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  • Shaniqua Rising: The Rough Fall and Fast Flameout of Linda Miles

Shaniqua Rising: The Rough Fall and Fast Flameout of Linda Miles

Posted on July 22, 2025 By admin No Comments on Shaniqua Rising: The Rough Fall and Fast Flameout of Linda Miles
Women's Wrestling

There was a time when Linda Miles looked like the future—six feet of fury, bred on basketball and shaped by ambition, towering over a sea of peroxide blondes and silicone smiles. She didn’t walk into professional wrestling to be cute. She came to dominate. And for a flickering, chaotic heartbeat in the early 2000s, she did.

Miles wasn’t built for subtlety. Born in Cincinnati in 1978, she bruised her way through Rutgers University with a stat sheet that read like war—nearly a thousand points, over 750 rebounds, a free throw percentage that screamed discipline, and a vertical that must’ve made backboards shiver. She was a baller before she was a brawler, a shot-blocking, floor-sliding, whistle-taunting forward with pro potential.

She even tried the WNBA—Seattle Storm camp, 2001—but got cut before the season tipped off. Maybe she wasn’t what they wanted. Maybe she was too physical. Too raw. Too loud. Whatever the reason, the Storm passed—and the wrestling gods opened their gates.

Because Vince McMahon needed more gladiators for the circus.

Tough Enough II came calling, a reality show that doubled as a torture chamber. Miles stepped in, six feet of no-nonsense, and won the whole damn thing alongside Jackie Gayda. She didn’t win because she kissed ass or smiled through bruises. She won because she outworked everyone. Al Snow saw it. So did Chavo, Ivory, and Hardcore Holly.

The ring became her new court.

And wrestling, for all its scripts and sequins, is still a sport that respects power.

Linda Miles had power in spades.

She debuted on Velocity in June 2002, teaming with Trish Stratus and fighting against her fellow Tough Enough victor Jackie in a feud that was more awkward than thrilling. This was the dark period—green workers, clumsy booking, and the smell of creative uncertainty hanging over the women’s division like a fog machine on the fritz. Miles got lost in the haze. Sent to OVW. Sharpened like a knife in the dark.

Then came the reboot.

Shaniqua.

That name alone feels like it was engineered in a smoky backroom by three middle-aged white men who thought they were being edgy. But Miles wore it like body armor. They slapped a dominatrix gimmick on her, gave her the Basham Brothers to manage, and painted her as a sadistic Amazon with a nightstick and a chip on her shoulder.

And, damn, she made it work.

She interfered in matches like a war general—methodical, brutal, unrepentant. She attacked the Divas division like it had personally insulted her. Bourbon Street Bikini Contest? She crashed it like a bar fight, flinging women over ropes and into the steel. Nidia got press-slammed like a ragdoll. Dawn Marie got booted back to catering. Torrie Wilson got mauled. Shaniqua didn’t do slaps and hair pulls—she brought boots and ring posts.

In a sea of catfights, she was a goddamn rhinoceros.

Of course, wrestling being wrestling, they couldn’t just let her run wild. No. She caught a Clothesline from Hell from Bradshaw that was sold as the equalizer, a poetic “know your place” from a locker room still wary of women who looked like they could actually win a real fight. Shaniqua was written off. Breast implants were written in. And when she came back, it wasn’t with vengeance—it was with a nightstick and storyline swelling.

They turned her into a joke. They tried to humiliate her—stinkfaces from Rikishi, handicap matches, cartoonish angles. And through it all, Linda Miles didn’t flinch. She sold the pain. Delivered the hits. Took the bumps. Did the job.

And then, just like that, she was gone.

No Way Out 2004 was her swan song—a loss, a pinfall under Rikishi’s Banzai Drop, and a silent exit stage left. No farewell. No thank-you package. Just a demotion back to OVW and then a pink slip in November.

The rumors whispered about backstage attitude. “Foul behavior,” they called it.

Maybe.

Or maybe wrestling just didn’t know what to do with a woman who refused to be small.

She laced up her boots one final time in 2005, wrestling Nidia in Mexico for Toryumon. Lost that one, too. And then she vanished from the squared circle for good.

No teary goodbye tour. No Hall of Fame speeches.

But Linda Miles didn’t disappear. She just changed uniforms again.

Now, she’s a college basketball referee—a whistle in her mouth, fire in her gut, still calling the shots. The irony is beautiful. She’s finally in control. She doesn’t need a gimmick. Doesn’t need a ring name. Just authority, earned and real.

She’ll never get credit from wrestling historians. They’ll remember the implants, the nightstick, the dominatrix angle. But real fans—those who watched SmackDown in 2003, who saw her boot Nidia like a linebacker or no-sell slaps like a Terminator—they remember Shaniqua as the muscle. The presence. The power.

Linda Miles didn’t play the game. She stormed it.

And the game never really forgave her for it.

But she never needed its approval anyway.

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