There’s a reason people who “don’t even watch wrestling” know who Stone Cold Steve Austin is. Or why a match from 1987 still gets referenced in think pieces today. The best feuds in pro wrestling aren’t just about two guys fighting — they’re about conflict, identity, and the kind of storytelling that gets under your skin whether you want it to or not.
These are the ten rivalries that did exactly that.
10. Randy Savage vs. Ricky Steamboat
WWF, 1986-1987
Before anyone had figured out what a truly great wrestling match could look like, Randy Savage and Ricky Steamboat sat down and essentially invented it. The setup was simple and vicious: Savage drove Steamboat’s throat into the guardrail, then dropped a ring bell onto his larynx from the top rope, putting him out of action. From that moment on, the crowd wanted revenge in the worst way.
What they got at WrestleMania III — in front of 93,173 fans packed into the Pontiac Silverdome in Michigan — was 14 minutes and 35 seconds of pure, breathless wrestling, complete with 22 pin attempts and almost no wasted movement. Steamboat won the Intercontinental title and stole the show from a card headlined by Hogan and Andre the Giant. Savage himself later said that everywhere he went, fans brought up this match above all others. Thirty-plus years later, they still do.
9. Sami Zayn vs. Kevin Owens
Independent Circuit / NXT / WWE, 2002–Present
Most feuds have a beginning and an end. This one just keeps finding new chapters.
Sami Zayn and Kevin Owens first fought each other in 2002 in IWS, a small Canadian indie promotion, and went on to tear apart PWG, Ring of Honor, NXT, and WWE across the next two decades. What makes it work is that it’s never just about the belt or the spot on the card — it’s about two people who genuinely know each other too well. The betrayals hit harder because the friendship was real. The reunions feel earned because you’ve watched them earn it.
By the time they stumbled into an unlikely tag team championship run together — partly as a result of Zayn’s absurd infiltration of The Bloodline — the whole thing had taken on a dimension no writer could have planned. No modern feud has more history or more heart.
8. Edge vs. John Cena
WWE, 2006–2009
Edge and Cena didn’t like each other, and it showed. Edge was the guy who would cash in a Money in the Bank briefcase at 2 in the morning on a wounded champion — which he literally did — while Cena was the company’s straight-laced golden boy who couldn’t be bought or bent. The contrast was perfect.
What elevated this beyond a standard good-vs.-evil feud was that Edge was genuinely compelling as the villain, not just cartoonishly evil. He was smart, petty, and opportunistic in ways that felt real. Their TLC matches were some of the most brutal and athletic spectacles of the era, and the feud had enough twists and title changes to sustain multiple years without feeling tired. It’s a rivalry that holds up much better than people give it credit for.
7. Ric Flair vs. Dusty Rhodes
EVERYWHERE – NEVER ENDED REALLY
Before WWE dominated everything, American wrestling was a patchwork of regional territories — and the NWA produced some of the most sustained, genuinely emotional feuds the business has ever seen. The crown jewel of that era was Ric Flair against Dusty Rhodes.
The contrast couldn’t have been sharper. Flair was all private jets, designer robes, and championship gold — a man born to make you despise him. Dusty was the “American Dream,” a heavyset guy from the Carolinas who talked and fought for everyday working people. It was class warfare turned into pro wrestling, and arenas sold out for it night after night for over a decade. This feud is the reason the NWA still means something to people who weren’t even alive to see it.
6. John Cena vs. CM Punk
WWE, 2011–2013
On June 27, 2011, CM Punk sat cross-legged at the top of the entrance ramp and delivered what became known as “the Pipe Bomb” — a promo that blurred the line between scripted television and genuine grievance so completely that even some media outlets weren’t sure what they’d just watched. Nothing in the promo was scripted by WWE writers. Punk was saying what he actually thought, with permission to say it on live TV, and it showed.
Their match at Money in the Bank 2011 in Chicago — Punk’s hometown — was a five-star classic according to Dave Meltzer, the first WWE match to receive that rating since 1997. The atmosphere was unlike anything seen in years: 15,000 fans treating Cena like the villain and Punk like a returning hero. Punk won the title, walked out of the arena, and posed for photos on the street with his friends. For a moment, it felt like anything could happen in WWE. That feeling is rarer than it should be.
5. Kane vs. The Undertaker
WWF/WWE, 1997–2010
This one hits home. I was at the age where I still thought wrestling was real. No feud in WWE history has a better origin story. For months in 1997, Paul Bearer — Undertaker’s long-time manager — hinted at a dark secret: that Undertaker had started a fire as a child that killed his parents and his younger brother Kane. Then, during the very first Hell in a Cell match at Badd Blood: In Your House in October 1997, the lights went out, the arena turned red, and out walked a 7-foot masked monster in red and black. Kane ripped the cell door clean off its hinges, stood face-to-face with his brother, and Tombstoned him — costing Undertaker the match.
What followed was one of the most gothic, emotionally rich storylines WWE has ever produced. Undertaker initially refused to fight his own brother no matter what Kane did to provoke him — and Kane did plenty, including burning a casket with Undertaker inside it at the 1998 Royal Rumble. When they finally met at WrestleMania XIV, it took Undertaker three Tombstone Piledrivers to put Kane away. Their first Inferno match followed shortly after. Then a brief, uneasy alliance. Then betrayal again.
The feud never truly ended — it just kept finding new reasons to restart, spanning more than a decade of feuds, tag title runs, Buried Alive matches, and Hell in a Cell rematches. The in-ring quality was inconsistent, but as a piece of long-form storytelling driven by two iconic characters and one of wrestling’s greatest managers in Paul Bearer, it has no equal. Kane’s debut alone is considered by many the greatest character introduction in wrestling history.
4. Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart
WWF, 1992–1997
The real heat between these two made everything better and everything more volatile. Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels genuinely could not stand each other — their professional jealousy, their clashing personalities, their competing visions of what wrestling should be — and all of it ended up on screen whether it was meant to or not.
What they produced together was extraordinary. Their 61 minute Iron Man Match at WrestleMania XII is still talked about today. And then came Montreal in November 1997, where Vince McMahon had the referee ring the bell while Bret was still locked in the Sharpshooter, costing him the title on his last night in WWE. It wasn’t a storyline. It actually happened. Bret didn’t know it was coming. The look on his face when he realized it was real is one of the most haunting images in wrestling history. No rivalry has ever ended quite so messily, or been quite so impossible to look away from
3. The Rock vs. Steve Austin
WWF, 1997–2003
They headlined WrestleMania together three times — at XV, XVII, and XIX — and each match felt like the biggest possible version of itself. The Rock and Steve Austin had the kind of chemistry that makes everything look effortless: the timing, the crowd manipulation, the ability to take a moment and stretch it until the whole building was vibrating.
Austin was the blue-collar brawler from Texas. The Rock was the arrogant, preening Hollywood star who happened to be one of the greatest talkers the business has ever produced. Together they carried the Attitude Era to its highest peaks and gave WWF the ammunition it needed to finally pull ahead of WCW in the ratings. Austin’s last match for 19 years was against The Rock at WrestleMania XIX in 2003. They could have phoned it in. They didn’t.
2. Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada
NJPW / AEW, 2017–Present
This feud didn’t just produce great matches — it changed the wrestling business.
Kenny Omega had just become the first foreigner to win New Japan’s prestigious G1 Climax tournament when he challenged Okada for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship at Wrestle Kingdom 11 in January 2017. What followed earned a record-breaking six-star rating from Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer, who called it one of the greatest matches in the history of professional wrestling. Across four bouts in NJPW — accumulating more than 200 minutes of combined match time — the two men established a standard for in-ring work that genuinely had not existed before. New Japan’s subscriber numbers spiked after Wrestle Kingdom 11 alone. The buzz from this rivalry drew new audiences to wrestling worldwide and helped lay the creative groundwork for AEW’s founding. Their rematch at Dominion 6.9 in 2018 received seven stars from Meltzer — a number that felt impossible until it wasn’t.
In terms of pure in-ring achievement, nothing in the 21st century comes close.
1. Steve Austin vs. Vince McMahon
WWF, 1997–2003
It started on September 22, 1997, when Austin hit McMahon with a Stunner on Raw — a moment described as “previously unthinkable” because McMahon had simply been the voice of the company until that point. Nobody expected the owner to become a character. Nobody expected the character to work this well.
The genius of Austin vs. McMahon is that it didn’t require any suspension of disbelief. Every working person in America already knew what it felt like to have a boss who made their life a misery for no good reason. McMahon was that boss — pompous, vindictive, and desperate to control something he couldn’t quite break. Austin was the guy who refused to be broken, who showed up every week and did exactly what McMahon told him not to, and drank a beer over his boss’s limp body while the crowd lost its mind.
This feud helped WWE survive the Monday Night Wars. It made Austin arguably the most popular professional wrestler who ever lived. It produced television so compelling that even people who’d never watched wrestling were tuning in to see what happened next. Some feuds are great wrestling. Some feuds are great entertainment. Every once in a while, you get one that’s genuinely great storytelling — and this is the best example the business has ever produced.
The best wrestling feuds work because they tap into something universal — jealousy, betrayal, the need to prove yourself, the desire to see the underdog finally win. These ten rivalries did all of that and then some.
ALL OPINIONS ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHOR


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