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WWE Raw Results — November 03, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for November 03, 2025 in Rio Rancho, NM. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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November 03, 2025 — Rio Rancho, NMEvent Time: Tue, Nov 4, 1:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Monday Night Raw on 11/3/25 in Rio Rancho, New Mexico was one of those shows where hype almost outweighed logic but still gave us plenty to talk about as the post‑Saturday Night’s Main Event dust settled. The brand new WWE World Heavyweight Champion CM Punk kicked things off with swagger, pointing out everyone in the back who wants a shot — and even tossing around The Vision before things got sideways fast. ([turn0search0][turn0search3]) The women’s tag action was way better than I expected as Roxanne Perez & Raquel Rodriguez took down Nikki Bella & Stephanie Vaquer, Perez hitting that Pop Rox for the win even as chaos slid around them. ([turn0search6]) Penta looked sharp and ruthless, outmaneuvering El Grande Americano with a Mexican Destroyer and dealing with interference like a seasoned vet — dude kept his cool even when the Los Americanos couldn’t. ([turn0search2]) Over in tag gold territory, AJ Styles & Dragon Lee successfully defended the World Tag Titles against Finn Balor & JD McDonagh; all four guys chopped up a fun, medium‑paced bout that finally ended with a Styles Clash. ([turn0search0]) The Kabuki Warriors vs. Bayley & Lyra Valkyria match had more switches than a Vegas casino: Valkyria and Bayley looked good together, but Asuka locked in an Asuka Lock to finish off Valkyria in a hard‑fought tag. ([turn0search5]) And main event time — the dream tag of CM Punk & Jey Uso vs. The Vision (Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed) — kinda dissolved into a wild brawl that actually ended in a double count‑out, Punk and Uso barely surviving the chaos before Logan Paul showed up with brass knuckles and dropped Punk cold as Raw went off the air. ([turn0search5][turn0search0]) So yeah, weird finishes, big names clashing, and a handful of actual solid wrestling — not a perfect night, but definitely one that gets the hype train rolling toward the next big thing.
Match Results
Champion Retains
Summary
This ended up being one of the more reliable matches on the show, mostly because you knew exactly what you were getting going in. Styles and Dragon Lee kept things fast and clean, while Bálor and McDonagh tried to drag it into a more methodical pace, but never fully took control. There was some outside noise with Sheamus and Dominik Mysterio getting involved at ringside, though it didn’t actually derail the match as much as you’d expect. In the end, Styles hit the Styles Clash on McDonagh to retain, and it felt like the right call. Judgment Day had their chances, but the champs just looked sharper when it counted.
Final
Pinfall
12:47
The Judgment Day
Summary
This match had a little bit of everything, including Nikki Bella continuing to shake off the rust while working with a team that clearly had more cohesion. Vaquer held her own and gave the team some balance, but Judgment Day just looked more in sync throughout. Raquel brought the power, Perez handled the pacing, and together they controlled most of the meaningful moments. The finish came when Perez hit Pop Rox on Bella for the pin, which felt like a deliberate choice to spotlight her rather than go with the obvious powerhouse finish. It wasn’t overly dramatic, just a solid, decisive win for a team that’s starting to feel more established.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was one of those matches that quietly did its job without a lot of extra noise around it. Penta kept the pace moving and leaned into his usual mix of strikes and counters, while El Grande Americano had enough offense to make it competitive without ever really feeling like he was in control. The match never drifted into anything overly complicated, which actually worked in its favor. Penta picked up the win clean, and it came off more like a necessary step than a big moment. Not the kind of match people will be talking about later, but it filled its spot on the card without dragging anything down.
Summary
This had a little more edge than some of the other matches on the card, mostly because the Kabuki Warriors don’t really ease into anything. Bayley and Lyra had good chemistry and managed to string together some strong sequences, but every time it looked like they were building momentum, Asuka and Kairi would cut it off with something sharper. The finish came after the Warriors executed their tandem offense to put Valkyria away, and it felt pretty definitive. Bayley and Lyra didn’t look bad, but they also never quite got over the hump, which has kind of been the story for that pairing so far.
Main Event
Summary
This match had more chaos than structure, which isn’t always a bad thing, but here it felt like it never quite settled into a rhythm. Breakker and Reed brought the power, Punk and Jey brought the energy, and the whole thing eventually spilled outside to the point where the referee just counted both teams out. That alone would’ve been a weak finish, but it didn’t stop there. After the match, things escalated with The Vision attacking Jey Uso, followed by Logan Paul showing up and knocking out Punk, which completely overshadowed whatever the match was trying to be. It’s one of those main events where the aftermath matters more than the actual bell-to-bell action.


















