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Wrestlers

B-Fab

SmackDown · Female · 35 years old · 2K Rating: 67 (2K26)

B-Fab
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Points (all-time)

Total Points
21
R/S Points
17
PLE Points
4
Belt Points
0
PPM
1.8
per match

R/S = Raw & SmackDown · PLE = Premium Live Events · Belt = title points · PPM = points per match · Total = R/S + PLE + Belt

Match record (all-time)

Wrestler match statistics are currently based on 2025 and 2026 televised events. House shows and Main Event are not included.

MW 12Win 2W% 16.7Loss 9L% 75.0NC 1DQW 0DQL 1DQ% 8.3

MW = Matches wrestled · Win/Loss = standard · NC = No contest · DQW/DQL = Win/Loss via DQ · W%/L%/DQ% = percentages of matches

Accomplishments

No accomplishments added yet.

Title Reigns

When this reign overlaps a scored month-end, we list the months that count toward fantasy belt hold points (same rules as the rest of the app), starting from January 2025 through the last completed calendar month.

No title reigns on record for this wrestler.

Match History

Last five are the most recent matches on the full event timeline (completed and live), using the same ordering and W/L/D rules as Pro Wrestling Boxscore — not limited to the fantasy points period above.

Recent form
L
L
L
L
D
RAW April 6, 2026 — Houston, TX
Main Event
Tag Team
Rhea Ripley & Iyo Sky
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This tag match was more chaotic than technical, but that worked in its favor. Ripley and IYO SKY brought a nice contrast as a team, with Ripley handling the power spots and SKY flying all over the place. Michin and B-Fab had their moments, especially when they isolated SKY and kept her from tagging out. There were a few rough transitions, but nothing that completely derailed things. The turning point came when Ripley got back in and started dominating with her usual physical style, shifting the match quickly. SKY followed up with a high-impact sequence that set up the finish, giving their team the win. It wasn’t flawless, but it had energy and moved at a pace that kept it from dragging.
SmackDown March 27, 2026 — Pittsburgh, PA
Undercard
Final
DQ
Summary
This match was over before it really began. Jade wasted no time interfering and smashing Rhea Ripley into the ring post. Jade and her posse stand tall over Rhea.
SmackDown November 14, 2025 — Albany, NY
Non-Title Match
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
2:15
Summary
In the women’s singles matchup, Jade Cargill continued to look like a literal wrecking machine against B‑FAB. Cargill used her size advantage to bully B‑FAB around the ring, slamming and driving her into corners early and often. B‑FAB fought back with surprising bursts of energy and even hit a nice splash off the top to drag Cargill into the mid‑match grappling and rallies, but Cargill’s power was too much in the end. A massive clothesline followed by a clean pinfall put B‑FAB away, giving Cargill another victory that looked dominant without being overly long.
SmackDown September 26, 2025 — Orlando, FL
Tag Team
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
10:13
Summary
This one was a bit chaotic from bell to bell. Giulia and Kiana James used a blend of power and quick strike offense to keep Michin and B‑FAB on their heels, while Michin and B‑FAB tried to rally with technique and speed. At one point it looked like Michin might seize control with a flying attack, but James pulled her into some rough‑and‑tumble double‑team spots that kept the momentum shifting. The decisive moment came when Giulia hit a northern lights bomb on Mia Yim and pinned her for the clean fall. It wasn’t the most elegant tag mat‑wrestling clinic you’ll ever see, but credit to Giulia and James for seizing their opportunities and clearing the ring.
SmackDown September 12, 2025 — Norfolk, VA
Undercard
No Contest
Summary
his one never really got going as a proper match because Giulia attacked B‑FAB during her entrance. B‑FAB barely got a chance to get into the ring before Giulia dumped her with a brutal early strike and beat her down with ferocity that suggested Giulia has no patience for slow build‑ups. Officials tried to separate them but Giulia kept up the assault, and what was supposed to be a competitive undercard bout instead turned into an all‑out beatdown that left B‑FAB dazed on the floor. In short, no real contest took place, and it felt like WWE just scrambled this segment into something meaner than a scheduled match.