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WWE Raw Results — August 25, 2025

Full WWE Raw results for August 25, 2025 in Birmingham, UK. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.

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August 25, 2025 — Birmingham, UK
Event Recap
Raw from the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Kentucky on 8/25/25 delivered a mix of dominant performances, chaotic brawls, and a few moments that made the crowd cheer and groan in equal measure. The show opened with Roman Reigns confronting The Vision, hyping his upcoming matches while throwing shade at CM Punk, setting the stage for tension that ran throughout the night. In singles action, Gunther crushed Je’Von Evans in a short but brutal match, asserting his dominance with a perfect combination of chops and a finishing Sleeper Hold. Rhea Ripley overpowered Lyra Valkyria in a physical encounter, hitting the Riptide to close the bout decisively, while Stephanie Vaquer successfully defended the WWE Women’s World Championship against Nikki Bella, relying on precision strikes and smart ring awareness to keep her belt. Tag team action featured AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeating Los Americanos, with Styles’ technical skill and Lee’s high-flying offense creating several highlight moments for the crowd. The main event saw The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) clash with Roman Reigns & Jey Uso, and it quickly escalated into a chaotic brawl with bodies flying, chairs being used, and Logan Paul interfering, leaving fans buzzing and a little bewildered as Raw signed off. Overall, the night balanced strong in-ring action with wild post-match chaos, giving fans plenty to talk about while building anticipation for the next big WWE events.

Match Results

Undercard
Final
Pinfall
8:47
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was a really fun opener that balanced speed with just enough chaos to keep things interesting without completely falling apart. JD McDonagh had backup in his corner, and for a minute it looked like Judgment Day was going to steal another one through numbers alone, but that got shut down early when Finn Bálor was ejected. Dominik Mysterio tried to keep the advantage alive, only to get neutralized by AJ Styles, which finally leveled things out. From there, Dragon Lee took over, hit Operation Dragon clean, and picked up the win. It wasn’t overcomplicated, just a well-paced match that actually got a proper finish.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
10:20
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This one leaned a lot more into interference than it needed to, but the in-ring portions were still solid enough to hold attention. Penta had the early momentum, using his usual mix of quick strikes and aerial offense to keep Kofi Kingston on the defensive. That changed once Grayson Waller got involved at ringside, first taking a hit for Kofi and then later creating the opening that turned the match. Kofi capitalized by knocking Penta off the top rope and finishing him with Trouble in Paradise. It worked, but it definitely felt like one of those matches where the outside help mattered more than what happened bell-to-bell.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
10:39
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was one of the more complete matches on the show, with a clear contrast between Ripley’s power and Roxanne Perez’s speed. Perez had moments where she slipped around Ripley and created openings, but she couldn’t sustain it long enough to take control. Ripley stayed patient, absorbed the offense, and eventually imposed her strength, planting Perez with a Riptide to get the win. Of course, it didn’t end there—Raquel Rodriguez jumped Ripley after the match, turning it into a two-on-one situation until IYO SKY ran down to even things up. The match itself delivered, even if the aftermath leaned into the usual chaos.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
8:04
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
his was the cleanest match on the show by a mile, which honestly made it stand out more than anything else. No interference, no distractions—just AJ Styles and Finn Bálor getting time to work. They kept things crisp, trading control without dragging the pace, and it felt like both guys were actually allowed to wrestle instead of working around constant interruptions. The finish came when Styles caught Bálor and hit the Styles Clash for the win. Simple, effective, and a reminder that not every match needs outside chaos to get over.
Main Event
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
13:46
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This main event had a solid backbone before it got pulled into the usual orbit of interference. LA Knight came in aggressive and held his own early, trading offense with Bron Breakker and keeping things competitive longer than expected. It actually felt like it might get a clean finish, which should’ve been a warning sign. Seth Rollins showed up at just the right moment to distract Knight, pulling him out of position long enough for Breakker to land a spear outside and then another in the ring to finish it. Breakker gets the win, but like a lot of matches on this show, it came with an asterisk attached.