Ringdivas.com Last Stand 2007 -womens Wrestling- Patched
The event's main event saw Sara Lee defeat Taya in a grueling singles match to become the new RingDivas.com Champion. The match was an intense, back-and-forth contest that left both competitors exhausted but exhilarated. Other notable matches on the card included a tag-team bout featuring Jennifer "VD" Swift and Sara Lee against Taya and Ariel, and a hard-hitting match between Luccas and Tynisha.
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
Among their extensive catalog, (frequently cross-referenced with its expanded home video release format, Battle Angels: The Last Stand ) remains one of the most culturally significant time capsules of the custom indie wrestling boom. 1. What was RingDivas.com?
remains the Alamo of hardcore women’s wrestling. They lost the battle (the website died). But the war for respect in violence? They won that long ago. RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-
: Acted as a primary antagonist/strategist during the matches. Atmosphere
: Features Alexa Lockhart introducing a "trump card" that shifts the momentum of the event. Dragon Star’s Appearance
The match quickly moved outside the ring, utilizing steel chairs, tables, and extreme elements to dictate the pace. The definitive climax arrived when Dumon executed a massive on Fairchild through a flaming table. Fairchild failed to answer the referee's 10-count, cementing Dumon's victory in what critics widely called the match of the night. 3. Technical Showcase: Submission Match The event's main event saw Sara Lee defeat
The 2007 "Last Stand" served as a showcase for some of the most popular independent female wrestlers of the time, many of whom also appeared in major promotions like WWE or TNA (now Impact Wrestling).
bringing in a secret weapon to the "Capital Punishment" scenario, which turned out to be Dragon Star. Notable Competitors
The 2007 edition of "Last Stand" was centered around a high-stakes designed to crown a definitive top contender for the promotion. Unlike mainstream promotions like WWE, which were still utilizing "Diva" gimmicks like Pudding Matches in 2007, RingDivas focused on longer-form wrestling matches that emphasized technical skill and physical endurance. Key Matches and Notable Talent For the pure drama, this was the main event of the heart
Last Stand 2007 was marketed as a definitive blowout—a culmination of feuds and rivalries that had been building across previous DVDs and live events. Given the nature of the platform, this was likely a DVD release or a streamed digital event that served as a "season finale" of sorts.
. In a moment that had the commentators—and the fans—reeling,
For the true connoisseur, Last Stand is not about video quality. It is about the sound of a wooden chair snapping across a woman’s back. It is about the roar of 147 drunk, dedicated fans who knew they were watching the end of an era. It is about the smell of a dying website giving its last drop of blood for the art of women’s wrestling.
1. Main Event: The RingDivas World Championship Fatal Four-Way
stands as a time capsule of a specific subculture in women’s wrestling—gritty, dangerous, and unapologetically adult. While not for all audiences, it remains historically significant for showing that before the “Women’s Evolution” in WWE, independent female wrestlers were already main-eventing violent stipulation matches on their own terms.