Tonight’s WWE RAW, airing March 31, 2025, promises a high-stakes night live from the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom. Cody Rhodes and John Cena will meet face-to-face once more ahead of WrestleMania 41, while Iyo Sky defends her Women’s World Championship against Rhea Ripley with Bianca Belair as special guest referee.
The show kicks off at 3 PM ET, and Ringside News will provide live, match-by-match results and key moments throughout the night. Stay tuned to this page, refresh for the latest updates, and join the conversation in the comments below!
Your announcers tonight are Pat McAfee and Michael Cole.
The crowd’s chanting brings out John Cena to kick off the show. John steps into the center of the ring. Before he can say a word, Cody Rhodes’ music hits. Cody walks down to the ring. John circles Cody before he can grab a mic.
John looks disgusted as the crowd sings along to Cody’s entrance. Cody says he’ll do the talking, especially after the last two weeks. He tells John, “You were supposed to cook me.” Cody points out his own lisp and how certain words with “S” give him trouble — then says “Stardust.” He tells John that has to bother him, because that’s who he’s facing in the final match — Stardust. Cody then brings up his neck tattoo, adding to the tension. Cody says he got booed in the very company he helped create — and he knows John noticed. He adds, “Maybe you’re having a hard time accepting that Superman is dead.”
Cody shifts his tone and says John’s words haven’t matched his actions. “You’ve lied to this audience for the last two weeks,” Cody says. “We used to ride together. You used to care about me. You used to care about them.” He points to the crowd. “So tell them, John… why?”
Cena finally responds. He says he’s not going to punch down to Cody’s level just to protect him — because Cody’s been protected long enough. “I’m not here to cook you,” Cena says coldly. “I’m here to bury you. Just like I buried everyone else. They’ve said for years that John Cena buries talent — I don’t bury talent. I am talent. I bury mediocrity.” John says he couldn’t care less about Cody’s lisp or his past failures. “You’ve manipulated your way to the top, and your ego’s bigger than your talent,” he says.
Cena calls Cody a slimy pickpocket who stole the blueprint and now thinks he can run the kingdom. “That disgusts me,” Cena growls. “You sat by my side, stole every secret — and you’re still underwhelming.” John finishes by telling Cody the truth: “If you’re not authentic, they’ll see right through you. You’re too perfect. Too polished. And you rely on them singing your song just to get by.”
John stares Cody down and calls him the Pied Piper — someone who tricks the fans with a catchy tune to make them accept something average. He says Cody doesn’t look like him, act like him, or work like him. In fact, Cody doesn’t even look or act like himself. He says Cody is afraid to show the real version of who he is. John promises he’s not going to beat Cody — he’s going to bury him before he even gets started.
Cena says Cody is just a mix of every wrestler he ever liked and every show he watched. He says Cody looks like a teenager scared to speak in public. The only thing Cody showed him is that someone average, who dresses the part, can still fool the fans. He calls Cody a spoiled nepo baby with a meaningless tattoo, someone who just bought the role and expects people to believe in him. Cena says that tattoo isn’t about where it is — it’s about what it represents. He calls Cody a fan who bought a toy belt and now pretends to be champion. Cena says he’s taking that title home to show the world what Cody really is — a lucky errand boy. Then he says, “There’s your why.”
Cody takes a moment, then admits he didn’t expect to say this to John. But maybe he’s right. Maybe Cody was chosen — not by Cena, not by the company, but by the fans. Cody asks John if he can say the same. Or was he chosen by just one man in the office — someone we don’t talk about anymore? Cody reminds John that he’s a wrestler, just like his father, and if anyone in WWE was created by the system, it was John.
Cody keeps going and says people are scared of John’s mic skills — but he’s not. He says, “I’ve got more d*** in my mic than you have in your jorts.” He mocks John for hanging out with Zac Efron and still acting like a teenager. Cody says John left and tried to act like it helped WWE, but the truth is, it left fans feeling abandoned — and Cody was there when John wasn’t. He says John didn’t make WWE better — he just ran off when things got hard. Then Cody drops a heavy line: “Which one of us sold out to The Rock?” He says John is still his hero, but he’s also a piece of s***.
John fires back. He says Cody is full of lies, not facts. He says he worked harder than anyone and never got special treatment. Every match, he took people’s best shots and never asked for help. That’s why he’s still here. No matter how tough things got, he made it work. He tells Cody that he left because he couldn’t even keep up. Cena says he built things for billionaires, while Cody just stole from them.
Cody gets the last word and hits John where it hurts. “Say what you want,” he says, “but I’ve never had a crowd chant ‘You Can’t Wrestle’ at me.” John steps back into the ring and squares up with Cody, tension building between them. But then, unexpectedly, John smirks and turns to leave the ring.
Just as he’s about to exit, he swings for a cheap shot—Cody ducks it and counters with a CrossRhodes, dropping Cena hard to the mat. Cody stands tall, throws up a Too Sweet, and points to the WrestleMania sign above.
We cut to a video package hyping up the Women’s World Title match.
Back in the arena, Kofi Kingston grabs a mic and says, “Thank God for The New Day.” Xavier Woods quickly tells the crowd to shut the hell up. He says they’re looking at the greatest tag team in professional wrestling history. Instead of running their mouths, he tells the fans to show some respect and bow their heads to royalty.
Kofi chimes in, saying they traveled all the way from the United States, leaving their families behind, only to be booed by the very people they came to entertain. Woods follows up by asking how Adam Pearce could have the nerve to put them in a match just to earn a tag title shot. “Haven’t we sacrificed enough?” he asks, clearly fed up. Kofi says they’re done waiting and it’s time to remind everyone exactly who they are. He says they’re going to force Adam Pearce to give them what they deserve — a shot at the tag team titles. Woods adds that when they win those titles, the entire world can drop to their knees and say it loud: “Thank GOD… for The New Day.”
That’s when Adam Pearce walks out onto the stage. He reminds them that, just like he said last week, nothing is handed out — they have to earn it. Pearce then introduces their opponents for tonight: Tyler Bate and Pete Dunne.
Bate and Woods open the match with a lock-up. Bate grabs control with a wrist lock, transitioning smoothly into a Greco-Roman knuckle lock. He then catches Woods in a headscissors before climbing the turnbuckles and tagging in Pete Dunne.
With Bate still holding the headscissors, Pete charges in and lands a stiff clothesline. Dunne goes right after Woods’ fingers, bending and twisting them before stomping down hard on the elbow. Bate tags back in and delivers a hesitation senton off the top turnbuckle for more damage.
Kofi tries to step in but gets knocked off the apron. Pete tags back in, hits Kofi with a knee strike while he’s still on the outside, and Bate follows up with a diving plancha onto Woods at ringside. Bate rolls Woods back into the ring and follows with a sharp European uppercut. He tags in Pete, who climbs the turnbuckles and delivers a double stomp right to Woods’ arm.
Kofi makes the tag and immediately catches Pete with a kick from the apron. Woods follows up with a Harley Race-style knee to the back, sending Pete tumbling to the floor. Kofi adds a kick from the apron for good measure.
Back in the ring, Kofi hits a forearm and starts unloading with kicks in the corner. Woods tags in and continues the attack with more boots to the midsection. Kofi tags back in and adds another kick before Woods sneaks one in too. Kofi tags in again, and Woods Irish whips him into the corner for a low baseball slide into Pete. Kofi covers but only gets a near fall. Kofi lands another forearm and slams Pete to the mat. Woods tags in and lifts Kofi, slamming him down onto Pete for added impact. Woods goes for the cover, but Pete kicks out at two. ete fights back with a series of forearms, trying to reach his corner, but Woods cuts him off and keeps him from making the tag. Pete keeps swinging, landing more forearms, but Woods won’t let him get past. Woods sends Pete into the ropes and chokes him across the middle rope.
Kofi takes advantage with a kick to Pete’s midsection while he’s tied up, and Woods follows with a dropkick to the back, driving Pete into the ropes. He goes for the cover but only gets a near fall. Pete fires back with a hard chop and more forearms, but Woods shuts him down again with a stiff shot that drops him to the mat. Woods holds Pete in place across the ropes, and Kofi comes flying in with a back senton off the apron. Kofi slides back in and covers Pete, but he only gets another near fall.
Kofi locks in an arm and chin bar, keeping Pete grounded. Pete tries to tag out, but Kofi stops him with a forearm. Pete flips out of the corner and tags in Bate.
Bate comes in hot with elbows to Kofi and knocks Woods off the apron. He misses a boot but catches Kofi with an exploder suplex. Bate spins Kofi in an airplane spin and drops him. Pete tags in and they hit kicks in the corner. Bate hits a rebound clothesline into a German suplex from Pete for a near fall.
Woods kicks Bate, but Pete kicks Woods and sends him to the apron. Pete pulls at his fingers and Woods drops to the floor. Kofi hits SOS for a near fall. Woods tags in.
Pete kicks both men, stomps Woods’ hands, and kicks Kofi. Bate tags in and hits a jab. Pete tags in and lands a flying kick in the corner. Woods rakes the eyes. Kofi throws Bate into the apron. Woods hits a backbreaker, and Kofi hits a double stomp off the top for the win.
Winners: Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods
Cathy stops Kofi and Xavier on the ramp and asks if they’re any closer to a tag title match. Woods says they’ve earned it and they want the title shot now. Kofi says they’re done waiting — they want what they deserve. The War Raiders come out, holding up their tag title belts as a warning.
We then cut to a recap of the recent tension between Jey Uso and Gunther, followed by Jimmy Uso’s comments to Jey from later in the show.
Jey approaches Jimmy backstage and says he’d feel better if Jimmy was out there with him. Jimmy tells him not to worry — the world may be doubting him, but he’s here to silence all that noise. “There’s no Ring General out there tonight,” Jimmy says. “Just a man. And he’s beatable.” He promises to take down Gunther tonight, and tells Jey that at WrestleMania, he will finish the job and become champion. Jey nods and says he hears him loud and clear. He looks into the camera and tells Gunther to be careful.
We then cut to Gunther walking through the backstage area, focused and intense, before heading to commercial.
After the break, Jackie Redmond is backstage with Ludwig Kaiser. She asks about his recent ups and downs and where he stands as a singles competitor. Kaiser says there may have been a delay in the inevitable rise of Ludwig Kaiser, but that time is ending. He says the real tragedy is that the WrestleMania card is already forming, and Adam Pearce still hasn’t given him a proper match on the biggest stage of them all. If that doesn’t change soon, Kaiser says he’ll take matters into his own hands — and warns that nobody wants to see what that looks like.
Jimmy blocks a punch from Gunther and fires back with a series of punches, an uppercut, and a few sharp chops. Gunther shuts him down with a big boot and tosses Jimmy to the floor. On the outside, Gunther whips Jimmy into the ringside barrier and lights him up with two loud chops before sending him crashing into the barricade again.
Gunther sets up for a powerbomb near the announce table, but Jimmy counters with a back body drop. Jimmy slides back into the ring and knocks Gunther off the apron with a punch, then follows up with a suicide dive. He rolls Gunther back into the ring and climbs to the top, but Gunther gets his knees up to block the frog splash.
Jimmy recovers and catches Gunther on the turnbuckles with a right hand. He climbs up and nails a superplex, shaking the ring. Jimmy heads back to the top and hits a frog splash, but Gunther kicks out just in time.
Gunther rolls to the floor, but as Jimmy comes off the apron, he’s met with a brutal chop. Gunther drops Jimmy back-first onto the apron, then follows up with a hard clothesline. Back in the ring, Gunther chokes Jimmy on the ropes, then hits a stiff European uppercut. Jimmy responds with a chop, but Gunther fires back with one of his own and gets a near fall. He follows with a boot to the chest, then another vicious kick. Gunther delivers another stiff chop to Jimmy, sending him stumbling. He follows with a second one that drops Jimmy flat to the mat. Jimmy blocks a slap, fires back with one of his own, then unloads with punches and a superkick. Jimmy hits a German suplex, then connects with a thrust kick that staggers Gunther.
But Gunther quickly shuts him down with a big dropkick. He follows up with a powerbomb, but instead of going for the pin, he pulls Jimmy up at the count of two. Gunther lands a boot to the head, then crushes Jimmy with a clothesline. Again, he lifts Jimmy up at two instead of finishing it. Gunther hits a forearm to the back and locks in a sleeper hold, adding body scissors to tighten the grip. Jimmy fades, and eventually passes out, forcing the referee to call for the bell.
Winner: Gunther
After the match, Gunther starts to leave but then turns back, re-enters the ring, and reapplies the sleeper hold with body scissors, refusing to let go. Jey Uso’s music hits and he rushes down the ramp. Gunther ignores the music and keeps the hold locked in, but Jey tackles him to the mat. Gunther scrambles away and escapes through the crowd as Jey chases with punches. Jey returns to the ring to check on Jimmy, who’s struggling to get to his feet. The referee stays by Jimmy’s side, checking on him as he slowly tries to recover.
Medical staff rushes down to check on Jimmy, who’s still dazed after the match. Jey helps his brother toward the back, but before they can leave ringside, Gunther ambushes them from behind.
Gunther sends Jey crashing into the steel steps. He grabs Jimmy and sets up for a powerbomb, but security swarms in. Gunther shoves them away and powerbombs one security guard onto the steel steps, then kicks another down. He grabs Jey and slams him into the ring post.
Gunther throws a heavy forearm, then pulls out a zip tie and wraps it around Jey’s wrists, tying him to the ropes. He pokes at Jey’s eyes to keep him disoriented. Gunther whips Jimmy hard into the barricade, then returns to the ring, grabs his Intercontinental Title, and holds it in Jey’s face. “This is as close as you’ll ever get,” he says coldly.
Jimmy tries to crawl back into the ring, but Gunther cracks him in the head with the title belt, knocking him back to the floor.
Gunther turns back to Jey and asks, “Can you handle the pressure?”
Jimmy, now bleeding from the forehead, slowly pulls himself back into the ring. Gunther grabs him and powerbombs him right in front of Jey, who’s still trapped. Jey struggles to break free, but can’t.
Gunther throws punches to Jimmy’s head, then smears his blood across his own chest and arms. He shoves Jimmy closer to Jey, only to kick Jey away. Gunther unloads with elbows to Jimmy’s chest, then locks in the sleeper with the body scissors again—making Jey watch as his brother fades. Gunther finally lets go of the sleeper hold, leaving Jimmy motionless on the mat and Jey still tied to the ropes, watching helplessly.
Adam Pearce storms down to the ring, furious. He gets in Gunther’s face and demands, “What the hell are you doing?!”
Gunther, calm and unfazed, just stares at Pearce, standing tall with Jimmy’s blood still on his chest, holding up the Intercontinental Title as Jey glares at him from the ropes.
We get a recap of the contract signing from SmackDown, highlighting the intense face-off and key moments from that segment.
Then, we take a look back at Monday night’s main event and everything that went down, including the aftermath that added more fuel to the fire heading into WrestleMania.
We cut to The Judgment Day backstage, where the group is gathered and Liv Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez walk in. Liv smirks and says it looks like the boys have patched things up. Finn Balor nods and says yeah—they’re like brothers, and any talk about a new member is done. That’s over with. Now it’s time to show Penta and Bron Breakker exactly what Judgment Day is all about. Finn then turns to Raquel and apologizes for their recent loss, but promises to make it right. He says he’s going to win the Intercontinental Title and bring more gold to the group.
Dominik and Penta start the match, but before things can fully get going, Finn grabs Penta’s leg from the outside, distracting him just long enough for Dom to land a few punches and take control.
Penta quickly recovers and hits a head scissors, flipping Dom across the ring. He tags in Bron Breakker, and the pace picks up as the powerhouse enters the match. Bron comes in strong with a shoulder tackle, then lifts Dominik for a press slam. Dom slips out and lands on his feet, but before he can regroup, Finn tags in. Bron grabs him with a side headlock, then catches Finn on a leapfrog attempt and slams him down hard. Bron follows up with an elbow in the corner before tagging in Penta.
Penta lands a sharp kick to Finn, sweeps the leg, and follows with a hesitation dropkick. Dom tries to jump in, but Penta drops him with a backbreaker, and Bron follows up by clotheslining Dom over the top rope to the floor. Penta then hits a plancha to the outside, crashing onto both Finn and Dom. He keeps the momentum going with a series of chops to both men.
Back in the ring, Penta goes up top and connects with a crossbody on Finn for a near fall. He lands a few kicks to Finn’s legs and stings him with a chop against the ropes. Penta kicks Finn again, but Carlito jumps on the apron. While the referee’s distracted, Dom pulls Penta down to the mat. Finn takes advantage with punches and kicks before tagging Dom back in.
Dom lands a few shots, then Finn tags in again and they double-team Penta with kicks. Penta tries to fight back with punches, but Finn shuts him down with a GTR for a near fall, then locks in a reverse chin lock. As the referee is distracted by Dom, Finn pulls Penta to the mat again and stomps him, following up with punches in the corner.
Finn delivers punches to Penta from the turnbuckles, then Dom tags in and drives his shoulder into Penta’s midsection a few times. Dom hits a snap mare, and Finn tags back in to land a slingshot boot to the chest. Dom returns with a slingshot senton for a near fall.
Dom goes for a suplex and holds on for a second, but Penta blocks the third attempt. Penta counters with a float-over and hits a lungblower to create space. Both teams tag out, and Bron charges in with a shoulder tackle, unloading punches on both Finn and Dom. He tosses Finn with an overhead belly-to-belly suplex, then does the same to Dom. Finn tries for a suplex, but Bron blocks it. Dom joins in, but Bron hits a double suplex on both of them.
Bron hoists Finn onto his shoulders, but Finn rakes the eyes to escape. Bron fires back with a Warp clothesline, and Penta tags in. Bron lifts Finn again, and Penta nails a wraparound Doomsday bulldog for a close near fall. Bron sends Dom to the floor, and Penta hits Finn with a superkick before heading to the top rope. Dom grabs Penta’s leg to stop him, and Bron knocks Carlito off the apron with a punch. Penta goes for the Mexico City Sunrise, but Dom grabs his leg again.
Dom warns Finn about Bron, and in the confusion, Bron accidentally spears Penta. Bron gets sent to the floor, and Dom follows up with a dropkick through the ropes. Finn climbs to the top and hits Coup de Grace for the three-count.
Winners: Finn Balor and Dominik Mysterio
Chad Gable is backstage with Adam Pearce, congratulating him on signing Grande Americano. Gable says he’d love to get in the ring with him soon and hands over another doctor’s note. Pearce tells Chad they’ll be in Minneapolis next week, but he’s not cleared to compete. Gable insists he’ll be fine, but Pearce holds firm—no clearance, no match. Pearce adds that there’s no better time for Grande Americano to debut on American soil, and makes it official for next week.
Just then, American Alpha walks in. Chad immediately calls them clowns and an idiot, clearly annoyed. Maxxine steps in and says she wants to talk about the women’s tag division—and more specifically, her career. She mentions she’s been speaking with Natalya and has some new ideas she wants to explore.
Jackie is with Karrion Kross and Scarlett, and she brings up Logan Paul. She asks why Kross even cares about what’s going on between AJ Styles and Logan. Kross smirks and says his favorite villain in all of this… is AJ Styles. He says beneath the smiling, humble legend persona, AJ is actually ruthless—and always has been. Kross then wonders out loud what version of AJ we’ll see when Logan Paul steps into the spotlight. Will it be the calm veteran… or the dangerous one hiding underneath? AJ Styles makes his way to the ring.
Cathy Kelley is backstage with Bron Breakker when Penta walks up, clearly frustrated. He gets in Bron’s face and demands to know what’s going on. Penta calls Bron stupid for what happened earlier, and before things escalate further, officials quickly step in to separate them.
Over in the arena, AJ Styles appears and says he’s been waiting patiently all night. But now he’s done waiting. If Logan Paul has something to say, AJ tells him to come out and say it to his face — right now. Logan Paul’s music hits and he makes his way to the ring.
Logan tells AJ he wouldn’t understand his world—because nobody in the crowd is on his level. He says he’s rich, famous, and loved, and everyone here is on his time. If he wants to make people wait, they’ll wait. “You’re all sheep,” he says.
He tells AJ not to get his “shiny little panties in a bunch” because he’s had a change of heart. Logan says he’s a dad now, and he’s trying to teach his daughter about forgiveness. So, he forgives AJ for what happened at Madison Square Garden—but warns him not to try it again. AJ responds calmly, saying he understands. He’s a dad too. And he forgives Logan as well.
Logan raises an eyebrow and asks what AJ means by that. AJ smiles and says he forgives Logan for being the biggest douchebag to ever step into WWE. He says Logan always brags about his success and money—but the fans don’t care about that. What they care about is how far you’re willing to go for them inside that ring. He tells Logan he has all the talent in the world, but in this business, talent alone won’t carry you. “So what are you gonna do?” AJ asks. Logan fires back, saying he’d ask AJ for advice—but he doesn’t take advice from people he wouldn’t trade places with. AJ finishes his sentence: “They also say don’t let your mouth write a check your ass can’t cash.”
Logan smirks and asks if that’s a threat. AJ says this is Monday Night Raw, and they’re in London. He’s in the ring, in his gear, and ready to go. Then he looks Logan in the eye and asks, “What do you think?”
Logan says he’s done talking. Everyone knows he doesn’t fight for free—and this city couldn’t afford him anyway. He tells AJ that if he wants that big-money match with Logan Paul, he better aim a little higher. Logan suddenly goes for a cheap shot with a kick, but AJ catches it and nails him with a punch. AJ sets up for the Styles Clash, but Logan slips out and escapes to the floor.
AJ gives chase and sends Logan crashing into the announce table. He throws him back in the ring and climbs in after him, but Logan grabs the ropes and yanks them up into AJ’s groin. With AJ stunned, Logan follows up with a suplex that rolls right into a DDT, leaving AJ laid out.
Jackie is backstage with Lyra Valkyria and asks what her focus is right now. Lyra starts by thanking Bayley for having her back, but says now it’s time to prove she can stand on her own. She points out that Bayley is the only person who’s beaten her since she won the title, and now she needs to prove to herself—and everyone else—that she can and will beat her. Next week, she’ll defend the Women’s Intercontinental Title against Bayley.
Next week on Raw:
– Lyra Valkyria defends the Women’s Intercontinental Championship against Bayley
– Grande Americano will be in action
Backstage, Finn Balor reminds everyone that he pinned Penta and got the best of Bron Breakker. With momentum on his side, he says it’s time to ask Adam Pearce for a title match. “Finn is back,” he says confidently.
Liv Morgan isn’t as impressed. She turns to Dominik and reminds him that Finn said he won — not them. She also points out that Dom already lost to Bron. Liv says she’s heading to Pearce too, and she plans to have her own conversation about what’s next.
The match begins with a lock-up and Iyo taking control with a side headlock. They move around the ropes, jockeying for position until Bianca has to step in and separate them.
They lock up again, this time Rhea grabs a waist lock and drives Iyo into the corner, following up with shoulders and punches. Bianca steps in once more, pulling Rhea out of the corner. Iyo charges, but Rhea catches her. Iyo fights out with punches in the corner, but then Bianca pulls her back as well.
Iyo goes back to the side headlock. Rhea shoots for the ankle, but Iyo stays on her feet and counters into a near fall. They go back and forth with a series of quick pin attempts. Iyo catches Rhea with a jackknife cover, but only gets two. She follows with a back handspring, but misses the dropkick. Rhea responds with a big clothesline.
Rhea connects with a forearm, but Iyo fires back with one of her own. Rhea takes her down and targets the arm with a stiff kick. She tosses Iyo into the turnbuckles, then hits her with several punches. Rhea follows with a snap mare and a dropkick, scoring another near fall.
Rhea hits a forearm to Iyo’s lower back, then follows with a second one. She goes for a third, but Iyo slips out and counters with an elbow, followed by a series of knees. Iyo hits a drop toe hold, sending Rhea into the ropes, and follows up with a dropkick to the back. She covers, but only gets a near fall.
Iyo applies a chin lock, then transitions into a stretch, pulling back on Rhea’s arms. Rhea powers out with punches, but Iyo answers with forearms. Rhea fires back with short-arm clotheslines, then lands a back heel kick and plants Iyo face-first into the mat for a near fall. Iyo recovers with a suplex. Rhea whips her into the corner, but Iyo catches her with a pendulum kick and follows with a missile dropkick off the top. Rhea rolls to the floor, and Iyo takes her out with a suicide dive.
Iyo goes for the Asai Moonsault, but Rhea cuts her off and drops her hard onto the apron. Back in the ring, Iyo tries for a poisonrana, but both women crash to the mat. They recover and trade forearms and punches in the center of the ring. Iyo gets the upper hand with a flurry of forearms and a back heel kick. Rhea lifts Iyo, but Iyo counters with a victory roll into a double stomp to the chest. Iyo climbs to the turnbuckles, looking for a moonsault, but Rhea cuts her off with a forearm. Rhea climbs up and lifts Iyo onto her shoulders, setting up for something big.
Iyo counters in mid-air with a Super Crucifix Bomb, driving Rhea to the mat. She makes the cover, but Rhea kicks out at two in a close near fall. Iyo hits a running double knee strike in the corner. She climbs to the top, but Rhea shoves her off to the apron. Iyo drops Rhea across the top rope, then goes for a crossbody—but Rhea catches her with a headbutt for a near fall. Rhea sets up for the Riptide, but Iyo counters into a guillotine. Rhea powers out and hits a backbreaker followed by a Razor’s Edge. She kicks Iyo in the head and goes for a cover, but Iyo kicks out.
Rhea lifts Iyo for another Riptide, but Iyo escapes and rolls her up for a near fall. Rhea blocks another rollup, but Iyo hits a standing switch. Rhea goes for a big boot, but Iyo dodges—and Rhea accidentally kicks Bianca. Rhea hits a kick and follows with the Riptide, but Bianca is down, selling the hit like a ref, not a wrestler. Rhea yells at Bianca to make the count. She finally covers Iyo, but Iyo kicks out. Rhea keeps yelling at Bianca and pokes her in frustration. She takes down Iyo with a double-leg and starts throwing punches. Bianca steps in, counts the rope break, and pulls Rhea off.
Rhea snaps and punches Bianca. Iyo climbs the ropes and goes for a missile dropkick, but she misses Rhea and accidentally hits Bianca instead. Rhea grabs Iyo, but before she can hit anything, Bianca calls for the bell.
Result: Double Disqualification (Iyo retains the title)
After the match, Rhea goes after Bianca and lands more punches. Bianca fires back. Iyo takes them both down with an Asai Moonsault. Iyo sends Rhea into the ring and starts throwing punches, but Bianca pulls Iyo off and hits her with a forearm. Rhea gets back up and nails Bianca with a headbutt, then hits a RipTide on Bianca… and another one on Iyo. Rhea stands tall as the show goes off the air. We go to credits.