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WWE Raw Results — June 23, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for June 23, 2025 in Columbus, OH. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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June 23, 2025 — Columbus, OHEvent Time: Tue, Jun 24, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw on 6/23/25 kept the formula rolling with a mix of hard-hitting matches, faction tension, and just enough chaos to keep things interesting, even if you could see some of it coming. The show opened with CM Punk calling out Roman Reigns and The Vision, delivering a sharp promo that got the crowd loud and set up the night’s conflicts right away. In singles action, Gunther bulldozed JD McDonagh, chopping him down and finishing with the Sleeper Hold in another dominant showing, while Rhea Ripley overpowered Roxanne Perez in a physical match that ended with a clean Riptide. The women’s division saw Stephanie Vaquer retain the WWE Women’s World Championship against Bayley, using smart counters and ring awareness to stay in control when it mattered most. Tag team action featured AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeating Los Americanos, blending quick tags and high-flying offense to keep the pace moving and the crowd engaged. The main event once again saw The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) collide with Roman Reigns & Jey Uso, and like recent weeks, it didn’t stay a clean match for long, breaking down into a chaotic brawl with interference and bodies flying around ringside. It wasn’t the most original episode, but it had enough energy, star power, and physicality to keep fans locked in for the ride.
Match Results
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Bron Breakker and Penta opened Raw with a brawl that was more “hard hits and big moments” than technical wizardry, and damn if it didn’t hit its marks anyway. Penta got the crowd fired up early with his quick offense — a sky‑high Tope Con Hilo that brought the house alive — but as soon as Breakker caught him midair with that nasty spear, the momentum swung. Breakker didn’t just follow up; he disciplined Penta with brutal shoulder tackles and that signature Frankensteiner before doubling down with another Spear for the clean pin. The Post‑match beatdown and Rollins’ message afterward made it feel like this wasn’t just a win — it was a declaration of dominance from the hard‑charging champion.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Jade Cargill vs. Roxanne Perez in the Queen of the Ring semis had the feel of “big power vs. speed and resolve,” and it delivered just that. Perez was working smart, targeting Jade’s leg early with calculated moves and even using the apron to grind down her bigger foe. It almost paid off, too — Perez was rolling and looked like she might steal the pin when Jade’s base was compromised. But Jade is Jade — the Prodigy shrugged off the adversity, caught Roxanne in mid‑air, and planted her with a wicked chokeslam before hitting her patented Jaded finisher to punch her ticket to the final. Perez showed heart, but Jade’s brute force proved the difference.
Successful Defense
+4
Title defense (DQ): +2
Winning match (DQ): +1
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Becky Lynch and Bayley came out with history and familiarity between them, and the match was physical from the opening exchange — solid strikes, counters, and old‑school clutch‑and‑grind moments that reminded you why these two know each other so well. Bayley tried climbing high and crashing Lynch with big risky offense, and Lynch answered with a superplex that shook the ring. Just as things got sloppy and borderline wild — chairs, annouce‑table spots, and all — Lyra Valkyria showed up, shoved Beck, and forced the referee to call it a disqualification. So Becky retained the Women’s Intercontinental Title, yes, but not without Bayley and Lyra creating enough chaos to make the finish feel like a “well, of course it ended this way” moment.
Main Event
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
If you wanted a banger of a main event, Cody Rhodes vs. Jey Uso delivered in spades...two friends who wrestled like rivals, and then wrestled like men who just wanted to out‑fight each other. They traded chops, counters, suicide dives, spears, and even reversed finishers like it was nobody’s business; each time one guy got close to the pin, the other answered back in kind. Cody hit a Super Cody Cutter off the top rope and nearly finished it, only for Jey to come right back with Uso‑splash attempts and Superkicks. The crowd was eating every second of it. Cody finally put him down with Cross Rhodes, earning his place in the King of the Ring final against Randy Orton. Blood, sweat, and respect all over that match — classic Raw main event energy.








