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The Comeback: How Women’s Bodybuilding Refused to Disappear

The Ms. Olympia was discontinued after 2014. Five years later it returned — and a new dynasty, led by six-time champion Andrea Shaw, rebuilt the sport the industry tried to retire.

By SteelQueens Editorial · Jun 7, 2026 · 2 min read

For five years, the most prestigious title in women’s bodybuilding simply did not exist. The Ms. Olympia — contested every year from 1980 — was discontinued after 2014, a casualty of shrinking stage time, sponsor cold feet, and a sport that the industry had decided to quietly retire (Ms. Olympia record). This is the story of how it came back — and why it is now growing again.

The five-year blackout (2015–2019)

When the Ms. Olympia was shelved, the women who had built the division didn’t stop competing — but the apex they trained for was gone. The Rising Phoenix World Championships kept the lights on as the de-facto world title, the only stage still crowning a champion of female bodybuilding while the Olympia name sat dormant.

2020: the reinstatement

In 2020 the Ms. Olympia returned, brought back under the Olympia umbrella with Wings of Strength as its driving force (Wings of Strength). The comeback had a face almost immediately: Andrea Shaw won the reinstated title in 2020 and never let go — taking six consecutive Ms. Olympia titles, 2020 through 2025 (2025 Ms. Olympia results). A dynasty was built on the exact stage the sport had written off.

Why it matters — the data

SteelQueens’ own Iron Score — an ELO rating built from every documented head-to-head across the sport’s history — places the division’s all-time greats (Iris Kyle, Andrea Shaw, Yaxeni Oriquen-Garcia, Lenda Murray) at the very top, the modern era now sitting comfortably alongside the legends of the 1990s. The comeback isn’t nostalgia; it is a measurable, competitive resurgence.

2026: a fuller calendar

The clearest sign of health is the schedule. The 2026 IFBB Pro League women’s bodybuilding calendar runs from the Alina Popa Classic Pro (Bucharest, 30 August) through the Olympia (Las Vegas, 24–27 September) to the Romania Muscle Fest Pro in November — more qualifiers, more stages, more paths to the Olympia than the division has offered in a decade (2026 schedule, event schedule).

The sport that the industry tried to end is, by every structural measure we track — champions, shows, ratings — back. SteelQueens exists to keep that record permanent.

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