UFC 213: Nunes vs. Shevchenko 2 Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

If Amanda Nunes wants to be more than the woman who likely retired Ronda Rousey, she’ll need to defeat Valentina Shevchenko in the main event at UFC 213. 
The women’s bantamweight title will once again be on the line as the Lioness looks to defend…

If Amanda Nunes wants to be more than the woman who likely retired Ronda Rousey, she’ll need to defeat Valentina Shevchenko in the main event at UFC 213. 

The women’s bantamweight title will once again be on the line as the Lioness looks to defend her title for a second time against a familiar foe in Shevchenko. 

The champion and challenger have met once before. Nunes rode a hot start to a unanimous-decision victory in her first bout with the challenger, but a five-round affair has the potential for a different dynamic between the two. 

The main event is good, but the co-main event gives it a run for its money for best fight of the night. Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker meet in a battle for the interim middleweight title. 

It’s a card with plenty of intrigue as the two title fights are near toss-ups, and they set the tone for the rest of the card. Here’s a look at the complete lineup along with predictions for the biggest fights on the card. 

      

Main Card (PPV at 10 p.m. ET)

  • Amanda Nunes vs. Valentina Shevchenko (for Women’s Bantamweight Title)
  • Yoel Romero vs. Robert Whittaker (for Interim Middleweight Title)
  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Daniel Omielanczuk
  • Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum
  • Anthony Pettis vs. Jim Miller

Prelims (Fox Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET)

  • Thiago de Lima Santos vs. Gerald Meerschaert
  • Chad Laprise vs. Brian Camozzi
  • Travis Browne vs. Oleksiy Oliynyk
  • Jordan Mein vs. Belal Muhammad

Prelims (UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET)

  • Rob Font vs. Douglas Silva de Andrade
  • Cody Stamann vs. Terrion Ware
  • Trevin Giles vs. James Bochnovic

         

Predictions

Valentina Shevchenko is the New Women’s Bantamweight Champion

Nunes has looked like an unstoppable force in her last two fights. After submitting Miesha Tate in the first round to become the champion, she scored the biggest win of her career by brutally finishing Rousey in just 48 seconds. 

But the rules of engagement when fighting Nunes seem pretty clear at this point. She’s one of the best finishers in women’s MMA, but if a fighter can survive the opening salvo, she’s got a shot. 

Shevchenko is already one of the prime examples of that in Nunes career. In their first encounter, the Lioness easily won the first round and blitzed Shevchenko in the second, but  the latter started to gain some traction in the second round before outstriking Nunes 17-3 in the final frame, per Fight Metric

Even more concerning for the champion is that her bout against Shevchenko was her best performance in a fight that got out of the first round. Her other bouts that went past the first five minutes are knockout losses to Alexis Davis and Cat Zingano and a decision loss to Sarah D’Alelio. 

One thing to keep an eye on is just how many takedown attempts Nunes will attempt. In the first fight she did most of her damage on the ground but went 0-for-4 on takedown attempts in the final round. 

If Shevchenko can hang on through the opening round or two, her high-level striking should take over in the later rounds. It was her ability to generate power in the clinch that turned the fight in their first bout:

Nunes cardio may be improving, but Shevchenko still took over the fight in the final round of the three-round fight. She could easily be added to the list of first-round victims for Nunes, but if she isn’t, it’s her fight to lose. 

Prediction: Shevchenko via fourth-round submission.

        

Yoel Romero Takes Control of the Middleweight Division

With Michael Bisping clinging to his middleweight championship belt for dear life while sitting out for all of 2017 thus far, the UFC’s distinction that this is an interim title fight actually carries some weight. 

Whoever wins this fight all but guarantees they’ll be the first in line to fight the champ when he gets off the sideline. The winner of this fight will likely be favored when Bisping does make his return. 

The fight itself is an intriguing matchup. Whittaker has proved that he needs to be taken seriously when it comes to anyone in the middleweight division. Since moving up to middleweight from the 170-pound division, Whittaker has ripped off six-straight wins. 

Whittaker has got the job done with a pressure game that forces opponents to fold and enough power to put fighters away. He has scored back-to-back finishes in his last two fights and will look to continue that streak by fighting the fight on his terms. 

“My strength is definitely my stand-up ability; my stand-up ability helps me control the fight,” Whittaker said, per Darren Arthur of ESPN. “I definitely want to get in there and hopefully use that on him and push the fight to my angle and my edge and my advantage through my striking.”

However, pushing the pace also opens up holes for reactive takedowns. That’s something that Romero is more than happy to throw into the mix as an Olympic wrestler. The mat is definitely a place that Whittaker will be looking to avoid. 

Once on the ground, Romero’s size and power could be too much for Australian. 

Prediction: Romero via third-round TKO

       

Alistair Overeem Takes the Rubber Match Against Fabricio Werdum

Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum are more than just a little familiar with each other—they just can’t seem to get enough of fighting one another. The two aging heavyweights will square off for the third time on the main card, with the series all knotted up at one apiece. 

This fight might not have much of an impact on the title picture—both fighters have lost to current champion Stipe Miocic, but don’t tell Overeem that. He plans on pushing for a rematch with the champion after taking care of business against Werdum. 

“After I get my hand raised, I’m going to grab that mic, and I’m going to challenge Stipe Miocic for the heavyweight championship belt,”  the former Strikeforce star said, per Fernanda Prates and Ken Hathaway of MMAjunkie

With Overeem, the possibility of a knockout loss is always just one good strike away. Ten of his 15 career losses have come by way of knockout, but Werdum hasn’t knocked anyone out since Mark Hunt in 2014. 

It appears that Overeem is both motivated and has just a little more punch left in him than Werdum. That should be enough to make the difference in a bout between two of the biggest names in the division who have a score to settle. 

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UFC 213 Weigh-In Results

UFC 213 takes place on Saturday, July 8, 2017 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas Nevada. The prelims will air on UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET and FOX Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET. Five bouts including two title bouts will take place on the main card that will air on pay-per-view event […]

The post UFC 213 Weigh-In Results appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

UFC 213 takes place on Saturday, July 8, 2017 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas Nevada. The prelims will air on UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET and FOX Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET. Five bouts including two title bouts will take place on the main card that will air on pay-per-view event at  10 p.m. ET.

The event will be headlined by a UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship bout between current champion Amanda Nunes and multiple-time muay thai world champion Valentina Shevchenko. The pairing met previously in March 2016 at UFC 196, with Nunes winning by unanimous decision. An interim UFC Middleweight Championship bout between Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker will serve as the co-main event. Rounding out the main card is Fabricio Werdum vs. Alistair Overeem in a heavyweight bout, Daniel Omielanczuk vs. Curtis Blaydes in a heavyweight bout and Jim Miller vs. Anthony Pettis in a lightweight bout.

UFC officials held the weigh-ins for UFC 213 on Friday at noon ET and here are the weigh-in results:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Champ Amanda Nunes () vs. Valentina Shevchenko () – for women’s bantamweight title
  • Yoel Romero () vs. Robert Whittaker (184.5) – for interim middleweight title
  • Curtis Blaydes () vs. Daniel Omielanczuk ()
  • Alistair Overeem () vs. Fabricio Werdum ()
  • Jim Miller () vs. Anthony Pettis ()

PRELIMINARY CARD (FS1, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Travis Browne () vs. Aleksei Oleinik ()
  • Brian Camozzi () vs. Chad Laprise (170)
  • Gerald Meerschaert (184.5) vs. Thiago “Marreta” Santos ()
  • Jordan Mein (170) vs. Belal Muhammad ()

PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC Fight Pass, 6:30 p.m. ET)

  • Rob Font () vs. Douglas Silva de Andrade ()
  • Cody Stamann () vs. Terrion Ware ()
  • James Bochnovic () vs. Trevin Giles ()

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Valentina Shevchenko Plans on Putting Amanda Nunes in Her Place

Valentina Shevchenko is ready to put the talking behind her. She’ll challenge Amanda Nunes for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s bantamweight title this Saturday night (July 8) inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The title bout will headline UFC 213. Speaking to Flo Combat, “Bullet” said Nunes will be silenced on fight […]

Valentina Shevchenko is ready to put the talking behind her. She’ll challenge Amanda Nunes for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s bantamweight title this Saturday night (July 8) inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The title bout will headline UFC 213. Speaking to Flo Combat, “Bullet” said Nunes will be silenced on fight […]

UFC Champion Amanda Nunes Out to Prove She Can Keep Evolving

Amanda Nunes says she’ll show she can adapt inside the Octagon. This Saturday night (July 8), Nunes will defend her Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s bantamweight title against Valentina Shevchenko. The title bout takes place inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada and will headline UFC 213. During a recent appearance on the “UFC […]

Amanda Nunes says she’ll show she can adapt inside the Octagon. This Saturday night (July 8), Nunes will defend her Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s bantamweight title against Valentina Shevchenko. The title bout takes place inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada and will headline UFC 213. During a recent appearance on the “UFC […]

Amanda Nunes: I Have To Keep Winning & Put On A Show

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes has quietly established herself as a force to be reckoned with in the 135-pound division, although she hasn’t received as much attention as she likely deserves. The “Lioness” has picked up back-to-back stoppage victories over bantamweight greats Miesha Tate and Ronda Rousey, but she knows she has to ‘keep […]

The post Amanda Nunes: I Have To Keep Winning & Put On A Show appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes has quietly established herself as a force to be reckoned with in the 135-pound division, although she hasn’t received as much attention as she likely deserves.

The “Lioness” has picked up back-to-back stoppage victories over bantamweight greats Miesha Tate and Ronda Rousey, but she knows she has to ‘keep winning’ and keep putting ‘on a show’ in order to receive the recognition of a championship level fighter:

“Everybody knows how it was with the Ronda promo,” Nunes laughed. “I think I got more attention against Miesha than when I defended my belt, when I was champion. I got more attention when I was the challenger than when I was the champion,” she told UFC.com. “I still have to keep proving myself, I have to keep winning and put on a show. It’s not going to be easy — it takes time until people realize ‘she’s the real deal’ or whatever they’re gonna think. It’s long, but one day people will think I’m the best here.”

Nunes will once again headline a pay-per-view event during International Fight Week this year, as she’s set to rematch top contender Valentina Shevchenko in the main event of UFC 213 this weekend (July 8, 2017) from Las Vegas, Nevada. It’s just another step on the journey for Nunes, but that doesn’t seem to bother her:

“I think the thing that I have to show is that I can keep evolving and winning fights, but I’m okay with that,” she added. “My whole life has been like that. This thing doesn’t bother me because it is what it is. If you have to go through this, I’m stronger for going through this.”

Do you expect Nunes to continue her winning streak against Shevchenko?

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UFC 213: After Crushing Rousey and Tate, Amanda Nunes Fights for Legacy

Dating back to 2006, the UFC has circled the weekends surrounding Independence Day as among the most important of its annual calendar. Since then, the group of names that has headlined its pay-per-views during that time of year include a Who’s Who of U…

Dating back to 2006, the UFC has circled the weekends surrounding Independence Day as among the most important of its annual calendar. Since then, the group of names that has headlined its pay-per-views during that time of year include a Who’s Who of UFC greats and legends: Brock Lesnar, Anderson Silva, Conor McGregor, Tito Ortiz and Quinton Jackson, just to name a few. 

Among that group, Amanda Nunes‘ name looks somewhat out of place. Yet for the second year in a row, she will headline the key weekend. 

Nunes, the woman who battered Miesha Tate at last year’s Fourth of July weekend event and who retired Ronda Rousey with a one-sided whipping last December, gets the call to top-line the card once again.

In an era where champion’s reigns are remarkably short-lived, the current UFC bantamweight queen hopes to solidify a hold on a division that less than two years ago was synonymous with Rousey. In the process, she aims to polish her own legacy.

On paper, Nunes—who is facing Valentina Shevchenko at Saturday’s UFC 213—looks like an obvious winner. Not only is she riding the momentum of defeating two of the best-known female fighters ever in Tate and Rousey in back-to-back bouts, but she’s also bigger than Shevchenko and holds a victory over the challenger in a March 2016 bout.

That’s a lot trending in Nunes‘ direction, yet astute observers can’t help but flash back to the final five minutes of Nunes-Shevchenko I.

After 10 minutes of dominating the fight—a pair of judges even scored the second round 10-8 for Nunes—the Brazilian badly faded in the final round. She was rocked with a hard elbow, her strikes lost all steam, and her output cratered. By the end of the round, Shevchenko had outlanded her by a total of 41-3, according to FightMetric stats.

While Nunes (14-4) held on for a unanimous-decision victory on the strength of the first two rounds, her disastrous final stretch has cast a specter over her chances in the rematch, which is scheduled for five rounds. On some sports books, according to Oddsshark, Shevchenko (14-2) is even a slight favorite, with many onlookers believing a 25-minute championship fight will prove the difference. To that, Nunes scowls.

“I got tired in the round round and she showed up, but I beat her clean,” she said during Wednesday’s edition of UFC Tonight. “I was tired but she didn’t finish me. Imagine me when I’m ready for five rounds.”

It’s a fair position, if only there was some evidence in her late-round beliefs. Nunes has only been out of the first round in four of her last 11 bouts. One was the disastrous third with Shevchenko. In the others, she lost via TKO to Alexis Davis in the second round, via decision to Sarah D’Alelio, and via submission to Cat Zingano in the third.

And in both the Davis and Zingano fights, she suffered the same kind of unraveling as against Shevchenko, winning the first round big and then getting mauled thereafter. To boot, in Round 2 against Davis, she was outlanded by a ludicrous 76 strikes, while in the last two rounds of her fight with Zingano, she was outlanded 79-4.

That’s an indefensible trend with indefensible numbers for a UFC champion, and if Nunes hasn’t fixed her stamina issues, Shevchenko will probably add to the narrative that the Brazilian is a one-round wonder.

Alternatively, Nunes offers Shevchenko plenty to worry about. She is unquestionably the most powerful striker in the bantamweight division, with four UFC knockoutsthe most in divisional history.

Nunes‘ success has largely come on the strength of her power, often arriving in sharp barrages. As a complementary skill, she also boasts a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt. Along with her impressive athleticism, that combination offers many chances at victory for her. 

Legacies are made of successes, yes, but they are also the byproduct of careful moment-by-moment, in-fight decision-making. For Nunes, she has to determine whether to follow her usual aggression or pull back and pace herself for the long haul. If she goes for an early finish and doesn’t get it, she may not have enough gas to go the distance. If she is overly cautious, she might put herself in the hole on judges’ scorecards.

The result hangs in the balance. Since July 2011 when Tate won the Strikeforce bantamweight title, she and Rousey have been involved in every single Strikeforce/UFC title bout.

That run is now over. Does that make Nunes the face of women’s MMA?

“I’m the champion. I have to be,” she said during a recent media conference call. “I’ve proved myself. I got the belt at UFC 200 and I defended against Ronda Rousey. I’m the most dominant in the division. I think I am, and I will keep proving it until people understand I’m here to stay, and I will do it. This is my next step, Valentina. I will keep it going.”

To do that, she must figure out herself on the way to figuring out Shevchenko. This is not so easy to do. As indestructible as she currently looks, that stamina is a hole in the same way that Rousey‘s striking defense was. It can either be repaired or exploited.

With Rousey and Tate in her rearview mirror, Nunes has already dispatched arguably the two most famous female MMA fighters ever. Now she is fighting for legacy. Now she is fighting herself.

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