10 Baddest Women In WWE History
9. Bull Nakano
In 1993, Vince McMahon endeavored to compensate for the absence of value profundity on his list by reintroducing ladies' wrestling toward the North American group of onlookers. He did as such by appearing Alundra Blayze and strapping the WWE Women's Championship on her. She would be the substance of his restored push to convey the fine art to another era of fans. Each saint needs a scoundrel, however, and McMahon would swing to a well known adversary of Blayze's from the orient for his lead baddie.
Bull Nakano was a heavyweight contender whose capacity to brutalize her restriction with solid strikes, a force based offense and backbreaking entries made her the ideal resistance for the versatile babyface Blayze. While she lost more than she won, because of McMahon's determination to put Blayze over, Nakano won the appreciation of the American group of onlookers for presenting a style they had never seen.
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