Tag: Rose Namajunas

  • “No Chance Thug Rose Lost That Fight” – Fans And Fighters React As Natalia Silva Gets Controversial Decision Win Over Rose Namajunas In Title Eliminator At UFC 324

    “No Chance Thug Rose Lost That Fight” – Fans And Fighters React As Natalia Silva Gets Controversial Decision Win Over Rose Namajunas In Title Eliminator At UFC 324

    Natalia Silva now finds herself closer to challenging for the UFC women’s flyweight championship after her win over Rose Namajunas at UFC 324; however, it was a win that was heavily disputed.

    The opening round appeared to be a quiet, tough to score one, with plenty of feints. Silva tried to get things going with her punches, but Namajunas’ footwork made it difficult for her to land anything major.

    Namajunas furthered the distance in the second round, which included landing a takedown and controlling the action completely on the ground. Silva turned up the heat in round three and completely out-struck Namajunas, controlling the action in the most clear round of the bout.

    Silva took 29-28 scores on all three judges’ cards.

    Natalia Silva Scores Controversial Decision Win Over Rose Namajunas At UFC 324

    Silva is now 8-0 in the UFC, having not lost in MMA since losing to Marina Rodriguez in 2017. Silva came into this bout off a win over former champion Alexa Grasso at UFC 315.

    Namajunas is now 3-2 in her last five and is 3-3 since moving up to flyweight.

  • Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas has been promised a UFC flyweight title shot with a win at UFC 324, but the prospect of fighting her idol Valentina Shevchenko comes with mixed feelings for the former two-time strawweight champion.​

    Speaking with Ariel Helwani, Namajunas confirmed the UFC has told her a victory over Natalia Silva on January 24, 2026, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas will earn her the next crack at Shevchenko’s flyweight title. The announcement puts significant weight on her main card bout against Silva, who enters the fight riding a 13-fight winning streak and holding a perfect 7-0 record in the UFC.

    Rose Namajunas Faces Complex Emotions Ahead of Potential Valentina Shevchenko Title Fight

    For Namajunas, the path to becoming a two-division champion leads through a fighter she considers the greatest in women’s mixed martial arts.

    “It would be weird,” Namajunas said when asked about facing Shevchenko. “We’re martial artists, so at the end of the day I’m down to do it, but I’d love to have a conversation with her first because she’s somebody that inspired me and I’ve looked up to.”​

    The two fighters have trained together in the past, with sparring footage showing their technical exchanges during camp preparations.

    “She’s literally my favorite female fighter,” Namajunas explained. “It would definitely be conflicting emotions, I would never want to see her lose, but I’d have to go into a fight and try to beat her.”

    Namajunas described the potential matchup as both a dream scenario and an emotional challenge. She ranks Shevchenko alongside Amanda Nunes as the greatest female fighters in MMA history.

    “At the same time, as a martial artist, it would be the ultimate culmination of being able to test myself,” she said. “I feel like she and Amanda Nunes are the greatest female fighters in MMA. So it would be a dream come true, but also like, ‘Oh…’”​​

    The 33-year-old Milwaukee native emphasized that personal animosity plays no role in her approach to competition. “That’s kind of what fighting is, it’s weird,” Namajunas said. “I don’t hate anybody I fight. I’ve fought people I train with, then we train again after. I don’t have to hate anyone to compete with them. I love all of my opponents, even the ones I was rivals with, afterward it’s just water under the bridge.”​

    Namajunas currently holds a 14-7 UFC record and is ranked sixth in the flyweight division. After losing her strawweight title to Carla Esparza in May 2022, she moved up to 125 pounds and has gone 2-2 in the division, with losses to Manon Fiorot and Erin Blanchfield. Her flyweight record includes wins over Amanda Ribas and Miranda Maverick.

    The two-division championship goal has driven Namajunas throughout her flyweight campaign. “Basically, it’s the two-division thing, to just have that as an accomplishment,” she told Helwani. “It be a dream come true and it’s definitely on the list of what I wanted to achieve in MMA.” A victory over Shevchenko would make Namajunas only the second woman in UFC history to hold titles in two divisions, following in the footsteps of Nunes.​

    UFC 324

    Before any of those plans materialize, Namajunas must overcome Silva, who has defeated former champions Jessica Andrade and Alexa Grasso without dropping a round in either fight. Silva was originally slated to face Grasso before the former champion withdrew due to injury in December, opening the door for Namajunas to step in.

    UFC 324 marks the promotion’s first event under its new seven-year broadcast agreement with Paramount+, eliminating the pay-per-view model. The main event features Justin Gaethje defending the interim lightweight title against Paddy Pimblett.

  • 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.

  • Latest UFC Fight Announcements Featuring Rose Namajunas, Paul Craig, And More

    MMA News has you covered with this week’s UFC matchmaking bulletin, featuring all the additions to upcoming fight cards.

    With events being held most weekends, Mick Maynard and Sean Shelby have their matchmaking work cut out if they’re to fill them, meaning new bouts are confirmed each and every week.

    Between Monday, March 17, and Sunday, March 23, a number of fights were made official by the UFC or reported as being in the works by reputable sources.

    For those matchups, check out the list below:

    But it wasn’t all positive, with three fights falling through or being adjusted:

  • Rose Namajunas’ UFC Return Set For Atlanta On June 14

    Rose Namajunas’ UFC Return Set For Atlanta On June 14

    Former two-time UFC women’s strawweight champion Rose Namajunas would appear to have her first assignment of 2025 in the calendar.

    Namajunas (13-7) has gone 2-2 since moving up to flyweight following a lackluster end to her second reign at 115 pounds opposite Carla Esparza in 2022.

    While a debut defeat to Manon Fiorot stalled her plans for two-division glory, “Thug Rose” rose the ranks in her new weight class by outpointing Amanda Ribas and Tracy Cortez.

    But after Erin Blanchfield stalled the veteran’s plans for a perfect 3-0 year in 2024 and surge into title contention, Namajunas must defend her ranking next time out.

    The 32-year-old Wisconsin will return at the UFC Fight Night expected for Atlanta on June 14, where a showdown with the #12-ranked Miranda Maverick (15-5) awaits.

    The news, which was first reported by @realkevink on X, was confirmed by Maverick in a post on Instagram.

    @rosenamajunas has been an inspiration for so many women, especially in WMMA, and I am no exception,” Maverick wrote. “I watched her fight as I was coming up in the sport and then I got to train with her on a regular basis. We have been training together for the past few years, but luckily train primarily at different gyms. Now it’s time to duke it out in front of the world and then go back to sharpening each other’s tools. I’m honored to share the cage with a champion person and fighter and I am ready to put the stamp on where I belong! #fearthemaverick #mma #wmma

    “Fear The” Maverick has hit the best run of her UFC career to date, winning four on the bounce since a decision setback to Jasmine Jasudavicius in mid-2023. The 27-year-old most recently got the better of Jamey-Lyn Horth in Tampa last December.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Brandon Moreno Dominates Amir Albazi 

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Brandon Moreno Dominates Amir Albazi 

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from Rogers Place in Edmonton, Canada and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, top-five flyweights Brandon Moreno (#2) and Amir Albazi (#3) clashed. While in the co-main event, Erin Blanchfield faced Rose Namajunas in a women’s flyweight matchup. 

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Flyweight Main Event: Brandon Moreno def. Amir Albazi via unanimous decision (49-46, 50-45×2) 
    • Women’s Flyweight Co-Main Event: Erin Blanchfield def. Rose Namajunas via unanimous decision (48-47×3)
    • Light Heavyweight: Brendson Ribeiro def. Caio Machado via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Ariane da Silva via submission: R3, 2.28 
    • Middleweight: Dustin Stoltzfus def. Marc-André Barriault via KO: R1, 4.28
    • Welterweight: Mike Malott def. Trevin Giles via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)

    Preliminary Card

    • Bantamweight: Aiemann Zahabi def. Pedro Munhoz via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2) 
    • Bantamweight: Charles Jourdain def. Victor Henry via submission: R2, 3.43 
    • Featherweight: Youssef Zalal def. Jack Shore via submission: R2, 0.59  
    • Heavyweight: Alexandr Romanov def. Rodrigo Nascimento via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Bantamweight: Serhiy Sidey def. Garrett Armfield via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Bantamweight: Cody Gibson def. Chad Anheliger via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 30-26)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jamey-Lyn Horth def. Ivana Petrovic via split decision (30-27, 29-28, 28-29) 

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Youssef Zalal def. Jack Shore

    In this featherweight contest, Youssef Zalal got it done with an arm triangle submission of Jack Shore in the second round.

    Charles Jourdain def. Victor Henry

    Charles Jourdain locked in a guillotine to get the win against Victor Henry in their bantamweight bout.

    Main Card Highlights

    Mike Malott def. Trevin Giles

    In this welterweight bout, Mike Malott earned a unanimous decision against Trevin Giles.

    Dustin Stoltzfus def. Marc-André Barriault

    Dustin Stoltzfus got the win with a first-round KO of Marc-André Barriault.

    Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Ariane da Silva

    In this women’s flyweight matchup, Jasmine Jasudavicius submitted Ariane da Silva with a D’arce choke in round three.

    Brendson Ribeiro def. Caio Machado

    Brendson Ribeiro earned a split decision win against Caio Machado in their light heavyweight contest.

    Erin Blanchfield def. Rose Namajunas

    In the co-main event, Erin Blanchfield got it done on the scorecards to defeat Rose Namajunas in their flyweight bout.

    Brandon Moreno def. Amir Albazi

    In the main event, Brandon Moreno earned a unanimous decision against Amir Albazi.

  • ‘Imagine What Shevchenko Would Do’ – Fans React As Erin Blanchfield Outpoints Rose Namajunas At UFC Edmonton

    ‘Imagine What Shevchenko Would Do’ – Fans React As Erin Blanchfield Outpoints Rose Namajunas At UFC Edmonton

    Erin Blanchfield pulled off a reverse sweep and earned a win over another former UFC champion, defeating Rose Namajunas in the UFC Edmonton co-main event.

    Namajunas had early control of the fight, utilizing her striking over the course of the first two rounds. While Blanchfield had bright spots in the opening frame, “Thug Rose’s” striking was on complete display in the second, showing the crispness and accuracy that helped elevate her to two UFC strawweight championships previously.

    “Cold Blooded” entered tonight with the significant advantage in grappling, and that was on display in the third round. Blanchfield was able to get Namajunas to the ground and controlled the action, but the veteran wasn’t going down without a fight.

    Blanchfield was able to get her striking going in the fourth round, finding her range and landing her targets with a solid pace. Namajunas, however, battled back and used her pressure and accuracy for a strong final minute.

    The #3-ranked contender got the fight back down and controlled the action there in the final stanza, completing the 48-47 decision win on all three judges’ scorecards.

    Erin Blanchfield Pulls Off Reverse Sweep Over Rose Namajunas In UFC Edmonton Co-Main Event

    https://twitter.com/beachsand503/status/1852906606696276184

    With the result, Blanchfield rebounded from a loss to Manon Fiorot at UFC Atlantic City in March. Prior to that loss, she had been on a solid winning streak that stretched back to her days with Invicta FC. Her recent wins came against former title challenger Taila Santos and ex-strawweight champion Jéssica Andrade.

    Namajunas, meanwhile, is now 2-2 since moving up to flyweight after her second strawweight title reign came to an end. She lost to Fiorot last year in Paris but rebounded with wins over Amanda Ribas and Tracy Cortez in 2024.

  • UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi Ceremonial Weigh-In Live Stream

    UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi Ceremonial Weigh-In Live Stream

    UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi takes place on Saturday, and MMA News is here to bring you the final faceoffs from the ceremonial weigh-ins!

    After staging its latest numbered event at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi last weekend, MMA’s leading promotion has remained on the road for a card inside the Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

    In the main event, former two-time UFC flyweight champion Brandon Moreno returns close to nine months on from a defeat to Brandon Royval in Mexico City. Having now lost two straight by way of split decision, “The Assassin Baby” will look to get back to winning ways at the expense of the charging Amir Albazi.

    Setting the stage for them in another 125-pound contest will be Erin Blanchfield and Rose Namajunas. After winning two straight in the division this year, the ex-strawweight queen will look to notch her biggest flyweight success to date and stake her claim for a title shot by adding to the woes of “Cold Blooded,” who was beaten by Manon Fiorot last time out.

    Elsewhere, heavyweight knockout artist Derrick Lewis makes the walk for his latest assignment, Mike Malott has the chance to rebound on home soil, and bantamweight veteran Pedro Munhoz adds to his Octagon experience.

    Ahead of the event, all 28 fighters successfully made weight. With that, every fight is intact, and all that remains on Friday is for the athletes to face off one final time at the UFC Fight Night Edmonton ceremonial weigh-ins.

    Check out a live stream via the official UFC YouTube channel below, commencing at 7 PM ET.

    UFC Fight Night Ceremonial Weigh-In Live Stream

  • UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi takes place on Saturday, and MMA News is here to bring you the official weigh-in results!

    After staging its latest numbered event from the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi last weekend, the MMA leader has remained on the road for a return to the “Great White North,” where Edmonton’s Rogers Place hosts a UFC Fight Night.

    Topping the lineup on Nov. 2 is a clash of ranked flyweights as former champion Brandon Moreno looks to break his two-fight losing skid by stalling the charge and title ambitions of Amir Albazi.

    Stakes will also be high in the co-headliner, which will see former strawweight queen Rose Namajunas look to keep her ball rolling at flyweight. To secure a third straight win at 125 pounds this year, “Thug Rose” must get the better of #3-ranked contender Erin Blanchfield.

    Elsewhere, the likes of heavyweight knockout artist Derrick Lewis, home favorite Mike Malott, and bantamweight veteran Pedro Munhoz will all be in action.

    UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Albazi Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Albazi takes place on Saturday, November 2, at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The main card begins at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT, with the preliminary card starting at 5 p.m. ET/2 p.m. PT.

    See above for a replay of the weigh-ins via MMA Junkie, and check out the full results below!

    Main Card:

    • Flyweight Main Event: Brandon Moreno (125.5lbs) vs. Amir Albazi (125.5lbs)
    • Women’s Flyweight Co-Main Event: Erin Blanchfield (125.5lbs) vs. Rose Namajunas (125lbs)
    • Heavyweight: Derrick Lewis (266lbs) vs. Jhonata Diniz (257lbs)
    • Light Heavyweight: Caio Machado (205lbs) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (205lbs)
    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault (185lbs) vs. Dustin Stoltzfus (185.5lbs)
    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (170.5lbs) vs. Trevin Giles (170lbs)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Bantamweight: Aiemann Zahabi (135.5lbs) vs. Pedro Munhoz (135lbs)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane Lipski (125lbs) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (125lbs)
    • Bantamweight: Charles Jourdain (135lbs) vs. Victor Henry (135lbs)
    • Featherweight: Jack Shore (145.5lbs) vs. Youssef Zalal (145lbs)
    • Heavyweight: Alexandr Romanov (261lbs) vs. Rodrigo Nascimento (264lbs)
    • Bantamweight: Serhiy Sidey (135lbs) vs. Garrett Armfield (135lbs)
    • Bantamweight: Chad Anheliger (135lbs) vs. Cody Gibson (135.5lbs)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jamey-Lyn Horth (126lbs) vs. Ivana Petrovic (125lbs)
  • UFC Edmonton Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Moreno vs. Albazi, Blanchfield vs. Namajunas, & More

    UFC Edmonton Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Moreno vs. Albazi, Blanchfield vs. Namajunas, & More

    UFC Edmonton is almost upon us, and MMA News is here to keep you updated with the current odds for this weekend’s lineup.

    The upcoming event takes place Saturday, November 2, at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The main card begins at 7 PM ET/4 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 4 PM ET/1 PM PT.

    Topping the lineup will be former two-time UFC flyweight champion Brandon Moreno, who will look to bounce back from consecutive split decision losses at the hands of Alexandre Pantoja and Brandon Royval when he competes in the “Great White North.” To Accomplish that feat, the Mexican fan favorite is tasked with stalling the surge of 17-1 contender Amir Albazi.

    Before they go to battle, the co-main event will see ex-strawweight queen Rose Namajunas make the walk for the third time this year. If she’s to make it three flyweight wins in a row and stake her claim for a shot at two-division glory, “Thug Rose” must send the #3-ranked Erin Blanchfield to the first losing skid of her career.

    Also set to make the walk on Saturday will be the likes of heavyweight knockout artist Derrick Lewis, welterweight prospect Mike Malott, bantamweight veteran Pedro Munhoz, and the always entertaining Charles Jourdain.

    UFC Edmonton: Moreno vs. Albazi Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC Edmonton (as of 10/31), courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Brandon Moreno (-175) vs. Amir Albazi (+145)
    • Erin Blanchfield (-130) vs. Rose Namajunas (+110)
    • Derrick Lewis (+145) vs. Jhonata Diniz (-175)
    • Caio Machado (-148) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (+124)
    • Marc-André Barriault (-205) vs. Dustin Stoltzfus (+170)
    • Mike Malott (-185) vs. Trevin Giles (+230)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Aiemann Zahabi (-125) vs. Pedro Munhoz (+105)
    • Ariane Lipski (+120) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (-230)
    • Charles Jourdain (-142) vs. Victor Henry (+120)
    • Jack Shore (+250) vs. Youssef Zalal (-310)
    • Alexandr Romanov (-102) vs. Rodrigo Nascimento (-118)
    • Serhiy Sidey (-142) vs. Garrett Armfield (+120)
    • Chad Anheliger (+160) vs. Cody Gibson (-192)
    • Jamey-Lyn Horth (-218) vs. Ivana Petrovic (+180)
  • Rose Namajunas Doesn’t Believe She Deserves The Next Title Shot With Blanchfield Win

    Rose Namajunas Doesn’t Believe She Deserves The Next Title Shot With Blanchfield Win

    Rose Namajunas looks to make it three in a row this weekend when she returns in the co-main event of the UFC’s visit to Edmonton. The #5-ranked contender will take on one of the flyweight division’s most exciting talents in Erin Blanchfield who holds the #3-spot.

    With Blanchfield looking to rebound from the first loss of her UFC career last time out and Namajunas coming off of wins over Amanda Ribas and Tracy Cortez, there are big stakes here but not for anything that “Thug” Rose believes will happen in the near future.

    On her flyweight debut in September last year, the former two-time strawweight champion was beaten by Manon Fiorot who then went on to dominate Blanchfield this past March. Despite her seven-fight win streak against some of the top names in the division, the French fighter is still yet to receive her title shot.

    That’s due to the trilogy of fights between Alexa Grasso and Valentina Shevchenko that recently wrapped up at UFC 306 where Shevchenko regained the top spot. In a recent interview with CBS Sports’ Shakiel Mahjouri, Namajunas said that even if she beats Blanchfield in impressive fashion this Saturday, she feels it would be wrong for her to get a shot at the belt before Fiorot.

    “I would still feel even with a good performance, well we could cross that bridge when get to it, but I feel like I’d still feel bad for some reason if I jumped her but you know, that’s just kind of, I don’t know. I am a person of integrity so I do feel like she deserves to be next in line. She’s been kind of waiting and although I do know that like I don’t know where her head is at, if she’s like saying no to offers than that’s not a thing to do either. Like if the UFC wants her to fight again then she should do that but ultimately, the UFC is kind of the judge of that and it’s up to me to have a really good performance as well to make that case.”   

  • Erin Blanchfield vs. Rose Namajunas Official For UFC Fight Night Edmonton Main Event, Derrick Lewis Co-Headlines

    Erin Blanchfield vs. Rose Namajunas Official For UFC Fight Night Edmonton Main Event, Derrick Lewis Co-Headlines

    The stakes will be high at 125 pounds when the UFC makes its return to Edmonton, Alberta, this coming November 2.

    Mixed martial arts’ leading promotion hasn’t been in “The Big E” since staging UFC 240 at Rogers Place in 2019. The venue will once again be the host for in-cage action when the Octagon heads back to Canada, this time in the form of a UFC Fight Night.

    While announcing the event to Sportsnet this week, UFC CEO Dana White revealed that elite flyweights Erin Blanchfield (12-2) and Rose Namajunas (13-6) will headline proceedings in “The Great White North.”

    “Cold Blooded” currently sits at #3 in the rankings but is coming off her first UFC defeat, having been outpointed by Manon Fiorot in the Atlantic City main event this past March.

    “Thug Rose,” meanwhile, has risen to #5 on the ladder after bouncing back from a divisional debut loss to Fiorot in Paris by reeling off consecutive headline victories over Amanda Ribas and Tracy Cortez.

    Derrick Lewis Gets Co-Main Billing At UFC Fight Night Edmonton

    Before Namajunas, a former two-time UFC strawweight champion, and Blanchfield do battle to close out the show, another notable name will be in action on Nov. 2.

    White also announced the co-main event for the upcoming UFC Fight Night in Edmonton, and it’ll see heavyweight knockout artist Derrick Lewis (28-12, 1 NC) return against fellow ranked contender Alexandr Romanov (17-3).

    “The Black Beast” will be in pursuit of his first win streak since a knockout of Curtis Blaydes secured him a title shot back in 2021. He’s since gone 3-5, most recently rebounding from a five-round loss to Jailton Almeida in Brazil last November by stopping Rodrigo Nascimento in the UFC Fight Night St. Louis main event this past May.

    Romanov, meanwhile, is sat two places below Lewis in the pecking order at #13. Defeats to Marcin Tybura and Alexander Volkov initially stalled his planned surge toward the top 10. And although he was able to bounce back at the expense of Blagoy Ivanov in 2023, he was most recently comfortably submitted by Almeida at UFC 302 in Newark.

    With the recent announcements, the fights currently expected to take place at UFC Fight Night Edmonton on Nov. 2 are as follows:

    • Erin Blanchfield vs. Rose Namajunas (women’s flyweight main event)
    • Derrick Lewis vs. Alexandr Romanov (heavyweight co-main event)
    • Ariane da Silva vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (women’s flyweight)
    • Marc-André Barriault vs. Dustin Stoltzfus (middleweight)
    • Chad Anheliger vs. Cody Gibson (bantamweight)
    • Jamey-Lyn Horth vs. Ivana Petrović (women’s flyweight)
    Derrick Lewis
    Image: UFC.com
  • Henry Cejudo Gives His Verdict On Teammate Tracy Cortez’s Performance Against Rose Namanujas: ‘I Talked To Her On Saturday…’

    Henry Cejudo Gives His Verdict On Teammate Tracy Cortez’s Performance Against Rose Namanujas: ‘I Talked To Her On Saturday…’

    Henry Cejudo recently weighed in on his teammate Tracy Cortez’s defeat against Rose Namajunas, suggesting that she had the potential to perform much better.

    Last Saturday night, Cortez gave it her all but fell short on the judges’ scorecards, enduring her first UFC defeat in a grueling five-round battle against “Thug Rose,” who won by unanimous decision.

    Cortez was originally gearing up for a bout against Miranda Maverick at UFC Vegas 94 on July 20. However, when Maycee Barber had to withdraw from the UFC Fight Night Denver main event due to undisclosed reasons, Cortez stepped up, accepting the short-notice challenge with just two weeks to prepare.

    Despite the limited preparation time, the 30-year-old Arizona native went toe-to-toe for the full 25 minutes against the former two-time strawweight champion. However, her teammate at Fight Ready gym, Cejudo, believes that Cortez could have delivered a much stronger performance with a different game plan…

    Cejudo Believes Cortez Misinterpreted Namajunas’ Strategy

    During a recent Pound 4 Pound podcast episode with former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman, “Triple C” dissected Cortez’s performance against Namajunas. He noted that “Thug Rose” effectively utilized her lateral movements and found better striking angles with well-timed takedowns, ultimately securing her victory over his teammate.

    “Rose was able to use her lateral movements, pick her shots, and then eventually bring in takedowns, which kind of surprised me,” Cejudo said. “But I’m not surprised with her because she did the same thing to Weili [Zhang] towards the end of the round to secure the rounds.”

    Cejudo further critiqued that Cortez lacked mindfulness throughout the fight and failed to capitalize on key takedown opportunities, a misstep that decisively cost her the bout.

    “Tracy didn’t show up, man. I just don’t know how to say it; man, that’s not the Tracy that we know. I watched the fight again, and she never once attempted the takedowns; after she attempted one takedown, that’s it, there’s no level changes involved. I talked to her on Saturday afterward and just said, ‘Hey, just keep your head up, dude. It was an experience, but I just know you’re better than that, Tracy’.”

    Cortez began the bout stronger, aiming to counter Namajunas’ speed and striking skills. Although she secured an early takedown, Cortez frequently found herself on the receiving end, being taken down multiple times by her opponent throughout the fight.

  • Tracy Cortez Gives First Reaction To Rose Namajunas Loss At UFC Fight Night Denver: ‘If I Had A Full Camp…’

    Tracy Cortez Gives First Reaction To Rose Namajunas Loss At UFC Fight Night Denver: ‘If I Had A Full Camp…’

    Tracy Cortez had a big task in front of her with a short-notice main event bout against former two-time strawweight champion Rose Namajunas at UFC Fight Night Denver.

    Though she managed to go the distance, Cortez was largely dominated from the opening minute of the contest, going on to lose via unanimous decision.

    While coming up on the short end and not getting the result she’d hoped for left a better sting, Cortez told ESPN MMA’s Megan Olivi that she felt proud of being able to last a full five rounds with someone as highly regarded as Namajunas.

    Cortez added that perhaps the fight could have played out differently with a full fight camp.

    “I took it on two weeks’ notice, unprepared,” Cortez said. “I gave it all I have. I know if I were to have had a full camp, prepared…I mean, my cardio was there. I think I would have done a lot better with a good gameplan.

    “But I think I proved myself tonight that I can go full fives [rounds]. Looking forward to the next one,” Cortez added.

    Tracy Cortez Feels Early Pacing Of Self May Have Cost Her Fight

    Cortez was dropped early into the first round, with Namajunas putting on a beautiful striking display. The #11-ranked contender tried to battle back in the second round with her grappling skills, but Namajunas’ strikes remained on point and she showed her grappling ability in the third to counter Cortez.

    The late-notice replacement fighter looked for a mountain of offense in the fifth round, but it wasn’t enough.

    “Because it was five fives, I was really trying to pace myself the first and second round,” Cortez said. “I just realized…give it all I have. It’s all or nothing. I think I waited a little too long to really push it on her.”

    Cortez isn’t letting this loss deter her, however. She wants to use this experience and get back into the cage as soon as possible.

    “Last time I fought, I went on a killer streak,” Cortez noted. “I’m not here to prove [to] the world, I’m here to prove [to] myself.”

  • Rose Namajunas Outlines ‘Dream’ Scenario For Future Fight After Win Over Tracy Cortez: ‘I Had This Vision…’

    Rose Namajunas Outlines ‘Dream’ Scenario For Future Fight After Win Over Tracy Cortez: ‘I Had This Vision…’

    Rose Namajunas looked arguably the best she has ever looked at flyweight in the main event of UFC Fight Night Denver, taking a clear unanimous decision win over Tracy Cortez.

    Namajunas dropped Cortez, who took this fight on short notice, in the opening minutes of the fight. The former two-time strawweight champion subsequently put on a striking clinic, keeping her distance and landing on her opponent whichever way possible.

    Cortez battled back with her grappling, but Namajunas answered with her own skills. The #11-ranked contender tried to mount a lot of offense in the fifth round, but by then it was too late.

    Though she can always pinpoint things in her performance to nitpick, Namajunas told the crew on ESPN’s UFC Post Show that she was satisfied with how she did in the cage.

    “I felt really happy with myself, but…Tracy’s really tough,” Namajunas said. “She definitely was durable. Even though I dropped her in the beginning, I knew I probably should have jumped on her right away because I let her recover a little bit.

    “Ultimately, I just felt I was better,” Namajunas added.

    Rose Namajunas Hopes To Bring The UFC To Lithuania

    Namajunas moved up to flyweight in late 2023, about a year-and-a-half removed from losing the UFC strawweight title to Carla Esparza at UFC 274. “Thug Rose” fell to defeat in her 125-pound debut against Manon Fiorot but has now won back-to-back fights. Prior to Saturday’s win, she beat Amanda Ribas in a March Fight Night main event.

    The former 115-pound champ entered this fight at No. 6 in the flyweight rankings. Positioned above her are champion Alexa Grasso, former champion and upcoming title challenger Valentina Shevchenko, Fiorot, Erin Blanchfield, Maycee Barber, and former strawweight champion and flyweight title challenger Jéssica Andrade.

    Namajunas feels ready for a crack at the gold now, though she expressed interest in trying to get a win back over Fiorot. Be it a rematch with the Frenchwoman or title shot, Namajunas has an idea for an interesting location she would love to see the UFC host a card: Lithuania.

    “I had this vision…I want to fight in Lithuania one day, bring the UFC to Lithuania if that could even be possible,” Namajunas said. “I would love to rematch Manon or [face] anybody for the belt, whatever. That’s my dream come true, but anything the UFC has in mind, I’m cool with.”

    Lithuania is the home country of Namajunas’ parents. The UFC is yet to stage an event in the European nation.

  • 4 Positives & 2 Negatives From UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez

    4 Positives & 2 Negatives From UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez

    On Saturday, the mixed martial arts leader returned for its latest event, UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez.

    After a rare weekend off in the aftermath of the UFC 303 pay-per-view late last month, the promotion kicked off its schedule for July by bringing the Octagon back to Denver. The main event came in the women’s flyweight division, with surging prospect Tracy Cortez receiving a major opportunity to climb the ranks against Rose Namajunas.

    “Thug Rose,” a former two-time strawweight champion, was originally set to do battle with top five contender Maycee Barber. But with “The Future” out injured, the #11-ranked Cortez filled in on short notice, looking to extend her undefeated UFC record by adding the biggest scalp to her résumé thus far.

    Elsewhere on the card, prominent names like welterweight veteran Santiago Ponzinibbio, always entertaining lightweight Drew Dober, and middleweight knockout artist Abdul Razak Alhassan were among those making the walk inside Ball Arena.

    But did those athletes come together to put on an entertaining night of MMA? Let’s find out with all the positives and negatives from UFC Fight Night: Namajunas vs. Cortez.


    Positive – The Flyweight Revolution

    For a while now, the strawweights have quite clearly made up the premier women’s division in the UFC. Before its demise last year, featherweight was virtually non-existent anyway. As far as bantamweight goes, aside from Kayla Harrison and a few names like Irena Aldana, underwhelming. Flyweight? Well…

    Across a number of years, the 125-pound weight class could be summed up as Valentina Shevchenko destroying her competition and a group of largely uninteresting contenders battling for a second place that not many paid attention to.

    Now, with a new champion at the helm, a fresh crop of actually high-level and intriguing contenders, and some seriously talented up-and-comers, the tide has firmly turned in the women’s flyweight division.

    When it comes to the third of those groups, one of the leading names was in action on Saturday night as Luana Santos moved to 3-0 on MMA’s biggest stage. The Brazilian welcomed Mariya Agapova back to the cage after a two-year layoff. Just like her previous fight in 2022, the Kazakh was left getting the life squeezed out of her while locked in a gruesomely tight rear-naked choke.

    Despite her best efforts to fight the hands, Agapova was forced to tap out. And with that, Santos has joined Natália Silva and Karine Silva as another Brazilian prospect threatening to shake up a flyweight title picture that already boasts rising names like Manon Fiorot, Erin Blanchfield, and Maycee Barber.

    Oh, and a fourth category I forgot to mention: gritty flyweights who will just throw down. Thanks Jasmine Jasudavicius and the debuting Fatima Kline for reminding me with one of the night’s best fights.

    Speaking of Jasudavicius, however…


    Negative – Dirty

    So are we just going to ignore what Jasudavicius did at the end of her fight?

    Jasudavicius once again delivered the goods inside the Octagon, pitching a shutout against a highly regarded newcomer in Kline. Unfortunately, she pulled off a dirty and classless move to add a stain to the result.

    After attempting a choke in the final seconds, the horn sounded. Instead of releasing the hold and returning to her feet following the conclusion of the fight, the Canadian released it and launched an elbow at her opponent’s head.

    In a similar case earlier in the night, Andre Petroski had already began to throw his punch at Josh Fremd when the first-round horn sounded. Jasudavicius had not. Just like Kline was aware that the fight had ended when she was released from the submission attempt, Jasudavicius knew that the fight had ended when she opted to take a cheap shot at her opponent.

    For whatever reason, not much was said by the commentary team about the illegal shot, and it wasn’t exactly a hot topic on social media either. Perhaps that’s down to Kline’s reaction, which saw her avoid any animosity and simply move on.

    But having also pulled the hair of Tracy Cortez in their 2023 fight, Jasudavicius is going the right away about gaining a reputation for ugly antics.

    https://twitter.com/dahrafarhad2/status/1812298426463195318

    Positive – ‘Quik?’ Yeah, You Don’t Say…

    Montel Jackson has something in his hands reminiscent of dynamite.

    The 32-year-old Wisconsin native has long been one of the bantamweight division’s most intriguing prospects. But that’s been the case for years, with inactivity preventing him from rising the ranks toward those in contention at 135 pounds and fulfilling his potential.

    Prior to Saturday’s event in Denver, Jackson hadn’t competed in 15 months since a statement knockout of Rani Yahya at the Apex. With those kind of gaps between fights, an emphatic performance is required in a return fight to remind the division.

    “Quik” did that quikly (intentional, thanks. Please don’t email us a correction), sending Da’Mon Blackshear to sleep with a clean left hand after just 18 seconds — the second fastest knockout in the division’s history.

    I’d say reminder to the division firmly sent, wouldn’t you?

    That’s now five straight wins for Jackson and eight in his last nine. That form should bag a chance to climb the ladder next time out, providing that “Quik” is able to get back in the cage relatively soon.

    For the sake of his own career and for the enjoyment of us, the fans, the quiker (intentional, again…) he makes the walk again, the better.


    Positive – Uppercut From Hell

    The term ‘turn up for the books’ comes to mind…

    One of the most intriguing matchups on Saturday’s UFC Fight Night card pitted the highly touted Joshua Van against former LFA champion Charles Johnson in the featured prelim. The Burmese prospect entered the Octagon with a perfect 3-0 UFC record in tow and many predicting big things for him.

    And through two rounds, it appeared the unblemished nature of his Octagon slate and big forecasts for success down the line would continue. Van was simply too good for Johnson in most exchanges and should have raced to a lead on the scorecards (he somehow didn’t, with one judge instead having Johnson up two rounds).

    In round three, though, tables turned in a gigantic way. “InnerG” came out from his corner to throw down, and “The Fearless” lived up to his moniker by obliging. That ultimately led to his downfall, however, as he found himself backpedaling after getting rocked.

    Van was not given any time to recover, with Johnson pouncing to land a truly vicious uppercut that sent the Burmese 22-year-old to the canvas with such a thud that the referee immediately scrambled to intervene.

    From what we’ve seen, it’s hard to say that Johnson has the talent to make a real run up the 125-pound pecking order. But with three wins from three fights in 2024, and having turned away the challenges of promising prospects like Van and Azat Maksum, it’s easy to acknowledge “InnerG” as one of the flyweight division’s most entertaining names.


    Negative – Not An Ideal Start

    When it comes to setting the tone, the main card opener in Denver firmly failed.

    The middleweight matchup between Abdul Razak Alhassan and Cody Brundage always looked likely to deliver a quick finish. And it was the Ghanaian powerhouse on track to finding it after putting pedal to the metal from the word go.

    Unfortunately, “Judo Thunder” soon began losing control of his offense and finding the back of Brundage’s head. Despite referee Dan Miragliotta’s warnings, Alhassan threw another particularly egregious elbow to the back of the head, leading to an intervention.

    Now, I neither want to guess the effect the blatantly illegal blows had on Brundage nor accuse him of looking for a way out. But as soon as the fight was paused, there was zero doubt in my mind that it wouldn’t restart. Perhaps that was due to the memory of Brundage’s disqualification win over Jacob Malkoun last year.

    On this occasion, the American didn’t get a free win. And while it wouldn’t be ideal for him to have had another DQ win added to his record, I find it hard to see the logic in Miragliotta not ruling it as such. At one point do multiple illegal shots post-numerous warnings become not accidental? And even if the argument is that Alhassan was just careless, should that not be better punished?

    The accurate and consistent enforcement of rules in MMA remains an uncrossed bridge toward absolute sporting legitimacy.


    Positive – As Advertised

    Some fights just can’t possibly underdeliver on how they appear on paper. Drew Dober vs. Jean Silva is among ‘some fights’.

    Silva has had some two weeks. First, he had the disappointment of missing weight ahead of UFC 303, but that asterisk on his International Fight Week outing was largely erased when he put in a violent showing to knock out Charles Jourdain.

    A move up to lightweight was not surprising, but just 14 days later to square off against a formerly ranked contender at 155 pounds like Dober? Yeah, that was a shock.

    It’s hard to think of many assignments for a divisional debut that come tougher than Dober, but “Lord Assassin” did not make it look as such. From the very first seconds, he found a home for his shots, leaving his veteran opponent leaking from above the right eye in the first round.

    In round two, Dober gave as good as he got at times, even landing the kind flush superman punch that brings out a joyous giggle from hardcore fans. But toward the end of the frame, a stiff spinning elbow from Silva (joyous giggle 2.0) further opened up the cut above the American’s eye.

    Speaking of spinning elbows, the Brazilian landed another in round three, and that was all she wrote. The ringside physician rightly took one look at the gaping hole in Dober’s eyebrow and said enough was enough.

    Would we have liked a final-round brawl to cap off the clear Fight of the Night? Of course, but we got that for the best part of two and a half rounds, so let’s be grateful. Welcome to 155 pounds, “Lord Assassin.”

  • ‘Rose Looks Like Mayweather In There’ – Fighters & Fans React To Rose Namajunas Cruising To Decision Win Over Tracy Cortez At UFC Fight Night Denver

    ‘Rose Looks Like Mayweather In There’ – Fighters & Fans React To Rose Namajunas Cruising To Decision Win Over Tracy Cortez At UFC Fight Night Denver

    Rose Namajunas looked to continue her path toward a title shot in a second weight class, and she accomplished that with a win over Tracy Cortez in the main event of UFC Fight Night Denver.

    Namajunas got off to a strong start nearly right away, dropping Cortez with a jab a couple of minutes into the fight. The former two-time strawweight champion seemed to be landing at will, and that trend continued as the fight entered the second round.

    Midway through the frame, however, Cortez looked to take Namajunas down and secure a choke. “Thug Rose” worked her way through the grappling, however, battling with her own wrestling before returning to her fairly dominant striking performance.

    The veteran seemed to have an all-around dominant showing in the third round, grinding out with a takedown and her own unsuccessful choke attempt. Meanwhile, on the feet, the ex-strawweight kept her distance, keeping herself out of Cortez’s range as she continued to fire off.

    Namajunas continued this throughout the fourth round. Her late-notice replacement opponent brought pressure in the fifth round, but at that point Namajunas was in cruise control and Cortez was unable to get the finish.

    Namajunas won a unanimous decision, with two 49-46 cards and a 48-47.

    Fans React As Rose Namajunas Takes Clear-Cut Decision Win In UFC Fight Night Denver Main Event

    Namajunas is now 2-1 since moving up to flyweight. The former strawweight champion defeated Amanda Ribas in March following a debut defeat in the division to Manon Fiorot last September in Paris.

    Cortez, who took this main event bout on short notice, sees a 10-fight win streak snapped.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Rose Namajunas Decisions Tracy Cortez

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Rose Namajunas Decisions Tracy Cortez

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, former two-time strawweight champ Rose Namajunas took on #11-ranked women’s flyweight Tracy Cortez. While in the co-main event, Santiago Ponzinibbio faced Muslim Salikhov in a welterweight matchup. 

    Make sure to catch all the UFC Fight Night results and highlights as they happen below! 

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Women’s flyweight Main Event: Rose Namajunas def. Tracy Cortez via unanimous decision (49-46×2, 48-47)
    • Welterweight Co-Main Event: Muslim Salikhov def. Santiago Ponzinibbio via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Lightweight: Jean Silva def. Drew Dober via TKO (doctor’s stoppage): R3, 1.28
    • Welterweight: Gabriel Bonfim def. Ange Loosa via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    • Featherweight: Julian Erosa def. Christian Rodriguez via submission: R1, 4.49
    • Middleweight: Abdul Razak Alhassan vs. Cody Brundage ends in no contest (illegal elbows by Alhassan): R1, 0.37

    Preliminary Card

    • Flyweight: Charles Johnson def. Joshua Van via KO: R3, 0.20
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Fatima Kline via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Bantamweight: Montel Jackson def. Da’Mon Blackshear via KO: R1, 0.18
    • Women’s Flyweight: Luana Santos def. Mariya Agapova via submission: R1, 3.27
    • Middleweight: Andre Petroski def. Josh Fremd via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Welterweight: Evan Elder def. Darrius Flowers via submission: R2, 1.46

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Evan Elder def. Darrius Flowers

    In this welterweight matchup, Evan Elder got it done with a submission of Darrius Flowers in the second round.

    Luana Santos def. Mariya Agapova

    Luana Santos locked in a rear-naked choke to get the win against Mariya Agapova in the first round of their flyweight bout.

    Montel Jackson def. Da’Mon Blackshear

    Montel Jackson unleashed a huge left to KO Da’Mon Blackshear after just 18 seconds of their bantamweight bout.

    Charles Johnson def. Joshua Van

    In this flyweight matchup, Charles Johnson earned a KO of Joshua Van 20 seconds into round three.

    Abdul Razak Alhassan vs. Cody Brundage ends in no contest

    This middleweight bout ended in a no contest after Abdul Razak Alhassan landed elbows to the back of Cody Brundage’s head, who was not able to continue.

    Julian Erosa def. Christian Rodriguez

    Julian Erosa locked in a guillotine to submit Christian Rodriguez at the end of round one in their featherweight contest.

    Gabriel Bonfim def. Ange Loosa

    Gabriel Bonfim earned a unanimous decision win against Ange Loosa in their welterweight bout.

    Jean Silva def. Drew Dober

    In this lightweight bout, Jean Silva was awarded a TKO victory after inflicting a nasty cut above Drew Dober’s right eye that caused the ringside doctor to stop the fight.

    Muslim Salikhov def. Santiago Ponzinibbio

    In the co-main event, Muslim Salikhov earned a split decision victory against Santiago Ponzinibbio.

    Rose Namajunas def. Tracy Cortez

    In the main event, Rose Namajunas earned a unanimous decision against Tracy Cortez to make it two wins in a row in the flyweight division.


  • UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez Weigh-In Results: Cortez Makes Weight With Haircut

    UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez Weigh-In Results: Cortez Makes Weight With Haircut

    UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez takes place on Saturday, and MMA News is here to bring you the official weigh-in results!

    After taking a weekend off post-UFC 303, the promotion is kicking off its July schedule with a return to Denver. The main event comes in the women’s flyweight division, with surging prospect Tracy Cortez receiving a major opportunity to climb the ranks against Rose Namajunas.

    “Thug Rose,” a former two-time strawweight champion, was originally set to do battle with top five contender Maycee Barber. But with “The Future” out injured, the #11-ranked Cortez has filled in on short notice, looking to extend her undefeated UFC record by adding the biggest scalp to her résumé thus far.

    Elsewhere, the likes of welterweight veteran Santiago Ponzinibbio, lightweight fan favorite Drew Dober, and middleweight knockout artist Abdul Razak Alhassan will be among those in action.

    UFC Fight Night: Namajunas vs. Cortez Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Namajunas vs. Cortez takes place on Saturday, July 13, at the Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado. The main card begins at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT, with the preliminary card starting at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT.

    Check out the full weigh-in results below!

    Main Card:

    • Women’s flyweight Main Event: Rose Namajunas (124.75lbs) vs. Tracy Cortez (126lbs)
    • Welterweight Co-Main Event: Santiago Ponzinibbio (171lbs) vs. Muslim Salikhov (171lbs)
    • Lightweight: Drew Dober (155lbs) vs. Jean Silva (155lbs)
    • Welterweight: Gabriel Bonfim (171lbs) vs. Ange Loosa (170lbs)
    • Featherweight: Julian Erosa (145.5lbs) vs. Christian Rodriguez (145.5lbs)
    • Middleweight: Abdul Razak Alhassan (185lbs) vs. Cody Brundage (185.5lbs)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Joshua Van (125lbs) vs. Charles Johnson (125.5lbs)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius (125lbs) vs. Fatima Kline (125lbs)
    • Bantamweight: Montel Jackson (135lbs) vs. Da’Mon Blackshear (135.5lbs)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Luana Santos (125lbs) vs. Mariya Agapova (125lbs)
    • Middleweight: Josh Fremd (186lbs) vs. Andre Petroski (185.5lbs)
    • Welterweight: Evan Elder (170lbs) vs. Darrius Flowers (170lbs)
  • ‘Rose Is Not That Fighter’ – Tracy Cortez Warned That Short-Notice Scrap Against Namajunas Is Bad Decision

    Tracy Cortez is set for a significant step up in competition this weekend when she takes on Rose Namajunas in the main event when the UFC rolls into Denver, Colorado, on Saturday night.

    Cortez, who is riding an e11-fight winning streak into this bout, was initially scheduled to face Miranda Maverick a week later in Las Vegas. When Namajunas lost her original opponent Maycee Barber to injury, the opportunity of a headline slot opposite a former champion was one that Cortez couldn’t turn down.

    30-year-old Cortez has won all five of her fights inside the Octagon since signing with the UFC back in 2019 off the back of a win over Mariya Agapova on Dana White’s Contender Series. While she is on an impressive winning streak, this will be the first time she faces an opponent ranked inside the top 10 in the UFC’s flyweight division.

    Speaking on his podcast Weighing In this week, Josh Thomson was asked by his co-host on “Big” John McCarthy if he thinks taking this fight was a good decision by Tracy Cortez.

    “I don’t think it’s a good fight for her,” said the former UFC welterweight. “No disrespect to her, I don’t think that…after her last fight against (Jasmine) Jasudavicius or whatever her name is…I think what I saw in that fight was in the later rounds like two-and-a-half/three rounds she started to slow down to the point where…Rose is not that fighter.”

    ‘She Will Not Slow Down’ – Josh Thomson On Namajunas

    “Thug” Rose won the UFC strawweight championship in 2017 by knocking out longtime champion Joanna Jędrzejczyk. During her UFC career, she has won four five-round main events by unanimous decision.

    Thomson believes that experience of the championship rounds should make the difference come Saturday night.

    “Rose has been in plenty of five-round fights, she’s trained for five-round fights,” Thomson continued. “She will not slow down in rounds three and four.”

    Thomson also believes that Cortez may be a little out of her depth when she tries to strike with the former UFC strawweight champion.  

    “She’s got the power to make Rose respect her, I just don’t know if she knows how to get in on the reach. Like she slid in on the Jasudavicius girl with those straight rights then follow up with the left hook, but Rose is a different level of striking”.

  • UFC Fight Night Denver Headliner Tracy Cortez Envisions ‘Surpassing’ Ronda Rousey: ‘I Say This Humbly…’

    UFC Fight Night Denver Headliner Tracy Cortez Envisions ‘Surpassing’ Ronda Rousey: ‘I Say This Humbly…’

    Ahead of her main event debut this weekend, UFC women’s flyweight Tracy Cortez has detailed the kind of success she’s envisioning for herself on mixed martial arts’ biggest stage.

    Since losing her professional debut under the Invicta FC banner in 2017, Cortez has experienced nothing but her hand raised inside the cage, winning 11 straight fights to establish herself as one to watch at 125 pounds.

    After adding the name of Erin Blanchfield to her record in 2019 and subsequently securing a victory on Dana White’s Contender Series, Cortez’s winning run has extended with a perfect 5-0 record in the UFC.

    Now, the Phoenix native is set for her toughest test to date in the form of Rose Namajunas. With the former two-time strawweight champion left without an opponent for this weekend’s UFC Fight Night main event in Denver following Maycee Barber’s withdrawal, Cortez has stepped up on short notice.

    And beyond making the most of the sizable opportunity awaiting her at the Ball Arena on Saturday night, Cortez is foreseeing an ascent to the highest possible step on the women’s MMA ladder…

    Cortez Outlines Lofty UFC Ambitions Ahead Of Main Event Debut

    During a recent appearance on The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani, Cortez looked ahead to the shot at title contention that has fallen at her doorstep this weekend in Denver.

    In terms of what she hopes to achieve with victories over notable names like “Thug Rose,” the #11-ranked flyweight set her sights on going above and beyond the legacy left behind in the cage by a trailblazer for female MMA.

    “You know, I’m very grateful for the way Ronda (Rousey) paved the way for women’s MMA. No one has done it like she has,” Cortez said. “But I say this humbly, I hope to surpass that. She set a goal, and I think us as competitors, we want to keep overstepping these goals and overdoing what our last heroes did.

    “I saw the way she moved and (I’m) finessing and tweaking, making it my own and hoping to surpass what she has done,” Cortez added.

    Having won all five of her Octagon outings to date and cemented a ranking with her victory over Jasmine Jasudavicius at Noche UFC last September, the next step on Cortez’s journey toward the greatness former bantamweight queen Rousey achieved in the cage is a big one.

    To remain perfect in the UFC and notch her first headline triumph, the 30-year-old is tasked with stalling the two-division ambitions of Namajunas.

  • Rose Namajunas vs. Carla Esparza Reportedly Set For UFC 274

    UFC Strawweight Champion Rose Namajunas will reportedly defend her title against Carla Esparza next in a rematch years in the making at UFC 274.

    News of the booking was first reported by Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated.

    Namajunas is coming off of back-to-back wins over Zhang Weili in 2021, including most recently in an immediate title rematch at UFC 268. She reclaimed UFC gold by knocking Weili out with a head kick at UFC 261.

    Namajunas has won three straight fights since losing her strawweight title to Jéssica Andrade at UFC 237, before getting revenge against Andrade in a non-title bout at UFC 251.

    Carla Esparza
    Carla Esparza, Image Credit: Getty Images

    Esparza makes her return to the strawweight title fight following five-straight wins. She most recently earned a dominant second-round submission of Yan Xiaonan last May after winning a close split decision over Marina Rodriguez.

    Esparza won the then-vacant strawweight championship following a win over Namajunas on The Ultimate Fighter 20. She went on to lose to Joanna Jędrzejczyk in her first title defense at UFC 185.

    Namajunas hasn’t had many stumbles since the loss to Esparza. She has earned dominant wins over Jędrzejczyk, Paige VanZant, and Michelle Waterson, to name a few.

    UFC 274 will be headlined by a lightweight title bout between Charles Oliveira and Justin Gaethje. It’s expected that Namajunas vs. Esparza 2 will serve as the co-main event.

    UFC 274 will take place in Phoenix, AZ at the Footprint Center on May 7. UFC president Dana White has recently hinted that the winner of the matchup will face Rodriguez for the next title bout.

    What is your prediction for Rose Namajunas vs. Carla Esparza 2?

  • Jędrzejczyk: Namajunas Is On A Different Level Than Esparza

    Joanna Jędrzejczyk believes we will hear “And Still” when Rose Namajunas rematches Carla Esparza sometime later this year at a date TBD.

    Namajunas and Esparza first fought back in 2014 for the inaugural strawweight title which Esparza won by third-round submission in the finale of TUF 20. After that, Jędrzejczyk went on to beat Esparza to win the belt and had it until Namajunas knocked her out in 2017.

    With Namajunas reclaiming the belt in 2021, she now appears set to rematch Esparza sometime this year. It’s an intriguing matchup as Esparza has had a career turnaround of sorts but in the rematch, Jędrzejczyk believes it will be Namajunas getting her hand raised this time around.

    I'm so proud of you' – Rose Namajunas shares touching moment with her  parents after beating Zhang Weili at UFC 268

    “I think that Rose will defend her belt,” Jedrzejczyk told MMA Junkie. “Carla won back in the day in 2014, but both of them are totally different fighters, different athletes with different mentality, as well, but I think that Rose will win this fight. She’s very strong. She’s very, very fast. Her timing is just perfect with her footwork. Of course, Carla has a few wins streak, but Rose is a different level, I think.”

    If Rosa Namajunas does defeat Carla Esparza as Joanna Jędrzejczyk thinks it’s likely Marina Rodriguez would be next for the champ. However, the Pole has made it known she still wants the third fight against ‘Thug’ even though she’s 0-2 to the champ.

    The plan for Jędrzejczyk is to rematch Weili Zhang sometime this year and should she win, she could very well earn another title shot. She still remains a big name in the sport and she could help sell the fight against Namajunas, which could happen sometime in 2023 as she looks to reclaim her belt.

    Who do you think will win the fight between Rose Namajunas and Carla Esparza?