands. 

January 22, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Marcel Barthel & Fabian Aichner {Semifinal Match}
From NXT 545. WALTER & Alexander Wolfe are out with Imperium, though that tactic didn’t work in the opener, so I’m not sure why it’d work any better here. It did work in at least one moment in giving Imperium the advantage over the Broserweights (and a cool Dunne/WALTER stare-down moment. After a commercial break we get the wonderful Broserweight tandem stuff. They’re just delightful together. Also delightful was the run up to the finish, wherein things escalated more and more until Imperium made the mistake of losing track of who was legal, giving the Broserweights the win at 11:27 (shown of 14:41) with the Bro To Sleep/enziguiri combo. The GYV come out after the match and reveal that the finals are happening next week. I think it’s a big miss that this isn’t happening at Worlds Collide, but I guess it’s an issue of time. ***¾

January 15, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Flash Morgan Webster & Mark Andrews {Quarterfinal Match}
From NXT 544. It’s a shame that the beginning of the match happened in the commercial break inset, because it featured some great double-team action from both teams and anyone who didn’t watch this live won’t see it.  This was much more about Dunne and Riddle showing off their new team’s skills than it was about giving the Welshmen a showcase, but damn it was fun anyway. If they stick together as a team for a while we’re in for a potentially great run from them. I loved this, but sadly it did get a bit gobbled up by commercials. You know what, I don’t even care. This was a blast and even the drawbacks of TV couldn’t ruin the fun I had watching these guys blow through amazing stuff at a million miles a minute. Dunne hit Andrews with the Bitter End onto Riddle’s knee for the win at 11:29 (shown of 18:20). ****

January 29, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Zack Gibson & James Drake {Number One Contenders Match}
From NXT 546. The Broserweights won in 15:12 (shown) with the elevated enziguiri on Gibson. A lot of this felt like a greatest hits rehashing of the fun bits Riddle & Dunne did in their other tournament matches. Even recycled Broserweights was better than anything else on the show, so this was good. There was a moment near the end where they almost made me believe that the Grizzled Young Veterans could win, but not quite. The finish was quite spirited too. ***¾

February 16, 2020 – Portland, Oregon

Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
From NXT Takeover: Portland. The Broserweights wear t-shirts with the Fish Fry bit on it, so I’m glad that’s not dead. There really hasn’t been a sub-terrific tag title match on a Takeover (or Worlds Collide) since Takeover: Philadelphia. I guess the ladder matches have been a bit disappointing but I just don’t like multi-man ladder matches that much. The point is that this match also didn’t disappoint, as everyone got to do the thing that makes NXT fans love them. The nuance in this tag title match that the others on Takeovers haven’t had was the inexperience of the Broserweights being the thing that almost cost them the match, as they bounced into each other near the end and nearly lost. But the power of friendship compelled them and they got the win and the titles with the Bro 2 Sleep/enziguiri combo at 17:00. ****¼

March 11, 2020 – Orlando, Florida

Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
From NXT 553. NXT has now moved into the WWE Performance Center as the world starts ending. Before the main event, Velveteen Dream says that he never cared about Roderick Strong and he only put Strong’s family on his tights to get in Strong’s head and get closer to Adam Cole and the NXT Championship. Cole told Dream that purposely losing a cage match didn’t earn him a shot at the title and that he’d be having a celebration to honor becoming the longest reigning champ of all time next week. As for the match. The bits of Takeover energy that this lacked were buffered by some fun comedy in the middle, with the Broserweights busting out some Latino Heat style cheating to get Cole and Strong sent to the back. The Grizzled Young Veterans tried to interfere, though to what end is never explained. Like, what interest did they have in the Undisputed Era being champs? Or were they trying to get the match thrown out? If so, they didn’t do a great job of it. Anyway, the interference leads to nothing and the champs win with the Riddle End at 14:07 (shown). ***½

That wound up being the final Broserweights match to date. I shouldn’t complain too much as I’d already reviewed all of these matches and they were pleasant enough (some of them even very good) to relive. But man does this team not deserve a spot in this ranking.