
RAW
WWE Raw Results — April 27, 2026
April 27, 2026 — Laredo, TXEvent Time: Tue, Apr 28, 12:00 AM UTC
Match Results
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PROMO SEGMENT
Vingette
Segment recap
The show starts off with a recap of the last Monday and Jacob asking for his shot at the title. Roman Reigns is discussing this with his cousins in a Vingette. Jimmy states that he understands where Jacob is coming from but it shouldn't come at Romans expense. Jey steps up and says that there should be consequences to his actions. Roman thanks Jey and says he will address this tonight
Segment recap
Seth Rollins opens the segment and calls out Bron Breakker, immediately taking shots at his recent loss and questioning his legitimacy. The two go back and forth, with Rollins claiming he made Breakker and blaming him for past setbacks, while Breakker fires back, saying he never needed Rollins and was treated like an errand boy.
Rollins leans heavily into portraying Breakker as the “future” rather than the present, repeatedly saying he isn’t ready and lacks the intelligence to succeed at the highest level. He compares their careers, bragging about his own success while dismissing Breakker’s.
Despite Rollins’ intent, Breakker comes off as the more sympathetic figure, standing his ground and calling out the flaws in Rollins’ arguments. The segment ends with Rollins taking a final shot at Breakker’s Steiner legacy before officially challenging him to a match at Backlash.
Overall, it was a strong promo exchange—but the dynamic felt reversed, with Rollins coming across more like the heel and Breakker like the face.
Summary
This one played out pretty much how you’d expect when you put a wrecking ball like Rusev in there with someone as explosive as Penta. Early on, Rusev completely shut things down, cutting off Penta’s high-flying game before it could even get going. Every time Penta teased something flashy, Rusev just leveled him—side kick, side slam, rinse, repeat. It wasn’t pretty, but it was effective.
After the break, Penta finally started to build some momentum, landing a cross-body and picking up the pace a bit. For a second, it looked like he might turn the tide, but Rusev wasn’t having it. He crushed another Destroyer attempt, blasted him with a Machka Kick, and looked ready to lock in the Accolade and end it.
Then…yeah, the finish happened.
Penta slipped out, faked the springboard Destroyer, and instead caught Rusev with a quick roll-up for the win. Just like that. No big payoff, no dramatic finish—just a sudden three-count that felt like it came out of nowhere. Not exactly satisfying considering how dominant Rusev looked most of the match.
Of course, Rusev snapped afterward and kept the beatdown going, because losing like that will do it. Ethan Page jumped in to make things worse, turning it into a numbers game until Je’Von Evans ran down to even things up and save Penta.
Summary
This match had all the ingredients to be one of the best things on the show—and for a while, it actually delivered. Iyo Sky came out firing, mixing her usual speed with some pretty nasty offense, targeting Becky’s arm and stacking together a string of momentum with a missile dropkick, Bullet Train Attack, and a slick tornado DDT. Becky, to her credit, kept matching her step for step, countering big moments and sneaking in heavy shots like the Manhandle Slam that almost ended it.
Things really picked up down the stretch. Sky hit the Over the Moonsault after a wild sequence, and it felt like that could’ve been the moment—but Becky got the knees up earlier and just refused to stay down. You could feel the match building toward something legit…until it didn’t.
Because Becky got a little too cute, going for a moonsault of her own (yeah, that was never going to end well), and that’s when everything fell apart. Asuka slid in while the ref wasn’t looking and took Sky out, completely flipping the match. Becky capitalized with another Manhandle Slam, stole the win, and that was that.
So technically, Becky retains. But let’s be honest—it didn’t feel like she beat Iyo Sky. It felt like the match got hijacked. The crowd chanting for Kairi Sane during all of this—and production trying to muffle it—pretty much told you everything about how this landed. Great action, messy finish, and a result that leaves more frustration than payoff.
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PROMO SEGMENT
In-Ring Promo
Segment recap
oe Hendry opens the segment doing his usual mid-ring singalong to announce he’s officially joining the Raw roster. He uses the moment to take shots at Logan Paul and calls for him to be fired, which immediately brings Paul storming out alongside Austin Theory.
Logan Paul cuts him off, loudly insisting he can’t be fired, while Theory tries to back up The Vision by pointing to their tag title success. Hendry fires back, calling them losers, which quickly escalates into a physical confrontation. Hendry gets in some offense before being overwhelmed, but the Street Profits run in to even the odds and force The Vision to back off.
Summary
Rey Mysterio picks up the win over El Grande Americano in a classic lucha-heavy match that leaned into speed, counters, and constant chaos from ringside. Mysterio had to fight through repeated interference attempts from the Americanos, including a moment where they tried to sneak in a steel plate during a ref distraction. That almost swung things, but OG Grande showed up out of nowhere to shut down the cheating and even the playing field.
Once things stabilized, Rey capitalized with his signature flow—dodging a big attack, hitting the 619 clean, and finishing it off for the win. Solid match overall, but it definitely felt like survival mode for Rey more than a clean showcase.
Post-match notes also hint at ongoing tension in the Americano group, especially with the masked identity situation still unresolved.
Summary
Oba Femi absolutely steamrolls Grayson Waller in a quick, one-sided match that never really gave Waller a chance to settle in. Waller tried to use movement and a brief escape to the outside to slow things down, but Femi shut that down fast with heavy clotheslines, corner shots, and those brutal freight-train uppercuts that just bulldozed him back into place.
Waller managed a small opening with a rope drop and a bit of outside breathing room, but it barely mattered. Femi caught him again, launched him with a big back suplex, and finished things off with the Fall From Grace for a clean, decisive win. No drama, no doubt, just dominance.
Post match Oba made a proclamation that he would be issuing an open challenge every Monday Night.
Main Event
Final
Pinfall
The Judgment Day
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
This main event had a little bit of everything—solid tag work, crowd reactions flipping in weird directions, and Judgment Day doing Judgment Day things right when it mattered most.
Early on, Raquel Rodriguez and Bayley kicked things off with Raquel using her power to get the upper hand. Roxanne Perez tagged in and got a loud hometown reaction, which honestly shifted the energy of the match a bit since the crowd clearly wasn’t fully behind Bayley in stretches. Lyra Valkyria entered next and had some strong exchanges with Perez, including crisp strikes and a backbreaker-wheel kick combo that showed she wasn’t just there to take pins.
Things really picked up late. Rodriguez looked like she might finish Bayley after controlling the pace, but Valkyria came flying in with a top rope dive to break the pin just in time. From there, it turned into chaos—Perez ate a Bayley-to-Belly after a failed Pop-Rox attempt, Valkyria wiped Rodriguez out at ringside with a crossbody, and it looked like Bayley might steal it for her team.
But that’s when Liv Morgan caused the distraction that changed everything. Bayley got caught looking, Perez capitalized with the Pop-Rox, and just like that, Judgment Day stole the win.
Not a blowaway classic, but a solid main event that leaned heavily on timing, interference, and just enough tension to keep it moving.
Segment recap
Roman Reigns opens the segment demanding acknowledgment like he’s done a hundred times before, still carrying that “I run everything” attitude even as the crowd reaction stays weirdly mixed. He talks about Jacob Fatu, saying he never forgot him and even signed off on his WWE arrival—but immediately flips it, saying Fatu still hasn’t earned anything and doesn’t deserve to be treated like a top guy yet. Classic Reigns control talk, acting like everything in WWE flows through him.
Fatu interrupts and doesn’t waste time playing respectful. He fires back that he didn’t need Reigns’ approval, didn’t need a week, didn’t even need an hour to know where he stands. He calls out Reigns for staying in the “main event bubble” while he had to grind his way up, saying no one in the Bloodline reached out to him except Solo Sikoa. That hits a nerve, and Reigns responds by claiming he’s the one who runs WWE, not Solo, not anyone else, and dismisses Fatu as being dumber than he thought.
Things fully snap when Fatu attacks Reigns with a Tongan Death Grip, choking him out while holding the championship up in the air as the crowd reacts heavily against him. Reigns eventually fights through it and grabs a mic, clearly rattled and barely holding it together, but still authoritative enough to officially set their Backlash match.























