UFC 195 Could Make Joanna Jedrzejczyk Household Name Nobody Can Pronounce

There’s an interesting little subplot brewing around UFC 195.
The primary plot point of the UFC’s first event of 2016, of course, is one of betrayal.
We were originally told the fight card scheduled for Jan. 2 would host Ronda Rousey’…

There’s an interesting little subplot brewing around UFC 195.

The primary plot point of the UFC’s first event of 2016, of course, is one of betrayal.

We were originally told the fight card scheduled for Jan. 2 would host Ronda Rousey’s third meeting with Miesha Tate. Last week, however, the fight company decided to go back on that decision and book Rousey against undefeated former boxing champion Holly Holm instead.

It was the right move, but that didn’t soften the blow for Team Tate, which reportedly found out she’d been dropped at the same moment the rest of us did—when Rousey announced it to the world during an appearance on Good Morning America.

But while the dominant story of this event is all about hard feelings, the secondary narrative could be one of great opportunity.

Right now, it is believed UFC 195’s co-main event will feature strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk defending her title in a rematch against Claudia Gadelha.

If it happens, it’ll be the first major pay-per-view event in the organization’s history to feature two women’s fights as headliners. It also could turn out to be the perfect showcase for Jedrzejczyk, who has quietly been making her name among hardcore fans—even if we still can’t pronounce it exactly right yet:

Don’t worry, not even the pros know how to handle that unwieldy string of eight consonants, two vowels and one “Y.” In March, Jedrzejczyk suggested a quick fix, telling MMAFighting.com’s Marc Raimondi, “Soon, they’re gonna call me Joanna Champion.”

Good enough for us, though sticklers for the details should note that her real name is actually not that hard to say, so long as our uneducated American tongues don’t try to sound like native Polish speakers. Just aim for some variation of “Yed-jay-chick” or “Yend-dray-trick” and call it good.

Remember, anybody who corrects you is just being a jerk.

Regardless, the 28-year-old Jedrzejczyk is the surprise breakout star of the UFC’s fledgling 115-pound class so far.

Since debuting as a complete unknown in July 2014, she’s seized the spotlight we once thought might be reserved for Rose Namajunas. She has jetted to 4-0 in the Octagon and upset Carla Esparza at UFC 185 five months ago to become the promotion’s second strawweight champion.

Jedrzejczyk’s strike-first attack has been a pleasing revelation for this newest weight class. You might not imagine the 115-pound women’s division being a place of great physical power, but she’s notched stoppages in back-to-back Octagon appearances and in five of her 10 career wins.

Her drubbing of Esparza was truly something to behold. Though 5Dimes (h/t Odds Shark) listed her as a slight underdog, Jedrzejczyk easily shucked off Esparza’s takedown attempts and brutalized her en route to a second-round TKO finish.

It was a shocking performance. It would’ve been tempting to also call it a star-making turn for the new champion, if this latest opportunity hadn’t just come along to dwarf it.

All eyes will be on the MGM Grand Garden Arena on the first Saturday night of the new year to watch Rousey take on Holm. It could turn out to be a situation where fans tune in to watch MMA’s biggest star do her thing and end up falling in love with Jedrzejczyk’s skills along the way.

Because let’s face it, the strawweight champ doesn’t exactly fit the mold the UFC has seemed to want to promote in its female stars to date. She doesn’t look like a movie star, she doesn’t show up on the red carpet decked out in designer evening gowns, she hasn’t posed for Maxim magazine.

But Jedrzejczyk has a different, arguably cooler kind of charisma.

She’s an unabashed sneakerhead and her Instagram selfies are likelier to be of the ballcap-and-shades variety than stills from her latest fashion shoot—though there are starting to be more of those, too. She rides around her eastern European hometown on a custom cruiser bicycle and the best day of her UFC title reign so far seemed to be the one when Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta sent her a box of free shoes.

Jedrzejczyk possesses an infectious, borderline kitschy charm. If Rousey is MMA’s Hollywood fashion plate, Jedrzejczyk seems more like the UFC women’s champion you’d want to go to Disneyland with.

Then she shows up at official pre-fight weigh-ins looking like a tiny demon who wants to crawl inside your eyeballs and eat your soul:

So, yeah, that works.

So far, the only thing she’s lacked is exposure—and maybe a quality foil who might become her nemesis.

This Gadelha fight should fit the bill on both counts.

When the two fought in December 2014, the result was a split-decision win for Jedrzejczyk. The fight was close enough, though, to have some observers wondering if Gadelha should’ve gotten the nod.

In the aftermath, the 26-year-old Brazilian doubled down on her top-contender status by defeating former World Series of Fighting champ Jessica Aguilar at UFC 190. At the moment, she stands at 13-1 and is eager to get back at Jedrzejczyk for putting the only blemish on her professional record.

“Dana White make my title shot,” Gadelha said in the cage after her win over Aguilar (h/t Fox Sports Arizona’s Damon Martin). “I am the best strawweight in the world and I’m going to prove that.”

It is not a reach to say this will be the most anticipated 115-pound title fight in UFC history—after all, there have only been four of them. It’ll also be a chance for Jedrzejczyk to make her case in front of a vastly bigger audience than she’s ever enjoyed before.

So long as she can keep Gadelha at bay—and maybe with a handy pronunciation guide front and center—there’s no telling how high she might fly.

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Joanna Jedrzejczyk vs. Claudia Gadelha to Co-Main UFC 195 Behind Rousey vs. Holm

Ronda Rousey and Holly Holm will have some great help carrying the UFC 195 card. According to UFC President Dana White, via Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times, the event will also feature a women’s strawweight title fight between Joanna Jedrzejczyk…

Ronda Rousey and Holly Holm will have some great help carrying the UFC 195 card. According to UFC President Dana White, via Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times, the event will also feature a women’s strawweight title fight between Joanna Jedrzejczyk and Claudia Gadelha.

Since claiming the women’s strawweight title, Jedrzejczyk has become one of the fastest rising stars in MMA today. The Polish striker earned a shot at the belt by taking back-to-back in the Octagon wins ahead of The Ultimate Fighter season 20 Finale. She took on its eventual winner (and the inaugural strawweight champion), Carla Esparza at UFC 185, and despite underdog status, would dominate the fight with rangy striking and surprisingly sturdy takedown defense while scoring a second-round TKO win.

While that was impressive on its own, Jedrzejczyk asserted herself as one of the scariest fighters in MMA with her vicious demolition of Jessica Penne. Against the former Invicta champion, Jedrzejczyk showed off brutal swarming combinations which left the challenger a bloody, battered mess.

Worth noting is that Gadelha and Jedrzejczyk have fought once before. That was in December 2014 at UFC on Fox 13. In a hotly contested bout, Jedrzejczyk came out on the better end of a narrow split decision. Gadelha has only fought once since, but she scored a lopsided win over former WSOF champion Jessica Aguilar. That victory, combined with her long history of success against high-level competition, kept her at the top of the division’s rankings and at the center of the title picture.

UFC 195 is set to go down on January 2 in Las Vegas. Who do you think gets the better of this one, fight fans?

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The Question: Did UFC Make the Right Call with Ronda Rousey vs. Holly Holm?

Ronda Rousey, the most dominant champion in UFC history, has fought wrestlers, jiu-jitsu black belts and rock-’em-sock-’em brawlers. Each, in turn, has been dispatched—most in the first round, many in the first minute.
A new challenge awaits in t…

Ronda Rousey, the most dominant champion in UFC history, has fought wrestlers, jiu-jitsu black belts and rock-’em-sock-’em brawlers. Each, in turn, has been dispatched—most in the first round, many in the first minute.

A new challenge awaits in the form of boxer Holly Holm, a former world champion in that sport who has wracked up an impressive 9-0 record in her burgeoning MMA career. Holm will bring her rangy jab and quick feet into the Octagon to test Rousey at UFC 195 on January 2 in Las Vegas. It’s a bout that, on Twitter at least, sparked no small amount of controversy.

The New Year’s weekend show traditionally features one of the promotion’s biggest stars—and Rousey certainly fits that bill. Can Holm live up to her end of the bargain? Or was Miesha Tate, originally expected to be Rousey‘s next opponent, the better choice?

Lead writers Jeremy Botter and Jonathan Snowden, Bleacher Report’s version of The Captain and Tenille will explore the fight and render a verdict.

 

Jonathan: The Internet exploded when Rousey announcedon Good Morning America by the waythat she’d be fighting Holly Holm in January. Not only is that about as mainstream as it gets, but it was actually a pleasant surprise. Until that moment, I had been under the impression that Rousey‘s next fight would be against Tate. Frankly, that wasn’t doing much to excite me.

While she’s a fine fighter, and one who seems to be improving well into her career, Tate’s also a fighter who has lost twice to Rousey. Neither fight was particularly competitive. Holm may or may not manage to push Rousey to her limits. She’s struggled at times in her brief UFC career and fights a style predicated on being better than her opponent for 25 minutes. That’s a tough task against a fighter like Rousey, who punishes any mistake harshly. 

But while Holm may not be a tougher test than Tate, at the very least she’s a different kind of test. I think that’s important as Rousey continues to build her legacy and carry the sport to the masses.

 

Jeremy: I don’t think Rousey will struggle much, if at all, when facing Holm

But that doesn’t mean I’m going to go on Twitter and proclaim that the sky is falling because Holm hasn’t faced any top-10 opponents and doesn’t deserve such a lofty fight. I’ve seen social media users say that nobody will buy this fight and that it should be on free television. People seriously say this mere weeks after more than 1 million people bought a fight to see Rousey face Bethe Correia!

And you’re right: Holm is a different test. I didn’t really mind the idea of seeing Rousey-Tate 3, but that’s mostly because at this point, Rousey fights have become an exercise in “how fast is she gonna win this time?” And while there’s nothing wrong with that, to an extent, we already know that Tate can take her past the first round. Hell, maybe this time Tate takes her to a decision? What a wondrous moment that would be!

Yeah, we’re scraping the bottom of the barrel here. Which is why I’m fine with Holm getting this shot. But the only way this truly works is if they match up Tate with Cris Cyborg, ideally on the same card. That’s my opinion, anyway; I’d like to know yours.

 

Jonathan: Styles make fights. What’s interesting about Holm is that she’s going to do things Rousey has never seen before in the cage. Almost everyone charges at Ronda, hoping to land that desperation knockout punch before inevitably getting dumped on their head and submitted.

Holm isn’t that kind of fighter. She’ll be on her bicycle throughout, cutting angles, throwing body kicks and basically trying to stay the heck away from Rousey. It has the potential to test the champ’s patience and technique.

Or maybe she’ll get trucked like everyone else. At least with Holm, there is a path to victory. Most fighters can’t make that claim.

As for Cyborg, if I were the UFC I’d be scared to death of a fight with Tate. In a best-case scenario, you do the fight on the Rousey undercard, and she overwhelms Tate just like she overwhelms everyone else. That sets up the huge Cyborg vs. Rousey fight we’ve all been waiting for.

But what if Cyborg struggles with her weight cut and then struggles with Tate? Would it be better to sell a fight between Rousey and Cyborg’s highlight reel? That becomes harder if Tate pushes her limits—or worse, beats her. What then?

 

Jeremy: If Cyborg can’t get it done against Tate, then I don’t have much interest in seeing her try against Rousey. She’s a terrifying force of nature, to be sure, but if she gets out-grappled by a high school wrestler? Rousey will literally throw her around the Octagon at will. 

My thing is: The UFC will almost certainly want Rousey on the UFC 200 card next summer. They’ll want to build up an opponent for her. Sure, you can throw Cyborg right in there and sell a lot of pay-per-views. 

But imagine if she goes in and destroys Tate on the undercard of Rousey-Holm? Casual fans will finally know who she is, and they will fear her, and they will believe she is a legitimate threat. 

And by the same token, if Tate beats this terrifying woman who we’ve been hearing for years is the biggest threat to Rousey‘s throne? She suddenly becomes a much more interesting challenger, even after losing the first two bouts. 

Yeah, you waste one contender by booking that fight. But in doing so, you also build up a special challenger for Rousey, even if it’s Tate for the third time.

 

Jonathan: I agree. It works out well if Cyborg steamrolls Tate or if Tate pulls off a miracle. But what if Cyborg comes out at 135 pounds and reveals herself to be the kind of fighter who struggles with Ronda’s leftovers?

That, to me, makes the subsequent Rousey fight just a little bit less exciting.

The safest play is leaving Cyborg behind the curtain and unveiling her only when it matters most. But perhaps it’s worth the gamble to turn this fight into the kind of mega-event this sport has yet to see.

No matter who she fights, if Rousey is on television, it’s appointment viewing. Let’s face it: Tate, Holm and Cyborg would all be some variation of “that woman who is fighting Ronda Rousey” to most in the mainstream.

It didn’t really matter who Steven Seagal was beating up when he was at the height of his action-star fame. You just knew somebody was taking a brutal beating. That’s where we are with Rousey. And you know what? I’m loving it.

 

Jonathan Snowden and Jeremy Botter cover combat sports for Bleacher Report.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ronda Rousey Announces on Good Morning America That She Will Be Fighting Holly Holm Next at UFC 195

For a while there, it seemed as if we were all but destined to see Ronda Rousey take on her arch-rival not named Cyborg for a third time following their respective wins over Bethe Correia and Jessica Eye, but today brings word of a fight many of us probably didn’t see coming.

During an appearance on Good Morning America earlier today, Rousey herself made the announcement that her next title defense won’t be against Miesha Tate, nor will it be against Cyborg, but against former pro boxer/kickboxer turned undefeated MMA fighter Holly Holm, at UFC 195. Or to put it another way: The lamb has passed through the gate. It has come to the killing floor. Its blind eyes see nothing of the horrors to come.

The post Ronda Rousey Announces on Good Morning America That She Will Be Fighting Holly Holm Next at UFC 195 appeared first on Cagepotato.

For a while there, it seemed as if we were all but destined to see Ronda Rousey take on her arch-rival not named Cyborg for a third time following their respective wins over Bethe Correia and Jessica Eye, but today brings word of a fight many of us probably didn’t see coming.

During an appearance on Good Morning America earlier today, Rousey herself made the announcement that her next title defense won’t be against Miesha Tate, nor will it be against Cyborg, but against former pro boxer/kickboxer turned undefeated MMA fighter Holly Holm, at UFC 195. Or to put it another way: The lamb has passed through the gate. It has come to the killing floor. Its blind eyes see nothing of the horrors to come.

Perhaps the reason most of us didn’t foresee Holm as the next logical title challenger/victim is due to the pair of performances she has put on thus far in the UFC, which can at best be described as “underwhelming.” Holm may have built up a reputation as “the best striker in women’s MMA” and will surely be lauded as “the best striker Rousey has ever faced” (see previously: Correia, B.), but she hasn’t exactly been annihilating her (somewhat unremarkable opposition) in the UFC like she was on the regional circuit.

In her promotional debut, Holm cruised to a unanimous decision over TUF 18 alum Raquel Pennington at UFC 184, and likewise wasn’t able to put away a Marion Reneau that was offering her absolutely nothing offensively at Fight Night 71. Now, she faces a champion with a 100% finishing rate. I’m probably in the minority here, but I see this thing lasting roughly a minute before the inevitable inevitably happens. But at least it’ll be a new face laying face down when all is said and done, right guys?

Then again, I suppose if Rousey decides to charge in wildly like she did against Correia, there’s a chance that Holm could make her pay for it. Time will tell, I guess (and that time will be 1:08 of round 1).

UFC 195 goes down on at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada on January 2nd, 2016.

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