The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 71: Latin American Xchange

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Right off the bat I’ll admit that Homicide & Hernandez are not my favorite pairing of all time, but I am nevertheless relieved that this list is now back to celebrating established tag teams that had a track record of being notable. Homicide debuted for TNA in the beginning of 2006 alongside Apolo as Konnan’s stable, the Latin American Xchange. Machete joined the group in February, and then Hernandez joined the group in March and became Homicide’s primary partner. Through the years, a large handful of wrestlers have been in the LAX, but this entry on the tag teams list is specifically occupied by the long-running team of Homicide & Hernandez.

They were ranked at number 80 on the 2022 list, 79 on the 2023 list, and come in at 71 because of disqualifications to other teams higher up on these Cagematch lists. We’re back to reviewing matches in the order in which they’re ranked thanks to Homicide & Hernandez having matches in multiple companies across many, many years.

August 10, 2008 – Trenton, New Jersey 

James Storm & Robert Roode def. Homicide & Hernandez {TNA World Tag Team Championship Match}
From TNA Hard Justice. Impact Plus has just terrible UX. The archives are buried, and this PPV specifically has a stretched out image because they didn’t fix for the HD aspect ratio. Awful. The archive is rather robust, though. I can’t call this a hidden gem because it was regarded highly enough by Cagematch users that it wound up on this list. But only 23 people have voted on it and more should probably seen it. This is one of my favorite Homicide performances. He came into the match extra angry because Beer Money had injured his eye in the run up to this show. Because of that, he was more interested in hurting them than he was in winning. That bit him in the ass, as they took advantage of his rage and targeted his eye even more here. And then because Homicide was in such bad shape, Roode got cocky and started mocking Eddy Guerrero (Hector Guerrero was cornering LAX), allowing Homicide to anticipate that he’d go for a frog splash and get out of the way. Homicide was able to fight off Jaqueline and hit a frog splash of his own. That would have made for a reasonably satisfying finish, and at first I wondered about the effectiveness of doing the spot if it wasn’t going to end the match. But now Homicide wants to do something dangerous to win the match, so he makes Hernandez pissed enough to Border Toss him onto his opponents. And that leads to chaos as Jaqueline and Salinas fight at ringside and Beer Money smashes a bottle in Homicide’s face for the win and the titles at 15:07. The crowd was wild for this and with good reason. Homicide’s rage got the better of him and it gave the belts to the bad guys. Love it. ****

October 12, 2008 – Hoffman Estates, Illinois 

James Storm & Robert Roode def. Homicide & Hernandez, Brother Devon & Brother Ray, and Abyss & Matt Morgan {TNA World Tag Team Championship Monster’s Ball Match}
From TNA Bound for Glory IV. Mongo McMichael is the guest referee. I hate to speak ill of the chronically ill (I’m having a Mandela Effect issue here as I was sure I’d read that he’d died. Glad he hasn’t), but I have to wonder if his fidgety feet issue will be a problem as a referee. It turns out, not so much, or at least not as much of a problem as the fact that he doesn’t seem capable of counting a convincing near-fall, choosing instead to keep his hand all the way in the air after a two-count no matter when the pinned wrestler kicks out. And the spots featuring Mongo were poorly-conceived, having him just blatantly making it harder for Beer Money to win, and attacking them. Hate it. TNA was dumb. The crowd didn’t care about those spots at all, to the shock of no one. Anyway, this is a rather typical garbage brawl with too many participants who conveniently disappear for long stretches of time with no explanation while others do mostly boring hardcore spots. That includes a flaming table double chokeslam on Abyss, who gets fire extinguished immediately. That’s wise, but also defeats the purpose of doing the spot in the first place. Mongo’s refereeing gets so bad that Don West eventually has to cover up for him, and he does so admirably saying that he’s slow to count (doesn’t know when to start counting) for everyone consistently. I guess that’s true. The finish is hot trash, as Hernandez can’t figure out how to untie a bag of thumbtacks to dump on a table, so Mongo has to help him. Then, Team 3D hits Hernandez with the 3D through the table, but the tacks make them wince in pain (completely unconvincingly) and Beer Money have enough time somehow (not convincingly) to force Mongo to count the pin for them on Hernandez (it’s so slow) for the win at 20:32. Trash match organized by trash people. At least Abyss had the good grace to exit the match after his fire spot. **

October 14, 2007 – Atlanta, Georgia

Homicide & Hernandez def. Elix Skipper & Senshi {Ultimate X Match}
From TNA Bound for Glory III. Winner gets a shot at the tag titles. Why is the aspect ratio fixed for 2007 shows but not 2008 shows? Weird. There was a spot here that I loved, though I’m not sure the thing I loved about it was intentional. Hernandez scaled the cables, but when he got close to the X, he didn’t seem to have enough strength in one arm to support all of his weight and grab the X. He was stuck like that for several seconds, allowing Skipper to dropkick him down. I wonder if Skipper was late for his cue, but I’m glad he was because now LAX feels like they’re at a big disadvantage as one of the members of the team can’t reasonably win the match for them. It starts to seem like it absolutely was intentional, because later in the match, after Homicide hits a wild neckbreaker from the cables to Skipper, Hernandez gets Homicide to his feet to make the climb again rather than going for the X himself. When that doesn’t work, Hernandez Border Tosses Skipper onto Senshi and Homicide on the mat; with no other recourse, Hernandez climbs again, and then hooks his legs onto the cables so his arms are free to grab the X at 12:00. I absolutely loved this. It was a terrific opener that got the crowd all fired up, and had amazing internal logic that left you wanting to see how the big man would problem solve to win the match. LAX are amazing storytellers! ****

October 25, 2008 – Edison, New Jersey 

Jay Briscoe & Mark Briscoe def. Homicide & Hernandez
From ROH Ring of Homicide 2. This was Homicide’s return to ROH after a year and a half away, so both shows that weekend were named for him. This was far from Homicide’s first match against the Briscoes. He’d wrestled them in 2-on-2 matches teaming with Low Ki twice, Samoa Joe 3 times, and Davey Richards and Roderick Strong once each. After this, he’d wrestle against them alongside Hernandez once more, Low Ki once more, and Eddie Kingston three times. Hernandez never wrestled the Briscoes without Homicide. Stats! Of all his 2-on-2 matches against this team, this match is the most highly rated. This was solid, but ultimately a little disappointing. They kept it real basic right up until the last few beats, making me wish they’d have shaved five or so minutes off of this thing. In the end, Jay powering up Hernandez was a cool visual, and then he and Mark hit a diving legdrop/Shooting Star Press combo for the win at 23:07. Good, but far from great. ***

In 2010, Homicide was released from TNA and the team existed mostly as an intermittent indie novelty act. The team reformed in 2017 in Impact, missing Hernandez but including Santana, Ortiz, and Diamante. Eddie Kingston joined the group a year later. 

July 22, 2018 – Toronto, Ontario 

Santana & Ortiz def. Homicide & Hernandez {Impact World Tag Team Championship Street Fight}
From Impact Slamiversary XVI. This was the result of Kingston betraying LAX and then bringing in the OGz version of the team to put an end to Santana & Ortiz’s title reign. The first half of this match was a kind of meandering violence that didn’t do much for me. In the second half they turned things up quite a bit, focused the action, and drew me in. Everyone seemed really jazzed to be out there, especially Hernandez. I liked the finish quite a bit. Homicide started jawing with Konnan, but didn’t notice Konnan throw thumbtacks to Santana. Santana threw a handful of thumbtacks at Homicide’s face, then slammed him on the tacks, then hit a frog splash for the win at 13:47. A few months, later, LAX and Konnan beat the OGz and Kingston in a six-man tag match to end the feud. ***½ 

This was a lot more enjoyable than I expected it to be. I eat crow and admit that LAX fully deserves a spot on this list.