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WWE Raw Results — December 15, 2025

Full WWE Raw results for December 15, 2025 in Hershey, PA. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.

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December 15, 2025 — Hershey, PAEvent Time: Tue, Dec 16, 1:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
Monday Night Raw on December 15, 2025 from the Giant Center felt like the first real WWE show after John Cena hung up his boots — and the mood tilted hard toward “new era” chaos with some brutal attitude on full display. The show opened with Gunther soaking up huge boos as he gloated about making Cena tap “like a little bitch,” taunting the crowd and even rubbing AJ Styles’ name in their faces before wandering off with his grin intact, which was oddly fun to watch because the crowd straight up hated this guy. The Usos rekindled their rivalry with The New Day in tag action, scoring the win after blasting Woods with a big Spear and 1‑D, granting them bragging rights in what still feels like one of the better generational tag team feuds going. Maxxine Dupri showed her aggression isn’t a gimmick, forcing Ivy Nile to tap out and retaining her Women’s Intercontinental Title, which was a more decisive finish than expected. The Women’s World Title match turned into mayhem when Nikki Bella stormed the ring and flattened both Stephanie Vaquer and Raquel Rodriguez, making it a no‑contest and leaving everyone wondering whose belt she’s really coming after. Logan Paul edged Rey Mysterio thanks to interference from that same masked attacker — who finally unmasked as Austin Theory — but the real ending came when Bron Breakker speared CM Punk, World Heavyweight Champion in hand, closing Raw on a violent, “you’re not safe anywhere” note that kept the momentum high heading into the holidays.

Match Results

Tag Team
The Usos
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
17:25
The New Day
Summary
This felt like a classic battle between two of the most recognizable tag teams of the modern era, and while it didn’t quite reach “instant classic” territory, it was exactly the kind of extended tag match you hope for when these teams collide. The Usos and New Day traded sequences, counters, and flurries of offense that reminded you just how long these two have known each other’s timing. There were moments where The New Day gained momentum, especially once Grayson Waller at ringside tried to tilt things in their favor, but once he got tossed out, the match tightened up. In the final stretch, Jey and Jimmy hit a big Spear on Xavier Woods followed by a clean 1‑D on Kofi Kingston for the pin. It wasn’t perfect, and it lacked that extra “boom” you sometimes get from this rivalry, but it gave The Usos a feel‑good win that felt earned, not rushed.
Women's IC Championship
Undercard - Title Match
Final
Submission
9:57
Champion Retains
+7
Title defense: +4
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Maxxine Dupri really leaned into that new vicious streak tonight, and it made a big difference. This wasn’t just your usual shorter mid‑card women’s match – Dupri attacked with purpose right from the bell, dragging Ivy Nile into the corners, firing off sharp strikes, and keeping her grounded with some smart positioning before transitioning into a brutal ankle lock. Ivy didn’t go quietly, hitting a surprise powerbomb that almost flipped momentum, but Dupri kept biting back and slid smoothly into the submission. When Ivy finally tapped out to the Grapevine Ankle Lock, it felt decisive. Dupri’s aggression has become a defining part of her title run, and though some of her offense looked a touch rough around the edges, tonight she looked like someone who’s not willing to let anyone just out‑fight her.
Women's World Championship
Undercard - Title Match
Final
DQ
8:43
Champion Retains
+4
Title defense (DQ): +2
Winning match (DQ): +1
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This one had real heat early on, as Raquel used her size and strength to try to overwhelm Stephanie Vaquer, backing her into corners and throwing heavy strikes that kept Steph on the defensive longer than you’d expect from a champion. Vaquer showed grit and fire, clawing back with chops and counters that at least kept it competitive, but just as the match seemed to be finding a rhythm, WWE Hall of Famer Nikki Bella suddenly popped up and unloaded on both women with a flurry of offense that stopped the match cold. With no legal finish and both competitors taken out, it ended in a no‑contest, which honestly felt as messy as it sounds but also made total sense given Bella’s star power and willingness to crash the party. Vaquer technically retains, but this one didn’t get the clean conclusion it deserved.
Main Event
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
14:59
+3
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This was one of those matches that swung wildly because of outside interference and those masked shenanigans we’ve been seeing lately, but the core clash was solid enough. Logan Paul looked motivated, mixing power shots with surprisingly crisp chain wrestling at times, and Rey pulled out all the classic lucha spots – high‑impact 619s, quick transitions, and that veteran savvy that keeps him safe even when he’s selling. Just as Rey looked like he might steal a big win, that masked assailant struck again, stomping Rey into the apron and turning the tide. Logan capitalized with a big Superstar Splash for the three‑count, and only afterward was the mystery man revealed to be Austin Theory, which definitely adds a fresh wrinkle. Bron Breakker then showed up and speared CM Punk post‑match, but sticking strictly to this match: Rey had his chances, Logan grinded them down with help, and it ended with a controversial but effective finish.