ROSEMONT, Ill. - Alexa Bliss and Braun Strowman each won their respective Money in the Bank ladder matches Sunday night, but just as in almost every other aspect of their lives, their circumstances could not be more different.

Bliss won the women's Money in the Bank ladder match early in the night, short-circuiting Becky Lynch's third straight close call in as many Money in the Bank matches. After becoming the first woman to become both Raw and SmackDown women's champion, and the first to hold those titles multiple times, Bliss becomes the first to add winning the Money in the Bank briefcase to that list of accomplishments.

"It was amazing. Our women have come so far, and to become the second Ms. Money in the Bank was amazing," Bliss said in an interview with ESPN shortly after the end of the Money in the Bank pay-per-view. "Being able to climb up the ladder, after the match that these women [and I] had just put on, and be the one to grab the briefcase was amazing."

But Bliss wasn't done. To the delight of the crowd at the Allstate Arena, Bliss waited just a couple of hours before she put her guaranteed title shot into play. As Ronda Rousey appeared poised to put Nia Jax away to become Raw women's champion, Bliss slid into the ring, nailed Rousey in the back with the briefcase to trigger a DQ, and then went to work on long-time rival Jax. Within minutes, she became a three-time Raw women's champion.

"Honestly, I kind of drowned out the crowd in that moment because it was a two-hour later cash-in," said Bliss. "To be able to have that moment, and to pin Nia Jax to become a three-time Raw women's champion was just amazing -- it's been a great night."

Money in the Bank winner Braun Strowman has his eyes set on Brock Lesnar's Universal championship. Courtesy WWE

Strowman, on the other hand, closed out the show with the briefcase held over his head after a grueling main event. He spent several portions of the men's Money in the Bank ladder match facing an all-out attack from the other seven competitors. Strowman even found himself buried under a pile of ladders at one point.

With the adrenaline pumping, Strowman was still wrapped up in the moment a few minutes later when he sat down with ESPN, briefcase in hand.

"It sucked. How do you think it felt? I got buried under hundreds of pounds of steel ladders," Strowman said. "It took me a minute to pile and climb my way out of that. It didn't stop me from climbing to the top of that ladder and taking what's mine."

He's the first true giant to win Money in the Bank since Kane did it in 2010. Unlike Kane, who was able to cash in the very same night to win the World Heavyweight Championship from Rey Mysterio, Strowman has to wait until reigning Universal champion Brock Lesnar is in the building for Raw or a pay-per-view before he can cash in his opportunity.

Funny enough, as the men and women representing Raw in the Money in the Bank ladder matches sat atop ladders in the ring last Monday, Strowman and Bliss all but dictated how these matches would play out. Even though their processes differed, the paths of the former Mixed Match Challenge teammates crossed over once more on Sunday night.

After SmackDown had Money in the Bank all to itself as an event last year, both briefcases were won by Raw superstars this time around. When Bliss cashed in spontaneously during Sunday's pay-per-view she became just the third person to take advantage of her title shot on the same night she won the briefcase. She joined Kane (2010) and Dean Ambrose (2016) in doing so, with all three successfully walking out of the Money in the Bank pay-per-view as champion.