The ring ropes were replaced with two-strand barbed wire. No canvass tape. Bare wire.
Before the main event took the stage, and Brooke Fairchild finally settled a bitter, months-long rivalry. Operating under classic Last Woman Standing rules—where victory is declared only when an opponent cannot stand before a 10-count—both athletes engaged in a brutal, hardcore brawl.
: Another high-profile singles contest featuring wrestlers who would go on to have significant careers in major promotions. Production and Atmosphere
Ultimately, RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 serves as a raw, fascinating artifact of a bygone era. It stands as a testament to a time when women's wrestling was establishing its own identity outside the mainstream spotlight, contributing to the development of the multi-faceted and highly respected industry seen today. RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-
For many female performers in 2007, web-exclusive promotions like RingDivas provided a steady source of income and valuable ring time. It allowed talent to hone their holds, submissions, and character work outside of the high-pressure environment of major television tapings.
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.
When you talk about the golden era of independent women’s wrestling, one name often surfaces for those who followed the underground circuit: . Known for its gritty, athletic, and often high-impact style, the promotion carved out a niche in a pre-Evolution era where women’s wrestling was still fighting for its rightful spotlight. Among their most discussed events is "Last Stand" (2007) , a show that perfectly captured the intensity and "take-no-prisoners" attitude of the promotion. The Atmosphere The ring ropes were replaced with two-strand barbed wire
The event was structured around two major tournaments and several high-profile grudge matches, showcasing the depth of the roster.
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.
The event featured a stacked card of independent talent, but it is remembered most for its chaotic, high-stakes confrontations. Before the main event took the stage, and
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.
To understand Last Stand , you must understand the climate of 2007. YouTube was still a chaotic toddler. DVD trading was king. RingDivas.com operated on a subscription model, releasing bi-weekly "Riot" shows featuring wrestlers like Ariel (Shelly Martinez) , LuFisto , Sumie Sakai , Missy Hyatt (in a managerial role), and the terrifying "The Greek Goddess" Athena (not the WWE star, but the deathmatch icon).
If you want to dig deeper, online forums and video archives are the best places to look for rare footage. The story of RingDivas is a testament to the fact that for women's wrestling to thrive globally, it needed to survive everywhere—even in the glamorous, hard-hitting rings of a promotion called RingDivas.
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.
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.