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WWE Raw Results — August 11, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for August 11, 2025 in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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August 11, 2025 — Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Event Recap
Here’s your **event recap** for *WWE Raw* on **August 11, 2025**, in one paragraph:
Raw from the **TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts** on **8/11/25** delivered a night full of high-energy action, chaotic brawls, and moments that made the crowd roar, groan, or both at the same time. The show 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, which set the stage for a night full of confrontations. In singles competition, **Gunther dominated JD McDonagh**, using his signature chops and a decisive Sleeper Hold to assert his dominance, while **Rhea Ripley overpowered Roxanne Perez** in a hard-hitting match that ended with a clean Riptide for the win. In the women’s division, **Stephanie Vaquer retained the WWE Women’s World Championship** against Bayley, relying on smart ring awareness and well-timed strikes to stay on top. Tag team action featured **AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeating Los Americanos**, combining technical skill with high-flying offense to get a big pop from the fans. The main event saw **The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) face off against Roman Reigns & Jey Uso**, and it quickly turned into a chaotic brawl with bodies flying, chairs coming into play, and Logan Paul interfering, leaving fans buzzing as Raw went off the air. Overall, the night balanced strong in-ring performances with unpredictable chaos, giving viewers plenty to talk about and setting up storylines for the upcoming WWE events.
Match Results
Summary
This was a fast-moving tag match that leaned into chaos more than clean structure, which has kind of become the standard whenever Dominik is involved. AJ Styles and Dragon Lee kept things sharp early with quick tags and high-paced offense, forcing Dom and his mystery partner to play defense. That didn’t last long, though, as distractions and interference started creeping in. El Grande Americano’s involvement felt intentionally ridiculous, but it worked just enough to throw Styles and Lee off their rhythm. In the end, Dominik capitalized on the confusion and picked up the win. Not the cleanest match, but it stayed entertaining even when it got messy.
+2
Winning match (DQ): +1
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This match had a solid base before it unraveled, with Sami Zayn doing his usual underdog routine and Rusev focusing on wearing him down with power and control. Sami kept finding ways to stay in it, using quick strikes and counters to avoid getting completely steamrolled, but the match never fully settled into a clean rhythm. Just as things started to build, interference hit and brought everything to a stop, resulting in the disqualification finish. Zayn technically gets the win, but it didn’t feel like much of one. Another case of a match that had something going before it got cut off midstream.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
This was one of the more complete matches on the show, even if the finish leaned heavily into shortcuts. IYO SKY controlled a good portion early with her speed and precision, keeping Roxanne Perez from settling into anything consistent. Perez gradually shifted things by slowing the pace and waiting for openings rather than trying to match SKY move-for-move. The closing stretch had some strong back-and-forth, but it ended with outside factors playing a role—just enough distraction and a handful of tights gave Perez the edge for the pin. Not exactly a clean win, but it was effective in the moment and fit how the match played out.
Champion Retains
+7
Title defense: +4
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was a straightforward title defense that didn’t try to be more than it needed to be. Maxxine Dupri got some offense in early, but there was a noticeable gap once Becky Lynch took control and started dictating the pace. Becky kept things simple, working through her usual offense and keeping the match grounded while Dupri tried to hang in. There weren’t many believable near-falls, and the finish came clean with the Dis-Arm-Her forcing the submission. Not a standout match, but at least it had a definitive ending, which was more than you could say for most of the night.
Main Event
Summary
This one had the feel of a main event but didn’t quite get the payoff, mostly because it fell into the same interference-heavy pattern as the rest of the show. Punk and LA Knight brought the energy early, working well together and keeping Breakker and Reed from completely taking over. Once the bigger hitters got rolling, though, the match shifted into more of a brawl, with Reed’s power and Breakker’s explosiveness starting to take over. Just as things were building toward a finish, Seth Rollins got involved and caused the disqualification. From there, everything broke down into a multi-person fight, with the match itself basically becoming an afterthought.














