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RAW
WWE Raw Results — November 10, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for November 10, 2025 in Boston, MA. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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November 10, 2025 — Boston, MAEvent Time: Tue, Nov 11, 1:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Monday Night Raw’s trip to the TD Garden in Boston on 11/10/25 felt like a hometown love letter with a few sharp elbows tucked inside, kicking off with a big nod to John Cena’s final Raw appearance in his town before anything even got going. Cena got that massive welcome pop, did some sincere stuff on the mic about his legacy, and then — chaos as usual — Dominik Mysterio popped up to interrupt and immediately shoved the title belt in Cena’s face. It led to an impromptu Intercontinental Title bout where Cena finally checked a belt off his checklist by beating Dominik and becoming a WWE Intercontinental Champion for the first time — yes, finally a Grand Slam for the GOAT right in Boston. The crowd went ballistic, even if the match itself wasn’t a five‑star classic; it was the feeling that mattered. Beyond that emotional opening, Raw kicked off the “Last Time Is Now” tournament with Rusev and Sheamus picking up wins over Damian Priest and Shinsuke Nakamura, respectively, which gave the show some old‑school fight energy that went down cleaner than expected. In women’s action, Stephanie Vaquer retained her Women’s World Title over Raquel Rodriguez, and Asuka & Kairi Sane — a.k.a. The Kabuki Warriors — shocked Charlotte Flair & Alexa Bliss to become the new Women’s Tag Champs, complete with interference and a little backstage chaos that spilled into a post‑match beatdown before Iyo Sky and Rhea Ripley came roaring back. Punk called out Logan Paul too, setting up more tension with The Vision ahead of Survivor Series: WarGames. All told, Raw had emotion, legit feel‑good beats, and enough lingering hostility to make next week’s show feel like a must‑watch.
Match Results
+1
On match card: +1
New Champion
+8
Title win: +5
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
This turned into a “drop everything, we’re doing this now” kind of match, and honestly, it worked because the crowd was completely behind it. Dominik tried to play spoiler early, hitting his usual offense and even connecting with the 619 and a frog splash, which looked like it might actually keep his reign alive. But Cena wasn’t there to mess around. He powered through, caught Dom mid-momentum, and delivered the Attitude Adjustment to win the title clean. No overbooking at the finish, just a decisive moment. Cena finally grabbing the Intercontinental title this late in his career is one of those “about time” moments, even if it comes at the expense of Dom’s run ending pretty abruptly.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was exactly what it looked like on paper: two big guys hitting hard and not overcomplicating anything. Priest had some momentum early and tried to keep Rusev moving, but once Rusev slowed things down, the match shifted pretty clearly in his favor. He leaned into the power game, landed his strikes clean, and never really let Priest regain control once he took over. The finish came with Rusev putting Priest away clean to advance in the tournament, and it felt straightforward in a good way. Not a flashy match, but it didn’t need to be—Rusev looked strong, and Priest didn’t get embarrassed in the process.
Champion Retains
+7
Title defense: +4
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This felt like a strength vs. control matchup from the start, with Raquel trying to overpower Vaquer and Vaquer working around that instead of meeting it head-on. Raquel got her moments and looked like a real threat at points, but Vaquer stayed composed and picked her spots carefully. Nikki Bella and Roxanne Perez being around added a little extra tension at ringside, though it didn’t completely derail things. Vaquer eventually secured the win and retained, and it came off like a steady, controlled performance rather than a lucky escape. Raquel looked strong enough, but never quite got over that final hurdle.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This one had a little more personality than the other tournament match, mostly because Sheamus and Nakamura have such different styles that it naturally creates something interesting. Nakamura tried to keep it technical and strike from angles, while Sheamus did what he always does—turn it into a fight and dare you to keep up. Eventually, that approach paid off. Sheamus weathered the kicks and counters, dragged Nakamura into his kind of match, and finished it with his usual heavy offense to move on in the tournament. It wasn’t groundbreaking, but it was solid and physical, and that’s usually enough when Sheamus is involved.
Main Event
New Champion
Summary
This match delivered in-ring, but the finish is what people are going to remember, and not necessarily for clean reasons. Charlotte and Alexa worked well as a team and had things under control for stretches, but the Kabuki Warriors kept finding openings and stayed right in it. Just when it looked like the champs might retain, interference hit and everything unraveled, leading to Asuka and Kairi Sane capitalizing and winning the titles. It’s one of those finishes that protects everyone a little, but also keeps things messy. The Kabuki Warriors walking out as champs feels right, even if the way they got there wasn’t exactly subtle.












