
New Day, Enzo Amore and Big Cass the Catalysts to WWE's Tag Team Renaissance
The continued dominance of The New Day and the recent arrivals of Enzo Amore and Colin "Big Cass" Cassady have reinvigorated tag team wrestling in WWE and will spark a renaissance in the division.
For years, WWE has been a wasteland for tag teams. All too often, the division was ignored or cast aside, left to wallow in mediocrity or, worse, irrelevancy. Title reigns stretched far longer than they should have, the result of a lack of depth in the division. Superstars were thrown together in random tag teams and given runs with gold that helped diminish the sanctity of tag team wrestling.
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A lack of dynamic characters and an abundance of impatience when it came to developing teams and focusing on the tag titles only further dragged the division into the depths of despair.
The New Day have changed all of that, erasing memories of Michael McGillicutty and David Otunga's reign of monotony and the New Age Outlaws' run that lacked logic and youth. They overcame early backlash, their straight motivational gimmick failing miserably to register with audiences, to achieve greatness. A molten-hot act, Xavier Woos, Kofi Kingston and Big E have captured the attention of fans, getting over with their sheer ridiculousness and fearless attempts at humor.
They are different, dynamic and their popularity with audiences has helped bring tag team wrestling to the forefront for the first time in years. That they are as popular as they are, even during their stint as heels, has only helped drum up interest for the same tag team titles that have long been undervalued by WWE management.
The sudden arrival of Enzo Amore and Colin "Big Cass" Cassady to Raw and SmackDown and the wealth of crowd support the longtime NXT stars enjoy will only help the rebuilding of the tag team scene in WWE.
With The New Day leading the way and Amore and Cass carrying so much goodwill, the division finally has more than one act it can build around. The result, as fans are already witnessing, is multiple feuds showcasing the talented teams the company touts.
Kingston, Woods and Big E have worked everyone from The Usos to The Lucha Dragons and back. They are the premiere team in the company, but with a tournament to decide their next top contender featuring another new tandem to the main roster, The Vaudevillains, the trio may meet its match in the form of two dastardly men's men.
Couple that with Amore and Cass' developing feud with old-school, future Hall of Famers The Dudley Boyz, and you have the foundation for the best tag team division WWE has featured in nearly a decade.
And what of Karl Anderson and Luke Gallows, who made their shocking debut on last Monday's episode of Raw, attacking The Usos and leaving them battered following a savage beatdown. Could the former Bullet Club duo be infiltrating the tag division, setting up a third rivalry with Jimmy and Jey?
If that is the case, WWE will force eyes to the tag division, making sure the audience knows how important it is in the company post-WrestleMania.
New Day, Amore and Cassady have generated interest in a division that has long laid dormant, its importance diminished by questionable booking and a lack of focus on the part of those charged with scripting it.
As long as those two teams maintain their current popularity and WWE Creative can continue building interesting teams and matches around them, fans can expect a tag team renaissance the likes of which has not existed since the height of The Hart Foundation, Demolition, The Rockers, The Brain Busters and The British Bulldogs in the late 1980s.
The world of professional wrestling in 2016 will be much better for it.



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