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Ringdivas.com Last Stand 2007 -womens Wrestling- May 2026

The opener was a nightmare. RingDivas loved the "Dog Collar" stipulation, but Last Stand added a 15-foot scaffolding bridge connecting two flatbed trailers.

Miss Chevous (a technical brawler from Canada) and Lorelei Lee (the southern barbarian) were chained at the throat by a 15-foot length of heavy chain. The goal wasn't a pinfall; it was to drag your opponent to the center of the scaffold and unhook a set of brass knuckles hanging from the ceiling.

What happened: The match was ugly in the best way. Lee tried to suplex Chevous off the edge, but the chain caught the railing, resulting in a terrifying near-fall that legitimately broke Lee’s nose. Chevous eventually retrieved the knucks, but instead of punching Lee, she used the chain to wrap Lee’s wrist to the scaffold, leaving her dangling. Chevous leaped off the scaffold—chain still attached to her neck—onto a table below. The snap of the chain locking yanked Lee down hard. It was a 1-star match by Tokyo Dome logic, but a 5-star match for raw, terrifying commitment. RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-

Aftermath: Both women were bleeding profusely. Medics hadn't arrived yet. This set the tone.

Unlike most indie shows, RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 was never released in full. A 20-minute highlight reel appeared on a defunct video site in 2008, but the master tapes are rumored to be held by a private collector in Ohio. This scarcity has turned the event into the "lost gospel" of women’s hardcore wrestling. The opener was a nightmare

For historians, Last Stand represents a crucial DNA strand. Many of the women on that card went on to train the next generation:

Furthermore, Last Stand 2007 proved an economic thesis that the industry ignored for a decade: There is a paying audience for violent, serious women's wrestling. The DVD bootlegs of this event (often selling for $150+ on eBay in the late 2000s) directly foreshadowed the success of promotions like WSU, SHIMMER, and eventually AEW’s women’s division. Furthermore, Last Stand 2007 proved an economic thesis

RingDivas’ Last Stand 2007 represents a specific moment in wrestling history when the internet allowed niche products to flourish. It proved that there was a market for women’s wrestling that didn't rely on bra-and-panties matches or 30-second squashes.

While the promotion would eventually evolve and the online landscape would shift, Last Stand captured the magic of the "super indie." It was a show where characters were larger than life, but the stakes felt incredibly real.

For modern fans who only know women’s wrestling through the lens of NXT or AEW, looking back at Last Stand 2007 offers a history lesson. It shows the bridge builders—the women who worked for places like RingDivas, SHIMMER, and WSU—who kept the art form alive during a dormant period in mainstream wrestling.