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WWE Raw Results — April 28, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for April 28, 2025 in T Mobile Center, Kansas City, MO. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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April 28, 2025 — T Mobile Center, Kansas City, MOEvent Time: Tue, Apr 29, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
The April 28, 2025 episode of WWE Raw had that unmistakable “post-WrestleMania chaos trying to find direction” feel, and while it wasn’t the cleanest show, it definitely had some bite. Seth Rollins, flanked by Paul Heyman and Bron Breakker, kicked things off by basically declaring themselves the future and daring anyone to step up—cue Sami Zayn, who did exactly that and got hit with the classic “maybe you should leave Raw for your own safety” line, which somehow made things feel even more tense instead of less. In the ring, Rhea Ripley vs. Roxanne Perez never really got going thanks to interference, ending in a disqualification that felt more like an angle than a match, especially with Giulia’s presence stirring things up around ringside. The War Raiders picked up a solid win over Judgment Day in a match that had just enough outside noise from The New Day to keep things from being straightforward—because apparently that’s the rule now. Stephanie Vaquer quietly grabbed a win over Ivy Nile in a match that didn’t get a ton of spotlight but delivered where it needed to. Bron Breakker vs. Sami Zayn looked like it could turn into something meaningful before it also got thrown out, keeping the night’s theme of “nothing ends clean” alive and well. Throw in appearances from Logan Paul and Jey Uso—including a well-timed superkick that at least gave the crowd something decisive—and you’ve got a show that felt busy, slightly overstuffed, and very committed to chaos. It wasn’t a perfect Raw by any stretch, but it had energy, and even if it leaned way too hard on interference, it at least made sure you were paying attention the whole time.
Match Results
+2
Winning match (DQ): +1
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Rhea Ripley and Roxanne Perez actually got a solid back-and-forth going before things fell apart. Perez focused heavily on Ripley’s leg, chopping her down and trying to neutralize the size difference, and for stretches it worked better than expected. Ripley still powered through and started to regain control, lining up for the Riptide when Giulia jumped in and caused the disqualification. The match itself was competitive enough to feel legit, but the finish was more about piling bodies into the situation than giving it a real conclusion. Ripley technically won, but she ended up outnumbered until backup arrived, so it didn’t exactly feel like a victory lap.
Summary
This match had a little chaos baked into it from the start, with Judgment Day trying to control things while outside factors kept creeping in. Bálor and McDonagh worked a more traditional tag structure early, isolating and slowing things down, but Erik and Ivar flipped the tone whenever they got space with power offense. The finish came when everything broke down—Carlito distracted, the referee missed it, and Penta showed up to knock McDonagh off the top rope, setting up War Machine for the win. It wasn’t exactly clean, but at least the chaos had a purpose, and the War Raiders capitalized the second the door opened.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Stephanie Vaquer made the most of this non-title match, keeping things sharp and controlled against Ivy Nile. Nile had Chad Gable in her corner and tried to bring a more grounded, strength-based approach, but Vaquer never really let her dictate the pace for long. The offense stayed crisp without getting overly flashy, and Vaquer picked her moment instead of rushing anything. She eventually hit the SVB and got the clean pin. This was one of those matches that didn’t try to do too much—it was efficient, decisive, and made Vaquer look like she belonged without dragging the crowd through unnecessary filler.
Main Event
+3
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This wasn’t a competitive match so much as a controlled demolition. Sami Zayn came in already dealing with the pressure from Seth Rollins and company, and once the bell rang, Bron Breakker just ran him over. Zayn tried to fight back in bursts, but Breakker kept cutting him off with sheer force, stacking Spear after Spear until it stopped being a match and turned into a beating. The referee finally called it after the damage piled up, giving Breakker the win by stoppage. And just to make sure there was no confusion, Rollins added a Stomp afterward. It was uncomfortable by design, and yeah, the crowd being into it didn’t exactly make it feel better for Sami.










