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WWE Raw Results — December 01, 2025
Full WWE Raw results for December 01, 2025 in Glendale, AZ. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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December 01, 2025 — Glendale, AZEvent Time: Tue, Dec 2, 1:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
WWE Raw (12/1/25) felt like a show that knew exactly what it needed to do and didn’t waste much time getting there, even if a few parts felt a little too familiar along the way. The finals of the “Last Time Is Now” tournament took center stage, with Gunther and Solo Sikoa delivering a physical, no-frills main event that leaned heavily on brute force over flash. Gunther controlled long stretches with his usual methodical offense, but Solo kept forcing openings until he finally broke through and picked up the win, which honestly felt like a statement more than an upset. Earlier in the night, Becky Lynch got back to doing things on her terms, holding onto the Women’s Intercontinental Title in a match that was more about control than drama, while the Kabuki Warriors continued to look like the most cohesive tag team on the roster with another solid title defense. Jey Uso and Bron Breakker kept their issues boiling over into another chaotic situation that never quite got a clean resolution, which is starting to feel intentional but still a little repetitive. Meanwhile, Dominik Mysterio tried to stay relevant in the Intercontinental picture but felt more like someone scrambling to keep his spot than dictating anything. The show wasn’t perfect—some finishes leaned on interference a bit too much—but it stayed focused, delivered where it needed to, and closed with a main event that actually felt like it mattered.
Match Results
+1
On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Right out of the gate, LA Knight and Jey Uso brought a serious energy to kick off Raw, and this one quickly became more than your average tournament match—especially with both guys carrying some heat from Survivor Series. Jey looked fired up with multiple big spots, hitting Spears and his Uso Splash that should have closed the show, but Knight wasn’t done. In the kind of crafty finish you don’t see every night, Knight countered one of Jey’s late sequences into a sudden crucifix roll‑up for the three count. The crowd was stunned and into it, and Jey’s reaction afterward—destroying a PRIME bottle stand in true “I’m fed up” mode—made it feel like a loss with actual consequences rather than just another pinfall. This wasn’t a long match, but it was tense and unpredictable in all the right ways.
AJ Styles & Dragon Lee
Final
Pinfall
The New Day
Champion Retains
Summary
This tag title fight delivered exactly what you hope for when a seasoned team like AJ Styles & Dragon Lee defends against a seasoned duo like The New Day. The champs hit the ground running, countering Kofi Kingston’s signature Boom Drop with a quick roll‑up and transition into a Calf Crusher that looked like it might put him away early before Woods made the save. From there, Dragon Lee’s double stomp on Kingston set up Styles to hit a crisp Styles Clash for the clean pin. It was brisk and efficient, with both teams clicking on offense and pacing things well, but Styles & Lee still looked like the sharper, more polished unit when it mattered most. This felt like a confident title defense—no flukes, just execution.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This was a long grind that lived up to the “fight” billing, and both guys made sure you felt every chop, slam, and chop‑block along the way. Solo’s entrance had a hint of danger with Talla Tonga lurking, and that paid off in bits of chaos early on, especially when Tonga tried to interfere. Gunther just kept grinding, though, taking shots, chopping back, and doing that classic methodical turnbuckle‑to‑hard‑strike work that makes him feel like a force of nature. The turning point came when Gunther landed a low blow while the referee was buried, and once that opened the door, he threw everything at Solo—powerbomb and all—to secure the pin and punch his ticket to the finals. Heavy and physical, this had the kind of old‑school feel you don’t see enough of.
Main Event
Rhea Ripley & Iyo Sky
No Contest
Allies of Convenience
Summary
On paper, this should’ve been an instant classic contender match, and for about the first half it played that way—flurry exchanges, tags at perfect moments, and both teams hitting their familiar, big‑move sequences. Rhea planted a knee and Sky hit a moonsault that nearly ended things before Flair and Bliss answered back with a Natural Selection and a Sister Abigail combo that looked decisive. Then… chaos. Before the pin could even hit three, the reigning Kabuki Warriors stormed the ring and laid out everyone, abruptly forcing the ref to call the match a no contest. Suddenly the women’s tag division feels wildly crowded and unpredictable: Ripley, Sky, Flair, Bliss, the Kabukis, Bayley & Lyra all up in that mix now. It was an exciting sprint into brawl territory, if a bit messy.












