History of WWE Money In The Bank ladder match, past winners and 2023 match cards

London, England – The 2023 WWE Money In The Bank will take place on Saturday, July 1st, 2023 at the O2 Arena in London, England. The event is the first to be contested outside United States Of America since its first edition in 2010. For the 2023 edition, there will be two Money In the Bank (MITB) ladder matches: one for men's championship contract and another for women's championship contract.
- About Money In The Bank ladder match
The Money in the Bank ladder match is a multi-person ladder match held by the professional wrestling promotion WWE. First contested at WWE's annual WrestleMania event beginning in 2005, a separate Money in the Bank pay-per-view was established in 2010. The prize in the match is a briefcase containing a contract for a championship match of the winner's choice, which can be "cashed in" by the holder of the briefcase at any point in the year following their victory—until 2022, the contract was only for a world championship match. If the contract is not used within a year of winning it, it will be invalid, but this has yet to happen. Up to and including the 2016 edition, ladder matches only involved male wrestlers. Beginning with the 2017 MITB event, however, women also have the opportunity to compete in such a match, with their prize being a contract for a women's championship match.
The first match was contested in 2005 at WrestleMania 21, after Chris Jericho invented the concept. At the time, it was exclusive to wrestlers of the Raw brand, and Edge won the inaugural match. From then until WrestleMania XXVI, the Money in the Bank ladder match, now open to all WWE brands, became a WrestleMania mainstay. The 2010 Money in the Bank event saw a second and third Money in the Bank ladder match when the eponymous WWE pay-per-view debuted in July, with WrestleMania no longer featuring the match. Unlike the matches at WrestleMania, this new event included two such ladder matches: one each for a contract for a WWE Championship match and a World Heavyweight Championship match, respectively.

Before the establishment of the annual Money in the Bank pay-per-view, wrestlers were allowed to use the contract to claim a match for any world championship in WWE. After the establishment of the pay-per-view, the Money in the Bank contracts were specifically aimed at one or the other championship. With the championship unification of the WWE and World Heavyweight titles into the WWE World Heavyweight Championship at the 2013 TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs event, there was only a single contract in play. This went into effect beginning with the 2014 Money in the Bank event.

The brand split returned shortly after the 2016 Money in the Bank event along with a new world title. The 2017 event was SmackDown-exclusive and the contract was a match for its world championship, the WWE Championship (formerly WWE World Heavyweight Championship). It also included the first-ever women's Money in the Bank ladder match, with the winner receiving a contract for a SmackDown Women's Championship match. Due to the controversy surrounding the ending of that match, the first non-pay-per-view Money in the Bank ladder match occurred on the June 27 episode of SmackDown Live. It became dual-branded beginning with the 2018 Money in the Bank event, involving both the Raw and SmackDown brands with one men's match and one women's match with participants evenly divided between the brands; the respective contracts guaranteed the winner a championship match for the top title of their respective brand, allowing Raw wrestlers (should they win) to cash-in on the Universal Championship or Raw Women's Championship. Beginning with the 2019 Money in the Bank, the respective winners could challenge either brand's champion.

At the 2020 Money in the Bank event, while the rules of the match remained the same, a "Corporate Ladder" gimmick was added on top of the match; both the men's and women's matches, which were held at the same time, took place at WWE's Titan Towers in Stamford, Connecticut, in which the participants began on the ground floor of the building and fought their way to the roof where a ring and ladders were located with the briefcases suspended above the ring; this change was brought about due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The matches returned to their regular format for the 2021 Money in the Bank event. While the contract was originally only for a world championship match, 2022 Money in the Bank winner Austin Theory was not the first to cash-in on a non-world championship when he unsuccessfully challenged for the WWE United States Championship

- How does a Money in the Bank ladder match work

The Money in the Bank ladder match can involve anywhere from 5–10 participants, with the objective being to retrieve a briefcase that is suspended 20 feet above the ring. The match was originally only for male wrestlers until 2017, when women began to have their own ladder match. The briefcase originally contained a contract that guaranteed a match for a world championship, and beginning in 2017 also a women's world championship—as of 2022, the contract can be used on any championship. The original match at WrestleMania 21 was exclusive to the Raw brand, with the contract guaranteeing a match for Raw's top title at the time, the World Heavyweight Championship. After this, wrestlers had the option between the WWE Championship and the World Heavyweight Championship, regardless of the brand the wrestler belonged to. In 2006, ECW's world title, the ECW Championship, became a third option until 2010, as in February that year, the ECW brand along with the title was deactivated; despite being an option, no contract holder cashed-in on the ECW Championship.

Beginning with the 2010 Money in the Bank event in July, it included two ladder matches, one for the Raw brand and one for SmackDown; Raw's ladder match was for a contract for a match for its top title at the time, the WWE Championship, while SmackDown's contract was for a match for its top title at the time, the World Heavyweight Championship. Although the WWE brand split ended after the 2011 event, a ladder match dedicated to each championship continued through the 2013 event. In December 2013, the titles were unified as the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. The next three years' events included a sole ladder match with a contract guaranteeing a match for the unified title. The brand split returned after the 2016 event. The WWE World Heavyweight Championship was made exclusive to SmackDown and renamed back to WWE Championship, while Raw established the WWE Universal Championship as their top title. Despite this, the 2017 event was SmackDown-exclusive and the contract was for a match for its world title. The 2017 event also saw the first women's Money in the Bank match with its contract for a SmackDown Women's Championship match.

Brand-exclusive PPVs ended following WrestleMania 34 in 2018, with all future events involving both the Raw and SmackDown brands. The Money in the Bank event now features two ladder matches, one for males and one for females, and each has eight participants evenly divided between the brands. The 2018 event was also the first year that the winners could challenge for the Universal Championship and Raw Women's Championship, respectively. For 2018, the winners received a contract for a match for their respective brand's world championship; in 2019, it was changed so that the winners could choose either brand's top championship. The 2020 event saw a variation to the match due to the COVID-19 pandemic: the men's and women's matches, featuring only six competitors each but still evenly divided between the brands, were moved to WWE's headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut, and occurred at the same time, with all competitors beginning on the ground floor and fighting their way to the roof where the briefcases were suspended above a ring. The 2021 event returned to the standard rules, but the 2022 event saw an uneven number of participants in the women's match; there were seven participants with four from Raw and three from SmackDown. The men's match was originally booked with an uneven division but that was rectified just before the match occurred. The 2022 event also changed the rules of the contract: winners can now challenge for any championship, as demonstrated by 2022 winner Austin Theory, who unsuccessfully cashed in on the WWE United States Championship.

The primary gimmick of the Money in the Bank briefcase is that it can be cashed in at the holder's sole discretion, at literally any time on any WWE programming. This enables the holder to take advantage of a moment's weakness in the champion, even if the champion had just finished a title defense for the night. This strategic use of the briefcase was popularized by Edge, the first Money in the Bank holder, who cashed it in at New Year's Revolution in January 2006, immediately after defending champion and actor John Cena had finished a grueling Elimination Chamber match against five other wrestlers. Because Cena was exhausted and barely able to defend himself, Edge made quick work of the champion, thus setting a powerful precedent for all Money in the Bank holders to come. At WrestleMania 31 in 2015, Seth Rollins set a precedent that a cash-in can even occur whilst a championship match is in progress; Rollins cashed in during the main event match between Royal Rumble winner Roman Reigns and WWE World Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar, converting the match to a triple threat match, and pinned the challenger Reigns to win the title. The Miz attempted to repeat this at the 2020 TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs event; however, since his tag team partner John Morrison cashed in the contract on his behalf, it was ruled an invalid cash-in and the contract was returned to Miz, thus enforcing that only the contract holder can cash in the contract.

The contract is valid for one year and the briefcase holder—dubbed "Mr./Ms. Money in the Bank"—can cash in the contract at the date, place, and time of their choosing. The briefcase may also be defended in matches, similar to how championships are defended. All of the briefcase holders have successfully defended and cashed in the contract except Mr. Kennedy and Otis, who both won the contract in the ladder match but lost the contract in defending the contract itself in a match. John Cena, Damien Sandow, Baron Tom Corbin, Braun Strowman, and Austin Theory are the only Money in the Bank contract holders to cash in and fail to gain a championship. To date, Cena, Charlotte Flair, and Seth "Freakin'" Rollins have had the contract cashed in against them the most (three times), as Edge, Rob Van Dam, and Damien Sandow have all cashed in against Cena, Carmella, Bayley, and Nikki A.S.H. have all cashed in against Flair, and Dean Ambrose, Brock Lesnar, and Austin Theory have all cashed in against Rollins, who has the unique distinction in that all three cash-ins against him were for different championships: the WWE World Heavyweight Championship with Ambrose, the Universal Championship with Lesnar, and the United States Championship with Theory. Cena was also involved in the first three instances where the championship failed to change hands after cashing in the contract: once as the challenger, which he won by disqualification against CM Punk, the second time as champion by defeating Sandow clean, and lastly as a distraction causing Corbin to lose to champion Jinder Mahal. Strowman was the first to fail by a no-contest ruling, when Brock Lesnar interfered during his Universal Championship match against Roman Reigns at the 2018 Hell in a Cell event and laid out both men. Theory is the most recent wrestler to fail in his cash in, losing to United States Champion Seth "Freakin'" Rollins thanks to an attack by Bobby Lashley on the November 7, 2022, episode of Raw. Edge, Daniel Bryan, and Seth Rollins are the only Money in the Bank contract holders to be given a title opportunity that was not their cash-in match: Edge won a championship tournament in 2005 on Raw to earn him a World Heavyweight Championship match against Batista, Bryan faced reigning World Heavyweight Champion Mark Henry in a steel cage match on the November 29, 2011, episode of SmackDown, and Rollins received a title shot in a triple threat match, also involving Cena and reigning WWE World Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar at the 2015 Royal Rumble. Rollins and Lesnar also have a unique history of cash-ins with each other, as they are the only two contract holders to cash in on one another and win a championship: Rollins at WrestleMania 31 when he cashed in and won Lesnar's WWE World Heavyweight Championship and Lesnar at Extreme Rules 2019 when he cashed in and won Rollins' Universal Championship.

- Past winners and contract holders:

1. 2005: Edge (1)

2. 2006: Robert Van Dam

3. 2007: Edge (2) and Mr. Kennedy

4. 2008: CM Punk (1)

5. 2009: CM Punk (2)

6. 2010: Jack Swagger (World Championship), Kane Jacobs (World Heavyweight Championship) and Mike Mizanin (WWE Championship)

7. 2011: Daniel Bryan (World Heavyweight Championship) and Alberto del Rio (WWE Championship)

8. 2012: Dolph Ziggler (World Heavyweight Championship) and John Cena (WWE Championship)

9. 2013: Damien Sandow (World Heavyweight) and Randy Orton (WWE Championship)

10. 2014: Seth Rollins

11. 2015: Sheamus

12. 2016: Jon Moxley

13. 2017 (SmackDown brand only): Baron Corbin (men) and Carmella (women)

14. 2018: Braun Strowman (men) and Lexi Kaufman (women)

15. 2019: Brock Lesnar (men) and Bayley (women)

16. 2020: Mike Mizanin (2) and Otis (men) and Asuka (women)

17. 2021: Big E. Langston (men) and Nicole Glencross (women)

18. 2022: Austin Theory (men) and Olivia Morgan (women)

Notes: the 2017 event was only exclusive to SmackDown brand. Also in 2017, the women's ladder matches were held twice after a controversial first match during the 2017, the 2nd match/rematch was held the following week after that controversial first match. In 2020, Mizanin won the contract after Otis lost the contract at 2020 Hell In A Cell.

- 2023 Money in the Bank match card (as of June 26, 2023 episode of Raw)

1. Men's Money in the Bank ladder match for any men's championship

2. Women's Money in the Bank ladder match for women's championship

3. Seth Rollins (c) vs. Finn Balor (World Heavyweight Championship singles match

4. The Usos (Jimmy and Jey Uso) vs. The Bloodline (Roman Reigns and Solo Sikoa) (Bloodline civil war tag team match)

5. Ronda Rousey and Shayna Baszler (c) vs. Liv Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez (women's tag team championship match)

6. Gunther (c) vs. Matthew Riddle (Intercontinental Championship singles match)

- Players qualified for 2023 Money in the Bank ladder match (as of June 26, 2023 episode of Raw)

a. Men: Logan Paul, Damien Priest, Trevor Mann, LA Knight, Santos Escobar, Shinsuke Nakamura and Pete Butch Dunne

• Mann defeated Mike Mizanin in the qualifying match on May 29 episode of Raw.

• Nakamura defeated Bronson Reed in the qualifying match on May 29 episode of Raw.

• Knight defeated Montez Ford in the qualifying match on June 2 episode of SmackDown.

• Escobar defeated Mustafa Ali in the qualifying match on June 9 episode of SmackDown.

• Butch defeated Baron Corbin in the qualifying match on June 9 episode of SmackDown

• Priest defeated Matthew Riddle in the qualifying match on June 12 episode of Raw.

• Paul was awarded a special exemption to Money in the Bank ladder match by WWE executives on June 19 episode of Raw.

b. Women: Trish Stratus, Becky Lynch, Zoey Stark, Zelina Vega, Io Shirai (Iyo Sky) and Bayley

• Vega defeated Lacey Evans in the qualifying match on June 2 episode of SmackDown.

• Lynch defeated Sonya Deville in the qualifying match on June 5 episode of Raw.

• Stark defeated Natalya Neidhart in the qualifying match on June 5 episode of Raw.

• Sky defeated Shotzi Blackheart in the qualifying match on June 9 episode of SmackDown.

• Bayley defeated Mia Yim in the qualifying match on June 9 episode of SmackDown.

• Stratus defeated Raquel Rodriguez by disqualification in the qualifying match on June 19 episode Raw. Therefore, Stratus is still exempted for women's Money in the Bank ladder match.

- Source:

WWE Money in The Bank website, featuring current match card

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