History of the NXT Women’s Championship

At this point, I’ve reviewed every other WWE Championship that even semi-regularly main events WWE shows. I think this one deserves a space here since it paved the way for the women’s main roster being as prominent as they are. 

July 24, 2013 – Winter Park, Florida 

Paige def. Emma {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From NXT 179. The finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. Taken out of context, it’s lame as hell that this match is opening rather than headlining the show, in the same way that it was lame that they didn’t trust the crowd to be able to handle more than one women’s match on each episode. But to be fair, there hadn’t been a glut of great women’s matches yet, and to judge this harshly would be to judge by modern standards. I will say that it’s wild how quickly things changed for the women once the convergence of amazing female talent and WWE finally pulling their heads out of their asses coincided. The crowd is hot for this match. Then Paige and Emma went and worked the mat like they were in an ESPN Classics match from the ‘50s. That is to say it wasn’t the most exciting match, but they had their headlocks and waistlocks on real tight. They knocked the crap out of each other too. I wasn’t expecting a lot out of this and it kind of blew my mind. Paige hit the Paige Turner for the win at 11:13 (shown). ***¾

May 29, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida

Charlotte def. Natalya {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From the inaugural Takeover. NXT General Manager John Bradshaw Layfield (I barely remember that being a thing) stripped Paige of the title when she moved to the main roster after winning the WWE Divas Championship. The video package for this match was incredible. Also, it’s nice of them to have former champion Paige come out before the match and explain why she’s not champion anymore. I didn’t get any of that from the loser vs. loser number one contender’s match earlier (that comment was a reference to Tyler Breeze vs. Sami Zayn from earlier in the show). I also just realized this is the first Charlotte match I’ve ever seen (that comment is in reference to the fact that this was the first Charlotte match I’d ever seen. I watched this in 2018). This was fueled by nostalgia and backed up by skill and I enjoyed it quite a bit. The match was awesome and the reason I was convinced that watching all of NXT could be a worthy endeavor. Charlotte hit the Natural Selection (which was still called Bow Down to the Queen at this time, ugh) for the win at 16:55. **** 

February 11, 2015 – Winter Park, Florida

Sasha Banks def. Charlotte, Becky Lynch, and Bayley {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: Rival. The commentators start off by basically saying that none of the challengers are deserving of this title shot. I don’t think they’re very good at this wrestling commentary thing. Over-hyped at the time, this match was kind of a mess, with no real flow or heat despite the efforts of all involved, especially Bayley. The finish felt tacked on, and very surprising. It was less surprising in the context of what was happening on the weekly show, but the whole division was in a lull around this time so I’m not surprised they didn’t blow me away here. Banks caught Charlotte with a crucifix pin for the win at 11:57. ***

August 22, 2015 – Brooklyn, New York

Bayley def. Sasha Banks {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: Brooklyn. Man, Bayley was just death on the mic, which was a shame because she was stellar in the ring. Seriously, why can’t the guys wrestle on this level as consistently as the ladies? These two, Charlotte and Becky Lynch are putting on just unreal matches every single time they’re given the spotlight and I love it so much. From the moment Sasha stomped on Bayley’s hand while in the Bank Statement I was fully sold on this match. And then, Charlotte and Lynch come out and pose like the Four Horsemen while Charlotte waves at her dad in the front row and this is basically how the Ghostbusters remake should have been written, more or less (probably less). Bayley hit the Bayley to Belly for the win at 18:12. Not long after this, these two headlined a Takeover special and the women were semi-regularly headlining the weekly show. ****¼ 

April 1, 2016 – Dallas, Texas

Asuka def. Bayley {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: Dallas. The crowd was really annoying here, more interested in getting European-style chants going than reacting to the match. Luckily, the ladies worked through it and put on a hell of a show. The whole performance, and the finish in particular, made Bayley look incredibly strong while losing, and made Asuka look like the best tactician in the women’s division. This is one of the women’s title matches that I can remember after the fact most vividly at any given time, because the story they told was as strong as the shots they threw at each other. Asuka used the Asuka Lock to get the win at 15:22. After suffering a collarbone injury four months later, Asuka vacated the title and left NXT. ****¼

November 18, 2017 – Houston, Texas

Ember Moon def. Kairi Sane, Peyton Royce, and Nikki Cross {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: War Games. I feel like logic should dictate that the winner of the Mae Young Classic tournament would win the title after Asuka’s graduation to the main roster left it vacant. But then they held some bullshit qualifying matches for the other three spots here (especially bullshit because Cross lost her match to Royce, but still won a battle royal to be in this). The finish of this match was so blatantly contrived and so poorly hidden by a bad camera angle that it totally took me out of the moment. Moon winning felt inevitable, which also isn’t a great feeling. On the bright side, Sane’s flying elbow is amazing. This one gets a 10 on the Contrived Eclipse Scale because Royce and Cross were just hanging on each other and Cross was blatantly looking at Moon waiting for the move to hit. Worst Eclipse ever. In hindsight, my criticism of the build to the match doesn’t really make sense, as Sane won the tournament before Asuka vacated the title, and this four-way was a perfectly reasonable way to crown a new champion. But man, that Eclipse was trash. Did I mention that? Moon hit it on Royce and Cross for the win at 10:09. ***¼

April 7, 2018 – New Orleans, Louisiana

Shayna Baszler def. Ember Moon {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: New Orleans. The seriousness of this match is undercut by Moon dancing like a goof with the woman who is performing her entrance music. Sometimes WrestleMania weekend pomp is counterproductive. The stuff with Baszler’s arm here really was cool, but aside from that it felt like they were sleepwalking through this. I was, and am, so over Moon by this point that I’m surprised I gave this any of my attention at all. Luckily, this was her last NXT match as she was a post-Mania call-up. Unluckily, she came back to NXT three years later and as of the time I’m writing this she’s getting a shot at the title again at an upcoming Takeover. Baszler put on the Kirifuda Clutch for the win at 12:55. **½ 

August 18, 2018 – Brooklyn, New York

Kairi Sane def. Shayna Baszler {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From Takeover: Brooklyn 4. Welp, that was the best match I’ve seen from both of these ladies to date. There were so many moments when I thought Baszler had the thing all locked up. Sane is amazing as an underdog, which actually has me a little worried about how she’ll perform as champion (her run was disappointing for sure). Here’s hoping they let her continue to be the underdog after a line of dominating champions. Sane counters the Kirifuda Clutch to a roll up for the win at 13:46. ****¼

October 28, 2018 – Uniondale, New York

Shayna Baszler def. Kairi Sane {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From WWE Evolution. The finish was a real big sandy butt. It was an especially sandy butt because the match was so damn dope leading up to it. I don’t think it does anything for Baszler’s character that she needed help from Marina Shaffir & Jessamyn Duke to win the belt. Also, the referee straight up looked at so much of the interference and did nothing. That’s lame. I don’t normally feel so put off by a match’s finish in the face of good action throughout (which this had in spades #nopunintended) but this one really got me salty. Or sandy. Some kind of grainy irritant. I hope at least that this leads to something interesting at Takeover War Games (eh, not really). Baszler put on the Kirifuda Clutch for the win at 12:30. ***½

December 18, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida

Rhea Ripley def. Shayna Baszler {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From NXT 540. Like the opener (Adam Cole vs. Finn Balor), this happened exactly as it should have. Well, in the end it did, as Ripley needed to beat Baszler here. But I didn’t love the way they got there. I get why they went with so much gaga here; Ripley was able to fight through interference, a ref bump, and a DDT on a chair, as well as all of Baszler’s actual skill to win the belt. But unlike when Tommaso Ciampa won the NXT Championship on TV in a match with a ref bump, here it felt tacked on and awkwardly executed. So did the Horsewomen interference, mostly because the Horsewomen are really quite terrible at everything they do. It’s personal preference, but I was digging how dominant Ripley had been in the build to this, and wasn’t really in the mood to see her fight from behind so much here. All that said, the way Ripley grabbed the referee’s shirt to show that she hadn’t passed out was dope. They built a ton of drama leading up to the finish once all the other silliness was out of the way. Ripley hit an avalanche Riptide for the win and the title at 14:23 (shown). Sidenote: Ripley’s submission is now called the Prism, and I’m not sure what that name has to do with anything. Sidenote 2: I rewatched the match again a few days later on the WWE Network without having to sit through a commercial and the match sat a lot better with me. The replays after the commercial kept things a lot more concise and dramatic. The ref bump was still iffy, but worked better on a second watch. ****

April 5, 2020 – Orlando, Florida 

Charlotte Flair def. Rhea Ripley {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From WrestleMania 36, Part 2. The pandemic has hit and wrestling fans have been barred from the building. This was early on in the pandemic, which was the worst period for the product as the matches happened in empty arenas without any canned audio. It’s a little odd that they keep making a big deal of Flair being a ten-time champion when the title she’s fighting for (which she’s held once before) isn’t counted toward that total. Ripley looks so hot in her white WrestleMania outfit that I almost can’t stand it. Ripley’s selling was really good here, if maybe a little too screamy for a champion. I guess since she ended up losing by submission it worked. The spots where she used the injured leg anyway would have worked a lot better with a crowd cheering her on, so add that to the list of COVID-19 bummers. The match did tell a good story though, as Ripley blew her load early and then spent the rest of the match getting her previously injured leg taken apart. Flair won the title at 20:28 with the Figure Eight Leglock. I am looking forward to the rematch of this after Flair beats the winner of the NXT ladder match down the line. ****

June 7, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Io Shirai def. Rhea Ripley and Charlotte Flair {NXT Women’s Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Takeover: In Your House. Welp, the rematch wound up being a triple threat, and then another triple threat a year later (with Asuka in place of Shirai), until they finally met one-on-one in June of the next year. This was the first time the ladies had main evented a Takeover in almost five years, though this title main evented over the men’s title on TV in that time. Flair has had the most consistently good empty arena matches of anyone on the roster (along with Seth Rollins), so I expected this to be pretty good with a few folks cheering the match on. Kevin Ford pointed out that Ripley’s asymmetrical contact lenses match her boots, and that seemed worth mentioning here. This was a wild ride. They beat the crap out of one another and strung together a series of really compelling moments. Shirai won the title by hitting a moonsault to Ripley’s goddamn head at 17:37 while Flair was going for the Figure 8. ****¼

Shirai wound up having a pretty dope, long run as champ. But Big Mamma Cool was waiting for her in 2021.