Wrestling Match of the Year 2025: The women’s bout that united a divided vote

Uncrowned's staff makes their picks for the best wrestling match of 2025.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - APRIL 20: Iyo Sky (C), Bianca Belair (L), and Rhea Ripley (R) argue prior to the Women's World Championship title match during WrestleMania 41 at Allegiant Stadium on April 20, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Bianca Belair vs. Iyo Sky vs. Rhea Ripley was one of the best matches in recent WrestleMania history, but where did it land on our year-end list?
Ethan Miller via Getty Images

What makes a truly great wrestling match? Is it violence? A stunning result? More false-finishes than you can count on two hands? Does a championship need to change hands — or even be at stake at all? Does it matter what event or where on the card it takes place?

These are all of the things Uncrowned’s staff weighed when casting their ballots for 2025’s Match of the Year. When looking at the final tally, 14 matches across three promotions involving more than two dozen individual wrestlers received at least one vote. Unlike last year, where Bryan Danielson vs. Will Ospreay was a clear-cut pick, none of the seven ballots had all of the final top five matches listed on it. Even the eventual winner — no spoilers yet — only managed to earn a single first-place vote, even though it appeared on all seven ballots. That's how tight and varied this race was.

So, let’s jump in, shall we?

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - APRIL 19: Seth Rollins (R) talks to Roman Reigns during their Triple Threat match with CM Punk during WrestleMania 41 at Allegiant Stadium on April 19, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
The seed for what ultimately became The Vision was planted in WrestleMania 41's Night 1 main event.
Ethan Miller via Getty Images

You knew this was going to be an absolute banger of a match once CM Punk came out to “This Fire Burns” at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas this past April. A wonderfully intertwined story that began in earnest at the Royal Rumble managed to link all three men’s individual feuds with one another to produce not just the best match of WrestleMania Night 1, but as evidenced by our voting, one of the most memorable contests of the year.

The ending of the match — which saw Paul Heyman turn on both Punk and Reigns — set the stage for "Monday Night Raw" for essentially the rest of 2025, as Heyman aligned with Rollins and created The Vision. Without a title on the line, there wasn’t your typical WrestleMania main-event stakes attached here, which makes it all the more impressive that it managed to overshadow every other men’s match on WWE’s biggest card of the year.

"You do not deserve the dignity of death. I sentence you to a lifetime of mediocrity." (Lee South, AEW)

This one feels like it was ages ago, but in reality it took place at AEW Revolution in March. Dubbed “The Hollywood Ending,” this AEW Women’s Championship match was a "Falls Count Anywhere" rubber contest, meaning it served as the ultimate payoff in a long-running story between the friends-turned-rivals. It was equal parts passion and violence, and somehow marked the peak of Storm’s generational run in an AEW women’s division that might be the best in all of professional wrestling.

Even more poetic, the match was May’s finale in AEW before she shifted over to WWE and rechristened herself as Blake Monroe later in the year. Without this feud — or this match — it’s unlikely either woman reaches the heights they have over the past year.

EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - AUGUST 03: John Cena congratulates Cody Rhodes after Rhodes won and became the WWE Undisputed Champion during the WWE 2025 SummerSlam at MetLife Stadium on August 03, 2025 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
Even on Year 23, John Cena was capable of putting up all-timers.
Elsa via Getty Images

Much like Reigns vs. Rollins vs. Punk, this match was as much about a specific entrance as it was the in-ring action itself. Two nights earlier, Cena signaled the merciful end to his heel run, which despite being named Uncrowned’s Moment of the Year, never really amounted to much more than being a shocking turn. So, when New Jersey's MetLife Stadium saw Cena’s titantron turn from black and white to the technicolor flourish we’d long grown accustomed to, the proverbial roof blew off the place.

As far as the action itself goes, it was thrilling despite the outcome being relatively predictable. Cena was fully in his bag for this match, showing an evolved skill set that seemingly defied the fact that it was one of his final times in a WWE ring. The two men fought throughout the stadium and, when all was said and done, ended the match cleanly in a true passing-of-the-torch moment. There will be many differing opinions about Cena’s retirement tour in the years to come, but it’s hard to argue this match wasn’t his peak from a strictly in-ring perspective.

(Photo via Ricky Havlik, AEW)
Triumph. (Photo via Ricky Havlik, AEW)
Ricky Havlik

We’ve talked a lot about entrances signifying how great a match will be, but the outcomes also matter too. That sentiment may not be more true for any match over the past year than Moxley vs. Page over the summer.

The final contest at AEW All In: Texas felt like an Avengers-level spectacle in the same way WrestleMania 40 Night 2’s main event between Reigns and Rhodes did in 2024. Moxley and his Death Riders presented a seemingly insurmountable challenge for Page, who received help in the form of run-ins from Will Ospreay, Darby Allin, Bryan Danielson and even longtime rival Swerve Strickland.

It was chaotic, violent, overbooked and epic in all of the right ways, leading to a truly special moment when Page secured the win and ended Moxley’s polarizing reign as AEW World Champion. Oh, and it was the apex of Uncrowned's Storyline of the Year as well.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - APRIL 20: Rhea Ripley in action against IYO SKY and Bianca Belair during WrestleMania 41 Sunday at Allegiant Stadium on April 20, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Andrew Timms/WWE via Getty Images)
Pure magic.
WWE via Getty Images

Every spot on a WrestleMania card is special, but you’d be hard pressed to find a more pressure-packed spot — outside of the main events — than where this trio of women found themselves in this past April. Tasked with kicking off Night 2, Ripley, Belair and Sky absolutely delivered, amping up the Las Vegas crowd in a way that wasn’t matched the rest of the night, including in the main event between Cena and Rhodes.

The order of entrances helped hammer home the story WWE had been trying to tell leading up to this match. Despite being the reigning champion and a world-class performer in her own right, Sky had essentially become an afterthought in the ongoing rivalry between Ripley and Belair. Sky walking out first — somewhat rare for the defending champion — was a signal to the crowd and those watching at home that Belair and Ripley were the bigger draws. Belair, arguably the greatest women’s performer in WrestleMania history, got an elaborate entrance that included her step-daughter while Ripley drew the loudest reaction at Allegiant Stadium.

Once the bell rang, the match followed a relatively standard triple-threat start before launching into high-gear. It was clean, fast and innovative across nearly 15 minutes of action. Sky provided the high-flying moves, Ripley offered power and Belair managed to deliver a bit of both, with none of the spots feeling recycled or forced at any point during the match. We saw a unique double blockbuster from Sky — off the top rope with her feet — as well as a Tower of Doom-style German Superplex that left all three women down. Sky utilized clever counters and a perfectly timed Over the Moonsault to pin Belair and secure her first WrestleMania win.

While Reigns, Rollins and Punk authored their own classic across nearly 33 minutes the night before or Storm and May had the ultimate payoff in their passionate, violent “Hollywood Ending,” these three women put together a technical masterpiece that served as a massive payoff for Sky, who managed to win over the crowd entirely by the time her arm was raised in victory.

No blood, no theatrics, no swerves. As Jacob Fatu would say, this match was all gas, no brakes. Ripley-Belair-Sky won’t just go down as the best contest from WrestleMania 41 or Uncrowned’s Match of the Year, it’ll go down as one of the greatest matches in WrestleMania history,

It’s worth mentioning there was one downside to the match, specifically the Tower of Doom spot. Belair suffered a broken knuckle on the move, leading her to miss the majority of the year with no timetable for a return.


(Hassan Ahmad, Yahoo Sports)
(Hassan Ahmad, Yahoo Sports)

Anarchy in the Arena – AEW Double or Nothing

Hangman Adam Page vs. Will Ospreay – AEW Double or Nothing

John Cena vs. AJ Styles – WWE Crown Jewel Perth

Swerve Strickland and Will Ospreay vs. The Young Bucks – AEW All-In Texas

Will Ospreay vs. Kyle Fletcher – AEW Revolution

Konosuke Takeshita vs. Zack Sabre Jr. – NJPW King of Pro Wrestling

Wyatt Sicks vs. MCMG vs. DIY vs. Fraxiom vs. Andrade and Rey Fenix vs. The Street Profits – WWE SummerSlam Night 2

Naomi vs. Rhea Ripley vs. Iyo Sky – WWE SummerSlam Night 2

John Cena vs. Dominik Mysterio – WWE Survivor Series: WarGames

Category: General Sports