Kofi Kingston, Xavier Woods, and Big E formed one of the iconic stables in WWE history, resulting in a few of one of the best tag team matches of the fashionable era, in 2014. The Latest Day was formed on a July episode of “WWE Raw,” but made their official debut during a November edition of “WWE SmackDown.” Through the sheer “power of positivity,” together with ridiculous antics, Latest Day won their way into the hearts of fans.
Latest Day won their first WWE Tag Team Championships at Extreme Rules in 2015, and would defend the gold throughout their quite a few reigns under freebird rules. The group would also support one another throughout their singles careers, including WWE Championship and King of the Ring victories.
In the case of that support, an enormous honorable mention on this list can be the gauntlet match on the March 26, 2019 episode of “WWE SmackDown,” within the midst of Kofi-Mania, where Big E and Woods won the chance to get Kingston right into a WWE Championship match against Daniel Bryan at WrestleMania 35. Woods and Big E defeated The Good Brothers, Rusev and Shinsuke Nakamura, The Bar, The Usos (via forfeit), and Bryan himself, alongside Rowan.
From giant boxes of “Booty O’s” cereal on the WrestleMania stage, to Francesca the trombone, to Big E’s gyrations, the stable was a staple of WWE as a trio for nearly ten years. Tragically, Big E suffered a career-ending neck injury during a match in 2022, and Latest Day was never the identical. Woods and Kingston would turn heel through the official 10-year anniversary celebration of Latest Day on an episode of “Raw,” and ousted Big E.
Prior to the heel turn, Woods, Kingston, and Big E had a plethora of exciting, great matches together. There could also be too many to call, but we have ranked five of what we would consider the best.
5. VS. Sheamus & Cesaro, Roadblock 2016
The Latest Day had one of the impressive runs with the tag team championships in WWE history once they captured the belts for the second time at SummerSlam in 2015. While that fatal four-way victory on the “Biggest Party of the Summer” would begin their 483 day-long reign, the match where they dropped the titles is one in every of their best. Kingston and Big E lost the titles to Sheamus and Cesaro, then often called The Bar, at Roadblock: End of the Line in 2016.
Cesaro was hot right out of the gate, immediately nailing Kingston with a dropkick, then taking him out with uppercuts within the corners. The Bar would tag out and in, dominating Kingston and keeping him away from Big E. The challengers’ strong offense can be an enormous theme of the match.
While The Bar dominated the primary portion, Latest Day would try and rally when Big E took out Sheamus with a spear, they usually almost had the match won with a kick from Woods on the skin right into a Big Ending. The match went back-and-forth, until Sheamus hit a Brogue Kick to Big E on the skin and Cesaro got Kingston with the swing, right into a Sharpshooter. Kingston technically tapped out, but Woods distracted the referee.
In the long run, The Bar used sneaky tactics to get the victory, once they faked the tag. Sheamus remained legal, unbeknownst to Kingston, who hit the Trouble in Paradise to Cesaro, and Sheamus was capable of roll him up for the win.
The Latest Day would go on to prove they didn’t need gold around their waists to stay over with fans, though they’d be champions again quite a few times. How good their Roadblock match was is a main example of just how great Latest Day could make others look.
4. VS. The Shield, Survivor Series 2017
Survivor Series was once all about brand supremacy, which was the case within the 2017 match where Latest Day faced off against the recently-reunited Shield, however the three-on-three bout was different, and rather more exciting, than a conventional Survivor Series match. While there didn’t appear to be a likelihood that Big E, Kingston, and Woods would emerge victorious over Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, and Dean Ambrose, they actually tried, and it turned out to be a wonderful match. It was one more time Latest Day kicked off a PLE in a bbig way.
The match had plenty of excellent motion, including brawls at multiple points throughout, however the stables appeared to all the time have a solution to at least one one other’s offense. To kick off the second half of the bout, Big E hit an enormous spear to Ambrose to the ground. Woods was capable of dodge one Superman Punch by Reigns, but walked into one other, but Reigns wasn’t capable of hit the spear, and the match rolled on.
Latest Day looked to have the match won with back-to-back splashes on Ambrose, followed by double Midnight Hours to Ambrose and Rollins, but Reigns hit a spear to Kingston to interrupt up the pin attempt. The match broke down into one other brawl, but ultimately, it was the Shield to hit the triple power bomb on the second rope to Kingston to win.
It was a match that probably would not have happened outside of Survivor Series and the very fact Latest Day lead the siege from “SmackDown” to “Raw,” but it surely was an excellent, 21-minute plus bout that showcased what each stables could do. Latest Day hung in there with the Shield in a match that will hardly be remembered off the highest of fans’ minds, but is actually value a watch.
3. VS. The Usos vs. The Lucha Dragons, TLC 2015
The Latest Day and their antics were made for gimmick matches, and at TLC 2015, they put their tag team championships on the road in a triple threat ladder match against The Usos and The Lucha Dragons. While it was Big E and Kingston to defend the titles, Latest Day retained because of the assistance of the person advantage in Woods, who was also excellent on commentary.
Ladder matches are best known for being spot-fests, and whenever you add within the tag team aspect, that holds true. While all teams got of their big spots, the champions had loads of time to shine, and made the others look great by selling perfectly for his or her big moments.
Big E provided loads of muscle throughout, from brutalizing one in every of the Usos within the corner with a ladder to permit Kingston to hit a dropkick through the rungs, to bench pressing each Sin Cara and Kalisto off a ladder while being stuck underneath it.
In the ultimate act, there have been moments when an Uso or Lucha Dragons’ victory seemed certain, even after a Salina Del Sol by Kalisto from the highest of the ladder, probably the most viral spot of the match, tried to place a stop to that. With Kalisto climbing the ladder within the ring, Woods jumped up from commentary, declaring there was no disqualification, and hit Kalisto within the back along with his trombone. The move allowed Kingston to scale the ladder and retrieve Latest Day’s titles.
The match proved to be a wonderful opener of the 2015 premium live event, during a time where Latest Day were reaching their heyday. While all of the teams shined within the bout, it was Woods, Kingston, and Big E to emerge with their titles in tow.
2. VS. The Usos, SummerSlam Kickoff 2017
Once upon a time, WWE used to run matches on its pre-shows ahead of premium live events, especially big ones like SummerSlam when not all the things could go on the important card. Before SummerSlam 2017 officially got underway, Latest Day and The Usos faced-off, in top-of-the-line pre-show matches up to now, for the SmackDown Tag Team Championships. It will be Big E and Woods to defend the titles.
The newest match in what would change into a longstanding rivalry got loads of time, with the teams going over 19 minutes. The Usos were gunning for his or her fourth reign with the titles, however the Latest Day, who once held the gold for over 400-some days, weren’t letting them have the championships that easily.
The Usos fought hard, with Jey initially isolating Woods well away from Big E to begin out. The challengers controlled an excellent portion of the start of the bout, until a turning point where Woods hit an enormous counter, driving Jey face-first into the mat. Each men got the recent tag, but it surely was Big E to go to work. In a formidable spot, Woods was the person to hoist Big E on his shoulders and slam him on to Jey in the midst of the ring.
The Usos tried to rally with a double spinebuster to Big E, followed by a hip attack within the Latest Day’s corner, allowing for Woods to tag back in and hit a backstabber to Jimmy off Big E’s body. Woods hit a Shining Wizard, but it surely wasn’t enough to place Jey away. Latest Day hit the Up Up Down Down, but on the last second, Jimmy broke up the autumn. The Usos had one last burst of offense, culminating within the Double Uce, and were capable of pin Big E to win the titles.
1. VS The Usos, Hell in a Cell 2017
In what’s widely regarded by many as Latest Day’s best match, it was Big E and Woods to tackle Jimmy and Jey Uso in a Hell in a Cell match in 2017 for the SmackDown Tag Team Championships. The teams had traded the championships back-and-forth over the course of the yr, so the stipulation was actually perfect for this match. Despite Latest Day’s loss, the bout was historic, because it was the primary time the tag belts had been defended within the structure.
It was an ideal mix of comedy, because of Latest Day, and brutality. The teams wasted zero time getting under the ring to arm themselves, with kendo sticks, chairs, and chains. Comedy props were used as weapons throughout, including multiple trombones, in addition to a cowbell and gong. The Usos rallied and brought the intense to the match, nevertheless, with brutal kendo stick spots. In a single impressive spot sans weapons, Big E hit a Rock Bottom-like move to Jimmy from the apron, and Woods caught him as he was falling to hit a back breaker. They hit an Up up Down Down shortly after, but Jey saved the match.
Elsewhere, Latest Day trapped Jey within the corner with kendo stick stuck through the links within the cage. The Usos responded to the move with handcuffs and a kendo stick spot of their very own, where they brutalized Woods as he was hung by his wrists from the ring post.
In the long run, the Usos hit the double Uso Splash, compete with a chair laid out across Woods, for the victory. Woods and Big E’s comedic antics amidst the brutal nature of the match made for a singular, 22-minute bout, and it was top-of-the-line matches within the teams’ iconic feud.






