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WWE Raw Results — September 15, 2025

Full WWE Raw results for September 15, 2025 in Springfield, MA. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.

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September 15, 2025 — Springfield, MAEvent Time: Tue, Sep 16, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw from the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado on 9/15/25 was a solid mix of strong in-ring work and chaotic backstage moments that kept the crowd invested from start to finish. The night opened with Roman Reigns confronting The Vision, calling out Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed while throwing shade at CM Punk, setting the tone for a tense main event later. In singles action, Gunther demolished JD McDonagh, showing off his raw power and finishing with the Sleeper Hold for a quick submission, while Rhea Ripley took down Roxanne Perez in a physical bout that highlighted Ripley’s brute force and willingness to go hard in every exchange. The women’s division saw Stephanie Vaquer retain the WWE Women’s World Championship against Nikki Bella, using a combination of clever ring positioning and targeted strikes, leaving Bella frustrated but looking strong. Tag action featured AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defeating Los Americanos, with Styles hitting a Phenomenal Forearm and Lee following with a high-flying splash for the win, which got the crowd hyped. The main event pitted The Vision (Breakker & Reed) against Roman Reigns & CM Punk, and it devolved into chaos, with bodies flying, weapons coming into play, and Punk barely surviving a steel chair shot, leaving fans on edge and cheering as Raw went off the air. Overall, the night delivered a mix of dominant performances, intense brawls, and enough unpredictability to keep the momentum rolling toward the next big WWE event.

Match Results

Undercard
Final
Pinfall
9:06
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Lyra Valkyria and Roxanne Perez went out first, and this one felt like a real test for Valkyria’s grit. Perez zeroed right in on Lyra’s previously injured lower back, working it over with targeted offense and making it look like she might pull the upset. Valkyria sold it visibly, which made her comeback feel earned when she fired up and eventually hit the Nightwing for the pin. Raquel Rodriguez tried to climb in after, but Bayley’s surprise return saved Lyra, hugging and helping clear the ring—though the whole cute/homicidal Bayley split vibe was at least a little weird. Big win for Valkyria, and a fun moment from Bayley that’s already got people talking.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
7:31
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Penta’s singles outing against Kofi Kingston delivered exactly what you’d expect from that type of clash: fast action, plenty of near‑escapes, and a little outside interference to keep things spicy. Xavier Woods and Grayson Waller tried to tilt things in Kingston’s favor on the apron, but Penta didn’t let it faze him—he absorbed the distractions, put Kofi on the mat, and unloaded a springboard Mexican Destroyer for the pin. Afterward he had to hustle out of a beatdown attempt from New Day and Waller, but the win was clean enough in execution. Straightforward and effective performance from Penta, even if it wasn’t the most complicated matchup of the night.
Undercard
Final
Submission
10:12
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Dragon Lee and El Grande Americano’s bout was big, loud, and chaotic in the best possible “how many dudes are there?” kind of way. Lee actually looked good early, trading chops and speed moves with Americano, and you could believe he might take control. But things went sideways quickly when multiple El Grande Americanos started popping up around ringside and outnumbering Lee. AJ Styles even ran in to neutralize one of them, but the numbers game ultimately mattered—another Americano got the edge, and the original locked in the cavernaria for the submission win. Wild match that prioritized spectacle over structure, and still fun because of it.
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
11:57
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Stephanie Vaquer and Kairi Sane took their time and gave the crowd exactly the sort of physical, competitive match that works well when these two click. There was even a respectful handshake to start, and it actually paid off as a setup—Asuka at ringside didn’t appreciate it one bit and ended up getting involved later. Vaquer looked strong throughout, hitting a huge crossbody on both Kabuki Warriors and Sane outside the ring before locking in a Devil’s Kiss and finishing with the SVB for the pin. Post‑match got spicy when Asuka tried to go after Vaquer, but IYO SKY showed up to even the odds, making this one feel like a legitimate precursor to their Wrestlepalooza title matchup.
Main Event
Tag Team
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
12:01
Summary
This main event tag match leaned into power dynamics from the jump—Breaker and Reed came out looking like rolling hills of offense, while Knight and Jimmy Uso tried to use strategy and quick tags to hang in. Jimmy nearly had Reed pinned after an Uso Splash, but Breakker broke it up and swung the momentum back. From that point on, it felt like a battle of attrition, with Knight hitting a few big moves but never actually putting anyone away. Reed eventually planted Jimmy with the Jagged Edge for the victory. After the bell, the tension flared big time: Jey Uso ran in to make the save, but LA Knight then blindsided him with a BFT out of nowhere. Brutal finish that left the crowd buzzing about what actually just happened.