10 Most Underrated Tag Teams In WWE History
Giving these misfits and underachievers the respect they deserve.
Since Jimmy and Jey Uso defeated the New Age Outlaws on the March 10, 2014 episode of Monday Night Raw, the twin brothers have developed a reputation of being some of the most consistently great in-ring workers in the entire company. They have put tag team wrestling back on the map and have quickly cemented themselves as one of the best tag teams in modern wrestling history. By the time their days as active in-ring competitors are over, it will not be out of the question that the duo ranks alongside the Hart Foundation, the British Bulldogs, the Hardy Boyz, Edge and Christian, the Dudley Boyz and the aforementioned Outlaws as the elite teams to ever grace a Vince McMahon-owned ring. There are teams throughout WWE's five-decade history that do not necessarily rank among the greatest of all-time but certainly made a mark during their tenures with with company. They developed into fine tandems that rarely disappointed from bell-to-bell and were key parts of the promotion's booking plans. They were teams that served as the workhorses and, more times than not, made the bigger, brighter and more celebrated tag teams throughout WWE history look event better. These are their stories.