Tag: Miranda Maverick

  • 4 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC Atlanta: Kamaru Usman vs. Joaquin Buckley

    4 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC Atlanta: Kamaru Usman vs. Joaquin Buckley

    The UFC returned to Atlanta for the first time in six years this past Saturday night, hosting a Fight Night card that brought out plenty of names and some noteworthy performances.

    The last time the UFC was in Atlanta was for UFC 236, which featured two title fights that have connections to even upcoming UFC events. The main event of that night saw Dustin Poirier defeat Max Holloway in their second encounter to become interim UFC lightweight champion. Those two will face off one more time in Poirier’s retirement fight next month at UFC 318. The co-main event, meanwhile, saw a wild encounter in which Israel Adesanya defeated Kelvin Gastelum to become interim UFC middleweight champion. That fight will be inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame in just a couple of weeks.

    Meanwhile, last night’s UFC Atlanta saw quite a few fights where a rising up-and-comer looked to make a statement against a known name.

    In the main event, Kamaru Usman returned to the Octagon for the first time in nearly two years to take on Joaquin Buckley. Usman had not been seen since his UFC 280 loss to Khamzat Chimaev — a fight that marked Usman’s third straight defeat since dropping the welterweight title to Leon Edwards. Buckley, meanwhile, was riding a six-fight win streak, having most recently finished Usman’s old rival, Colby Covington, in December.

    The co-main event saw Rose Namajunas look to keep positive momentum in the flyweight division against rising star Miranda Maverick. Namajunas entered the fight just 2-2 since moving to 125, having dropped a decision to Erin Blanchfield this past November. Maverick, meanwhile, was on a four-fight win streak and had won six of her previous seven bouts.

    Who came out strong? Who didn’t? Let’s go into it together with this week’s edition of Hits and Misses.

    Hit: Fun-Filled Finishes On Prelims

    UFC Atlanta’s main card may have had the star power; however, it was the prelims that had the big finishes — and was arguably the more entertaining portion of the evening.

    It all began with Phil Rowe going down two rounds against Ange Loosa. Loosa was in fairly dominant control over the bout’s first 10 minutes, even scoring a knockdown on Rowe at the conclusion of a wild second round. But in the third, things changed quickly. Rowe managed to get his combinations going, bringing the pressure right to Loosa, who appeared to be struggling. Rowe managed to land blow after blow, including a series of uppercuts, before a right hand crumbled Loosa to the mat for the finish.

    It was a wild outing for “The Fresh Prince,” who is now 4-3 in the Octagon since coming into the UFC through Dana White’s Contender Series (DWCS). He not only avoids a three-fight skid and arguable retained his job, but it was the kind of performance that’s sure to leave a lasting impression on fans and brass alike.

    Then came a violent knockout Jose Ochoa had on Cody Durden and a walk-off KO for Malcolm Wellmaker against Kris Moutinho. It was a pair of violent displays that really got the card on fire — and three finishes in a four-fight span that wet the appetite of Atlanta’s UFC faithful in attendance.

    Hit: Watch Out For Wellmaker

    I know I just mentioned Malcolm Wellmaker in the entry about the card’s finishes, but he deserves a second hit for the impact he left in the Octagon — both on this evening and thus far in his UFC run.

    Taking on a returning Kris Moutinho, Wellmaker pushed the pace against someone who likes to bring pressure and get into striking battles. No matter what Moutinho tried to deliver, Wellmaker was just too strong and too accurate.

    Wellmaker landed a right hand in the center of the Octagon that knocked out Moutinho, bringing the crowd to its feet. In fact, for a second straight fight, Wellmaker walked away from the fight as the referee waved it all off.

    “The Machine” had made his UFC debut less than two months ago, when he stopped Cameron Saaiman — and that was after he knocked out Adam Bramhald on DWCS.

    I know he’s only two fights in, but we need to keep serious eyes on Wellmaker. He deserves recognition for what he’s done thus far, and another one of these performances will just quickly rise his star that is starting to shine.

    Miss: Another Inconclusive Paul Craig vs. Rodolfo Bellato Ending…And Is It An Act?

    After Rodolfo Bellato’s herpes diagnosis forced him out of a fight with Paul Craig just weeks ago, you’d think a quick re-booking would help to solve the issue of which man is the better fighter, right?

    Well, UFC Atlanta didn’t provide that — and it was a fight that left a really bitter taste in fans’ mouths.

    The two men threw their power right away, and after rocking Craig, Bellato took him down and got into a dominant top control. But it was the end of that first round that brought the trouble.

    Craig landed an upkick that appeared to knock out Bellato; however, with Bellato’s knees still grounded, the kick was an illegal one. And when Bellato appeared to be out of it, attempting to take down the ref upon waking the up, the referee decided to stop the fight and rule it a no-contest.

    When looking at the finish, however, it appeared Bellato looked toward the ref, ready to dispute before flopping to the mat. MMA X (fka Twitter) has called him out on it. Anthony Smith has called him out on it. And it appears to be that many are in agreement Bellato looked for the easy way out.

    To be blunt, we’ll see if Bellato has a job after this one. I’m sure Dana White and the rest of the UFC brass won’t be happy with his actions and how his performance is being called out on. If he does, will we have to see a third booking between this pair?

    Miss: Mansur Abdul-Malik Loses Finish On Accidental Headbutt

    It’s bad when a foul causes the end of a fight once. Unfortunately, it happed just a couple of fights later at UFC Atlanta — and this one cost a fighter a strong finish.

    The second fight of the main card saw Mansur Abdul-Malik take on Cody Brundage. The fight was very lackluster to start, with both fighters not taking much control in the first 10 minutes — albeit with Abdul-Malik busting Brundage open behind one of his ears.

    But the two let their hands go to start the third — a round where Brundage appeared to go down in pain, covering up, after a big knee to the body by Abdul-Malik. But just as we thought Abdul-Malik got a third-round finish, fight replay showed an accidental headbutt that triggered Brundage’s pain and crumbling to the mat.

    Due to the foul causing the finish, overruling the ref, and with the fight in the third round, the fight went to a technical decision. Abdul-Malik still won the fight, but it marked the first time the judges’ cards played a role in the victory.

    It was a disappointing fight that saw a great finish ruined by an unfortunate foul. Hopefully Abdul-Malik can still carry this momentum into his next outing.

    Miss: Changes Do Cody Garbrandt No Good

    There was once a time where Cody Garbrandt was undefeated and on top of the bantamweight world as the UFC champion. Those days are long gone, however, and Garbrandt finds himself in quite the position after losing at UFC Atlanta against Raoni Barcelos.

    Garbrandt looked to showcase a vintage performance in the opening round, with speedy crisp strikes that stunned and opened up Barcelos. Barcelos had his moments, however, briefly taking Garbrandt down and busting the former champ open around one of his eyebrows.

    Barcelos, however, took over during the remaining 10 minutes. Barcelos landed clean, strong combinations, led by his right hand, which rocked Garbrandt during the round. Barcelos continued his pressure-based offense in the third, stopping Garbrandt’s takedown attempts and working smartly with his strength and precision.

    Garbrandt has only once per year since losing the bantamweight title with the exception of 2021 — and even then, he didn’t fight at all in 2022. In that time, he has gone from an 11-0 fighter that won the UFC’s 135-pound strap to a 14-7 fighter whose future is uncertain. Obviously he’s had to overcome injuries and health scares — and his health should be priority — but his standing as a fighter should still be in question at this point given his skid.

    Even after supposed changes in his fight camp, Garbrandt is in a bad position.

    Hit: Rose Namajunas Continues To Fly, Puts On War With Miranda Maverick

    Could Rose Namajunas be in contention for a flyweight title opportunity? She may have showed how she definitely belongs at the top of 125 contention with her decision win over Miranda Maverick in the UFC Atlanta co-main event.

    The two did plenty of trading for a wild back-and-forth encounter over 15 minutes. Namajunas seemed to get the better of things during the first round; however, Maverick did get her to stumble on her own attack. Namajunas got Maverick to the ground during the second and worked around Maverick’s guard to get to her back, troubling her with ground strikes and a strong-rear naked choke attempt. Credit needs to given to Maverick, however, for slipping out and locking up a tight arm-triangle in the dying seconds of the round.

    “Thug Rose” scored a knockdown in the third round and controlled from there, going on to win a unanimous decision.

    Namajunas is now 3-2 at 125 — and her only losses have come against former title challengers in Manon Fiorot and Erin Blanchfield. She definitely won’t be getting the next title opportunity, especially if the UFC goes for a fight between Weili Zhang and Valentina Shevchenko, but one or two more wins may nail Namajunas with a chance at gold in a second UFC weight class.

    Hit: Usman’s Back, ‘Nuff Said

    Those who wrote Kamaru Usman’s grave during the time away from the cage may have been sorely mistaken.

    Usman looked like his old self against Joaquin Buckley, putting on a dominant display filled with takedowns, wrestling, and powerful strikes in the main event of UFC Atlanta.

    Though the live crowd didn’t appreciate it as much, Usman used what made him so successful and a UFC champion in the first place — his dominant wrestling skills. Usman used it in style — once he got Buckley down during the first three rounds, Buckley stayed there. Usman added his powerful ground strikes, including busting Buckley openly badly on his face during the second round.

    Buckley appeared to storm back in the fifth, however, dodging all of Usman’s takedown attempts and looking to land wild, powerful strikes for a Leon Edwards-style, last-minute finish. Alas, he didn’t find it, and Usman won a dominant decision.

    It was his first win in three fights; his most recent win prior to this fight came when he defeated Colby Covington at UFC 281 to retain the welterweight title. Now it’ll be interesting to see what happens if Usman gets paired with someone in the top three like Belal Muhammad, Sean Brady or Shavkat Rakhmonov. Usman and Muhammad, in fact, have already traded barbs recently — and if Usman won that, perhaps he could get another opportunity to regain the belt he once had.

  • ‘That’s Some Good Back And Forth’ – Fans & Fighters React To Rose Namajunas Dropping, Scoring Decision Over Miranda Maverick In Tug-Of-War Battle At UFC Atlanta

    ‘That’s Some Good Back And Forth’ – Fans & Fighters React To Rose Namajunas Dropping, Scoring Decision Over Miranda Maverick In Tug-Of-War Battle At UFC Atlanta

    In what proved to be a competitive and highly entertaining close encounter, former UFC women’s strawweight champion Rose Namajunas came out on top in the co-main event of UFC Atlanta, defeating rising flyweight contender Miranda Maverick.

    The first round was a back-and-forth, competitive affair that could have fallen either way. Both women landed effective strikes, with Maverick causing Namajunas to stumble halfway through the round. Namajunas, however, appeared to take the edge for the late portion of the round, working combinations.

    Namajunas scored a perfectly-timed takedown of Maverick during the second round, getting a solid top position early. Maverick made work of her guard, however, looking to lock up a triangle before Namajunas escaped the attempt. Namajunas then looked to get to Maverick’s back, while Maverick was able to stand — only to be taken right back down by Namajunas. With about a minute left in the round, Namajunas appeared to be under Maverick’s chin and cranking — but Maverick escaped and quickly got her own submission attempt with an arm-triangle! Namajunas escaped the hold, but she barely got out of the round, dealing with Maverick’s follow-up ground-and-pound attack.

    Maverick looked to get her own takedown on the former UFC champ in the third round, but Namajunas avoided the attempt. She then knocked down Maverick with a quick left hook, and while she didn’t finish, she jumped right into top control and pressured the up-and-comer. Namajunas looked for an arm-triangle choke, but Maverick escaped. And while Maverick looked for a desperate guillotine, she was no match for “Thug Rose” in the third.

    The judges all scored the fight for Namajunas, with two 30-27s and a 29-28.

    Rose Namajunas Tops Miranda Maverick In UFC Atlanta Co-Main

    https://twitter.com/TheCallStandss/status/1934108866305769536

    Namajunas has now won three of her last four and is 3-2 in the Octagon since moving up to flyweight a few years ago.

    This loss snaps a four-fight win streak that Maverick entered this fight with.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Kamaru Usman Decisions Joaquin Buckley

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Kamaru Usman Decisions Joaquin Buckley

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, welterweights Kamaru Usman and Joaquin Buckley clashed. While in the co-main event, Rose Namajunas faced off with Miranda Maverick in a women’s flyweight matchup. 

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Kamaru Usman def. Joaquin Buckley via unanimous decision (49-46×2, 48-47)  
    • Rose Namajunas def. Miranda Maverick via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    • Edmen Shahbazyan def. Andre Petroski via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    • Raoni Barcelos def. Cody Garbrandt via unanimous decision (29-28×3) 
    • Mansur Abdul-Malik def. Cody Brundage via technical decision (30-27, 29-28×2)
    • Alonzo Menifield def. Oumar Sy via unanimous decision (29-28×3) 

    Preliminary Card

    • Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig ruled a no-contest (accidental foul): R1, 4.59
    • Michael Chiesa def. Court McGee via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    • Malcolm Wellmaker def. Kris Moutinho via KO: R1, 2.37
    • Jose Ochoa def. Cody Durden via KO: R2, 0.11
    • Ricky Simon def. Cameron Smotherman via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    • Phil Rowe def. Ange Loosa via TKO: R3, 4.03

    Jamey-Lyn Horth def. Vanessa Demopoulos via unanimous decision (30-27×3)

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Phil Rowe def. Ange Loosa 

    Phil Rowe earned a TKO late in the third.

    Jose Ochoa def. Cody Durden

    Jose Ochoa stopped Cody Durden early in the second round.

    Malcolm Wellmaker def. Kris Moutinho

    Malcolm Wellmaker made quick work of Kris Moutinho on the latter’s return to the UFC.

    Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig ruled a no-contest

    Due to an accidental foul by Paul Craig at the end of round one, involving an up-kick that severely dazed Rodolfo Bellato.

    Main Card Highlights

    Alonzo Menifield def. Oumar Sy

    Alonzo Menifield got it done on the scorecards.

    Mansur Abdul-Malik def. Cody Brundage

    Mansur Abdul-Malik earned a decision win after the fight was stopped 36 seconds into the third round due to an accidental headbutt. The bout was scored up to that point.

    Raoni Barcelos def. Cody Garbrandt

    Raoni Barcelos got it done on the scorecards.

    Edmen Shahbazyan def. Andre Petroski

    Edmen Shahbazyan earned a unanimous decision.

    Rose Namajunas def. Miranda Maverick

    Rose Namajunas earned a unanimous decision.

    Kamaru Usman def. Joaquin Buckley

    In the main event, Kamaru Usman earned a unanimous decision against Joaquin Buckley.

  • Erin Blanchfield: Maverick Fight Was “Easier” Than I Expected

    UFC women’s flyweight Erin Blanchfield described her UFC 269 fight with Miranda Maverick as “easier” than she thought it would be.

    At the final pay-per-view of 2021, two of the UFC’s top female prospects collided, both looking to move closer to a spot in the 125-pound rankings.

    24-year-old Maverick was about as highly touted as they come, and entered last summer 2-0 in the UFC following victories over Liana Jojua and Gillian Robertson. After a controversial split decision loss to Maycee Barber, a result most disagreed with, “Fear The” Maverick was hoping to rebound by halting the charge of a fellow future star on December 11.

    Blanchfield, meanwhile, had made her way to the UFC and established herself as rising name at the age of just 22. After back-to-back Performance of the Night performances under the Invicta FC banner, “Cold Blooded” debuted on MMA’s biggest stage with a win against Sarah Alpar last September.

    At UFC 269, it was the younger of the two prospects who made her way further up the mountain. By securing a dominant unanimous decision triumph, Blanchfield moved closer to the group of contenders and put the rest of the weight class on notice.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CXZnUf1JNi6/

    Blanchfield Promises To “Keep Surprising People”

    In the eyes of many leading up to the blockbuster year-ending PPV, Blanchfield was the underdog and was expected to make way for the division’s hottest prospect. Ultimately, that couldn’t have been further from reality. With a flyweight record seven takedowns and some hard shots on the ground, Blanchfield imposed her will with ease.

    During her appearance at the post-fight press conference, “Cold Blooded” suggested the only thing that really surprised her was how easy the contest was. Given the hype surrounding Maverick and her muscular build, Blanchfield understands why her opponent was favored. However, she promised to keep upsetting the odds on her way to the top.

    “I’m pretty happy with it. I wish I could’ve hit her a little bit more. She was good at holding my wrist and stopping my ground and pound that I like. But you know, the fight felt pretty smooth, it went the way I wanted it to, so I’m happy with it.

    “I think her striking, she had decent fakes. But other than that, everything felt easier than I thought it was gonna be, honestly. I mean, I know everyone picked her to win, but I feel like that’s probably just because she looks a little more muscular. I don’t look like I should be able to be this strong and beat these people. But I know I can and I have the technicality and the ability to do so. I’m gonna keep surprising people until I’m champ.”

    Blanchfield was initially scheduled to face Barber on December 11, but “The Future” was forced to withdraw. With Barber sat at #13 in the rankings, we could well see that clash re-arranged in 2022.

    For Blanchfield, it would provide the chance to secure her place on the divisional ladder. For Barber, it would give her the opportunity to cement herself as the top flyweight prospect.

    What did you make of Erin Blanchfield’s latest performance? Do you see her as a future champion?