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Victoria Crawford

Eve vs. Alicia Fox - Divas Championship Match - WWE

Popularly known as Alicia Fox, born Victoria Elizabeth Crawford in 1986 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, was one of the most enduring and versatile performers of WWE’s late Divas Era and early Women’s Evolution period. Her career is documented through WWE television archives, pay-per-view records, championship histories, and mainstream entertainment coverage spanning more than a decade on national programming.


Crawford signed with World Wrestling Entertainment in 2006 and debuted on the main roster in 2008 on SmackDown. Early broadcast footage documents her pairing with Edge in storyline appearances before transitioning fully into in-ring competition. WWE television archives from 2009–2011 show Fox positioned consistently within the Divas Championship scene, often featured in multi-woman title programs during a transitional era for the division.


Her most historically documented achievement occurred on June 20, 2010, at Fatal 4-Way in Uniondale, New York, where she defeated Eve Torres to win the WWE Divas Championship. Official WWE title histories confirm the victory, making Alicia Fox one of the few Black women to hold a singles championship in WWE during the Divas era. The reign, while brief, was widely reported in wrestling media as a milestone moment.


Among her most notable and well-documented appearances:


vs. Eve Torres, WWE Divas Championship

Fatal 4-Way – Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York – June 20, 2010

Official WWE records confirm Fox’s Divas Championship victory.


Team Johnny vs. Team Teddy, 12-Man Tag Match

WrestleMania XXVIII – Miami Gardens, Florida – April 1, 2012

WWE broadcast archives confirm Fox’s participation in a large-scale WrestleMania storyline match.


Women’s Royal Rumble Match

Royal Rumble – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – January 28, 2018

WWE event records confirm Fox’s participation in the inaugural women’s Royal Rumble match.


Throughout the mid-2010s, WWE programming documented Fox’s transition into a veteran presence within the locker room, frequently positioned as both competitor and character-driven personality. Wrestling media coverage often highlighted her ability to shift between comedic segments, dramatic storylines, and athletic competition depending on creative direction.


Culturally, Alicia Fox’s significance lies in longevity and visibility during an era when sustained television time for women was not guaranteed. As a Black woman consistently featured on weekly WWE programming for more than a decade, Fox represented continuity across multiple creative eras, from the Divas branding to the Women’s Evolution rebrand. Retrospective commentary frequently notes that while she was not always positioned at the center of the division, her consistent presence contributed to normalization of diversity within women’s wrestling on mainstream television.


After stepping away from active competition, Fox’s tenure was acknowledged in WWE’s alumni and legacy programming, reinforcing her place within the company’s long-term historical record.


Through televised archives, championship documentation, pay-per-view records, and roster histories, Alicia Fox emerges as a durable and adaptable competitor. She navigated shifting eras, branding overhauls, and creative transitions, leaving behind a documented career defined less by a singular moment and more by sustained presence at the national level.

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