← Event Results · Home · Boxscore

SmackDown
WWE SmackDown Results — March 29, 2025
Full WWE SmackDown results for March 29, 2025 in O2 Arena in London, England.. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
Raw resultsSmackDown resultsPLE resultsRosterChampionships
March 29, 2025 — O2 Arena in London, England.
Event Recap
The March 29, 2025 edition of WWE SmackDown leaned hard into the chaos that always seems to hit right before WrestleMania, and the London crowd was more than happy to fuel it. The night featured a couple of title matches, plenty of interference, and just enough brawling to remind everyone that nobody trusts anybody this time of year. The Street Profits successfully defended the WWE Tag Team Championships against Pretty Deadly in a lively match where the challengers kept things competitive with a few close calls, but Montez Ford and Angelo Dawkins eventually shut the door with their Doomsday Blockbuster combination to keep the titles. Meanwhile, Piper Niven and Alba Fyre handled Kayden Carter and Katana Chance thanks to the usual chaos surrounding Chelsea Green, who distracted the referee long enough for Niven to drop Carter with the Piper Driver. The celebration didn’t last long, though, because the trio continued the beatdown until Zelina Vega sprinted down to even the odds.
Elsewhere on the show, Drew McIntyre picked up a win over Randy Orton after Kevin Owens showed up at exactly the wrong moment for The Viper. Just as Orton looked ready to land an RKO, Owens caused a distraction that allowed McIntyre to blast Orton with a Claymore Kick for the victory. Owens then tried to continue the fight, but Orton slipped out of a potential disaster and the chaos spilled toward the crowd. The show also included a win for Jimmy Uso over The Miz and a wild United States Title match where LA Knight kept the championship after Braun Strowman won by disqualification thanks to Jacob Fatu interfering and wrecking everyone in sight. The biggest moment of the night came when CM Punk, Roman Reigns, and Seth Rollins gathered for their WrestleMania contract signing. Punk finally put pen to paper to headline WrestleMania for the first time, which would’ve been a nice, clean moment if this were any other sport—but this is wrestling, so of course it ended with shouting, tension, and the feeling that someone is going to try to tear someone else’s head off long before the big match actually happens.
Match Results
Pretty Deadly
Final
Pinfall
The Street Profits
Summary
The Street Profits kicked off their title defense against Pretty Deadly in front of a loud London crowd that clearly wanted to see the challengers steal the belts. Elton Prince and Kit Wilson leaned heavily on quick tags and constant distractions early, isolating Angelo Dawkins and trying to keep Montez Ford from getting involved. Once Ford finally got the hot tag, the pace picked up fast. Ford flew around the ring with his usual high-energy offense while Dawkins handled the power side of things. Pretty Deadly managed a couple of close near falls that had the crowd biting, but the champions eventually shut the door. The finish came when Dawkins launched Ford into the air for their Doomsday Blockbuster, and Ford landed the splash for the pin to retain the WWE Tag Team Titles.
+3
Title defense (DQ): +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
This match was exactly what you’d expect when Braun Strowman is challenging for a title: a lot of heavy hits and very little finesse. Strowman tried to overpower LA Knight early, tossing the champion around and making it clear he planned to win by brute force. Knight responded with quick strikes and movement, trying to keep the giant off balance long enough to find an opening. The crowd stayed firmly behind Knight, and he managed to build some momentum with a few big counters. Just when the match looked ready to hit its finishing stretch, everything fell apart. Jacob Fatu stormed into the situation and attacked Strowman, bringing the match to a halt. The interference wiped out any chance of a clean finish and left the title situation unresolved while bodies piled up around the ring.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Charlotte Flair and Michin had a solid back-and-forth match that leaned heavily on contrast in styles. Michin came out aggressive and tried to overwhelm Flair with strikes and fast offense, landing a few early shots that kept the former champion from settling into her rhythm. Once Flair slowed things down, the match turned into a more methodical fight. She targeted Michin’s legs and controlled the pace, forcing Michin to fight from underneath. Michin managed a brief comeback with a flurry of kicks and a near fall that got the crowd reacting, but it didn’t last long. Flair eventually caught her opponent in the Figure Eight, and once it was fully locked in there wasn’t much Michin could do except tap out. It was a clean technical finish and a reminder that Flair can still end a match quickly when she locks that hold in
Main Event
+3
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
The main event turned into a tense heavyweight fight between Drew McIntyre and Randy Orton. Both guys worked a deliberate pace early, trading strikes and trying to set up their big finishers. Orton looked like he might take control after hitting a few signature moves and stalking McIntyre for an RKO, but the match took a turn once Kevin Owens appeared at ringside. The distraction came at the worst possible moment for Orton. As he turned his attention toward Owens, McIntyre seized the opportunity and blasted him with a Claymore Kick. That was enough to keep Orton down for the three-count. It wasn’t the cleanest win in the world, but McIntyre wasn’t about to complain, and the chaos between Orton and Owens continued after the bell.














