The newly crowned UFC women’s bantamweight champion talks about her victory over Holly Holm and why she admires “The Preacher’s Daughter” for refusing to wait for Ronda Rousey.
It’s no secret that UFC president Dana White was frustrated with Holly Holm’s decision to defend the bantamweight title against Miesha Tate, instead of waiting for a mega-money rematch with Ronda Rousey.
Holm, who has won multiple world titles in boxing, dethroned “Rowdy” via head kick at UFC 193 and was expected to rematch the former champion later in the year. Instead, The Preacher’s Daughter decided to accept Miesha Tate’s challenge at UFC 196 to remain an active champion. And, although Dana White was’t pleased with the matchup, “Cupcake” commends Holm for accepting the fight.
The newly minted 135-pound champ spoke to Fight Network’s John Pollock on Thursday (h/t David St. Martin of MMA Fighting).
“I think Holly took the advice of her coaches who she trusts with everything,” said Tate. “They said, ‘Holly, you’ve always been an active fighter. Let’s not change who you are now that you’re the champion because that’s when you’re going to lose sight of who you are.’ I think the idea was to keep her grounded just the same as if she wasn’t the champion. Fighting often, through the top 10 and I admire that. I respect that. I think that’s what any champion should do. She didn’t want to wait. She wanted to get in there and prove why she was the best in the world.”
Although Holm lost the belt to Tate at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada, the MMA veteran believes her willingess to defend the title against all challengers is the mark of a true champion.
“It didn’t work out for her this time but that’s the mindset that makes a champion. You’re not going to win every fight in this sport but she has the mentality of a champion and that’s why she beat Ronda. If she would have said, ‘I’m not ready to fight Ronda’ she would have missed that opportunity. She’s just the kind of woman who wants to stay ready, be ready and she’s passionate about this. I have a lot of respect for her and I don’t think it was a mistake. I think she’s going to learn from it and she’ll come back better.”
Tate engaged in a back-and-forth scrap with Holm before snatching a rear-naked choke in the dying stages of the contest to render Holm unconcious. The 29-year-old believes her dominant 2nd round set the precedent for the 5th and final round.
“I think she just crumbled under the pressure when I took her down in that second round,” Tate told Fight Network’s John Pollock. “My coaches and Bryan [Caraway] actually told me, ‘She’s either going to stay down and be so scared about being submitted that you’re going to ground and pound her and beat her up or she’s going to try desperately to get up. Because your top pressure is so heavy she’s going to be forced to leave something out there and you’re going to grab it and you’re going to submit this girl.’
“We saw both cases. In the second round she stayed down there and took some heavy ground and pound. In the fifth round she definitely didn’t want to get stuck down there again so she tried to zealously get up and I saw the opening and I took it. We planned for that and we assumed that was going to happen.”
It’s expected that Miesha Tate will complete her trilogy fight with Ronda Rousey towards the end of the year. The former Strikeforce champion lost her belt to Rousey in 2012 and was submitted by the Judoka again at UFC 168.