Claudia Gadelha Expects To Receive Title Shot If She Beats Jessica Andrade

Claudia Gadelha knows what she wants, which is UFC gold. However, she knows following her win at UFC 212, she knows that it wasn’t time for a new title shot just yet. Gadelha (15-2) is coming off a quick submission win over former title challenger Karolina Kowalkiewicz at UFC 212. Prior to that fight, she […]

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Claudia Gadelha knows what she wants, which is UFC gold. However, she knows following her win at UFC 212, she knows that it wasn’t time for a new title shot just yet.

Gadelha (15-2) is coming off a quick submission win over former title challenger Karolina Kowalkiewicz at UFC 212. Prior to that fight, she had beaten Cortney Casey, which puts her at 2-0 since a failed five-round title beat down by current champ Joanna Jedrzejczyk at last July’s TUF 23 Finale.

Now, she is set to take on Jessica Andrade at UFC Fight Night 117. With this upcoming bout and possibility of winning the bout, Gadelha is hoping that this one will do the trick.

“I think that, getting past Jessica, I won’t have anything else to prove to anyone,” Gadelha told MMAjunkie. “I had two close fights with Joanna. If I don’t deserve that title shot, I don’t think anyone else does.”

A second title fight with the champion wouldn’t necessarily mean a trilogy with JedrzejczykThe promotion has already scheduled the UFC 217 bout between Jedrzejczyk, and Rose Namajunas could see the UFC’s 125-pound belt changing hands on Nov. 4.

“I think Rose doesn’t stand a chance against Joanna,” Gadelha said. I’m coming off a win, so I’d rather be fighting someone who was also coming off a win,” Gadelha said.

Gadelha had two things that she wanted to do on her mind. One of them was to stay active and the second thing was to fight in Japan, which she will accomplish.

“All the respect, the hierarchy – that’s very important to me,” Gadelha said. “I wanted to fight in Japan one day. And since (the UFC doesn’t) go there every day – or even every year – I wanted to be on this card, so I asked for it.”

Despite her desire to compete, Gadelha had to wait for the promotion to line her up with her next opponent. With six weeks to go before the event, no one had accepted the challenge. Thus, she had to take action and book a fight for herself via social media.

“It’s a soap opera at this point, but I think Carla Esparza and I should fight,” Gadelha said. “I think this fight should happen. I’ve been waiting for this opportunity. I also even thought about Felice (Herrig), who’s coming off a few wins. I did want to fight someone coming off a win. But then nobody said yes, only Jessica.”

“I don’t know what goes on with her,” Gadelha said. “I don’t think she’s professional. I think she fights more for the money. She has no goals in the division. She was the champion once, but I think she got very lax. She fights for the sake of it. She doesn’t really want anything, she has no objectives in there.”

“I’m waking up when I would be waking up there, sleeping when I should be sleeping there, and training when I should be fighting there,” Gadelha said. “This is what’s been very productive in my training: I can move around my coaches and the people who help out in my camp so it all revolves around me.”

UFC Fight Night 117 takes place on Friday, September 23, 2017 at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. The event will be the fifth that the promotion has hosted in Saitama, and first since UFC Fight Night: Barnett vs. Nelson in September 2015.

“Jessica has some good physical characteristics: She’s very strong, she’s got a lot of heart, and she moves forward against her opponents,” Gadelha said. “I think we have similar physical features, as I’m also one of the strongest in the division.

“But I don’t think she’s a very technical fighter. I think she lacks a lot in that department, and that’s where I have to work.”

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Claudia Gadelha Set To Make Return At UFC Fight Night 117

A new bout has been added to UFC Fight Night 117. It appears that if you take matchmaking into your own hands, it seems to pay off. UFC strawweights Claudia Gadelha and Jessica Andrade recently did this on social media. After Gadelha issued an Instagram challenge to Andrade, who accepted it, Combate.com confirms that the […]

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A new bout has been added to UFC Fight Night 117. It appears that if you take matchmaking into your own hands, it seems to pay off. UFC strawweights Claudia Gadelha and Jessica Andrade recently did this on social media.

After Gadelha issued an Instagram challenge to Andrade, who accepted it, Combate.com confirms that the bout is on. According to their report, the two fighters are set to fight each other at the upcoming event.

Gadelha (15-2) is coming off a quick submission win over former title challenger Karolina Kowalkiewicz, at last month’s UFC 212. Prior to that fight, she had beaten Cortney Casey, which puts her at 2-0 since a failed five-round title beat down by current champ Joanna Jedrzejczyk at last July’s TUF 23 Finale.

On the flip side, Andrade (16-6) is coming off her own unsuccessful stab at Jedrzejczyk’s belt, at UFC 211. The setback snapped the three fight streak that Andrade.

The event is set to take place on Friday, Sept. 22 at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan, near Tokyo. Mauricio Rua vs. Ovince Saint Preux in a light heavyweight bout is set to headline this event. Although the broadcast details and lineup has yet to be finalized, here is the updated card:

Mauricio Rua vs. Ovince Saint Preux

Jussier Formiga vs. Ulka Sasaki

Henrique da Silva vs. Gokhan Saki

Chan-Mi Jeon vs. Syuri Kondo

Claudia Gadelha vs. Jessica Andrade

 

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Jessica Andrade: ‘Defeat is Part of The Game, It’s Learning’

Jessica Andrade is taking her championship loss in stride. Andrade fell short in her Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) title bout against strawweight ruler Joanna Jedrzejczyk. “Bate Estaca” lost the bout by unanimous decision last month at UFC 211. Speaking to the media, Andrade said she’s dusted herself off and refuses to dwell on the loss […]

Jessica Andrade is taking her championship loss in stride. Andrade fell short in her Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) title bout against strawweight ruler Joanna Jedrzejczyk. “Bate Estaca” lost the bout by unanimous decision last month at UFC 211. Speaking to the media, Andrade said she’s dusted herself off and refuses to dwell on the loss […]

Joanna Jedrzejczyk: I’m On Another Level Now

Joanna Jedrzejczyk is the most dominant female champion in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, and at the rate she’s progressing, she’s on track to possibly becoming the best of all time. In the co-main event of last night’s (Sat. May 13, 2017) UFC 211 pay-per-view (PPV) from Dallas, Jedrzejczyk took home a lopsided unanimous decision win

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Joanna Jedrzejczyk is the most dominant female champion in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, and at the rate she’s progressing, she’s on track to possibly becoming the best of all time.

In the co-main event of last night’s (Sat. May 13, 2017) UFC 211 pay-per-view (PPV) from Dallas, Jedrzejczyk took home a lopsided unanimous decision win over No. 3-ranked Jessica Andrade for her fifth consecutive 115-pound title defense. “Joanna Champion” put on one of the best performances of her career, as it marked her second fight training under newly-joined coaches at American Top Team.

During the post-fight press conference, Jedrzejczy stated that she believes her performance against her Brazilian counterpart was the best of her career, and the work she has been putting in over at American Top Team is a large part of it (quotes via MMA Fighting):

“Yes, I think so, even if I’m getting older,” Jedrzejczyk said at the UFC 211 post-fight conference. “I feel this fire, and I want to learn. Since I moved to American Top Team, I feel like I’m the bird that got to escape from its cage, if you know that meaning. I’m very hard on myself everyday, you can ask my coaches, and after a good training session, I’m not happy because I know I can do better or change something to do better, you know? That’s why I keep on defending this belt.”

Jedrzejczy is still undefeated in her MMA career with 14 straight wins. She defeated inaugural strawweight champion Carla Esparza via second round TKO to win the title before taking out the likes of Jessica Penne, Valerie Letourneau, Claudia Gadelha, Karolina Kowalkiewicz, and now Andrade to defend her title.

Photo by Jerome Miron for USA TODAY Sports

It’s expected that Jedrzejczy’s next challenger will be No. 4-ranked Rose Namajunas, but regardless if that’s the case or now, the Polish knockout artist remains prepared to take on any and all challengers who threaten her reign as queen at 115 pounds:

“Before my last fight at Madison Square Garden, I only had six, seven weeks to work with my new coaches and team,” Jedrzejczyk said. “It wasn’t enough, but I think we still put on great work. This time we definitely had more time, and I’m very happy. I feel like I stepped on a different level and I’m looking forward to it. I (will) go on vacations for a few days to fly back to Poland to spend some time with my family, but I can’t wait to get back to ATT and put in work again with my team.

“I don’t know who’s going to be my next opponent right now,” Jedrzejczyk added. “I’m happy about this fight and I’m looking forward to spend some time with my fiancé and my family. I will have some vacations, and after that, I will think about my next fight. I don’t care who’s my next opponent, I will put on great work and defend this title for a sixth time.”

Joanna Jedrzejczyk
Image Credit: Jerome Miron for USA TODAY Sports

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After Record-Setting Win, Joanna Champion Needs Ronda Rousey-Style Push from UFC

Joanna Jedrzejczyk threw more than 350 strikes at Jessica Andrade Saturday at UFC 211, according to the official Fightmetric statistics for their bout.
Not all those shots landed, of course—but, boy, it sure seemed that way.
When the smoke cleare…

Joanna Jedrzejczyk threw more than 350 strikes at Jessica Andrade Saturday at UFC 211, according to the official Fightmetric statistics for their bout.

Not all those shots landed, of course—but, boy, it sure seemed that way.

When the smoke cleared on another record-setting performance by Jedrzejczyk, the UFC strawweight champion had earned a five-round, shutout victory over the hard-charging Andrade (50-45, 50-44, 50-45).

It was nothing short of masterful, and the typically reserved Jedrzejczyk let the MMA world hear about it when she was done.

“There is only one strawweight champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk of Poland. Remember that,” she declared to UFC color commentator Joe Rogan inside the cage. “No one is taking this belt from me. Nobody.”

The win moved the woman nicknamed Joanna Champion to within one fight of tying Ronda Rousey’s mark of six consecutive title defenses. Jedrzejczyk will likely get that chance later this year against popular contender Rose Namajunas, in what could be the biggest matchup the 115-pound division has produced in its short history.

Against Andrade, Jedrzejczyk also broke her own records for leg kicks (75) and strike differential (+141), while out-landing the 25-year-old Brazilian 215-74.

The lasting impression was that Jedrzejczyk remains leaps ahead of the next-best competition. With a 14-0 overall record, eight straight wins in the UFC and victories over each of the division’s Top Three-ranked challengers, it’s unclear who can come along to rival her.

If the UFC is looking for a new heir to invest a Rousey-level promotional push in, it may as well call off the hunt.

Jedrzejczyk is the complete package. As new UFC ownership at WME-IMG continues to scrounge for fresh faces to build into a new generation of stars, she seems the most obvious and deserving choice.

The 29-year-old Poland native has too much speed, skill and tenacity for her contemporaries. Her performances in the cage routinely earn wide-eyed praise from all corners, as evidenced by the outpouring of social media love she earned by so easily dispatching Andrade.

The media is on board:

Former opponents can’t help but marvel:

Even the UFC’s biggest star is a fan:

Outside the Octagon, Jedrzejczyk possesses a quirky charisma that also makes her an easy sell to the sport’s hardcore fanbase. If the UFC awarded her with the full might of the public relations blitz it once bestowed on Rousey, it’s possible the flicker of excitement she’s engendered inside the MMA bubble might spread into a good-sized blaze outside it.

Jedrzejczyk is not Rousey, obviously, and it’s difficult to believe she could ever enjoy quite the same level of mainstream acclaim. But if the world’s largest MMA promoter is in as desperate need of new draws as we’ve been led to believe through the first four-and-a-half months of 2017, there may be no better candidate on the roster.

Like Rousey, Jedrzejczyk’s dominance in her first handful of title defenses has been staggering, though in a distinctly different way. While Rousey’s Olympic-level judo skills manifested in a series of quick and easy first-round submissions, Jedrzejczyk uses pinpoint kickboxing skills and next-generation footwork to whittle her opponents down over 25 minutes.

You can’t fit her fights into an Instagram video, but the complete picture is just as awe-inspiring and arguably more interesting than what Rousey used to offer. So far, it also hasn’t left consumers feeling cheated or like she’s being artificially propped up by her fight company bosses.

While Rousey occasionally felt like a reflection of what UFC ownership wanted women’s MMA to look and act like, Jedrzejczyk’s rise has been more authentic. She’s shaped the UFC strawweight division in her own image, not the other way around.

Jedrzejczyk sprang from obscurity when she defeated Carla Esparza to win the strawweight title at UFC 185 in March 2015. Over the course of the next two years, her greatness has revealed itself without a lot of obtrusive meddling from the UFC.

She is once again a reminder that you seldom get to pick your superstars in this unpredictable sport. As a promoter, you get who you get and you make the best of it.

And Jedrzejczyk is nothing if not the best.

All her greatest qualities—her unassuming charm, endearing pre-fight antics and cold-blooded, snowballing offense—were well on display this weekend against Andrade.

Jedrzejczyk began by feeding Andrade a steady diet of leg kicks and jabs, but by the second round, her relentless attack began to diversify. The jab slowly blossomed into full-fledged and dizzying punching combinations. Her low kicks spread up the legs, morphing into thudding knees to Andrade‘s midsection and, eventually, whipping kicks that paint-brushed across the side of the challenger’s head.

Andrade was the shorter but obviously more powerful fighter, and she had been impressive in three straight wins since dropping to strawweight from bantamweight in June 2016. Against Jedrzejczyk, however, her might was outgunned by sheer technical brilliance.

To her credit, Andrade never stopped charging forward, trying to turn the bout into a brawl with winging power punches. When she did manage to connect, she did damage—raising a welt above Jedrzejczyk’s right eye in the first round that got increasingly worse as the fight wore on.

But soon enough it was clear that Andrade’s bull-rush attack was all she had to offer, and it wasn’t going to be enough. Jedrzejczyk was too fleet of foot, too good at reversing position when Andrade forced a clinch and too adept at maneuvering out of her takedown attempts.

To date, nobody has had an answer for the rising tide of punishment the champion dishes out during her fights.

In July, Jedrzejczyk foiled the grappling-based attack of Claudia Gadelha.

Four months later at UFC 205, she bested Karolina Kowalkiewicz’s striking game.

Saturday at UFC 211, she systematically wore down and dashed Andrade’s brute force assault.

If there is a woman or a style in her division that can beat her, we haven’t seen it yet—and perhaps that more than anything makes her worthy of a stratospheric push from the UFC.

With Namajunas likely on deck—bringing her own unique appeal and a good deal of interest from MMA fans—the time is now to see how high Jedrzejczyk can fly.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Joanna J?drzejczyk vs. Jessica Andrade Full Fight Video Highlights

In the co-main event from last night’s (Sat. May 13, 2017) UFC 211 pay-per-view (PPV), UFC strawweight champion Joanna Jędrzejczyk attempted to make her fifth consecutive title defense against heavy-hitting No. 3-ranked contender Jessica Andrade. Jędrzejczyk came into the fight on a 13-fight win streak as she is undefeated in her mixed martial arts (MMA) career.

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In the co-main event from last night’s (Sat. May 13, 2017) UFC 211 pay-per-view (PPV), UFC strawweight champion Joanna J?drzejczyk attempted to make her fifth consecutive title defense against heavy-hitting No. 3-ranked contender Jessica Andrade.

J?drzejczyk came into the fight on a 13-fight win streak as she is undefeated in her mixed martial arts (MMA) career. Andrade was riding a three-fight win streak since her 115-pound debut; defeating the likes of Jessica Penne, Joanna Calderwood, and Angela Hill in dominant fashion.

“Joanna Champion” landed a plethora of leg kicks and and high kicks throughout the course of the 25-minute bout and was able to out-class her Brazilian counterpart on the feet overall. The Polish knockout artist also showed great movement and elusiveness en-route to a unanimous decision victory over Andrade, solidifying herself as the most dominant female champion in the UFC today.

J?drzejczyk’s next title challenger has yet to be determined, however, it is expected that No. 4-ranked Rose Namajunas will get the honors after her dominant win over Michelle Waterson.

You can check out the full fight video highlights from J?drzejczyk’s title defense here:

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