Four Reasons Ronda Rousey Needs To Change Camps

Former UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey suffered a harrowing knockout loss against Holly Holm at UFC 193, one that sent her in to a tailspin of depression and negative media for the months following. Having lived the life of the most dominant champion in the division’s history, overnight ‘Rowdy’ fell in to a pit

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Former UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey suffered a harrowing knockout loss against Holly Holm at UFC 193, one that sent her in to a tailspin of depression and negative media for the months following. Having lived the life of the most dominant champion in the division’s history, overnight ‘Rowdy’ fell in to a pit of despair that she would not emerge from until last month. It’s important amidst all the criticism over Rousey’s attitude to remember she is human, just like the rest of us.

The persona we see in UFC promo cuts and media sessions is not necessarily an accurate depiction of the real Ronda Rousey, and I feel the circumstances surrounding UFC 193 go much deeper than it appears. The common MMA fan might tell you that she was simply a hype train that got derailed, beating ‘lesser’ competition in a division devoid of real talent. In reality, the women’s 135 pound division needs a boost, that’s true, but this isn’t a tool to take away a champ’s achievements. The loss to Holm leaves one clear message to consider; Ronda Rousey needs to change camps.

Here’s why:

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Improvement, or the illusion of

Rousey came in to the UFC 193 main event intent on destroying Holly Holm in the stand up department, but for some reason was overlooking the former boxing great’s own striking skills. For a fighter like Rousey, only really focusing on boxing for three years, to take on a thorough bred pugilist like ‘The Preacher’s Daughter’ head on like that, there’s really something wrong there. Completely abandoning the bread and butter grappling style that got her to the belt in the first place, Rousey was like a lamb to the slaughter, and it was certainly a rough night down under.

Her stand up was always going to look amateur against a great boxer and kickboxer like Holm, but it wasn’t just down to her opponents skill advantage. Everything about Rousey’s stand up was wrong, her footwork, lack of head movement, inability to cut angles or close off her opponent’s movement, her hand position, her range, her lack of head movement. In reality, she had absolutely zero fundamentals, not even the basics, to show Holly Holm that night in Melbourne, Australia. At some point, you have to look at who is training her to use these techniques, who is telling her that this is how you fight.

Which leads quite nicely to the next point.

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Miesha Tate: I’m More Challenging Than Ronda, I Can Take Punches

UFC women’s bantamweight contender has a warning for her next opponent, the champion Holly Holm is in for an explosive battle according to ‘Cupcake’…. It’s strange how things turned out for UFC & Strikeforce veteran Miesha Tate in the current bantamweight title picture, and she owes a lot of it to Ronda Rousey. Up until

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UFC women’s bantamweight contender has a warning for her next opponent, the champion Holly Holm is in for an explosive battle according to ‘Cupcake’….

It’s strange how things turned out for UFC & Strikeforce veteran Miesha Tate in the current bantamweight title picture, and she owes a lot of it to Ronda Rousey. Up until UFC 194, Tate was being overlooked for a title shot, even though her recent run of form had included impressive wins over Sara McMann, Rin Nakai, Liz Carmouche and Jessica Eye.Then came the infamous ‘plunder down under,’ as Holm captured the title from Rousey with a monstrous head kick knockout.

All of a sudden ‘Cupcake’ was in with a chance at another title fight, having stumbled in her rematch with Rousey at UFC 168. Then ‘Rowdy’ revealed she’d be taking some time off to pursue her acting career, and that was the deciding moment for Tate. It wasn’t long before she was paired with Holm for a UFC 196 collision, in a bout that has many intriguing qualities.

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Tate spoke with FOX Sports lately to describe how she’s a bigger challenge than former champion Ronda Rousey:

“I’m not like Ronda at all in my fighting style. I present different challenges and I have a lot more ring experience and I’ve been battle tested. I’m definitely a battle-tested veteran. I know I can take a punch to give a punch and I don’t fear the clock.”

“I don’t care if it takes me 24 minutes and 59 seconds to win that fight, I will be…

Continue to page 2 for the rest of the interview…

miesha tate odds

“I don’t care if it takes me 24 minutes and 59 seconds to win that fight, I will be in it to win it. I will be patient when I need to be patient, I will be explosive when I need to be explosive, I will be calculated and precise and I will do exactly what I need to do to win this fight.”

Tate says she is a clear step up in competition for Holm and her Jackson’s MMA camp, and a choice they’ll live to regret:

“I think they’re going to regret the decision after the fact,” Tate confidently explained. “Like ‘man, we really wanted to step up, we wanted to prove the we’re the best in the world as champion,’ but I’m going to spoil those plans.”

“They know this is a huge step up in competition. They know that stylistically, I think everyone believes that I’m a more challenging style for Holly. I present different problems.”

Ronda Rousey Knocked Out By Holly Holm at UFC 193 | The Big Lead

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