Click here to see the Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time list so far.
Eddie Guerrero and Chavo Guerrero Jr. first met when Eddie was three years old when Chavo was born. Their miniscule age difference obscured the fact that Eddie was Chavo’s uncle. Chavo Sr. was only 21 when his son was born, and Eddie was the youngest of six siblings, while Chavo Sr. was the oldest. Gory Guerrero got busy, is what I’m saying. Eddie and Chavo Jr. first teamed here and there in EMLL (now CMLL) and in WCW a handful of times in the ‘90s, but much less that you’d probably assume. They didn’t formally become a team until the Paul Heyman-led Smackdown Six era in WWE in 2002, opposite the teams of Chris Benoit & Kurt Angle and Edge & Rey Mysterio.
Los Guerreros were ranked number 74 on the 2022 Cagematch list, and at number 76 on the 2023 list, which averages out to this vaunted number 69 spot overall thanks to higher-ranked teams being disqualified for reasons I’ll get into in future posts. I’m going to do this not just in chronological order, but with more than five matches because I’m a huge geek for this era of WWE tag team wrestling.
October 17, 2002 – Toronto, Ontario
Chris Benoit & Kurt Angle def. Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero {Semifinal Match}
From Smackdown. This was part of an eight-team tournament to decide the first champions for this newly created set of titles, as the recent, original brand split left the long-standing tag titles on Raw. Ironically (and stupidly), this lineage is the one that survives today in the WWE Unified Tag Team Championship alongside another that began in 2016, while the one that dates back to 1971 is in the dustbin of history. And that’s the end of my grumpy old man tirade. Los Guerreros had defeated Rikishi & Mark Henry in the opening round, while Benoit & Angle beat Billy Kidman & John Cena. Right before this match started, Al Wilson got caught with Dawn Marie in the shower by Al’s daughter Torrie. So not everything on Smackdown was good. Edge & Mysterio attacked Los Guerreros before the match in revenge for an attack earlier in the night. They also attacked Benoit & Angle for the hell of it. What started as a pretty standard, albeit fast-paced match, turned into a wild ride filled with a ton of suplexes, some crazy counter wrestling, and a bit of dramatic intrigue. The tag rules got completely thrown out, which was pretty annoying except for when it allowed for Benoit to tease that he might turn on Angle with a chair shot, only for it to be a ploy to lull Los Guerreros into danger. Benoit hit them both with chairs, and Angle hit Eddie with the Angle Slam for the win at 10:45 (shown). ***¾
Benoit & Angle went on to win the tournament by beating Edge & Mysterio in the finals. That match will appear in this series much, much farther down the line. As in, I’m going to do a post or two on the best tag team matches that weren’t attributed to a top 100 tag team, as Benoit & Angle are ranked in the 120ish range at any given time, and Edge & Rey Mysterio don’t have a tag team listing on Cagematch for whatever reason.
October 26, 2002 – Manchester, Greater Manchester
Chris Benoit & Kurt Angle def. Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Rebellion. Benoit & Angle still weren’t getting along, so it was stipulated that if they attacked each other during this match they’d be suspended. This crowd was much more into Angle than any of the other three guys. At least at the top of the match, the referee seems much more interested in maintaining the tag rules. This took forever to get going. It was never boring, but it stayed in first gear for quite a while with very little to make the first 10 minutes memorable. Angle finally got a hot tag and got the crowd all riled up. Sadly, that didn’t lead to anything particularly memorable either. The finish was similar to the Smackdown match, except this time Chavo successfully hit Angle with the title belt (instead of a chair), only to get attacked by Benoit. Then, Benoit dropped Eddie’s head on the top rope and Angle hit the Angle Slam for the win at 20:15. Not bad, but disappointing after they did way more in less time on Smackdown. ***
November 17, 2002 – Manhattan, New York
Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero def. Chris Benoit & Kurt Angle and Edge & Rey Mysterio {WWE Tag Team Championship Elimination Match}
From Survivor Series. I don’t know how many times I’ve written this, but watching this PPV in college at a Hooters in Kalamazoo, Michigan was one of the most stressful wrestling watching experiences I’ve ever had. I smoked a half a pack of cigarettes during the Brock Lesnar vs. Big Show match. I was emotionally invested in Lesnar’s success, and I don’t remember much about this match because I was reeling from Lesnar’s loss. The crowd is pretty quiet to start, so they must have been feeling the same way. Edge & Mysterio had won the tag titles from Angle & Benoit on Smackdown in a 2/3 falls match shortly before this. There was a moment early in this match when Mysterio fell off the top rope and one wouldn’t be called crazy if they wondered if it was an accident. But Angle & Benoit played off of it well. That is, until Angle got Mysterio in a front facelock for what felt like forever while they presumably readjusted their game plan. After that, things picked up in a frenzied manner, though the referee kept track of who was legal the whole time. Los Guerreros tricked Benoit into thinking that Angle hit him with a title belt, when it was actually Chavo. That led to a bit of chaos and Edge hitting Benoit with a spear to eliminate Benoit’s team. The NYC crowd did not like the suplex boys being the first ones out, and they kept pretty quiet for the remainder of the match. Things were a little wonky looking during that final stretch too, so I understand their lack of enthusiasm. Chavo hit Mysterio with a title belt, and then for some reason Edge decided to fight with Chavo instead of helping Mysterio get free from Eddie’s Lasso from El Paso, which won Los Guerreros the titles at 19:26. I guess I forgot about this match as much because of its flaws as that I was in mourning for Lesnar’s title reign. ***¼
November 28, 2022 – Columbia, South Carolina
Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero def. Chris Benoit & Kurt Angle {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From Smackdown. Another note for those who remember this era of Smackdown being perfect, the commentators spend the opening minutes of this match wondering who Stephanie McMahon will force to face the 79-year-old Fabulous Moolah later in the night. Los Guerreros were getting their asses kicked, and when they tried to get intentionally and obnoxiously counted out, the referee said that there were no count outs in this match. Cute. This was awesome. Benoit & Angle tore through Los Guerreros, and it was everything that the champs could do to cheat where they could just to stay alive. What wound up saving the titles for Eddie & Chavo was the continuing discord between the challengers. Specifically, Angle not wanting to let Benoit get the winning submission, despite Benoit being legal. This led to two moments when Angle put on illegal anklelocks on his opponents only to be told by the referee that it wouldn’t count, and give Los Guerreros openings for low blows and title belt shots. In the end, Chavo hit Benoit with a belt and knocked Angle to the floor, allowing a half-unconscious Eddie to crawl onto Benoit for the win at 13:12 (shown of 17:30). Terrific stuff that had the crowd going nuts. ****
December 12, 2002 – Atlanta, Georgia
Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero def. Chris Benoit & Billy Kidman {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From Smackdown. Kidman earned this shot by successfully defending his Cruiserweight Championship against Chavo the week before. Meanwhile, Eddie knocked Benoit out of a WWE Championship contender match that same night, so he gets to be Kidman’s partner. And goddamn this was awesome too. Eddie and Benoit tried to tear each other apart, which I’m sure had me super stoked for their (ultimately kind of disappointing) PPV match at Armageddon. Kidman came in and got brutalized by a still seething Eddie, but then realized that his usual agile-but-not-so-intense offense wasn’t going to get the job done and turned up the dial on his offense. Very cool. Benoit came in and forced Eddie to tap to a gnarly crossface immediately, but Chavo had the referee tied up. That happened during a weirdly placed commercial break, but we got the replay after the fact. Los Guerreros stopped taking chances and were at their most dastardly in an effort to keep Kidman from being able to tag out. That got the crowd all foamed up. It got Benoit foamed up too, eventually enough for him to come in and clean house without a tag. And then Michael Cole got foamed up on commentary because the referee counted a pin attempt for Benoit. I’m with you Cole, that took me all the way out of an otherwise dope match. It’s even more frustrating because the finish played right into Benoit being too steamed and putting Chavo in a crossface, distracted from Eddie dodging Kidman’s shooting star press and using the ropes to pin him for the win at 11:51 (shown of 15:14). God dammit. You take that one pin attempt out of this match and it’s one of my favorites in recent memory. As it is, still excellent, but one that I’ll remember for a glaring flaw at a pivotal moment. ****
December 26, 2022 – Tulsa, Oklahoma
Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero def. Edge & Billy Kidman {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From Smackdown. Kidman picked Edge to be his partner here, but why Kidman got another title shot is mystifying seeing as he got his ass kicked by Eddie in a singles match the week before. Another thing that is mystifying is the referee deciding that the Guerreros would lose the titles if they were deliberately counted out. If referees have that power, why wouldn’t they always use it? A bit later, Eddie gets disqualified when he pulls the ref’s foot while he’s counting a pin for Kidman on Chavo, and said ref then restarts the match with no disqualifications. That feels like it’s more in a referee’s purview, but even still mostly seems like a call for an ever-present WWE authority figure to make. The constant restarting feels very Heyman (and Vince Russo ripping off Heyman). A-Train, who had already injured Mysterio, ran out to attack Edge. That left Kidman alone to get hit with Eddie’s frog splash and lose at 12:11 (shown of 15:46). This was fast-paced and fun, but eventually started to feel like it was organized by someone with ADHD. ***
As much fun as it might be fun to see Los Guerreros beat the team of John Cena & B-2 (Bull Buchanan/Brooks Jensen’s Dad) in a short match, I’m going to save myself a chunk of time and that even those of you who were fans at the time don’t remember it for a reason.
February 6, 2003 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Shelton Benjamin & Charlie Haas def. Eddie Guerrero & Chavo Guerrero {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From Smackdown. Team Angle/The World’s Greatest Tag Team are ranked in the 195ish area of Cagematch’s all time list, so we won’t be seeing much more of them in this series. In fact, as of now I think only one more match of theirs made the cut. This match was paced out incredibly well, and having Team Angle outmaneuver and discombobulate Los Guerreros was a fun way to transition the titles. My only issue with this match, and it’s a rather big one, is that the fans weren’t buying into the challengers, so the vibe around this thing didn’t feel very important. But I love that despite Eddie trying to win by pinning the illegal man, the referee was having none of it and Haas was able to sneak in and roll Eddie up for the win and the titles at 12:43 (shown of 15:36). ***¼
Los Guerreros continued teaming for another year, winning and losing the belts once more. But then Chavo turned on Eddie so that Eddie could get a singles win and then go off on his own and became WWE Champion. Eddie died a couple years later, a rare performer passing away while at or near the peak of his career. Chavo went on to have a middling career in WWE that ended in 2011, a completely forgettable run in TNA, a decent little cameo of a run in Lucha Underground, and then a solid career training people to wrestle for Hollywood movies and TV shows.
It was fun to go back and take a look at some lesser-regarded matches from this period, a few of which are fantastic. Last thing: the Lasso from El Passo was a terrible looking submission hold.