Charlotte Flair built a legacy on filling the role of “big match” champion almost every time she walks through the curtain. Dressed in elaborate robes that echo her father Ric Flair but moving with the speed and power of a modern athlete, she became the centerpiece of WWE’s women’s divisions and one of the most decorated champions in company history.
WWE and most record keepers list her as a 14-time women’s world champion, and she is widely treated as a standard for big-stage women’s wrestling in the 2010s and 2020s.
She was born Ashley Elizabeth Fliehr in April 1986 in Charlotte, North Carolina, the daughter of Ric Flair and Elizabeth Harrell. Growing up around wrestling meant she saw the business up close, but as a teenager, she was more focused on sports like volleyball than on following her father.
At Providence High School, she captained the volleyball team and won two North Carolina 4A state championships before heading to Appalachian State University on a volleyball path in 2005. After two seasons, she transferred to North Carolina State University, where she finished a degree in public relations in 2008 and worked as a certified personal trainer.
Her life changed after her younger brother, Reid, who was training to wrestle, died in March 2013 due to an overdose. Charlotte has said in interviews and essays that wrestling became a way to stay close to his memory and to reclaim control of her life after a difficult stretch that included a short first marriage and family turmoil.
She had already signed a developmental deal with WWE in 2012, training first with Lodi in North Carolina and then at the WWE Performance Center in Florida, where Sara Del Rey helped shape her into a complete in-ring performer.
Flair took the ring name Charlotte and debuted on NXT TV in July 2013 with a win over Bayley. Early on she showed a mix of basic athleticism and raw timing, then grew fast while working as both Bayley’s partner and later a betraying friend aligned with the BFFs group alongside Sasha Banks and Summer Rae.
In May 2014, she won the vacant NXT Women’s Championship by beating Natalya at NXT TakeOver, then defended it in strong matches with Bayley and others until dropping the belt to Sasha Banks in early 2015. Pro Wrestling Illustrated named her Rookie of the Year for 2014, signaling how quickly she had moved up compared with other new wrestlers.
Her main roster break came in July 2015 during the so-called “Divas Revolution” when she, Sasha Banks, and Becky Lynch all moved up from NXT.
Charlotte was placed on Raw as part of “Team PCB” with Paige and Becky, then quickly pushed into the Divas title scene. She defeated Nikki Bella at Night of Champions in September 2015 to win the Divas Championship, later unified that legacy into the new WWE Women’s Championship (now the Raw Women’s title) at WrestleMania 32 in a three-way with Banks and Lynch in April 2016. That match is often cited as a turning point where the company began framing its women as true featured stars.
After the brand split in 2016, Flair helped carry the Raw women’s division through a famous series with Sasha Banks. They traded the title several times in long TV and pay-per-view matches, including a Hell in a Cell main event in October 2016 that marked the first time women headlined a WWE pay-per-view and the first women’s Cell match.
She later moved to SmackDown, became the first woman to hold both the Raw and SmackDown women’s titles, and added more reigns across both brands, building the “Queen” persona of a champion who assumes she belongs at the top.
In 2018, she played a central role in WWE’s push for bigger women’s matches. At WrestleMania 34, she ended Asuka’s long undefeated streak in a title match that positioned her as the company’s most dominant woman.
The next year, she won the 2019 women’s Royal Rumble and headlined WrestleMania 35 in a triple threat with Ronda Rousey and Becky Lynch, which was the first women’s main event in WrestleMania history.
Through the early 2020s Flair moved between brands and divisions, picking up more title runs and also the women’s tag team championship, which helped her complete WWE’s women’s Grand Slam and Triple Crown.
She won the 2020 women’s Royal Rumble and later, in December 2022, made a surprise SmackDown return to beat Ronda Rousey for the SmackDown Women’s Championship in under two minutes, adding to her growing count of world title reigns.
In December 2023, her momentum halted when she suffered a serious knee injury in a SmackDown match with Asuka, tearing her ACL, MCL, and meniscus. The injury kept her out for all of 2024 as she went through surgery and a long rehab process that focused on rebuilding strength and stability around the joint.
She returned at the 2025 Royal Rumble, entered late in the match and won, becoming the first woman ever to win two Rumbles. That spring, she challenged Tiffany Stratton for the WWE Women’s Championship at WrestleMania 41 but came up short.
She then shifted into a tag team story with Alexa Bliss and later captured the WWE Women’s Tag Team titles with her in August 2025.
In the ring, Charlotte Flair works with a tall, athletic base that leans on hard chops, big boots and suplexes, then builds to sudden high-impact moves like a moonsault to the floor or a top-rope Spanish Fly in big matches.
Her signature submission, the Figure Eight, is a bridged version of her father’s figure-four leglock, which she usually sets up by attacking an opponent’s knee and dragging them back to the center of the ring.
She frequently dashes with quick sprints, utilizes a spear from the side, or executes a springboard dive to disrupt her opponents’ rhythm before securing the hold or delivering her finishing move, known as Natural Selection, which is a flipping facebuster launched from a running start.
Her presentation leans into royal imagery. She enters in long robes with feathers and sequins, holds herself with a cold, proud posture, and often calls herself “The Queen” or “The Opportunity,” playing on the idea that she is always near a title match.
At the same time, interviews and personal pieces show a driven former college athlete who still feels the pressure of carrying the Flair name while trying to define herself as more than just Ric Flair’s daughter.
Today, she remains a central figure on WWE’s SmackDown brand, now also a two-time Royal Rumble winner and women’s Grand Slam champion whose career is still focused on chasing and defending championships.
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