With Tyson Kidd suffering a broken neck and the Prime Time Players slowly growing into their babyface act, WWE's never needed Jimmy and Jey Uso back on the roster to solidify one or two segments of Raw. Sadly, the Usos probably won't be back until Survivor Series, so tag team wrestling will most certainly be an issue of concern. The New Day are fantastic, but they're heels. Building a tag team division around a trio that doesn't have compelling babyfaces that can sell for their skullduggery makes for boring television. In a way, it also gets the heels a certain amount of babyface credibility too, in the sense that the heels become so entertaining at being so bad that they eventually become good. Every villain needs a comparable hero, and the tag division sorely misses that.
Besides having been an independent professional wrestling manager for a decade, Marcus Dowling is a Washington, DC-based writer who has contributed to a plethora of online and print magazines and newspapers writing about music and popular culture over the past 15 years.