Every Bullet Club Member Past & Present: Ranked From Worst To Best
10. Doc Gallows
Doc Gallows joined NJPW as part of 2013's World Tag League, forging an immediate alliance with Karl Anderson, who was one of Bullet Club's major players at the time. They won that year's tournament, and soon became a staple in the heavyweight tag division, notching three separate title reigns before eventually departing for WWE together in 2016.
Gallows is a serviceable big man whose loud, brash personality meshed perfectly with Bullet Club's western ethos, but he has never been a particularly exciting wrestler. He's adequate, but several levels below his long-time tag partner in terms of in-ring ability, with his deficiencies particularly noticeable as a singles wrestler in the G1 Climax.
Doc's size and strength should have made him a good choice as the group's enforcer, but BC have always had Bad Luck Fale to fill that particular void, meaning that the current WWE Raw star was used exclusively as a tag wrestler outside of major tournaments. Regardless, Gallows played a prominent role during one of Bullet Club's most important periods. Him and Anderson were cornerstones of an oft-neglected division, and while their matches rarely set the world on fire, their push supersedes this.