Ranking EVERY Tag Team In WWE Today From Worst To Best

Double Vision.

By Michael Hamflett /

Vince McMahon might crow about having to pay double for the "same" old sh*t when he books tag team wrestling, but it's one of the few wrestling traditions he's failed to squeeze out of his show since first assuming control of his father's business in 1982.

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The tag match has been a means to an end for McMahon ever since, particularly following the advent of monthly pay-per-views - singles feuds dovetailing on go-home shows were free main events that didn't blow an ending, whilst actual doubles titles were too often left to fester in between brief and fleeting better days.

2019 is much the same, despite heir-to-the-throne Triple H saving the scene on NXT. It's for this reason the developmental duos won't be included on this list - they'd smash the curve and dominate the top end virtually without exception.

For better and - and these will feature first, so strap in - worse, this list is main roster exclusive, but will at least take note of recent or makeshift additions as well as those thriving or simply surviving across Raw and SmackDown Live's uneven landscapes.

21. The B-Team

B as in 'bottom of the pile', which is where this idea should have stayed long before WWE decided to put the Raw Tag Team Championships on the former Miztourage in 2018.

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Bo Dallas and Curtis Axel deserve a huge amount of respect for bouncing from their subservient roles alongside 'The A-Lister' into a comedy act with a catchy entrance theme that briefly got them over, but the summer push they received saw the entire roster's credibility steamrolled as a result.

The only reason they still fit on the main roster is because they are literally total losers. WWE 'Superstars' no fan would actively aspire to be or feel inspired to hate. Fault lies squarely with the company and not the performers.

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