The Women’s Division is the Best Reason to Watch Raw

Last night’s episode of Raw reaffirmed something that’s been clear for weeks now: the women’s division represents pretty much everything interesting about the show right now. This is both a testament to the solid work WWE has done building a respectable women’s division, and a sign of how poorly booked the rest of the show is. While the main event men and the nascent cruiserweight division suffer through poorly written promos and listless storylines that prioritize the wrong talent, wrestling largely adept matches rendered meaningless through repetition and a misguided overall direction, the women’s division has focused on a core group with distinct personalities and skill sets that all play well off each other.
The key to the division’s success has been the talent. Charlotte, Sasha Banks and Bayley are a strong trio to build a division around. They all have clearly defined characters, honed by years of experience in NXT, that complement each other well. On a WWE roster filled with great workers, all three are capable of having the match of the night on any card on which they’re booked. Most importantly, their segments on Raw have largely played to these strengths, presenting them as serious competitors who try to settle their believable issues with one another in the ring in matches largely focused around winning the championship, something which often seems secondary in even the biggest WWE feuds.
There have been some miscues along the way, most egregiously the booking of the Charlotte and Sasha Banks Iron Man match earlier this month. Having Sasha submit to tie the score with only a couple of seconds left easily could have killed her as a babyface, and having Charlotte win cleanly in overtime just a few minutes later missed out on an easy opportunity to strengthen Charlotte’s heel credentials. The two episodes of Raw since that match have righted the ship, though, as Charlotte has headed into a feud with Bayley (in what is perhaps the starkest heel vs. face dichotomy WWE has seen in years), and Sasha will get to play to her in-ring strengths as the sympathetic underdog against the monster Nia Jax. The poor finale of that Iron Man match lead directly to two promising feuds that should only strengthen both the division and Raw.