SPOILER WARNING: This article contains full spoilers for WWE Friday Night SmackDown airing Friday, Dec. 19, 2025, which was taped on Monday, Dec. 15, 2025 ahead of tonight’s live episode of WWE Monday Night RAW. If you want to go in unspoiled, stop reading now.
Credit to Bodyslam.net for the original spoiler post.
WWE SmackDown Spoilers (Airing Dec. 19, 2025): Full Results From the Dec. 15 Taping
WWE’s December 15 double-taping format produced a SmackDown that reads like a tightly packed “story advancement” episode—one built around Damian Priest being hunted, the women’s division colliding into a multi-star standoff, and Giulia continuing to stack wins as her presentation stays front-and-center.
While the show’s match count is lean, nearly every segment on the spoiler sheet points toward escalation: attacks that happen twice, a tag match that leads directly to bigger names clearing house, and a no contest that screams “this isn’t over.”
Damian Priest’s Night Turns Into a Two-Act Ambush
SmackDown opens with Damian Priest grabbing the mic in the wake of last week’s Terror Twins victory—trying to set the tone and reassert control after the momentum swing.
But Priest doesn’t even get the comfort of a clean introduction.
According to the spoilers, Aleister Black and Zelina Vega immediately make the promo a trap, attacking Priest and turning the early portion of the taping into a statement: whatever this rivalry is now, it’s no longer about trading wins—it’s about taking pieces away from Priest until there’s nothing left to stand on.
And WWE doubles down on that idea later.
In a second beat, Aleister Black lays out Priest backstage—a key detail because it transforms the story from “a brawl that happened” into “a campaign.” Two attacks in one night (one public, one private) paints Priest as a marked man and Black as someone who’s done waiting for official match graphics to settle the score.
This all tracks with how WWE has framed the wider Terror Twins orbit recently: Priest and Rhea Ripley reuniting, Black and Vega positioned as the agitators, and the violence escalating whenever the spotlight shifts their way.
Nia Jax & Lash Legend Get the Win — Then the Stars Arrive
The spoilers also spotlight Nia Jax and Lash Legend with a backstage segment, followed by a match that keeps them looking dangerous as a unit.
Nia Jax & Lash Legend def. The Kabuki Warriors
Nia and Lash pick up a notable tag win over The Kabuki Warriors, and it’s the aftermath that matters just as much as the result: Alexa Bliss and Charlotte Flair hit the scene and clear everyone out.
That closing visual is the type WWE likes because it does multiple jobs at once:
- It preserves the idea that Jax and Legend can win, but they can’t fully control the division once bigger names decide they’re done watching.
- It turns a standard tag result into a bigger women’s division intersection, where alliances and rivalries can be shuffled quickly without needing a long promo exchange.
- It gives the Dec. 19 episode a “moment” designed for clips: Bliss and Flair arriving like a hard stop to the chaos.
If WWE is aiming to heat up multiple women’s programs at once, this is a clean way to do it—one match, one post-match eruption, multiple directions.
Giulia Keeps Momentum Rolling With Another Singles Win
Another standout through-line: Giulia remains heavily featured, getting both promo time and an in-ring result.
First, she delivers a backstage promo, then follows it by defeating Alba Fyre—a straightforward, confidence-building structure that WWE often uses when it wants a talent to feel like a rising constant rather than a cameo.
Giulia def. Alba Fyre
It’s the kind of booking that says: “watch her every week, because the wins are adding up.”
Dragunov & Hayes vs. DIY Adds Intrigue to the Tag Picture
One of the more eye-catching match results on the list is the pairing of Ilja Dragunov and Carmelo Hayes—a duo with obvious combustible energy—scoring a win over DIY.
Ilja Dragunov & Carmelo Hayes def. DIY
This is interesting on multiple levels:
- Dragunov and Hayes are both the type to treat any match like a personal referendum, which makes their teamwork feel like a temporary alliance that could collapse at any second.
- DIY losing to a team like that can be used to justify DIY getting nastier or more desperate the next time they’re on screen—especially if the loss becomes a point of obsession.
- WWE has already been playing with Dragunov’s U.S. Title orbit and the chaos around potential challengers; keeping Dragunov in featured matchups continues that momentum even when the belt isn’t explicitly on the line.
JC Mateo & Tonga Loa vs. Gacy & Lumis Ends in No Contest
Finally, the taping includes a match that doesn’t get a finish—which, in WWE language, usually means the story was more important than the scoreboard.
JC Mateo & Tonga Loa vs. Joe Gacy & Dexter Lumis — No Contest
A no contest finish strongly suggests something broke down into a brawl or interference, and it keeps all involved protected while signaling that this rivalry (or whatever larger faction issue surrounds it) is not contained by standard tag rules.
Full Spoilers Recap: SmackDown Airing Dec. 19 (Taped Dec. 15)
- Damian Priest promo; Aleister Black & Zelina Vega attack Priest
- Nia Jax & Lash Legend backstage segment
- Aleister Black lays out Priest backstage
- Nia Jax & Lash Legend def. The Kabuki Warriors; Alexa Bliss & Charlotte Flair clear the ring
- Giulia backstage promo
- Giulia def. Alba Fyre
- Ilja Dragunov & Carmelo Hayes def. DIY
- JC Mateo & Tonga Loa vs. Joe Gacy & Dexter Lumis ends in no contest
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