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RAW
WWE Raw Results — September 01, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for September 01, 2025 in Paris, France. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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September 01, 2025 — Paris, France
Event Recap
Raw from the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. on 9/1/25 was a high-energy mix of intense matches, backstage tension, and plenty of moments that kept the crowd engaged even when things got messy. The show opened with CM Punk confronting Roman Reigns, calling out The Vision and challenging anyone who thought they could stop him, immediately setting a combative tone for the night. In singles action, Gunther overpowered JD McDonagh in a decisive squash, putting on a display of raw strength that reminded everyone why he’s so feared in the ring. Rhea Ripley handled Roxanne Perez with authority, finishing with her signature Riptide and leaving the crowd roaring, while Stephanie Vaquer retained the WWE Women’s World Championship against Bayley, using a mix of cunning and precise strikes to secure her victory. Tag team action saw AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeat Los Americanos, combining Styles’ technical prowess and Lee’s aerial offense to keep the fans invested. The main event featured The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) versus Roman Reigns & Jey Uso, which quickly descended into chaos with bodies flying, chairs involved, and Logan Paul making an appearance to add even more tension, leaving the crowd buzzing as the show went off the air. Overall, Raw balanced dominant performances, explosive brawls, and unpredictable interference, making it an action-packed Monday night that set the stage for the fall WWE storylines.
Match Results
The Kabuki Warriors
Final
Submission
The Judgment Day
Summary
The show kicked off with Asuka and Kairi Sane taking on Raquel Rodriguez and Roxanne Perez, and this one delivered right out of the gate with lots of heat and active offense. Perez and Rodriguez came in aggressive with stiff strikes and uppercuts, but the Kabuki Warriors weren’t having any of it and fought right back with a mix of grappling and high‑impact moves. Kairi’s Insane Elbow to Rodriguez on the floor was a highlight before Asuka locked Perez in the Asuka Lock, forcing her to tap and sealing the deal. It was a clean, hard‑hitting tag match that didn’t drag, and the Warriors looked sharp in getting the victory.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This one was a pure wrestling matchup that showed why a hook‑up like Bálor vs. Lee can work so well when given space to breathe. Dragon Lee came out fast, using speed and aerial offense to keep Bálor on his toes and create some crowd‑pleasing moments, including a splash off the top and slick transitions. Bálor absorbed enough punishment to look like he was in trouble, but once JD McDonagh got involved on the apron, that changed the math—Lee turned to McDonagh, giving Bálor the window to hit Coup de Grâce and get the win. The finish felt a bit cheap given the distraction, but the match itself swerved between crisp mat work and solid high spots.
The New Day
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This six‑man tag had a chaotic but fun vibe, built on constant motion and big team sequences more than long, methodical exchanges. New Day and Waller tried to play smart early, tagging in and out and using quick offense to stay alive, but that strategy only lasted so long once The War Raiders started flattening folks with their trademark power. Penta looked explosive throughout, keeping the pace up between Ivar and Erik’s bruising teamwork, and once Xavier Woods got too cocky with a cheap shot, that opened the door for Penta to connect with the Mexican Destroyer for the pin. Energetic and messy in equal measure, this delivered exactly the kind of big‑spot tag action the crowd expects on Raw.
Champion Retains
+7
Title defense: +4
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was the headline match of the night and a good show of why sometimes you have to watch both in‑ring action and the sideline chaos to understand how these matches end. AJ Styles looked poised early, countering Dom and setting up for the Phenomenal Forearm like he was going to walk out of Paris with the Intercontinental title. Just when it felt like that could happen, out of nowhere El Grande Americano appeared, delivered a loaded‑mask punch to Styles, and swung the momentum right back to Dominik. “Dirty” Dom followed up with a Frog Splash and got the pin to retain. It was one of those finishes where the result makes sense if you know the backstory—even if it leaves you shaking your head about the interference.
Main Event
Summary
Heading into the main event, there was real anticipation seeing The Vision duo open up against Jey Uso and LA Knight on a big stage in Paris, and it mostly delivered the brutal, hard‑charging tag action you’d expect. Jey and Knight worked well together early, trading strikes and tags that kept Breakker and Reed on the defensive, but the power and size of Bron and Bronson eventually shifted the match. A wicked spear by Breakker wiped out Jey after he and Knight had put in a solid run, resulting in the pin fall win for The Vision. After the bell, Reed and Breakker laid into both guys until Jimmy Uso ran out with a chair to even the odds and rescue his brother. A technical loss for the babyfaces turned into a dramatic post‑match moment that really fired up the crowd and set the stage for bigger things to come.


















