Ringdivas.com Last Stand 2007 -womens Wrestling- May 2026
RingDivas.com’s Last Stand 2007 delivered an intense night of women’s wrestling — from hard-hitting main events to high-flying undercard showstoppers — proving these athletes are a force to be reckoned with in both skill and spectacle.
If you want, I can expand this into a full-length article, write match-by-match summaries, draft promotional copy for social media, or create wrestler bios for the card. Which would you prefer?
1. The Four-Way Scramble (Opener): Ariel X vs. Rain vs. Lacey vs. Sumie Sakai This wasn't a technical classic; it was a brawl. Within three minutes, the action spilled into the crowd. Ariel X, known for her hybrid catch-wrestling style, locked a body scissors around a metal pole. Rain (future WWE's "Nora Greenwald" alias-adjacent) bladed hard way after a dropkick to the exposed concrete. Sakai, the veteran from Japan, anchored the chaos. The finish saw Lacey pin Rain with a bridging German suplex that cracked the old Legion floorboards. Winner: Lacey
2. "I Quit" Match: MsChif vs. Hailey Hatred This is the match that RingDivas.com forums still dissect seventeen years later. MsChif, the gothic chokeslam artist, vs. the powerhouse Hatred. In a call-back to old FMW tapes, the stipulation allowed no rope breaks. Hatred duct-taped MsChif’s arms to the top rope at the 8-minute mark and delivered 17 unanswered knife-edge chops. The visual of the night: MsChif spitting her trademark green mist directly into the eyes of the referee (by accident), leaving him blind. Hatred then produced a steel chain from her boot. The submission came when Hatred wrapped the chain around MsChif’s head and torqued a dragon sleeper. MsChif, unable to breathe, screamed "I QUIT" into the house mic. The crowd went silent. Winner: Hailey Hatred RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-
3. Hardcore Title Retirement Match: "The Demon" Daffney (c) vs. Lexie Fyfe For the pure drama, this was the main event of the heart. Daffney (RIP, a legend lost too soon) was the reigning champion and the soul of RingDivas. Lexie Fyfe was the wily veteran who had started in the 90s. The gimmick: the loser’s career ends, and the title is retired regardless of outcome. The weapons included a barbed wire baseball bat, a cookie sheet (Indy staple), and a broken kendo stick. At the 14-minute mark, Daffney attempted a top-rope Frankensteiner, but Fyfe reversed it into a powerbomb through a table set up on the floor. Daffney’s leg bent unnaturally. With the referee checking on her, Fyfe dragged Daffney’s limp body into the ring and applied a single-leg crab. The champion clawed for the ropes—there were none (no rope breaks, again). After 22 seconds of screaming, Daffney passed out from pain. Winner and FINAL RingDivas Hardcore Champion: Lexie Fyfe
Fyfe did not celebrate. She picked up Daffney, raised her hand, and threw the title belt into the crowd. A fan in a Motorhead shirt still owns it, reportedly.
The event was structured around two major tournaments and several high-profile grudge matches, showcasing the depth of the roster. RingDivas
The Return of Lexie Fyfe The co-main event of the evening featured a legend of the independent scene, Lexie Fyfe, taking on RingDivas mainstay Bobbi Billard. By 2007, Fyfe was a veteran who had toured the world, known as "The Wife of a Die Hard" and for her technical prowess. The match was a classic "Veteran vs. Star" dynamic. Billard, who possessed the look of a Hollywood starlet, was the face of the promotion, but Fyfe played the role of the spoiler perfectly. The storytelling here was paramount—Billard had to dig deep to overcome Fyfe’s experience. While fans often remember the glamour of RingDivas, this match highlighted that the in-ring product could stand on its own merits.
The Tournament Finals The undercard was bolstered by tournament brackets that gave the show a "big fight" feel. The elimination format forced the wrestlers to work smarter, conserving energy for later rounds, which added a layer of psychology often missing in single-spot shows. These matches featured talents like Francine (ECW original) and Amy Lee, bringing hardcore credibility to a card that also featured models. This juxtaposition was RingDivas' secret sauce: the ability to book a legitimate striker against a glamour girl and make the crowd believe the model had a fighting chance.
| Positive | Negative | |----------|----------| | High-risk moves and authentic hate in feuds | Low production values compared to mainstream | | Memorable final moments for several wrestlers | Uneven match quality; some filler bouts | | Raven’s cage win called an emotional high point | Tone shifts awkwardly between hardcore and adult comedy | The sendoff: The lights went out
The main event was the tragedy. Ariel—post-WWE, pre-TNA—was the "Face of RingDivas." Sumie Sakai (who would later win the first NJPW Women’s title years later) was the "Heart."
The stipulation was brutal: The loser must retire from wrestling forever (kayfabe). The weapons: A glass table, thumbtacks, and a RingDivas.com branded fire extinguisher.
The story: Ariel had sold out. In the plot, she was shutting down RingDivas to join a "corporate fed." Sumie was fighting for the DVD subscribers. The match was structured as a "Apology vs. Pride" fight.
Key spots:
The sendoff: The lights went out. When they came back on, the entire roster (including the injured from earlier matches) stood on the stage. Ariel, crying real tears, handed Sumie the domain name of RingDivas.com on a laminated card. Sumie lit it on fire. The show ended with a single frame of text: "No reruns. No regrets. Goodnight, Divas."