
WWE Raw Results: Biggest Winners, Losers and Moments from November 7
The Nov. 7 episode of Raw emanated from Glasgow, Scotland, and was a fairly miserable show that did little to drum up anything even remotely close to excitement for the upcoming Survivor Series pay-per-view.
The writing was disjointed, there was a complete and utter lack of urgency and the result was a waste of time and energy.
Harsh? Yes. Fair? Go back and rewatch the thing.
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But in the creative darkness, one Superstar was able to break through and emerge as the biggest (both figuratively and literally) winner of the broadcast.
| Noam Dar | Winner | The cruiserweight looked like a star in his home country of Scotland, even if a babyface role and win would have been nice. |
| Tag teams | Losers | The New Day was entertaining enough, but the 12-minute segment involving the tag division dragged on and made none of the other duos look any better. |
| Bayley | Loser | The beloved babyface may have been on the receiving end of a big ovation and a little song, but she stumbled through her promo. She must improve that area of her game to succeed. |
Biggest Winner: Braun Strowman
For the second consecutive week, Braun Strowman earns "biggest winner" status on the back of a strong night of creative and in-ring work.
Over the course of Monday's show, Strowman was established as a loner, a massive competitor whose only loyalty is to himself. He does not care about his teammates, and representing his brand does not much matter. No, Strowman is a destructive force determined to wreak havoc on WWE, and he will do so on the biggest stage of his young career on Nov. 20 in Toronto.
In the main event of Raw, he battled Chris Jericho, Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins and Kevin Owens in a Fatal 5-Way match. Not only did he turn in one of his best performances as a singles competitor to date, but he also proved to his harshest of critics that no stage is too big for him.
He proved he could hang with the best and brightest in a big match.
Now, he rolls into one of the most significant events of the year as arguably the most intriguing character in all of WWE. Is he merely a giant for a lead babyface to topple, or does he figure into the bigger picture, a key cog in the company's plans for the new year and beyond?
His use in the coming weeks will tell us.
Biggest Loser: Logic
WWE Raw commissioner Stephanie McMahon is so concerned with defeating brother Shane's SmackDown Live crew at Survivor Series that she booked a Fatal 5-Way match between the Superstars she picked to represent her and her best interests at the event.
Even announcer Corey Graves pointed out the complete and utter lack of logic behind the decision while discussing Strowman. The big man could demolish every one of his opponents and teammates en route to a victory.
That booking decision hurt the marquee storyline on the show, as did several other decisions.
Why book Noam Dar as a heel when the countryman was making his debut, knowing full well he was going to elicit a reaction unlike any the cruiserweights have experienced to this point?
In what universe are The Shining Stars a tag team deserving of an opportunity to represent Raw against SmackDown at Survivor Series?
On a show that desperately needed to inject excitement into the Survivor Series build, this week's broadcast did more to generate head-scratching than anything.



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