The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale: Live Results, Play-by-Play and Card Highlights

The Ultimate Fighter 18 capped off a busy November for the UFC, and Nate Diaz ended things with a bang, stopping rival Gray Maynard in the first round of their main event showdown.
Beyond Diaz’s triumph, The Ultimate Fighter 18 finale wa…

The Ultimate Fighter 18 capped off a busy November for the UFC, and Nate Diaz ended things with a bang, stopping rival Gray Maynard in the first round of their main event showdown.

Beyond Diaz’s triumph, The Ultimate Fighter 18 finale was an historic event for its crowning of the first ever female TUF champion, namely Julianna Pena.

For results from the entire card, take a look below. For a play-by-play recap of the action, scroll to the bottom of the page.

TUF 18 Main Card on Fox Sports 1

  • Nate Diaz def. Gray Maynard, TKO (Round 1, 2:38)
  • Julianna Pena def. Jessica Rakoczy, TKO (Round 1, 4:59)
  • Chris Holdsworth def. Davey Grant, Submission (Round 2, 2:10)
  • Jessamyn Duke def. Peggy Morgan, Unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Raquel Pennington def. Roxanne Modaferri, Unanimous decision (30-27, 20-27, 29-28)

 

Prelims on Fox Sports 1

  • Akira Corassani def. Maximo Blanco, Disqualification for illegal knee (Round 1, 0:25)
  • Tom Niinimaki def. Rani Yahya, Split decision (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)
  • Jared Rosholt def. Walter Harris, Unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Sean Spencer def. Drew Dober, Unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

 

Facebook Prelims

  • Josh Sampo def. Ryan Benoit, Submission (Round 2, 4:31)

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TUF 18 Finale: Live Streaming Weigh-In Video

On Saturday, the UFC will crown two more winners of its reality show, The Ultimate Fighter.
Season 18 will reach its conclusion over the weekend on a fight card headlined by former TUF winner Nate Diaz and TUF contestant Gray M…

On Saturday, the UFC will crown two more winners of its reality show, The Ultimate Fighter.

Season 18 will reach its conclusion over the weekend on a fight card headlined by former TUF winner Nate Diaz and TUF contestant Gray Maynard. In the main event, the slumping Top-10 lightweights will battle to return to the win column.

Finalists in the first ever female TUF competition include Julianna Pena and Jessica Rakoczy. History will be made when one has their hand raised on Saturday. In the men’s bantamweight final, Chris Holdsworth will meet David Grant.

The TUF 18 finale weigh-ins will be held on Friday at 7 p.m. EST. At that time, live streaming video will be available on the above video player.

Below is the entire fight card for the TUF 18 finale, which will take place at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas.

 

TUF 18 Finale Main Card (10 p.m. EST on Fox Sports 1)

  • Gray Maynard vs. Nate Diaz
  • Julianna Pena vs. Jessica Rakoczy
  • Chris Holdsworth vs. David Grant
  • Jessamyn Duke vs. Margaret Morgan
  • Roxanne Modafferi vs. Raquel Pennington

 

TUF 18 Finale Fox Sports 1 Prelims (8 p.m EST on Fox Sports 1)

  • Akira Corassani vs. Maximo Blanco
  • Rani Yahya vs. Tom Niinimaki
  • Jared Rosholt vs. Walt Harris
  • Sean Spencer vs. Drew Dober

 

TUF 18 Finale Online Prelims (7:30 p.m EST on UFC.com)

  • Josh Sampo vs. Ryan Benoit

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Shane Del Rosario Taken off Life Support, Breathing on His Own

UPDATE: Saturday, November 30 at 8:05pm ET
Sources close to Del Rosario told Bleacher Report that the fighter was removed from life support on Friday night, and as of Saturday evening, he is breathing on his own and has shown encouraging signs. Brain a…

UPDATE: Saturday, November 30 at 8:05pm ET

Sources close to Del Rosario told Bleacher Report that the fighter was removed from life support on Friday night, and as of Saturday evening, he is breathing on his own and has shown encouraging signs. Brain activity has been registered, and Del Rosario also squeezed his mother’s hand on Saturday morning.

Here’s an update from Sherdog.com with comments from Del Rosario’s training partner and friend, Erik Apple: 

Hospitalized UFC heavyweight Shane del Rosario is now off life support and breathing on his own, according to friend and training partner Erik Apple.

Sherdog.com confirmed the news with Apple via text message on Saturday afternoon. Ross Finkelstein initially posted a tweet on Saturday indicating that del Rosario had also registered brain activity and squeezed his mother’s hand, and Apple verified that both statements were true.

Though the news is encouraging, Apple also relayed that del Rosario, who suffered cardiac arrest on Tuesday, is still very much in a fight for his life.

“All of these are positive signs. However, we just have to be patient and wait,” Apple told Sherdog. “These are not definitive signs. They could mean something, or they could mean nothing.”

Stay tuned for the latest developments in Del Rosario’s story. 

 —End of Update—

Ultimate Fighting Championship heavyweight Shane Del Rosario remains on life support after suffering what doctors termed a “catastrophic cardiovascular collapse” at his California home on Tuesday.

Del Rosario was not responsive when discovered by his roommate and friend Ian McCall on Tuesday morning. McCall, who fights in the UFC’s flyweight division and trained with Del Rosario at Colin Oyama’s gym, called 911 and administered CPR. 

On Wednesday evening, doctors at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach, Calif., used the Arctic Sun Treatment System on Del Rosario. The system is designed to induce a hypothermic state in the body that reportedly can help restart damaged organs and restore brain function. 

Oyama provided more detailed specifics via text to Josh Gross of ESPN.com:

His body is coming around physically, his organs are slowly coming back online. Now they are working on getting his brain to kick in. They have begun to raise his core temperature in hopes that his brain will activate after approximately 15-24 hours.

Sources close to Del Rosario confirmed to Bleacher Report that he still had no brain function when the Arctic Sun treatment was completed.

Del Rosario, 30, remained on life support on Thursday, even as erroneous reports of his death began circulating via social media. The family decided to keep him on life support in the hopes of a “miracle” occurring and were planning to make what was described as a “final decision” on Friday morning.

Del Rosario was born and raised in Southern California, where he began training as a fighter at 17 years old with Marco Ruas. He became a world champion kickboxer before transitioning to mixed martial arts and made his MMA debut in 2006 for the King of the Cage promotion. He ran up an undefeated record for KOTC, M-1 and Strikeforce before a car accident left him badly injured in 2011. He was out of action for over a year but eventually returned to the cage.

Del Rosario signed with the UFC in May 2012 but lost two consecutive fights to Stipe Miocic and Pat Barry. He was expected to return in July against Dave Herman, but an injury forced him to withdraw from the bout. He was booked to return yet again at December’s UFC 168 event, but a rib injury forced him to withdraw.

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Julianna Pena: Ronda Rousey Is ‘Pretentious’ and a ‘Spoiled Rich Brat’

One of the finalists for season 18 of The Ultimate Fighter, Julianna Pena, is known for telling it how it is, and that didn’t change during an appearance on FOX Sports Live Wednesday.
When asked what “bugs her the most” about UFC bantamweight cham…

One of the finalists for season 18 of The Ultimate Fighter, Julianna Pena, is known for telling it how it is, and that didn’t change during an appearance on FOX Sports Live Wednesday.

When asked what “bugs her the most” about UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, “The Venezuelan Vixen” had a very straightforward answer. 

“I think what bugs me the most would be just her all-around pretentious attitude, and I feel like she’s just a spoiled rich brat, and uh, that’s what I think.” 

Pena was on upcoming title challenger Miesha Tate’s team during this season of TUF, which was apparently a good thing since “Rowdy” clearly rubbed the 24-year-old prospect the wrong way. 

The submission ace earned her spot in the finals by tapping out heavy favorite Shayna Baszler with a rear-naked choke in the elimination round and then avenging a TKO loss to Sarah Moras in the semifinals, locking up a guillotine choke to end the bout.

Pena faces off against feared striker Jessica Rakoczy in the series finale Saturday night, who competes for a six-figure UFC contract after decisive victories over Roxanne Modafferi and Raquel Pennington. 

This isn’t the first time Pena has put Rousey on blast, stating that Rousey doesn’t know how to lose gracefully after Episode 6 aired last month, per MMA Fighting

TUF 18 was the first season of the reality show that featured female competitors and leaves the door open for an all female cast at some point in the future. 

A trilogy bout between Gray Maynard and Nate Diaz headlines the TUF 18 Finale tomorrow night, which airs as a free broadcast on FOX Sports 1. 

Is Pena’s recent bashing of Rousey a fair assessment of the dominant women’s champ, or is she just trying to create a little more hype around herself for her first official UFC fight?

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA Editor for eDraft.com.

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Roxanne Modafferi vs. Raquel Pennington Booked for TUF 18 Finale

Jessamyn Duke and Peggy Morgan aren’t the only ladies who lost on The Ultimate Fighter Season 18 who will still get some time in the spotlight at the Finale this Saturday. Fan favorite Roxanne Modafferi and semifinalist Raquel Pennington will squa…

Jessamyn Duke and Peggy Morgan aren’t the only ladies who lost on The Ultimate Fighter Season 18 who will still get some time in the spotlight at the Finale this Saturday. Fan favorite Roxanne Modafferi and semifinalist Raquel Pennington will square off in the main card’s first fight.

B/R’s own Jeremy Botter broke the story on Twitter:

That translates to all eight ladies who made it to the house this season getting an official fight in the UFC.

Raquel Pennington faced off with Jessamyn Duke to advance to the semifinals with a unanimous-decision victory. The fight was heralded as one of the best bouts in the history of the long-running reality series. However, she would go on to drop a unanimous decision to Jessica Rakoczy, who will face off with Julianna Pena in the finals.

Modafferi lost in her first bout in the house to Rakoczy, who knocked her out in the second round. However, “The Happy Warrior” is a true pioneer in women’s MMA who has fought many of the best women in the sport and previously challenged Sarah Kaufman for the Strikeforce women’s bantamweight belt.

The fight is an intriguing stylistic matchup. Modafferi is a strong Brazilian jiu-jitsu practitioner and has years of experience against high-level competition. Pennington, meanwhile, owns potent hands and a solid ground game of her own.

Just two women don’t have a bout lined up in the Finale, Shayna Baszler and Sarah Moras. Both ladies are currently nursing injuries that made them unavailable (though Baszler will be cornering Duke in her fight). However, they will likely face off with each other at some point in the future.

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TUF 18: Jessamyn Duke Fighter Blog, Episode 13

This is it…the final episode! They saved the ladies fight for the last episode (even though it was actually the first semifinal fight that happened, so seeing things go down in this order on the show was kind of weird). And we were rewarded with tech…

This is it…the final episode! They saved the ladies fight for the last episode (even though it was actually the first semifinal fight that happened, so seeing things go down in this order on the show was kind of weird). And we were rewarded with technical striking match between two great fighters. 

My thoughts going into this fight were very mixed. Raquel and I had fought barely two weeks prior, and for both of us, the damage of that battle was only just starting to heal. I knew that Raquel was banged up from our fight, She was struggling with some injuries, and they were affecting her training. I also knew that Jessica Rakoczy was still nursing an injury she received in her fight to get in the house that had affected her training from Day 1.

This made things interesting when it comes to the fight. It made it more of a mental thing.

Almost every fighter that steps into the cage on fight day is dealing with some sort of injury. Sometimes, injuries are minor; sometimes, they are major, but it’s part of the sport. With experience, you learn how to deal with those obstacles and train to your full potential. 

Physically, I felt that Raquel had the advantage in this fight. On the ground, I felt that she had the advantage. Standing, I felt that Rakoczy had the advantage. She may be one of the smaller 135ers, but she’s a professional boxer with almost 40 fights and eight world titles. She hits hard, hits fast and has superb accuracy.

However, this advantage can be taken away by a fighter who has superior wrestling and ground work, and I was sure that Raquel’s strategy going into this fight would be to take it to the ground right away and just smother Rakoczy. We worked a lot with Jessica on getting back to her feet, defending the takedown and using her superior speed and footwork to keep the fight in the range she wanted.

That’s exactly what she did. 

Jessica made Raquel fight in her range and on her rhythm. She was calm and composed and never lost focus. Despite having a serious shoulder injury, she went out there and fought exactly the fight she needed to to win. She never let the fact that she could barely throw her right hand affect her strategy and her composure going into the match.

This is where I felt like Raquel struggled. She was injured and hesitant, which affected her performance. This isn’t to say that if Raquel hadn’t been injured that she would have necessarily won the fight, but it certainly played into the fact that she clearly wasn’t fighting like herself that day. 

I couldn’t have been more proud or happy for Jessica. She truly deserves this, and Ronda Rousey wasn’t kidding when she said that Rakoczy was the most improved fighter on the show. It was an amazing thing to see a fighter with so much experience and seasoning still find ways to grow and evolve. 

So that leaves us with the first overall pick fighting the last overall pick for the title of the first female Ultimate Fighter. Call me biased, but I believe 100 percent that Jessica Rakoczy is going to beat Julianna Pena and take that title on Saturday night.

She’s a better striker than Pena in all aspects. I also think that her ground game is severely underrated. She’s scrappy and never stops moving, and she’s had many months to prepare for this fight in optimum conditions. Her experience will help her here. She knows exactly what she needs to do to win this fight and what it takes to be a champion.

So you heard it here first—get on the #TeamRakoczy train right now and be prepared to see history in the making as she becomes the first female Ultimate Fighter. 

Not only that, but you will get to see yours truly make an official UFC debut! It was announced on Monday that I’m fighting Peggy Morgan on the main card of the finale.

This is a matchup that I’m extremely excited for. I actually thought I was going to have to fight Peggy to get into the house. When we both won our elimination fights, I thought, “We will definitely fight on the show,” and then we ended up on the same team. After Peggy and I lost our preliminary fights in the house, we actually had a conversation one morning over coffee about how we both had a strong feeling we would be fighting each other on the finale. 

Peggy and I are homies. We trained together every day. Because of our size, it was convenient for us to be regular training partners. We lived together for six weeks. Cut weight together. Slept in beds right next to each other. As I’ve said before, everyone on Team Rousey bonded during our experience on the show.

We were a family.

When we all talked about getting the “Every Single Second” tattoo after the show, Peggy and I were the first to get them as soon as we got home. We even got them in the same spot: a script band around our forearms.

However, we are also both fighters. We have the same dream and goals in this sport. I would rather fight people I like. I feel like it brings out the best in you. Anger and hate don’t cloud your performance. Peggy and I were friends before this fight, and we will be friends after, and I have nothing but respect for dear Pegatron.

I know that she’s going to bring her very best against me, and I’m going to do the same. But make no mistake: We are both coming for blood on Saturday night.

 

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through a one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.

**Tune in Saturday to watch the live conclusion of The Ultimate Fighter 18. Also, we at Bleacher Report would like to thank Jessamyn Duke for partnering with us to produce this excellent series of reflections on the show!

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