Ringdivascom Last Stand 2007 Womens Wrestling Top -

RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 event featured a highly physical card headlined by a Fatal Four Way Elimination Match for the RingDivas World Championship. The main event saw champion Empress Sayuri successfully defend her title against challenger Vanessa Kraven and surprise entrants Lacey Von Erich Sensational Sam Sexton

. Sayuri secured the victory by pinning Von Erich using the "Sayuri Driver". Other key matches from the event included: Last Woman Standing Match Destiny Dumon Brooke Fairchild

in a match involving chairs, tables, and a "Destiny DDT" through a flaming table. Standard Match Alexa Lockhart ringdivascom last stand 2007 womens wrestling top

in an "explosive" encounter that eventually broke down into a chaotic brawl involving multiple wrestlers. Tag Team Action : The event also featured a match with the team of Dragon Star against unknown opponents. specific wrestler or any of the other matches from this card? RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 (Womens Wrestling)


The Context: Before the Last Stand

To understand 2007, we have to go back to 2003. RingDivas.com emerged from the ashes of the late-90s "catfight" websites. However, unlike its purely fetish-driven predecessors, RingDivas attempted to blend legitimate athleticism with adult-themed hardcore matches. By 2005, they had a roster of genuine indie wrestlers—women like Sindy Spring, Viper, Caliente, and Heather The Lethal Leopard—who could work a technical style but were willing to bleed, chair-shot, and powerbomb through tables. RingDivas

By 2007, the landscape was shifting. Piracy was decimating pay-per-download sites. Credit card processors were cracking down on "sexually suggestive combat." RingDivas was bleeding money. Thus, the promotion decided to go out with a bang—not a whimper. The Last Stand was marketed as the final, definitive statement of the hardcore women’s wrestling era.

3. The Fans Bring the Weapons Match: Heather vs. Sahara

A "Carolina Barbecue" match in spirit, this was pure spectacle. Fans threw in hairbrushes, phone books, a toaster (unplugged, thankfully), and a jar of honey. The match devolved into a mud-and-glass (kayfabe sugar glass) spectacle. While not the technical "top" match, it was the most viewed clip on file-sharing networks in late 2007. The Context: Before the Last Stand To understand

Why "The Top" Matters: The Search for Quality Footage

For modern collectors, typing "ringdivascom last stand 2007 womens wrestling top" into search engines leads down a rabbit hole of dead links, torrents from 2009 with zero seeders, and heavily watermarked re-uploads. Why the obsession?

  1. The "Finality" Factor: Because RingDivas effectively died after this event (a brief revival in 2010 failed), "The Last Stand" serves as the finale to an era. Unlike WWE, where wrestlers have redemption arcs, here the final bell rang, and the promotion vanished.
  2. The Aesthetic: The digital grain, the fluorescent lights, the total lack of crowd barriers—it feels dangerous. In 2007, women’s wrestling on TV was about glitter and bikinis. This was blood, sweat, and non-consent theatricality.
  3. The Athletes: Several women in the "top" matches (notably Ariel X and a pre-fame wrestler known only as "Tana") went on to legitimate careers in SHIMMER and later AEW. Watching their raw, unpolished work here is a time capsule of their physical prime.