WINC Watchlist: Best Women’s Matches Of All Time

Watching night one of WWE WrestleMania 39 in real time was a magical experience, with Rhea Ripley vs. Charlotte Flair being a big contributing factor. Watching it again in 2025 was no different.

Before “The Eradicator” and “The Queen” even locked up on the grand stage, many fans and pundits, including us Wrestling Inc. staff, called for this WWE SmackDown Women’s Championship match to be fitted in the night one main event slot. The reason? Storytelling and star power.

Ripley and Flair previously squared off at “The Shows of Shows” in 2020, albeit in the smaller and much quieter space of the WWE Performance Center. Still, the WWE Universe heavily pushed for the younger, “WWE NXT” version of Ripley to make a mark by defeating Flair, who came into their NXT Women’s Championship match with more experience and more titles to her respective name in WWE. WWE instead went the opposite route as Flair bested the rookie in a 20-minute affair to add yet another championship to her collection.

Fast forward to 2023, Ripley returned to Flair, seeking not only retribution, but also the SmackDown Women’s Championship — a title she guaranteed herself a shot at by winning the 2023 Women’s Royal Rumble (with a then-record-setting outing of 1 hour, 1 minute and 8 seconds, by the way). This go around, Ripley approached Flair with even more strength, experience, and determination. She could have even come along with her Judgment Day stablemates as well, but she shined bright on her own, and in doing so, catapulted her career to the next level.

The SmackDown Women’s Champion match itself, situated in the semi-main event of WrestleMania 39, can best be described as a back-and-forth slugfest laced with near falls, timely counters, and an open invitation to beat the s*** out of each other. Flair extended the emotional invitation after Ripley kicked out of a spear, exclaiming that if Ripley wanted her spot in the WWE hierarchy, she’d have to bring forth her best strikes. Ripley did as such, with Flair also firing off a series of elbow strikes and a big boot that put the Australian in position to then be locked into a Figure Four.

Showing her growth and ring awareness, Ripley pulled herself to the nearby bottom rope to break Flair’s submission hold — something that proved pivotal in finally setting Ripley up for the match-winning pinfall. Though exhausted, Flair followed Ripley to the corner for what she hoped to potentially be an avalanche fallaway slam. Ripley, again displaying her ring awareness, instead bounced Flair’s head off the ring post and shouted “It’s my time!” What followed was an avalanche Riptide that left the crowd buzzing with joy, Rhea Ripley as the new champion, and Charlotte Flair’s face plastered with a proud smile. And I have to say: same, Charlotte, same.

In that moment, Ripley solidified herself as a premier star in WWE. Meanwhile, Flair, a frequenter of aerial moves and submissions, showed fans a more physical side of herself, which honestly came as a breath of fresh air. The cherry on top? Flair reportedly pushed for the match to go way longer than planned, leading to a truly must-see, 24-minute performance.

Written by Ella Jay

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