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WWE Raw Results — July 07, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for July 07, 2025 in Providence, RI. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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July 07, 2025 — Providence, RIEvent Time: Tue, Jul 8, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Here’s your **event recap** for *WWE Raw* on **July 7, 2025**, corrected and in one paragraph:
Raw on **7/7/25** delivered a steady mix of physical matches and chaotic moments, even if parts of the show felt a little too familiar by the end. The night opened with **CM Punk calling out Roman Reigns and The Vision**, setting the tone with a fired-up promo that got the crowd loud early. In singles action, **Gunther made quick work of JD McDonagh**, chopping him down and finishing with the Sleeper Hold in a match that was more about dominance than drama, while **Rhea Ripley overpowered Roxanne Perez** with a clean Riptide after a hard-hitting exchange. The women’s title scene saw **Stephanie Vaquer retain the WWE Women’s World Championship against Bayley**, using smart counters and ring positioning to stay one step ahead. Tag action kept the pace up as **AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeated Los Americanos**, combining smooth teamwork with high-flying offense that got one of the better reactions of the night. The main event once again brought **The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) against Roman Reigns & Jey Uso**, and like recent weeks, it broke down into a chaotic brawl with interference — including Logan Paul stirring things up — leaving bodies laid out as the show closed. It wasn’t the freshest episode, but the crowd stayed into it, and the big names did enough to keep the momentum rolling.
Match Results
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Kairi Sane got the night started with a confident performance against Women’s Tag Team Champion Roxanne Perez. Perez struck fast early, tossing Sane around with high‑impact offense and even climbing to the top rope to land a big knee, but Sane kept finding counters and answered with a smooth blend of headbutts and timing‑based offense. The finish came when Sane stepped out of a Pop Rox attempt and turned it into a backslide for the pin, proving she still has that seasoned ring IQ. Post‑match chaos broke out when Raquel Rodriguez and Perez double‑teamed Sane, but the Kabuki Warriors reunited in force as Asuka rushed down to even the odds, cleaning house on both attackers and reminding everyone that when Sane and Asuka team up, they still bring a ton of heat.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Bron Breakker faced a depleted Sami Zayn, who took the match despite a vicious sneak attack from Karrion Kross before the bell. Breakker didn’t waste any time after the bell rang, meeting Zayn in the center of the ring with brutal shoulder tackles and a series of Spears that looked like they could snap bones, not just bodies. Zayn managed a brief moment of resistance — even connecting with a clothesline — but every comeback attempt was swallowed up by Breakker’s sheer power and intensity. A second Spear put Zayn on his back and a third one finished him clean, leaving Zayn in rough shape afterward and selling just how punishing Breakker’s offense truly is when he gets going.
+2
Winning match (DQ): +1
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Jey Uso’s singles bout with Bronson Reed didn’t last long, but it was brutal while it lasted. Reed manhandled Jey for most of the match, whipping him around the ring, dropping elbows, and threatening to just steamroll him. The match abruptly ended when Reed lost his head and smashed a chair into Jey’s skull — a textbook DQ — but the real carnage started after that bell. Reed wasn’t satisfied with the win; he drilled Jey with back‑to‑back Tsunamis that made it look like a Calvinball highlight reel of violence. The beatdown required multiple officials, producers, and referees just to get Reed to back off, turning what should’ve been a quick upper‑midcard matchup into a “please make it stop” segment that only made Reed look that much more dangerous.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
El Grande Americano and Dragon Lee put on a fun, frenetic matchup that leaned heavily into spectacle and momentum swings. Lee started strong, clotheslining Americano out of the ring and hitting a dropkick that sent him crashing through the ropes, which got the crowd pumped. Americano returned the favor by tossing Lee into the steel steps and grinding him down before they even hit the apron. Back in the ring, Lee was getting set to rip that mask off when Americano turned the tables with a series of counters and then delivered a massive running headbutt — thanks to a metal plate hidden in his mask — for the pin. It was exactly the sort of over‑the‑top finish fans expect from a fast‑paced midcard singles match, and it keeps Americano looking unpredictable enough to keep drawing reactions.
Main Event
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
In the main event, Seth “Freakin” Rollins and Penta threw down in a smart, physical match that blended veteran savvy with big‑moment spots. The two felt each other out early, exchanging holds and grappling before Rollins started turning up the heat with sharper strikes and slick counters. The climax came when Rollins used the old “invisible” referee angle — catching Penta with a low blow the official didn’t see — then delivered a Stomp to score the win. Rollins thought he had the night wrapped up, but just when it felt like the segment was over, LA Knight blindsided him with a Beast’s BFT on the ramp, setting up their Saturday Night’s Main Event showdown while leaving Rollins’ celebration — and dignity — in shambles.










