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Ringdivas.com Last Stand - 2007 -womens Wrestling- __link__

The official death knell—and the event that remains a touchstone for collectors and historians—is .

Fyfe did not celebrate. She picked up Daffney, raised her hand, and threw the title belt into the crowd. A fan in a Motorhead shirt still owns it, reportedly. 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. RingDivas.com Last Stand 2007 -Womens Wrestling-

This is the match that RingDivas.com forums still dissect seventeen years later. MsChif, the gothic chokeslam artist, vs. the powerhouse Hatred. In a call-back to old FMW tapes, the stipulation allowed no rope breaks. Hatred duct-taped MsChif’s arms to the top rope at the 8-minute mark and delivered 17 unanswered knife-edge chops. The visual of the night: MsChif spitting her trademark green mist directly into the eyes of the referee (by accident), leaving him blind. Hatred then produced a steel chain from her boot. The submission came when Hatred wrapped the chain around MsChif’s head and torqued a dragon sleeper. MsChif, unable to breathe, screamed "I QUIT" into the house mic. The crowd went silent. Winner: Hailey Hatred The official death knell—and the event that remains

But by mid-2007, the writing was on the wall. Legal pressures, payment disputes with talent, and a shifting digital landscape forced the owners to pull the plug. Instead of vanishing quietly, they did what RingDivas always did: they doubled down. The result was Last Stand . Held on a humid night in late August 2007 (exact date varies by source, but universally cited as Q3 2007), the show took place in a cramped American Legion hall in Southern Indiana. The ring was battered. The lighting was DIY. The air smelled of stale beer and desperation. But for the 147 people in attendance—and the thousands who would later trade DVD-Rs online—it was hallowed ground. A fan in a Motorhead shirt still owns it, reportedly

Loved this deep dive into wrestling history? Check out our pieces on "The Death of GLOW (1989)" and "SHIMMER Volume 1: The Birth of Modern Indie Women’s Wrestling."