The Top 100 Tag Teams of All Time | 67: Team Hell No

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Daniel Bryan & Kane’s team, Team Hell No, was born out of their feud against each other. At No Way Out 2012, they met in a triple threat also including WWE Champion CM Punk. Punk retained the title, and Bryan kept chasing after him. Eventually, General Manager AJ Lee punished Bryan for his persistence by booking him against Kane at SummerSlam. The gimmick was that Kane was a violent monster, and that Bryan was becoming a rage demon himself because the audience kept changing “YES” while he shouted “NO.”  This led to the couples therapy skits that have become infamous, and a nine-month run as a tag team. 

They were ranked number 66 on Cagematch’s list of top tag teams as of April 2022, and then plummeted to number 75 on the April 2023 list. Could this be because of Kane’s political career? Who’s to say? Either way, they’re number 67 on my list, and as with all tag teams whose runs were short, I’ll be doing this one in chronological order. Bryan & Kane beat Kofi Kingston & R-Truth for the tag titles at Night of Champions in September of 2012 in a forgettable match. They defended the titles six times before doing so in a match that the Cagematch users felt was good enough to rate favorably.  

January 27, 2013 – Phoenix, Arizona 

Daniel Bryan & Kane def. Cody Rhodes & Damien Sandow {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Royal Rumble. This was the Rhodes Scholars fourth shot at Kane & Bryan’s titles. Rhodes’ whole personality around this time was his mustache. The Rhodes Scholars were a decent enough lower card heel team, and as such they were able to give the popular Team Hell No (who had just graduated from therapy, as if that’s a thing) a match that would have been very satisfying if it was on Raw. But this was a PPV, and while the Rumble PPV often rushes through everything but the main event, it still sticks out as only slightly above average out of context. Bryan caught Sandow with the No Lock for the win at 9:24. This match made me curious about a very long match that these two teams had a month earlier on Main Event, so I checked that out here. ***

May 19, 2013 – St. Louis, Missouri 

Roman Reigns & Seth Rollins def. Daniel Bryan & Kane {WWE Tag Team Championship Tornado Match}
From WWE Extreme Rules. I think this match gets slept on because it’s short, but it’s awesome. One of if not the best tag team match I’ve seen that’s under ten minutes. They jam packed this with action, but not the kind that meant that anyone had to no-sell something and make the match hard to believe. Bryan & Kane were able to match the Shield’s chemistry and animosity, and it wasn’t until Reigns figured out how to use Kane as a weapon against Bryan that he was able to take comfortable control. That led to Reigns lifting up Bryan in a Torture Rack and Rollins bringing him down with a diving knee drop for the win and the titles (joining Dean Ambrose, who won the United States Championship earlier in the night) at 7:24. Had that been three or four minutes longer at the same pace, people would be rightly flipping out over it at the time and still today. They’d be right to flip out over it anyway. ***¾ 

May 27, 2013 – Calgary, Alberta 

Roman Reigns & Seth Rollins def. Daniel Bryan & Kane {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Raw. The match was joined in progress after Bryan & Kane stopped the Shield from attacking Kofi Kingston. The most interesting thing about this match was how much regular dude energy Kane brought to it. He stood on the apron, cheering Bryan on like a good buddy would. Compare this to his character 15 years earlier, and for the majority of his run, and it’s a stark contrast. It works in the storyline because now he’s all about therapy, but it’s so goofy that it was impossible not to notice. Bryan was on his overcompensating for being the weak link in the team trip, wrestling very aggressively until it caught up with him. In the end, Kane was too concerned with Bryan’s rage and wasn’t paying attention when Rollins hit him with a jumping knee for the win at 15:29 (shown of 18:35). The finish was narratively appropriate, but felt very sudden and unsatisfying. Very good match otherwise. ***½ 

Bryan & Kane went on to break the Shield’s undefeated streak in six-man tag matches on Smackdown (though they’d technically done it months earlier by disqualification on Raw), and then they went their separate ways in search of singles glory. A year later, they had a PPV match against each other at Extreme Rules, but for the most part they stayed out of each other’s way. Also, Bryan took a few years off and had everyone thinking he might be forced to retire. But then, in 2018, the Bludgeon Brothers forced them into a brief reunion, leading to a PPV tag title match. 

July 3, 2018 – Omaha, Nebraska 

Daniel Bryan & Kane def. Jimmy Uso & Jey Uso
From WWE Smackdown. This match doesn’t have any ratings on Cagematch but it was reasonably well-reviewed at the time, and the Team Hell No vs. Big E Langston & Dolph Ziggler match that I’m bumping for it was crap. If the Usos had won, they would have been added to the tag team match at the PPV. The five year gap between this and the last match make it obvious how much slimmer Bryan became later in his career. No need to look beefy up against Triple H in 2018, I guess. Also, you know, fake retirement. This match was kind of mid, but at least it didn’t suck. The Usos were only in control for a minute, and Kane was looking goofy and out of character. He was in the middle of his mayoral campaign, and he was also quite old at this point. Bryan hit one of the Usos with the running knee and Kane hit the other with a chokeslam for the win at 9:56 (shown of 11:42). **¾ 

July 15, 2018 – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 

Harper & Rowan def. Daniel Bryan & Kane {WWE Smackdown Tag Team Championship Match}
From WWE Extreme Rules. Bryan started the match on his own because Kane had been attacked backstage by the champs. Bryan does a solid job holding his own, but the crowd is subdued because they don’t buy that he can win. Plus nobody gets close enough to winning to even get in any nearfalls. Which makes it baffling that before a single pin is attempted, Kane comes out in a boot. But Bryan tags in almost immediately, and it’s not long after that before the champs hit him with a Doomsday Device powerbomb situation for the win at 8:23. Not sure what they were going for here, but I have to assume they didn’t achieve it. Pretty disappointing all around. **¼ 

Kane pretty much stopped wrestling after this and settled into his role as a mayor. Bryan won the WWE Championship a few months later, held it for a few months, and then eventually moved on to AEW where he works and gets injured frequently today. 

The frustrating thing about this team for the purposes of this series is that the two things that people loved about them, their skits and their six-man tag team matches against the Shield, aren’t what this series is about. Their two-on-two tag team matches range from pretty good to not so good. I can’t say that their run was bad, if nothing else you have to call it successful because of the memorable moments and the fact that they were tag champs for two-thirds of a year. But top 100? I don’t agree, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the declining trajectory they’re on (they’re down even further now, to the 82 spot in August) continues.