← Event Results · Home · Boxscore

RAW
RAW

WWE Raw Results — July 21, 2025

Full WWE Raw results for July 21, 2025 in Houston, TX. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.

Raw resultsSmackDown resultsPLE resultsRosterChampionships

July 21, 2025 — Houston, TXEvent Time: Tue, Jul 22, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Here’s your **event recap** for *WWE Raw* on **July 21, 2025**, in one paragraph: Raw from the **Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado** on **7/21/25** delivered a mix of intense in-ring action, chaotic brawls, and moments that had the crowd fully invested from start to finish. The night opened with **CM Punk cutting a tense promo on Roman Reigns and The Vision**, calling out anyone who thought they could stand in his way and immediately setting the tone for a night of conflict. In singles action, **Gunther overpowered JD McDonagh**, asserting his dominance with trademark chops and a commanding Sleeper Hold, while **Rhea Ripley overpowered Roxanne Perez** in a physical bout that ended cleanly with her Riptide finisher. The women’s division featured **Stephanie Vaquer retaining the WWE Women’s World Championship** against Bayley, relying on ring awareness and well-timed strikes to secure the win. Tag team action saw **AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeat Los Americanos**, blending technical skill with high-flying offense to deliver multiple highlight moments. The main event featured **The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) against Roman Reigns & Jey Uso**, which spiraled into a chaotic brawl with bodies flying, chairs involved, and interference from Logan Paul, leaving fans buzzing as Raw went off the air. Overall, Raw served up a solid mix of power, strategy, and unpredictability, giving fans plenty to dissect and leaving the feeling that anything could happen next week.

Match Results

Undercard
Final
Pinfall
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was exactly what you’d expect when these two collide—no wasted motion, just two guys hitting each other hard until one of them stops getting up. Sheamus leaned into the physicality early, throwing heavy strikes and working Rusev over in the corners, while Rusev answered back with suplexes and those grinding submissions that slow everything down. It never really turned into anything fancy, but it didn’t need to. The finish came after Sheamus absorbed enough punishment to create an opening and put Rusev down for the win. Not a classic, but a solid, no-nonsense brawl that knew what it was.
No. 1 Contender Match — Raw Tag Team Championship
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
The New Day
The Creed Brother
LWO
No. 1 Contender
Summary
This one moved fast and rarely slowed down, which helped cover up the fact that it was more about constant action than structure. The New Day brought the energy, the Creed Brothers brought the power, and LWO played the role of the team that picks their moments instead of forcing them. There were plenty of quick tags, dives, and near-falls, but nobody really stayed in control long enough to take over. In the end, LWO capitalized when things broke down, sneaking in at the right time to secure the win. It was fun in the moment, even if it felt like organized chaos more than anything else.
Tag Team — Women's Tag Team Championship
The Judgement Day
Undercard - Title Match
Final
Pinfall
Successful Defense
Summary
This match followed a pretty familiar formula, with Bayley and Lyra Valkyria doing the bulk of the actual wrestling while Judgment Day looked for openings to take shortcuts. Lyra had some strong stretches, using her speed to keep things moving, while Bayley handled the heavier exchanges, but every time they started to build something, interference found its way in. Becky Lynch showing up to attack Lyra completely shifted the momentum, and from there it didn’t take much for Raquel Rodriguez to hit the Tejana Bomb on Bayley and finish it. Another win for Judgment Day that technically counts, even if it didn’t exactly scream dominance.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
This had a slightly different feel than their usual matches, mostly because Sami Zayn came in banged up and had to wrestle like a guy trying to survive instead of outmaneuver. Kross took full advantage, slowing things down and focusing on wearing Zayn out rather than rushing for a finish. Sami had his moments where he fired back and tried to speed things up, but it never really lasted long enough to swing control. Eventually, Kross shut things down and picked up the win, which felt like the right call given how the match played out. Not the most exciting match on the show, but it told a clear story in the ring.
Main Event
Main Event
No Contest
+3
No Contest - appearance points only
Main eventing: +3
+3
No Contest - appearance points only
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This match had a strong start and looked like it might steal the show before it got cut off. IYO SKY brought her usual mix of speed and precision, while Stephanie Vaquer matched her with sharp counters and a more grounded, aggressive style. They built a nice rhythm, trading control without it feeling forced, and it actually felt like it was heading somewhere meaningful. Then the disqualification finish hit, abruptly ending things before it could really peak. It’s frustrating because the match itself was working, but instead of a clean finish, it just kind of stopped. Still, what we got before that was solid while it lasted.