
WWE Raw Results: Biggest Winners, Losers and Moments from November 28
The November 28 episode of Raw featured an outstanding Falls Count Anywhere main event in which Sasha Banks defeated Charlotte Flair to become a three-time women's champion, not to mention a strong Roman Reigns-Kevin Owens match, yet none of the four competitors involved in those bouts earned "biggest winner" status for the night's festivities.
No, that honor went to an underutilized talent who is finally getting the television time he deserves via an intriguing storyline involving the brand's general manager, Mick Foley.
While he had a strong night of character development and progression, another Superstar continued his slide into mediocrity, the championship around his waist meaningless given the manner in which he has been booked.
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| Sasha Banks and Charlotte | Winners | The Boss and her main rival continued to revolutionize women's wrestling with another brilliant main event and historic title change. |
| Enzo Amore | Loser | An incredibly popular babyface, but he absolutely deserved what he got from Rusev, who was merely defending his wife's honor. |
| The New Day | Winners | The popular trio has turned to cheating to preserve its historic tag team title reign, perhaps signaling a change that would see it once again embrace its villainous ways. |
Biggest Winner: Sami Zayn
The Underdog from the Underground continued to earn himself more television time in an expanded role Monday night as he saved Goldust and R-Truth from a brutal beatdown at the hands of Braun Strowman, only to have general manger Mick Foley interrupt the proceedings.
The Hall of Famer cited his attempt to save Zayn from himself as the reason for holding him back then admitted it was he who booked the match against Strowman last week as punishment for the Canadian's inability to take the intercontinental title from The Miz at Survivor Series.
Zayn called Foley a hypocrite, a corporate stooge taking his orders from above when he used to be the same heroic underdog. Walking out on the Hardcore Legend only demonstrated the disgust he had in the man he once considered a mentor.
The narrative being told involving Zayn and Strowman is the type of interesting storyline WWE Creative should be crafting for every one of its Superstars. There is a clear good guy fans can throw their support behind and an obvious villain, and the wild card in Foley, who continues his delve deeper and deeper into the corporate mindset.
It is Zayn's never-say-die attitude and general likability that has kept him relevant despite Creative's attempts to bury him in the midcard mess. Now with an actual story to sink his teeth into, the former NXT champion can finally run wild on a Raw brand that should be more proud to have him.
Biggest Loser: Kevin Owens
The WWE universal champion has had a tumultuous few months on top of the Raw brand. While he wears the show's most prestigious title, he has been treated as anything but the top star on Monday nights.
Sure, the work he has done with Chris Jericho has been entertaining and, some may suggest, the best element of the Monday night staple for months. This Monday night, though, that partnership was threatened as Owens lashed out at his friend.
Take that away from the Prizefighter, and what are fans left with? A generic villain who rarely wins without someone helping him to victory.
Owens has fallen into the trap WWE Creative crafts for so many bad guys, neutering them of any trait that could possibly make them interesting and beating them at every turn to boot.
As Roadblock: End of the Line approaches, does anyone care about Owens defending his title against Roman Reigns? No, because the champion had his credibility killed Monday night when he was beaten clean in the center of the ring by his No. 1 contender.
Not only is credibility erased, the significance of the title is hurt as well, especially given the company's penchant for booking its champion to look weak every single broadcast then booking them strongly at the pay-per-view.
Owens is a Superstar who should have benefited exponentially from a championship. Now, it would be best for him to drop the title and regain his edge before too much damage is done.



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