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RAW
WWE Raw Results — July 28, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for July 28, 2025 in Detroit, MI. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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July 28, 2025 — Detroit, MIEvent Time: Tue, Jul 29, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw from the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina on 7/28/25 was a night packed with hard-hitting matches, chaotic brawls, and moments that had the crowd cheering, groaning, and sometimes doing both at once. The show opened with CM Punk cutting a fiery promo on Roman Reigns and The Vision, setting a tense, confrontational tone that carried throughout the night. In singles competition, Gunther dominated JD McDonagh, using his signature chops and finishing with a commanding Sleeper Hold, while Rhea Ripley overpowered Roxanne Perez with brute force, closing the match with a decisive Riptide. The women’s division featured Stephanie Vaquer retaining the WWE Women’s World Championship against Bayley, relying on precise strikes and ring awareness to stay on top. Tag team action saw AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeat Los Americanos, blending Styles’ technical skill with Lee’s high-flying offense to deliver some of the night’s most exciting moments. The main event brought The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) against Roman Reigns & Jey Uso, and it quickly escalated into a chaotic brawl, with bodies flying, chairs involved, and Logan Paul interfering, leaving the crowd buzzing as Raw went off the air. Overall, the night balanced strong in-ring performances, explosive action, and unpredictable chaos, giving fans plenty to talk about while building momentum toward the fall WWE events.
Match Results
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This six-person tag had a fun pace and didn’t overcomplicate things, which honestly worked in its favor. AJ Styles handled most of the heavy lifting on his side, mixing in quick offense while Asuka and Kairi Sane kept things moving with strikes and double-team spots. Judgment Day, as usual, leaned into distractions and numbers advantages whenever they could, but it never fully slowed the match down. The finish came after the usual chaos at ringside, with Styles cutting through it and landing a Phenomenal Forearm to seal the win. It wasn’t a deep match, but it was clean, energetic, and didn’t overstay its welcome.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was short, physical, and very much on Sheamus’ terms from the opening bell. Waller tried to create space and avoid getting dragged into a straight-up fight, but that only worked for so long before Sheamus caught him and started unloading with heavy strikes. There wasn’t much back-and-forth here—Waller got a few moments in, mostly through cheap shots and quick counters—but once Sheamus got rolling, it was pretty one-sided. The finish came quickly after Sheamus landed his usual hard-hitting offense and put Waller away without much drama. Not a showcase, but effective if you just wanted to see someone get hit really hard for a few minutes.
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This match was basically controlled chaos, but at least it committed to that from the start. With eight women involved, there was constant motion—quick tags, big group spots, and just enough structure to keep it from completely falling apart. Rhea Ripley stood out whenever she was in, bringing that physical presence that cuts through the noise, while IYO SKY added speed and unpredictability. On the other side, Chelsea Green and company leaned into disruption more than control, breaking things up whenever they could. The finish came after everything broke down into a multi-person sequence, with Ripley’s team ultimately picking up the win. It was busy, sometimes messy, but still entertaining in that “just keep it moving” kind of way
Champion Retains
Summary
This one had a solid underdog structure, with Wilde and Del Toro pushing the pace early and trying to overwhelm the champions before things could settle. They had a few believable near-falls and moments where it looked like they might actually pull it off, which helped keep the crowd engaged. Of course, once the match started swinging the challengers’ way, interference became a factor. Things got especially ridiculous with multiple “El Grande Americano” appearances getting involved, which felt like overkill but also very on-brand for this kind of match. In the end, Bálor and McDonagh retained after the distraction created just enough of an opening. Fun match, even if the finish leaned a little too hard on nonsense.
Main Event
+5
Winning main event (DQ): +2
Main eventing: +3
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This started off as a pretty straightforward power vs. speed matchup, with Jey Uso staying active early and trying to keep Bronson Reed from planting his feet for too long. Jey mixed in strikes and hit the Ode to Rikishi for a near fall, while Reed answered back with heavy shots and a big senton that slowed everything down in a hurry. Just as the match was settling into a rhythm, Bron Breakker showed up and wrecked it with a spear on Jey, causing the disqualification. From there, it turned into a full-on beatdown—Roman Reigns ran in to help, but that didn’t last long, as Breakker and Reed overwhelmed both guys and left them laid out at ringside. Not much of a “match” by the end, but the destruction afterward was the real point.






















