The six men competing in the main event of the next SmackDown pay-per-view were prominently featured on Tuesday night -- opening and closing the two-hour show. But it was a revelation made in the second hour that was the headline stealer as WWE announced the first-ever women's Money in the Bank ladder match will be contested on Sunday, June 18.

With SmackDown looking for a No. 1 contender for Naomi's women's championship, Charlotte Flair, Becky Lynch, Natalya, Carmella and Tamina Snuka will all compete for a briefcase containing a guaranteed contract that can be cashed in at a moment's notice. It is the first time WWE will hold this match with women and comes on the heels of the company's first women's Hell in a Cell match a year ago.

Other than that announcement, SmackDown was a bit of a disappointment as WWE has little room for creativity with its top four matches already scheduled for an event two-plus weeks away. (Oh yeah, a tag team title match was also made on Tuesday night.)

Check out full results and analysis from Tuesday's show below. 

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WWE SmackDown results

Kevin Owens' Highlight Reel -- Shinsuke Nakamura, Baron Corbin: Owens sarcastically introduced Nakamura, referring to him by his new terrible nicknames, "The Rock Star" and "The Artist Known As." He informed Nakamura that he retired the last so-called "rock star" in WWE, Chris Jericho. As Nakamura was about to speak, Corbin's music hit and he demanded to see highlights of his beating up Sami Zayn last week. Corbin then called Owens "Cartman" as Nakamura reminded Owens that he pinned him 1-2-3 last week and told Corbin that Zayn beat him twice. The heels teamed up to attack Nakamura, so Zayn saved the day. Zayn said he wasn't done fighting Corbin and his battle with Owens was "never over" and set up a tag team match.

Shinsuke Nakamura & Sami Zayn def. Kevin Owens & Baron Corbin via pinfall: Nakamura got the hot tag and added some needed energy to a slow match. Zayn pushed Owens into Corbin, which provided a distraction as the two argued. Owens pushed Corbin, Zayn clotheslined Corbin out of the ring, and Nakamura hit Kinshasa to get his second pinfall victory over Owens. 

This is basically what happened to open last week's show, though the tag team match was saved for the main event. Nakamura is now 3-0 and has pinned Owens in tag team matches over consecutive weeks. It was announced at the end of SmackDown that they will one-on-one next week, which obviously makes sense. However, this is more proof they announced the Money in the Bank match participants way too early.

In the ring -- The Usos and New Day: The Usos clowned the rest of SmackDown's tag teams, all of which they have beaten while defending the title. That brought out New Day for their first SmackDown Live appearance. After playing up to the crowd, Big E said, "As far as those SmackDown tag team titles: We like 'em, and we wants 'em." Xavier Woods thought it was "cute" The Usos thought they ran the show, but commissioner Shane McMahon actually does, and he set up a tag team title match for Money in the Bank.

Package -- Jinder Mahal's celebration: SmackDown aired highlights from last week's Punjabi party along with a wide variety of Indian newspaper and television headlines celebrating the championship win.

Fasion Files -- "The Men Who Knew Too Little:" This week's edition was an old-school cop caper as Fandango stumbled upon a trashed Fashion Police Department office. Rather than describe it all, check out the video below. Here's a good out of context line from Fandango: "It's ethanol alcohol, tree frog excrement, hibiscus."

The New Day's return to TV was average, though it established a money feud with The Usos right off the bat, which was nice. Normally, I prefer challengers earn title opportunities, but New Day is an easy exception. It was also a good idea for WWE to play up the Indian headlines created by Mahal's title victory as they're not shying away from the obvious motivation of that decision. The Fashion Files was a bit rough, maybe the worst of the four thus far, though still decent enough.

No. 1 Contender's Fatal 5-Way Match -- Charlotte Flair vs. Becky Lynch vs. Natalya vs. Carmella vs. Tamina Snuka: Before the match even began, the women all began brawling and Snuka completely ripped apart the announce table only to be thrown into the ring post by Flair, who soon wiped out both Snuka and Natalya with a moonsault from the top rope to the outside. Carmella was next to fly, splashing Flair from off the barricade. Lynch then hit Carmella with an exploder suplex, and Flair threw Natalya into the steel steps before powerbombing her through the cleared off table.

In the ring -- Shane McMahon: The commissioner hit the ring thrilled that the women were so competitive that the match never started. He announced they would all fight once more, this time in the first-ever women's Money in the Bank ladder match. Cameras panned to Flair, who gave a perfect devilish grin after the announcement.

Yes! The Atlanta crowd popped in a major way for the tremendous announcement. If the action ringside was any indication, this match is going to be phenomenal. Love the decision.

Also ...

Breezango def. The Colons via pinfall: The Fashion Police wore their costumes from the earlier segment to the ring. Breeze was knocked off the ring ropes and returned as the janitor from last week and hit the Unprettier (inverted double underhook facebuster).

Backstage -- AJ Styles and Dolph Ziggler: The two traded barbs about their match later in the night with Ziggler pointing out he's the only one in this year's MITB match to actually win the briefcase and cash in the contract successfully. (Ziggler also referred to Styles as "P1," which was pretty funny.)

In the ring -- Randy Orton and Jinder Mahal: The Viper said he's beaten the best the industry has ever seen and followed up by sharing his family's credentials. "Let's just say, if my grandfather was alive today, he'd smack the hell out of me for losing the championship to a guy like Jinder Mahal," he said. Orton also pointed out that respect is a two-way street and Mahal hasn't earned it yet and he certainly doesn't send it back. He promised an American ass-kicking at Money in the Bank in his hometown of St. Louis, Missouri. "I'm going to stop talking because, at Money in the Bank, I'm going to become champion for the 14th time," he concluded. The WWE champion's music hit, and Mahal appeared on the TitanTron saying Orton was just like the rest of the United States, a symbol of the past living on America's former greatness.

Dolph Ziggler def. AJ Styles via pinfall: An entertaining, athletic match as one would expect from these two. Styles looked to get the fall with a Calf Crusher late in the match, but Ziggler raked his eyes and hit the ZigZag for a near pin. Avoiding a superkick, Styles set Ziggler up for the Phenomenal Forearm, but Ziggler pulled the top rope to knock him down and hit Styles with a superkick to the side of the head for the clean victory.

First of all, I'm simultaneously shocked and thrilled that Ziggler just got a clean 1-2-3 over Styles. Then I remembered that SmackDown was in Atlanta, Styles' hometown, and it made more sense as WWE always seems to pull that move. Still, a big spot for Ziggler to go over and a credibility builder for a guy that has consistently been buried by booking.