For 10 and 9 click here.
For 8 and 7 click here.
For 6 and 5 click here.
4. Charlotte Flair vs. Sasha Banks vs. Becky Lynch — WrestleMania 32
WrestleMania 32 marked a turning point for WWE’s women’s division. With the Divas Championship retired, Charlotte Flair, Sasha Banks, and Becky Lynch stepped onto the grandest stage of them all to usher in a new era, and with it came enormous pressure.
These weren’t just three new faces. They represented something fundamentally different from what had come before: exceptional, fully realized wrestlers who had spent years proving themselves in NXT. The crowd had grown with them, invested in them, and now was ready to receive them as equals.
In front of a massive crowd in Dallas, the stakes couldn’t have been higher. This was more than a title match. It was a moment that would define whether this new era would truly take hold.
They delivered.
What followed was a fast-paced, high-stakes Triple Threat filled with urgency, innovation, and near-falls at every turn. Each woman had her moments, Banks with her fearless offense, including a split-second mid-air adjustment that saw her turn a suicide dive into a senton, Lynch with her resilience, and Flair with her composure under pressure, as all three pushed to make history.
The finish saw Charlotte seize her moment, locking in the Figure Four and bridging into the Figure Eight to force Lynch to submit and become the inaugural WWE Women’s Champion.
It wasn’t just a victory. It was the beginning. Charlotte’s win marked the first chapter in what would become an exceptional WrestleMania legacy, establishing her as the division’s defining big-match performer on its grandest stage.
3. Charlotte Flair (c) vs. Rhea Ripley — WrestleMania 39
By WrestleMania 39, Rhea Ripley was no longer the unproven rookie who fell short three years earlier. At WrestleMania 36, Charlotte Flair humbled her, cutting short her first reign and exposing the gap between potential and greatness. This was the rematch, and Ripley’s chance at redemption.
After spending much of 2022 in a supporting role, Ripley found her identity through The Judgment Day, embracing a darker edge that the audience fully bought into. With a Royal Rumble victory in hand, she returned to the same opponent, this time ready to take her place at the top.
The stakes went beyond the championship. This was a clash between the established standard-bearer and the woman poised to replace her, a true shift in power at the top of the division.
What followed was a brutal, hard-hitting showdown that played out like a main event, regardless of where it landed on the card. Both women wrestled with a chip on their shoulder, pushing the pace and physicality to another level. Determined to make a statement, they pushed past their allotted time, refusing to be contained and delivering the first women’s WrestleMania match that truly felt like an epic.
Ripley met Flair at every turn, countering her offense and refusing to be overwhelmed the way she once was. Charlotte, fighting to maintain her grip on the division, answered with urgency and precision as the two pushed each other to the limit.
In the end, Ripley broke through, defeating Flair to capture the SmackDown Women’s Championship in a long-awaited moment of redemption.
It was more than just a victory. It was a turning point, the moment the division shifted from Charlotte’s era to Rhea’s. A coronation performance that didn’t just live up to expectations, but raised the standard for what a women’s WrestleMania match could be.
Be sure to check back tomorrow as we reveal the top WrestleMania matches of the modern era!