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WWE Raw Results — September 22, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for September 22, 2025 in Evansville, IN. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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September 22, 2025 — Evansville, INEvent Time: Tue, Sep 23, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Raw from the Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana on 9/22/25 felt like the perfect Monday night smack after Wrestlepalooza, with the build toward Crown Jewel front and center and a handful of moments that got real reactions. Cody Rhodes and Seth Rollins kicked things off with a fiery face‑off, hyping up their champion vs. champion clash in Perth, with Rollins trying to swagger but Cody clearly not having it — and Rollins’ own crew standing down when he asked them to back off was weirdly telling. In the women’s division, Stephanie Vaquer made her first Raw appearance as WWE Women’s World Champion, thanking the crowd before saying she’s gonna run through anyone who tries to stop her, and Bayley pulled out a gritty win over Roxanne Perez by getting vicious with a Bayley‑to‑Belly and super knee that made you look twice at how dark Bayley’s character has gotten. Rusev got JD McDonagh to tap with the Accolade, and even though Dominik Mysterio almost seemed poised to help, he froze and didn’t make the save — cue Finn Balor rushing out to hit the Slingblade and then visibly griping with Dom on the ramp about what just happened. A hot singles match saw Jey Uso edge LA Knight, but only after interference from The Vision helped tip the scales, and afterward The Vision nearly clobbered Knight until Jimmy Uso stood tall to even the odds a bit. The main event was Rhea Ripley defeating Asuka, and just when it felt like the beatdown should be over, Asuka and Kairi Sane unleashed a post‑match assault on Ripley, misting her and then assaulting IYO Sky when she tried to make the save — leaving Raw off the air with a shocking attack that had the crowd both booing and buzzing. It was a Raw with real heat, some questionable decisions, and enough hostility to keep the hype on for next week.
Match Results
Final
Pinfall
10:17
The New Day
Summary
This straight‑up brawl was exactly what the “No DQ” label promised—Kendo sticks, tables, wild scrambles, and moments where you almost forgot you were watching Raw and not a backyard demolition derby. The New Day and Grayson Waller came out trying the usual mix of high‑flying spots and cheeky teamwork, but once Penta and the War Raiders started bringing in the heavy hardware, things quickly escalated. Tables got set up, chairs got swung, and Penta eventually connected with a top‑rope Avalanche Mexican Destroyer on Waller to seal the win. It was chaotic, unpolished, and exactly the kind of over‑the‑top cluster Raw leans into when they want people talking.
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Bayley’s match with Roxanne Perez started with some surprisingly competitive back‑and‑forth between the two women, with Perez using quick strikes and clever counters to keep Bayley honest. But when Bayley got her openings, she started turning the pressure up, and by the time she hit the Rose Plant for the pin, it felt like she’d actually earned it. The real story came after the bell—Bayley, hugging Lyra Valkyria early in the night like they were besties, completely flipped and shoved her to the mat out of nowhere. That sudden aggression made the win feel less like a victory and more like Bayley finally snapping, which is honestly way more interesting than a plain old pinfall.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Rusev and JD McDonagh took the Raw ring next, and it was a classic “bulldozer vs. technician” type of match. McDonagh brought the smooth offense early and even got some offense in that looked promising, but once Rusev locked in the Accolade, it turned into a grind. Dominik Mysterio almost came in to help his Judgment Day buddy, froze on the apron, and that hesitation was all Rusev needed to keep McDonagh turning in the hold until he tapped. Then, just to put some icing on the pain cake, Rusev kept The Accolade locked in even as McDonagh was screaming for the ref to break it. Bálor had to run in to finally save McDonagh, leaving Dom standing there like a deer in headlights.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
“Main Event” Jey Uso and LA Knight threw hands in what was a really physical singles match with heat and real urgency. Knight went after Jey hard and had some impressive sequences, including a Burning Hammer that almost stole the night, but the finish ultimately came down to opportunism. Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed lurked at ringside trying to tilt the match, and Knight spent a chunk of time dealing with them instead of Jey. Uso capitalized on a brief opening, hit his signature Spear/Uso Splash combo, and got the pin. Afterward, Jimmy Uso pleaded with his brother to help Knight against the 2‑on‑1 situation—but Jey just walked off, leaving Jimmy to save the megastar with a steel chair. The family tension was practically bubbling over by the end of this one.
Main Event
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
+3
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This ended up being the most chaotic and talked‑about match of the night—not because of a clean technical showdown, but because of how dramatically it ended. Rhea Ripley and Asuka wrestled a solid main event, with Rhea eventually scoring a pinfall win thanks to a well‑timed small package after some moments where it looked like either could take it. What really blew up was what happened next. Asuka hit Ripley with the poison mist, and then things flipped upside down. Asuka and Kairi Sane turned on IYO SKY when she came out to intervene, hounding her with strikes and leaving both Ripley and Sky laid out. That post‑match mayhem wasn’t just a beatdown—it felt like a full‑on betrayal carnival, leaving one of the women’s division’s hottest angles dangling by the end of the show.













