SmackDown Women’s Champion Charlotte Flair is still talking about the latest member of the WWE’s roster.

WWE has put more focus on the division in recent years thanks to the Women’s Revolution. We now have two different women’s divisions as well as the title.

One division on Monday Night Raw and the other on SmackDown.

Flair has taken the WWE by storm since being called up to the main roster in 2015 during the Women’s Revolution storyline. She has won championships both in NXT and on the main roster.

At first, she was portrayed as her real-life personality then she started to come out of her father’s spotlight and become her own person.

Flair, who joined WWE back in 2012, has found success in both NXT and on the main roster. She has held the NXT Women’s, Divas, and Raw Women’s Championships.

Now, that she is on SmackDown Live, she is looking to win the SmackDown Women’s Championship.

Flair is still trying to find herself while competing on the blue brand as a babyface. For the majority of her career (including NXT and main roster) she has worked as a heel.

However, when WWE decided to trade her to SmackDown Live last year during the Superstar Shakeup, they turned her into a babyface.

Flair guested on SiriusXM Stars' Conversations With Maria Menounos this week. During the interview, she was asked who she wants to face at WrestleMania 34 and why it’s not former UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey.

Here is what she had to say (transcript courtesy of Wrestling Inc):

"I want to wrestle Asuka, I want to break her streak. We've never faced each other, never been in a multi-woman match. I feel her coming from Japan and having her own legacy, and coming from a completely different culture, and then my background, I think it's definitely a WrestleMania moment. So that's who I would like to face. She has to pay her dues first to face me!"

"Oh, they should be. Ronda's a star and an attraction and with her coming to be a part of the women's division, obviously it brings more eyes on the women's division, not just our audience. I mean, people that don't even watch wrestling, they know who Ronda Rousey is. They're like, 'oh she's on WWE, oh let's tune in for a second.'

So I think that's huge. But, you know, we're on the road 265 days a year and you just can't call yourself a WWE Superstar. So the easiest thing she'll do is sign a contract.

Whether she's willing to put in that work, that's where the respect and understanding our culture and what it means to be a star in our industry... we'll see how the future plays out. "