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WWE Raw Results — September 08, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for September 08, 2025 in Milwaukee, WI. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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September 08, 2025 — Milwaukee, WIEvent Time: Tue, Sep 9, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw from the Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana on 9/8/25 was a night full of high-energy matches, tense face-offs, and enough chaos to keep the crowd on its toes. The show opened with CM Punk cutting a sharp promo on Roman Reigns, calling out The Vision while flexing his own momentum, which got a mix of cheers and boos from the audience. In-ring action kicked off with Gunther squashing Je’Von Evans in a display of sheer dominance, reminding everyone why he’s still one of the most intimidating competitors on the roster. Rhea Ripley overpowered Lyra Valkyria, finishing with a brutal Riptide and setting a tone of physicality that carried through the night. The women’s division also saw Stephanie Vaquer retain the WWE Women’s World Championship against Becky Lynch, using smart ring work and well-timed strikes to stay on top. In tag team action, AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeated Los Americanos with a combination of Styles’ finesse and Lee’s high-flying offense, getting a big pop from the crowd. The main event featured Roman Reigns & Jey Uso taking on The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed), which turned into a wild brawl with bodies flying and interference from Logan Paul, leaving fans buzzing and a little exasperated at the chaos. Overall, the show balanced dominant performances, explosive action, and messy brawls, making it an entertaining, if occasionally overstuffed, Monday night leading into the fall WWE schedule.
Match Results
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
AJ Styles came out swinging in this singles match with El Grande Americano, and the crowd was right there with him from the opening bell. Styles didn’t waste any time trying to take control, but just when it looked like he was gearing up for a clean technical showdown, the usual Raw shenanigans hit. While the referee was distracted, not one but two El Grande Americanos appeared and swarmed Styles, stacking the odds against him. Just when it looked hopeless, Dragon Lee sprinted down and cleared the extra masked men off the apron, swinging the momentum back in Styles’ favor. With the roadblock removed, Styles hit a big Styles Clash and got the pinfall. Clean finish only after serious interference, but still a satisfying little win for Phenomenal.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Raquel Rodriguez and Lyra Valkyria collided in a physically intense match that leaned into size versus speed beautifully. Valkyria came out flying, and you could tell she was coming in with real fire, hitting dynamic moves that kept Raquel guessing early. The crowd was invested in every limb‑targeting exchange, but you could also see Raquel starting to wear on Valkyria’s lower back as the match went on. Raquel’s power shots began to tell, and just as Lyra seemed to be mounting another comeback, Roxanne Perez popped in to distract her at a crucial moment. Raquel seized the opening, dropping Valkyria with a hard‑hitting Tejana Bomb right on cue for the win. It was one of those matches that felt earned even with the distraction, and Valkyria looked tough as nails.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
This was one of those backstage‑angling matches that actually lived up to at least something in the ring—Rusev and Penta went at it with a real give‑and‑take mentality, and there were moments where it genuinely felt like either guy could walk out with the win. Penta looked crisp early, mixing in creative offense and dodging big swings from Rusev, while Rusev played the bulldozer, putting as much pressure as anyone can put on a dude in a mask. The match got even wild when The New Day and Grayson Waller came down to ringside and stirred the pot, breaking things up and forcing Penta into scrambling mode. Rusev took advantage, stunning Penta mid‑air with a Machka Kick and finally pinning him. It wasn’t a perfect masterpiece, but it was one of Raw’s livelier competitive bouts of the night.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Asuka and Nikki Bella gave us exactly what you want when two veterans lock up—clear pacing, hard strikes, and momentum swings that kept the crowd honest. Nikki Bella, a WWE Hall of Famer, showed she still has gas in the tank as she traded blows with Asuka early and even got some respectable heat on the Empress of Tomorrow. But Asuka’s lethal offense eventually told the tale. She dialed up those crisp kicks, busted out precise counterholds, and didn’t even blink when Bella answered back with her own offense. A well–placed swift kick opened the door for Asuka to cinch in the Asuka Lock, and Nikki had no choice but to tap. Solid, clean submission that reinforced Asuka’s striking chops without too much nonsense.
Main Event
+3
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This main event was supposed to be LA Knight getting payback, and for a hot minute he did deliver on that promise—Knight was aggressive early, trying everything from chops to that insane dive off the announce table to put Reed on his heels. But “Big” Bronson Reed is no walkover, and once he caught Knight mid‑assault with a Jagged Edge, the’s momentum swung big. Then things got even uglier: Bron Breakker showed up at ringside, keeping Knight from mounting any sort of comeback, which tipped this one firmly to Reed. He hit the big moves, got the fall, and left Knight laid out. Even after the match, chaos stayed all over the place—The Vision double‑teamed, The Usos fought back, and in a wild moment Jey Uso SPEARED LA Knight right at the end, leaving everyone wondering what the heck just happened. It’s the kind of messy brawl Raw always seems to find in the main event slot—but hey, it kept people talking.










