By the time Jessicka Havok—born Jessica Cricks in the rust-belt cradle of Massillon, Ohio—stormed into mainstream wrestling, she wasn’t looking for permission. She was demanding it. A six-foot freight train of fury with war paint on her face and a storm behind her eyes, Havok wasn’t here to kiss babies or sell merch. She was here to bulldoze through the walls that still kept women’s wrestling in the kiddie pool.
You didn’t watch Havok matches expecting finesse. You watched them for the same reason people rubberneck at highway crashes or read Bukowski poems about burning bars down to the floorboards. There’s beauty in the carnage—if you’re brave enough to look at it.
The Rust-Belt Beginning
Cricks debuted in 2004—back when women’s wrestling on the indies was still treated like filler between the real acts. She took the name Jessicka Havok and carved a path through the Midwest like a woman possessed. Ohio Championship Wrestling, Mega Championship Wrestling—those were the proving grounds. She wasn’t the girl-next-door. She was the girl who tore the door off the hinges and dared you to say something smart about it.
WSU: War Games and Reputations
When Havok arrived at Women Superstars Uncensored in 2009, she brought the chaos with her. Tag titles with Hailey Hatred were just the appetizer. The real meat came when she turned on Rain’s Army, set off a chain of feuds with names like Alicia, Mercedes Martinez, and Brittney Savage, and turned WSU into her own personal demolition derby. She won the Spirit Championship, the WSU World Title, and defended both like a drunken samurai with something to prove.
The highlight? A War Games match where The Midwest Militia—Havok, Sassy Stephie, and Allysin Kay—left Team WSU in a heap of bruises and regrets. A casket match with Martinez. A championship win against Athena. A fistfight with Sami Callihan. If it wasn’t extreme, it wasn’t Havok.
She didn’t so much wrestle as wage war. Every match was a cigarette break from the apocalypse.
Shine, Shimmer, and Getting Hit by a Car
From SHINE to Shimmer to NCW Femmes Fatales, Havok made her name everywhere worth making it. Her contagion-themed character—complete with gas mask—looked like it wandered out of a George Romero fever dream. In SHINE, she qualified for the inaugural championship tournament, traded blows with Saraya Knight and Rain, and eventually got run over by a damn car in a storyline with Allysin Kay. That’s not a metaphor. That actually happened.
TNA: From Havok to Jessicka and Back Again
In 2014, she arrived in TNA like an extinction event—dropping Gail Kim, choking out Velvet Sky, and winning the Knockouts Title with the same ease most people order takeout. But the title reign was short-lived, like summer in Cleveland. A triple threat loss to Taryn Terrell sent her spiraling into obscurity—until she clawed her way back.
The years in between were filled with indie battles, a Japanese tour with Stardom, and finally, a reemergence in Impact Wrestling alongside Rosemary, Su Yung, and later The Death Dollz. Jessicka—her new, technicolor alter ego—was bubbly, bright, and vaguely deranged, like Harley Quinn if she wrestled at the Gathering of the Juggalos. It worked.
She won Knockouts Tag Team gold—multiple times—often under the Freebird Rule, alongside Valkyrie and Rosemary. Whether she was called Havok, Jessicka, or some combo of both, she brought the hammer.
AAA and the Global Grind
By 2024, she was a known commodity across the globe. Triplemania appearances, gold in AAA’s mixed tag division, and wars with Killer Kelly and Masha Slamovich kept her name relevant. While others were chasing sponsors and social media metrics, Havok was piling up titles and broken bodies like firewood.
Personal Life
Havok got engaged to fellow wrestler Sami Callihan on her birthday in 2021. If that sounds like a love story dipped in barbed wire and bourbon, well… it probably is.
Final Bell?
Jessicka Havok isn’t the poster child for women’s wrestling. She’s the cautionary tale scrawled on the locker room wall in black Sharpie. She’s not a diva. She’s not an influencer. She’s a brawler, a bruiser, a bad dream wrapped in a singlet. And in a business that too often rewards glam over grit, that makes her essential.
She doesn’t need your approval. She’ll take your respect—or take your head off trying.