Women’s History Month Finale: Women’s Wrestling, Uncut — From Burke’s Carnivals to Today’s Global Main Events

March is Women’s History Month, and the biggest lie wrestling ever told was that women’s wrestling “arrived” when a major promotion finally decided it was convenient. Women’s wrestling didn’t arrive. It endured. It innovated. It drew money. It got watered down. It got revived. It got re-invented — again and again — across countries, styles, … Read more

Naomi: Proceed With Caution — The Glow That Became a Warning, and the Women’s History Month Story You Don’t Appreciate Until She’s Gone

March is Women’s History Month, and Naomi’s career is the kind that reads differently depending on when you jumped in. Early on, she was the electric athlete who could flip a crowd with one entrance. Then she became the woman who kept getting momentum… and still had to fight for the company to treat her … Read more

Deonna Purrazzo: The Virtuosa, the Pure Standard, and the Career Built on Making Wrestling Look Easy

March is Women’s History Month, and Deonna Purrazzo is one of the cleanest “you either respect this or you don’t like wrestling” careers going today. Because her whole brand isn’t volume. It’s precision. The Virtuosa gimmick works because it isn’t a costume — it’s a mission statement. She’s built a decade-plus career on the idea … Read more

Taryn Terrell: The Hot Mess Who Turned Chaos Into Gold — and Why Her TNA Legacy Still Hits Different

March is Women’s History Month, and Taryn Terrell is one of those careers you have to talk about honestly to appreciate properly. Because her best work wasn’t “perfect.” It was alive. Emotional. Unpredictable. Sometimes ugly in the exact way wrestling needs to be when it’s trying to feel real. That’s why the “Hot Mess” gimmick … Read more

The Bella Twins: Twin Magic, the Divas-Era Lightning Rod, and the Women’s History Month Legacy You Still See Everywhere

March is Women’s History Month, and The Bella Twins are one of those careers that forces an honest conversation. Not “were they the best workers of their era?” but what did they change? Because Nikki and Brie Bella changed the way women’s wrestling was packaged, consumed, marketed, and eventually mainstreamed. They weren’t just part of … Read more

Awesome Kong: The Monster Who Made Women’s Wrestling Feel Dangerous & The Legacy That Still Looms

March is Women’s History Month, and Awesome Kong is the kind of name that instantly rewrites the tone of the room. Not because she was “big for a Knockout.” Because she wrestled like a final boss before that phrase became normal in women’s wrestling. Kong didn’t just win titles — she made entire divisions feel … Read more

Mercedes Martinez: The Gatekeeper, the Blueprint, and the Women’s History Month Case for a Career That Never Needed Hype

March is Women’s History Month, and Mercedes Martinez is one of those wrestlers whose legacy makes the point of the month feel simple: some women didn’t just “benefit” from the modern boom — they built the floor it stands on. Mercedes is a career-long standard bearer. The wrestler other wrestlers mention when they talk about … Read more

Charlotte Flair: The Queen’s Resume, the Horsewoman’s Legacy, and the Standard WWE Still Chases

March is Women’s History Month, and Charlotte Flair is the easiest kind of career to respect and the hardest kind to summarize—because her legacy isn’t just “titles won.” It’s the way she helped normalize women being treated like main-event infrastructure. Not special attractions. Not once-a-year headliners. Weekly, year-round, “build the division around her” pillars. Charlotte’s … Read more

Bianca Belair: The EST Standard — Built on Track Speed, Forged in Title Reigns, and Still the Division’s Measuring Stick

March is Women’s History Month, and Bianca Belair is the kind of superstar who makes you realize how far women’s wrestling has come — and how much one person can accelerate that progress just by existing at a certain level. Bianca didn’t just become champion. She became the standard for athletic credibility in WWE’s women’s … Read more

Mickie James: Hardcore Country Royalty, the Knockouts Standard, and the Woman Who Turned Every Era Into Her Story

March is Women’s History Month, and Mickie James is the kind of career you spotlight when you want the full picture of women’s wrestling growth—because her legacy isn’t confined to one company, one title, or one “prime.” Mickie’s value has always been that she can take any role—underdog, villain, mentor, champion, threat—and make it feel … Read more