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WWE Raw Results — June 16, 2025

Full WWE Raw results for June 16, 2025 in Green Bay, WI. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.

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June 16, 2025 — Green Bay, WIEvent Time: Tue, Jun 17, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw on 6/16/25 felt like the template for what the show would become over the next few weeks — heavy on big names, physical matches, and a main event scene that refuses to stay contained. The night opened with Roman Reigns addressing CM Punk and The Vision, laying down his usual confident tone while making it clear he’s still the center of everything, even with multiple threats circling. In singles action, Gunther steamrolled JD McDonagh, landing brutal chops and locking in the Sleeper Hold for another no-nonsense win, while Rhea Ripley powered through Roxanne Perez in a stiff matchup that ended decisively with the Riptide. The women’s title picture stayed consistent as Stephanie Vaquer retained the WWE Women’s World Championship against Bayley, using counters and timing to escape Bayley’s offense and secure the victory. Tag team action saw AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeat Los Americanos, delivering a smooth, fast-paced match that gave the crowd something to really get behind. The main event featured The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) taking on Roman Reigns & Jey Uso, and it didn’t take long before things unraveled into a chaotic brawl with interference and bodies scattered around ringside, closing the show with more noise than resolution. It followed a familiar pattern, but the intensity and star power were enough to keep it from feeling completely stale.

Match Results

Queen of the Ring qualifier
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
15:48
Stephanie Vaquer
Stephanie Vaquer
+1
On match card: +1
Asuka
Asuka
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Raquel Rodriguez
Raquel Rodriguez
+1
On match card: +1
Ivy Nile
Ivy Nile
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
The Queen of the Ring opener was a four‑way that felt bigger than most Fatal 4‑Ways because Asuka made her long‑awaited return and looked like she hadn’t missed a beat. Stephanie Vaquer started hot with Devil’s Kiss attempts and fluid offense that made her look genuinely dangerous, while Raquel Rodriguez brought her usual power and Ivy Nile showed off some impressive striking too. At one point Raquel nearly had it won until Rhea Ripley randomly yanked her out of the ring, leaving Asuka a clear shot. Asuka didn’t waste it — she hit her Empress Impact and scored the pin, reminding everyone exactly why she’s still a threat whenever she sets foot in the ring.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
10:38
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
AJ Styles vs. JD McDonagh delivered exactly the kind of refreshing in‑ring encounter you want from two guys who actually know how to wrestle without flailing all over the place. McDonagh came in with solid aggression and kept Styles honest early, working a grapple‑heavy approach that made things feel grounded. Styles answered with his trademark mix of strikes, counters, and those flashes of ingenuity that make you go “ohhhh” when he hits them. The finish came when Styles caught McDonagh with a sudden Styles Clash and got the pin, but not before Dominik Mysterio tried to muck things up on the outside. Styles stood tall after the bell, briefly feuding with Dom’s cheap‑shot antics, and walked off looking like he still has plenty left in the tank.
Undercard
Final
Forfeit
2:45
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
What was scheduled as a singles match quickly turned into one of those unfortunate moments where real life smacked into the show — Liv Morgan dislocated her shoulder within seconds of the bout starting when she landed awkwardly and immediately grimaced in pain, forcing the referee to call it off and award the win to Kairi Sane. You could see the distress on Morgan’s face when she crumpled to the mat, and commentary acknowledged the severity right away, which made it feel like a gut punch for the crowd and for everyone invested in her momentum. Sane at least sold the situation appropriately afterward, but this one was over before it even got going and leaves you wondering what the plan was before fate intervened.
Main Event
King of the Ring Qualifier
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
17:25
Jey Uso
Jey Uso
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Rusev
Rusev
+3
Main eventing: +3
Sheamus
Sheamus
+3
Main eventing: +3
Bronson Reed
Bronson Reed
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This King of the Ring fatal‑four‑way main event was one of those hot messes that somehow works because everyone involved committed to making chaos entertaining. Sheamus and Rusev traded dueling chants from the crowd early, giving us some unexpected “Let’s go Sheamus/Rusev Day” energy, while Bronson Reed and Jey Uso brought raw power and willingness to brawl. Breakker tried to crash the party at one point, which spiked the unpredictability even further, and then Sami Zayn and Penta ran in to clear house at ringside. Amid the din, LA Knight swooped in to level Reed, and Uso seized his opening — hitting a spear and two splashes to put away Reed and punch his ticket into the King of the Ring semifinals. Even with Seth Rollins trying to jump him afterward, Cody Rhodes ran out for the save, giving the finish a big “oh damn” moment and setting up next week’s Cody vs. Jey clash.