UFC 215 Results: The Real Winners and Losers from Nunes vs. Shevchenko 2

More turmoil allowed Amanda Nunes to headline UFC 215 event just two months after UFC president Dana White said she never would headline again (h/t CBSSports.com’s Brian Campbell). The rematch with Valentina Shevchenko would give her a platform to rede…

More turmoil allowed Amanda Nunes to headline UFC 215 event just two months after UFC president Dana White said she never would headline again (h/t CBSSports.com’s Brian Campbell). The rematch with Valentina Shevchenko would give her a platform to redeem herself, but not everything went as planned.

The most important plan for Nunes did come through—she retained the UFC bantamweight championship by split decision. She just didn’t get back in the good graces of MMA fans.

Rafael dos Anjos made a statement in the co-main event with a first-round submission over Neil Magny. The former lightweight king looked outstanding and every bit of a welterweight contender.

Those are just the big stories exiting Edmonton and UFC 215. There were plenty of other winners and losers when the cage door closed.

Wondering who are those fortunate, and unfortunate, souls? Here are the real winners and losers from Edmonton.

Full UFC 215 fight card results appear at the end.

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Amanda Nunes Retains Title Against Valentina Shevchenko In Split Nod

The stage was set for the main event of UFC 215. Women’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes defended her gold against Valentina Shevchenko. Nunes was going for her second successful title defense. “The Lioness” retained her title in a razor-thin split decision. A leg kick was there for Shevchenko early. Nunes went for a couple of […]

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The stage was set for the main event of UFC 215. Women’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes defended her gold against Valentina Shevchenko. Nunes was going for her second successful title defense.

“The Lioness” retained her title in a razor-thin split decision.

A leg kick was there for Shevchenko early. Nunes went for a couple of leg kicks as well. She went high with a kick that missed. Shevchenko couldn’t get much going in the opening frame up to this point. A kick to the body found the target for Nunes. Shevchenko caught a kick, but ate a punch for her troubles.

When “Bullet” went to her corner, she looked to have been favoring her left hand. The second round began and Shevchenko hoped to gauge the champion’s distance. A superman punch was there for Shevchenko. She landed a combination, then landed a right hand on the break. Shevchenko had a much better showing this go-round.

Shevchenko landed a hook and a kick to the body. She used punches to set up a leg kick. Nunes ducked under a spinning backfist. When Shevchenko walked back to her corner, blood was dripping down her leg.

Nunes entered the fourth round with some more aggression. She landed a counter right hand. A combination was there for Shevchenko, but Nunes wasn’t fazed. A counter punch landed for Shevchenko. A knee to the body landed for “Bullet.”  The round came to a close and it looked like Shevchenko got the better of that frame.

The fifth and final round was underway. The two traded leather early in the round. Nunes went for a takedown and pushed her opponent towards the fence. They separated shortly after. Nunes took the back of Shevchenko. Shevchenko ate a knee as she got back to her feet. “Bullet” was taken down with about 50 seconds left in the fight. Nunes stood in control until the final horn sounded.

Final Result: Amanda Nunes def. Valentina Shevchenko via split decision (47-48, 48-47, 48-47)

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Amanda Nunes Takes Decision Win Over Valentina Shevchenko In Five Round Thriller

Round 1: Both women exchange leg kicks to open things up. Shevchenko steps back from a strike and just misses on a counter hook. A leg kick lands for Shevchenko and Nunes just misses on a high-kick. Another leg kick lands for Nunes and she just misses on a follow-up jab. The champ lands a kick to […]

Round 1: Both women exchange leg kicks to open things up. Shevchenko steps back from a strike and just misses on a counter hook. A leg kick lands for Shevchenko and Nunes just misses on a high-kick. Another leg kick lands for Nunes and she just misses on a follow-up jab. The champ lands a kick to […]

Fighters Blast Weight Cutting After Ray Borg’s UFC 215 Withdrawal

UFC fighters have voiced their opinions on Ray Borg’s removal from UFC 215 just a day-and-a-half before his scheduled fight with Demetrious Johnson. While Borg has denied that weight-cutting issues were the issue, all signs point to a difficult drop to 125 pounds, which is a weight that has caused Borg to be pulled from […]

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UFC fighters have voiced their opinions on Ray Borg’s removal from UFC 215 just a day-and-a-half before his scheduled fight with Demetrious Johnson.

While Borg has denied that weight-cutting issues were the issue, all signs point to a difficult drop to 125 pounds, which is a weight that has caused Borg to be pulled from fights in the past.

Two prominent fellow UFC fighters took to Twitter, and both of them agreed on one thing: more weight classes.

Women’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes, who is actually filling in as headliner after “Mighty Mouse” and Borg were pulled from the card, felt the same way after a particularly brutal weight cut prior to UFC 213:

“I was unable to (breathe) and felt off-balance from the pressure in my sinuses,” Nunes said of her weight cut for UFC 213.

Like Borg, Nunes didn’t make it to fight night at UFC 213, and instead will defend her belt against Valentina Schevchenko in the main event of UFC 215 on Saturday, the same main even though Borg was scheduled to fight in against Demetrious Johnson.

The issue of weight cutting has become such a problem that USADA now has rules regarding how much weight a fighter is allowed to cut based on their body weight.

Do you want to see more weight division ls in the UFC? Is weight cutting as big of an issue as it’s being made out to be?

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UFC 215 Main Event Preview: Women’s MMA Is Set To Evolve

Tonight (Sat., September 9, 2017), Amanda Nunes and Valentina Shevchenko will finally settle their long-standing rivalry when they battle for the UFC women’s bantamweight championship in the main event of UFC 215 from Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The bout, a rematch of their closely-contested first match-up at UFC 196 in early 2016, where Nunes […]

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Tonight (Sat., September 9, 2017), Amanda Nunes and Valentina Shevchenko will finally settle their long-standing rivalry when they battle for the UFC women’s bantamweight championship in the main event of UFC 215 from Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

The bout, a rematch of their closely-contested first match-up at UFC 196 in early 2016, where Nunes emerged victorious, was scheduled to take place in the main event of July 8’s UFC 213 until a last-minute illness forced Nunes to pull out of the International Fight Week-ending card the day of the bout.

Still one of the more dominant champions in the UFC, Nunes has repeatedly stated she believes the UFC is “punishing” her for not fighting at UFC 213 by placing her fight with Shevchenko in the co-main event, but that became a moot point when Ray Borg was forced from his main event clash with flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson with an illness similar to Nunes.

So regardless, Nunes vs. Shevchenko will have their rematch, and despite the outright hangover from Conor McGregor’s boxing match against Floyd Mayweather two weeks ago, this is one of the best fights – especially meritocracy wise – that the world’s MMA leader could put on. That was never more apparent than it was shortly following Shevchenko’s shocking submission win over talented grappler Julianna Pena at January’s UFC on FOX 22, a bout which earned “Bullet” her title shot and Nunes was present for.

Photo: Ron Chenoy for USA TODAY Sports

The two shared an interesting moment of their own shall we say, unique, trash talk, and MMA’s perhaps most underrated rivalry was taken to a new level. It’s cooled off significantly after the highly-publicized mess at UFC 213, and the timing of the rescheduling probably couldn’t be much worse than it is now. But that simply doesn’t change the fact that this may be the single best fight in UFC women’s bantamweight history in terms of talent.

Nunes and Shevchenko represent the true evolution of women’s MMA, and that makes the UFC 215 main event a true spectacle of modern mixed martial arts, even if it isn’t getting much attention. Let’s break down the fight from all aspects of both females’ well-rounded MMA games.

Photo: Mark J. Rebilas for USA TODAY Sports

Striking:

Here’s where both women have been most touted, with Nunes being regarded as the most powerful puncher in women’s MMA not named Cris Cyborg, and Shevchenko renowned for her championship-level Muay Thai background that includes multiple victories over UFC women’s strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk.

Nunes’ recent smatterings of Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate prove she has the power to knock out any female fighter in MMA if she lands cleanly, and indeed she was able to land some hard shots on Shevchenko in the first two rounds of their first match. But she wasn’t able to easily plow through “Bullet’s” defense and finish the fight in devastating fashion like she did against Rousey and Tate, and that lead to her gassing badly in the third round, which she lost in dominant style.

That means a more measured, precise striking game that evolves over several rounds of the five-round fight will favor Shevchenko. The Russian-born combatant rarely finds herself in danger, evident by her ability to stay clear of noted knockout artist Holly Holm’s strikes in a shockingly one-sided decision win at UFC on FOX 20. She’ll look to counter Nunes’ inevitable rushes, and it’ll require some extreme accuracy to do so without getting tagged.

If Nunes can land early, obviously this arena will trend in her favor. If she can’t hurt Shevchenko in the first two frames, however, it may shift to ‘Bullet’s’ favor in short order.

Advantage: 50-50

Photo: Mark J. Rebilas for USA TODAY Sports

Wrestling:

Neither elite woman relies all too heavily on their wrestling to get the job done; but that doesn’t mean they don’t have a significant amount of skill in that arena.

Nunes is a big, strong bantamweight who can muscle opponents to the mat with ease but prefers to bash her foes with powerful, precise strikes as her takedowns to open up a path for a fight-ending submission, most commonly a rear-naked choke. The aforementioned tendency to gas will most likely lead Nunes to avoid too many prolonged wrestling exchanges, however.

Shevchenko is all more well-known for her elite striking and then her submissions second, but she showed some underrated takedowns in her win over a former champion in Holm. She also proved she could more than hold her own with one of the best wrestlers in the division by stopping Pena in her latest victory.

The champion has a brutalizing top game that she proved she could use to control Shevchenko in their first bout, but that again will be limited by her notorious gas tank. Shevchenko has proven she can go five hard rounds. This one is close, but I’ll give a slight edge to the challenger on longevity alone.

Advantage: Shevchenko 55-45

Photo by Ron Chenoy for USA TODAY Sports

Submissions:

Both women are extremely versed in grappling just like they are striking and, to a lesser extent, takedowns.

Nunes prefers to rock her opponents on the feet and then go for the tapout when her opponents are too rocked to defend a submission. She did just that to two world-class bantamweights in former champion Tate and former title challenger Sara McMann. She’s a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and is an absolute bear to deal with on the ground. However, she’ll always favor her potentially fight-ending power, and 10 of her 14 MMA victories have come by knockout, while only three have come by submission.

Meanwhile, Shevchenko is widely known for her decorated Muay Thai resumé, so that’s lead to her dangerous grappling skills being overlooked significantly. She has actually won six of her 14 MMA victories by submission, with only four coming by way of T/KO. Tapping “The Venezuelan Vixen” with a risky armbar like she did in January shows she can submit anyone from any position, making her a highly dangerous challenge on the mat for any female in MMA.

It may sound cliché, but this area of MMA is once again as closely matched as it could be.

Advantage: 50-50 again

Photo: Ron Chenoy for USA TODAY Sports

Final Prediction:

Hyperbole be damned, this is truly a title bout that represents the sheer evolution of women’s MMA as it features the two most well-rounded, dangerous, and talented female bantamweights to ever set foot in the octagon.

Rousey paved the way for these women to enjoy the positions they do today, but Nunes and Shevchenko took those opportunities and ran with them, clearly pulling away from the rest of the pack. The division isn’t stacked underneath them by any means, but “The Lioness” and “Bullet” are two of the best female fighters in women’s MMA history regardless of who wins or loses tonight.

With that said, I feel the champion has indeed improved since they first faced off, but Shevchenko may have gotten even better. “The Lioness” was clearly fading in the third round of their first fight, and with this scheduled for five rounds, I think it will just be too much to finish “Bullet” in the early rounds. If and when she can’t, Nunes may gas from implementing her high-paced, power-slugging gameplan.

I think that will lead to a rapid shift in momentum, one which the Russian-Peruvian kickboxer will capitalize on to take the belt.

Pick: Shevchenko def. Nunes via R4 TKO (strikes)

 

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UFC 215 Fight Card: PPV Schedule, Odds and Predictions for Nunes vs. Schevchenko

The UFC 215 fight card has experienced some shakeups, but the Edmonton, Alberta crowd at Rogers Place will still be treated to the culmination of a bitter rivalry in the Amanda Nunes-Valentina Shevchenko main event. 
The pay-per-view was supposed …

The UFC 215 fight card has experienced some shakeups, but the Edmonton, Alberta crowd at Rogers Place will still be treated to the culmination of a bitter rivalry in the Amanda Nunes-Valentina Shevchenko main event. 

The pay-per-view was supposed to be anchored by Demetrious Johnson going for 11th consecutive title defense in the flyweight division. However, opponent Ray Borg was forced to withdraw from the bout due to an illness, per Brett Okamoto of ESPN. 

In addition to the loss of the heavyweight clash between Francis Ngannou and Junior dos Santos due to a potential doping violation for JDS, the card has taken a considerable hit. 

There’s still some fights worth getting excited about, though. The women’s bantamweight title rematch should be a fun bout, former lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos is continuing his welterweight campaign and Gilbert Melendez will make his featherweight debut. 

Here’s a look at the main card along with the latest odds from OddsShark and a closer look at some of the biggest fights on this card. 

 

Main Card

  • Amanda Nunes (EVEN) vs. Valentina Shevchenko (-130) for the women’s bantamweight championship
  • Rafael dos Anjos (-175) vs. Neil Magny (+145) welterweight bout
  • Henry Cejudo (-325) vs. Wilson Reis (+250) flyweight bout
  • Ilir Latifi (-105) vs. Tyson Pedro (-125) light heavyweight bout
  • Jeremy Stephens (-115) vs. Gilbert Melendez (-115) featherweight bout

Note: All odds are in moneyline form. For instance, -900 means that a bettor would have to bet $900 dollars to win $100. 

 

Amanda Nunes vs. Valentina Shevchenko

The Nunes vs. Shevchenko matchup has high expectations to be a good one. Carrying a card that has been through the ringer, the hope is that they’ll close out the night with an action fight. 

Gilbert Melendez—who knows a thing or two about action fights—believes that the championship fight is his main competition for Fight of the Night. 

“I believe Valentina will become stronger and more dominant as it goes along. Amanda Nunes really lets those hands go and I think she’s getting very good at her striking,” Melendez said, breaking down the fight per Dave Doyle of MMA Fighting. I didn’t give her that much credit earlier, but she’s really blossomed, I have to say if [Melendez and opponent Jeremy Stephens] don’t get Fight of the Night, they probably will.”

It’s hard to argue with Melendez’s logic. Nunes is a quick starter who will look for the early finish. She has finished 11 of her 14 wins inside the first round so she’ll look to press right away. 

If Shevchenko can survive that initial onslaught we are in for a war, though. In the first fight Nunes had just enough gas left in the second round to earn the first two rounds on the judges’ scorecard. 

By the third, she was hanging on to win the decision. Shevchenko dominated the third round in such a way that it’s hard not to see her once again dominating the later rounds. 

With the title fight going five rounds, that leaves Shevchenko with three rounds to work with if she happens to drop the first two again to the champion. That’s plenty of time to complete the comeback this time around. 

Prediction: Shevchenko via decision

 

Henry Cejudo vs. Wilson Reis

Because Demetrious Johnson’s latest title defense was taken off the main card, a battle between two of the champions former challengers was promoted to the pay-per-view. Henry Cejudo and Wilson Reis will square off in a fight that could determine who gets a shot at redemption against the champion. 

Johnson is to the point now where the division is all but cleaned out so rematches could be the next phase of his title reign. Cejudo figured to be one of Johnson’s toughest outs, but Mighty Mouse ended the fight early with brutal knees in the clinch. 

That performance was a bit of an aberration for both Johnson and Cejudo. Mighty Mouse isn’t generally the kind of striker that ends fights in the first round and Cejudo scored an early takedown, but wasn’t able to maintain top position. 

Reis lasted longer in his bout with the champion, but was more thoroughly dominated. Where Cejudo at least scored a takedown and showed glimpses of competing, Reis was outlanded 108-16 in significant strikes, per FightMetric before succumbing to a third-round submission. 

Still, Reis feels that his grappling chops are in line with Cejudo and it will be a big part of his gameplan on Saturday night. 

“I have an aggressive wrestling style, too,” Reis said, per FloCombat. “I like to take people down. I’m looking for an opportunity all the time, so, just because he is an Olympic champion, I will not take that part of my game out of my strategy. I believe very much in my takedown abilities, so I will fully rely on my wrestling and jiu-jitsu against him.”

That might not be the best idea. Cejudo is an Olympic gold medalist level wrestler and he has transitioned that discipline well into his MMA repertoire. 

Reis is an accomplished grappler, but he’s been taken down in losses to Jussier Formiga and Iuri Alcantara. It should be more of the same here as Cejudo proves too powerful for the Brazilian. 

Prediction: Cejudo via third-round TKO 

 

Jeremy Stephens vs. Gilbert Melendez

The people’s main event on Saturday might just be the featherweight bout between division mainstay Jeremy Stephens and debutante Gilbert Melendez. 

After a run at lightweight that included a Strikeforce championship and two shots at the UFC strap, El Nino will make the move down to 145 pounds. Greeting him will be a fighter in Stephens who has taken on the best of the best in the division.

Stephens is far from elite at this stage in his career. He’s just 2-5 in his last seven fights. But he’s always a scrappy challenge, having three Knockout of the Night and three Fight of the Night honors to his name. 

There’ll be plenty of motivation to do well, too. After all, the man postponed his wedding to take the fight. 

“I got the call and I said, ‘alright, who’s the opponent?’, Stephens said, per Dave Doyle of MMA Fighting. “They said ‘Gilbert Melendez,’ and I said ‘hang on, let me call my fiancee real quick’ and see if she’s willing to do it.”

Stephens decision might just pay off in this case. Melendez hasn’t been impressive of late either. He’s on a three-fight losing streak and is just 1-3 since coming over to the UFC from Strikeforce in 2013. 

At this point, this fight comes down to which fighter has more left of their prime. The 31-year-old Stephens might just have the advantage in that category over the 35-year-old Melendez. 

Expect the motivated Stephens to edge out Melendez in a fight that should feature plenty of action. 

Prediction: Stephens via decision

 

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