15 worst T-shirt designs in WWE history

Um...okay?
Um...okay?

#14 Becky Lynch: Lass Kicker (for men) / Nia Jax: I'm Not Like Most Girls (for men)

I don't
Pro-tip for men: maybe don't wear a shirt that suggests that you beat women

I decided to put both of these in the #14 spot because they're here for the literal exact same reason. Let's go one-by-one.

On its own, Becky Lynch's "Lass Kicker" shirt isn't too offensive - it's a simple design that looks fine and underlines Lynch's propensity to make puns.

So why is it here? Well, because the shirt was also released for men.

That's right - there was a men's shirt on WWE Shop that said "Lass Kicker" on it. This was before they added the words "Becky Lynch" to the bottom, too, so all that was left was a catchphrase that suggested a man's pride in committing acts of violence against women.

Now, I get that WWE feels a need to release both men's and women's versions of merchandise so that anyone could buy them, but...why this one? What were they thinking?

Evidently, they weren't. Because they did it a second time -

Oops. t
To be fair, it's not incorrect...

This is the men's version of Nia Jax's shirt. Yes - they actually released a shirt, for men, that read "I'm not like most girls" in big purple letters on the front.

I mean, to give it some credit (and by "some," I mean minimal), it's also not bad on the eyes, per se. And hey, at least it didn't imply domestic violence. But how clueless do you have to be to release not one, but TWO gender-specific shirts to the opposite gender?

Luckily, both of these were quickly pulled from the shelves and replaced. Lynch got a new shirt altogether, while the male version of Jax's read simply - "I'm not like most". It's still nothing special, but at least they remedied it to an extent.