Charlotte Flair vs. Ronda Rousey: Which WWE Star is Needed More For Women’s Division? | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

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Charlotte Flair vs. Ronda Rousey: Which WWE Star is Needed More For Women’s Division?

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    Charlotte Flair and Ronda Rousey are top WWE stars, but who is more needed?

    Credit: WWE.com

    Earlier this year, Charlotte Flair and Ronda Rousey engaged in a rivalry that dominated airwaves and led to two high-profile premium live event matches (WrestleMania 38 and WrestleMania Backlash).

    The women split those matches, with Rousey emerging from the feud with the SmackDown Women’s Championship.

    But which one is more valuable and needed by current-day WWE?

    When taking personal preference out of the question, the answer may be surprising.

The Case for Charlotte Flair

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    Charlotte Flair is a generational talent whose success is unparalleled by any woman on the current WWE roster.

    A 13-time world champion on the main roster and two-time NXT champion, she has been to the pinnacle of women’s wrestling and delivered some of the best in-ring work of her generation, against every major star the company has had to offer.

    She can be relied upon to enhance the significance of any storyline, match or angle based on her reputation alone, not to mention what she brings between the ropes. She has been booked to such a degree that fans buy into her as the best and any woman that is selected to beat her is instantly thought to be a big deal.

    Sure, she is pushed too strongly at times and fans do grow tired of watching her win all the time, but as a result of WWE Creative’s devotion to the second-generation star, she has achieved credibility and legitimacy in the world of professional wrestling that makes her an undeniable asset in helping to get other women over.

    As important as it is to have someone who can be utilized to help make stars, either by losing to them or pulling them to their level, today’s wrestling fan appreciates and demands a certain level of in-ring work and Flair has it in spades.

    Look no further than her battles with Becky Lynch in 2018, her classic with Trish Stratus at SummerSlam 2019, any number of the NXT matches with her fellow Four Horsewomen that helped bring about the Women’s Revolution, or her main roster series with Sasha Banks as evidence of Flair’s significance to the overall quality of the ring work in WWE’s women’s division.

    Even her WrestleMania Backlash “I Quit” Match against Ronda Rousey can be lumped into that collection.

    Despite fan frustration with what can be considered overexposure, there is no arguing that Flair is not a great professional wrestler and that element of her game is as important, if not more so, than her star power or what she brings to the women she works with.

The Case for Ronda Rousey

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    The appeal of Ronda Rousey is and always has been her star power and credibility.

    An entire generation of fans watched her establish herself as one of the best, most influential mixed martial artists of all time, en route to induction into the UFC Hall of Fame. Her addition to the women’s division in 2018 in WWE instantly provided it that name attraction that it needed to help elevate it even further than the in-ring revolution had.

    Flair and Becky Lynch maybe two of the most influential women’s wrestlers of all time, and the latter’s popularity undoubtedly had something to do with WWE’s decision to book it in the position it was on the card, but there is a very real and credible argument to be made that women would not have main evented WrestleMania 35 had it not been for Rousey’s name value being omnipresent in that historic Triple Threat Match.

    She may not be as red hot as she was, and certain creative issues have plagued her most recent run, but it would foolish to suggest that she is not still over with fans, carries a certain level of credibility with her and is a believable badass who can elevate any opponent simply by selling for them.

    Is she a picture-perfect pro wrestler? No. She does not have the level of training that the women around her do and she clearly becomes lost at points. She has been very open about her shortcomings.

    “Well, remembering it is hard, I’m not like a seasoned veteran or anything like that. This past ‘Mania, I was like, ‘I don’t have this down, at all.’ We were about to go out there and I’m like, ‘uh, I don’t know all this match yet.’ But all the parts where I wasn’t sure what was next was a part where I could get a queue or something from somebody else,” she told The Wives of Wrestling podcast (h/t WrestlingInc.com).

    “I am very much dependent on who else I am in there with to make the match itself and to guide me when I am out there. I’m like a smoke and mirrors b*tch. I’ve only had a year and a half of experience, and people forget that a lot.”

    Rousey is not going to go out to the ring and will anyone to a five-star match in the way Flair might, but she is still going to elevate them in the same way that The Queen does because beating a legendary badass still means something, mostly because it is not something that has been done repeatedly to the point that the effect wears off.

    Look at Liv Morgan and what it meant to her to be able to beat Rousey, even if the execution was not always perfect. She is a bigger star now than she was before it and a focal point of SmackDown creative efforts.

    That may not have happened without the headline-making wins over someone with the star power of Rowdy.

The Pick

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    On the surface, this felt like an easy argument to make.

    In an era where die-hard fans demand a certain quality of in-ring work, Flair is the obvious answer. After all, those fans make up the base of any viewership and go a long way in determining who succeeds and who does not.

    Upon diving deeper into the argument, though, it becomes apparent that Rousey is the choice.

    She may not be a polished in-ring worker and if there is anyone who could benefit from reading a pre-written script directly off the sheet of paper, it is her, but there is no denying what she has done to help create stars for WWE during her relatively brief run with the promotion.

    Lynch discovered her “The Man” persona but it was in going toe-to-toe verbally and physically with Rousey that helped enhance and pull it to the main event level. Morgan was a popular competitor among that aforementioned die-hard fan base but by working with Rousey, achieved a level of credibility that allowed WWE to book one of the marquee matches of a premium live event (Extreme Rules) around her match with the MMA alumnus.

    Can Flair claim to have created as many stars?

    Through little fault of her own, it is difficult to argue that anyone has actually emerged from a feud with The Queen better than they entered. Was Carmella enhanced by working with Flair? How about Dana Brooke? Nikki Cross?

    Flair is a great, great professional wrestler and that is not to be denied. Her legacy is already established and if she walked away from the ring tomorrow, she is a first-ballot Hall of Famer whose contributions to the legitimization of women’s wrestling on a grand scale is undeniable.

    But Rousey is an invaluable asset because there are women on the WWE roster who are not headline stars who can become one strictly by working a program with Rowdy. Do they have to win in the end? Not necessarily, but by proxy alone, they are perceived as more important and higher profile and that is something no five-star match can make up for.


    The Pick: Rousey



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