Once a recruit with the smile of a Disney princess and the ACL of a football retiree, Jennifer Michell Cantú Iglesias—better known to fans as Yulisa León—is now dancing with destiny in Mexico’s indie underworld. She was built in a lab called the Performance Center. But now she fights like someone who burned the lab down.
Origins: Second-Gen Blood, First-Class Baggage
Born April 9, 1996, in the wrestling crucible of Mexico, Jennifer Michell Cantú Iglesias had lucha libre in her veins and inevitable disappointment in her future. Her father wrestled as Julissa Mexa, which sounds like either a ring name or a spicy new flavor of tortilla chip. The name would return, like most good legacies do, only after the daughter had been broken, buried, and branded by the world’s biggest wrestling corporation.
But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
She signed with WWE in early 2021, after some “physical tests” at the Performance Center—which sounds less like a recruitment tryout and more like a dystopian CrossFit obstacle course administered by angry Floridians. It took until April 23 for WWE to introduce her officially—shiny headshot, rehearsed optimism, and all. A “new class of international recruits,” they said. In other words: bodies to bump, sparkle, and maybe (but probably not) survive the NXT meat grinder.
NXT: Where Dreams Are ACL-Dependent
Her first match came via 205 Live, that show you forgot existed and WWE forgot to cancel. On October 22, 2021, now billed as Yulisa León, she teamed with La Catalina in a tag match that they promptly lost to Valentina Feroz and Amari Miller—two names that could also pass for sorority vice presidents.
Her NXT singles debut? A loss to Ivy Nile, a woman built like a protein bar. A tough start, but hey—it’s developmental, right?
Then, on September 13, 2022, León revealed she’d suffered a torn ACL. Nine months out. Surgery imminent. “My first surgery in 15 years as an athlete,” she wrote, presumably while icing her dreams and filling out rehab forms.
WWE may not teach patience, but it demands it. León went under the knife, disappeared for most of 2022, and reemerged in May 2023 on SmackDown, of all places, in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it tag team loss with Feroz to the icy Scottish vampires known as Alba Fyre and Isla Dawn.
That was it.
On September 21, 2023, WWE did what it does best—quietly released Yulisa León in the middle of a news cycle. No vignette. No farewell. No awkward tweet from Shawn Michaels pretending to care. Just another Performance Center product tossed into the ever-growing “What could’ve been” pile behind catering.
Rebirth in Baja: The Rise of Julissa Mexa
But this story doesn’t end in Florida’s developmental purgatory.
On November 3, 2023, León—or should we say Julissa Mexa—walked into The Crash Lucha Libre in Tijuana, stared into the lights of a raucous border-town crowd, and did something she never got to do in WWE: win.
She defeated Dulce Tormenta to become the Crash Women’s Champion—her first title, her first real spotlight, and probably the first time someone actually pronounced her name correctly on commentary.
For once, the “second generation” label wasn’t a burden—it was a crown.
Crash Course in Becoming a Wrestler
You see, The Crash isn’t a performance center. There are no camera drills, no promo classes, and no smiling next to washed-up football players who think “selling” means starting an energy drink line.
In The Crash, there are only fans who want violence, heart, and maybe a little blood on their ringside tacos. You either deliver—or you go back to doing Instagram Q&As about your protein shake routine.
Julissa delivered. Because underneath the Performance Center shine, there’s a real luchadora. One forged not in WWE’s plastic furnace, but in the real pain of injury, rejection, and rebirth.
She didn’t get a redemption arc in NXT. So she carved one herself in Tijuana, title belt slung over her shoulder like a warning sign to the rest of the indie world: She’s not done. She’s just getting started.
Legacy, Redux
By reviving her father’s ring name, Julissa Mexa, she did more than rebrand—she reclaimed. Wrestling history in Mexico doesn’t hand out second chances. You either earn them or you fade behind the pyro fog of people with richer uncles.
So when she stands in the ring now, it’s not as a cast-off Performance Center grad or a “former WWE star.” It’s as a warrior with the mask of her father and the scars of her own trials.
She’s not building herself back.
She’s burning the old version to the ground.
