Ringdivas.com Last Stand: 2007 -womens Wrestling- __exclusive__
RingDivas was a proving ground for several notable talents. Here are some of the key figures associated with the promotion around the time of Last Stand 2007 :
By mid-2007, the site was hemorrhaging money. The cost of flying in hardcore talent, buying insurance for light tube matches, and fighting PayPal restrictions on "adult content" (despite having no nudity) was crippling. The owners decided to go out with a bang. No fade to black. No silent server shutdown. They booked a single, climactic super-show in a sweltering warehouse in southern New Jersey.
Want me to focus on any specific match or performer from this event or era? RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-
By 2007, the "Dream Slam" style matches (popularized by G.L.O.R.Y. and other associations) were in full swing. RingDivas became a destination for talent who could work. Last Stand 2007 was positioned as a climax for many of the promotion's biggest storylines, taking place in a packed gymnasium that felt intimate yet electric.
The wildcard, known for her speed and unorthodox maneuvers. RingDivas was a proving ground for several notable talents
Looking back at 2007, it sits at an interesting crossroads. It was:
The event was structured around two major tournaments and several high-profile grudge matches, showcasing the depth of the roster. The owners decided to go out with a bang
RingDivas.com successfully carved out a niche in 2007 by offering a "pay-per-download" model, allowing fans to access high-quality independent women’s wrestling directly. Last Stand 2007 was a testament to the growth of this niche, providing a platform for female wrestlers to showcase their talents outside the mainstream media spotlight.
By 2006, the site had expanded its reach. A short piece in a college publication described RingDivas as a place "for those who just love wrestling divas," distinguishing their roster from the "WWE divas" and labeling them as "girls that belong to an all-female wrestling organization". This was a crucial differentiator: RingDivas presented its talent as athletes and fighters, even if the presentation often leaned heavily into sexuality.
Rain wasn't trying to win the title. She wanted LuFisto to say "I quit" in front of LuFisto’s own family sitting in the front row (a rare inclusion for RingDivas).