Amanda Nunes Beats Valentina Shevchenko by Split Decision at UFC 215

The Amanda Nunes era of women’s bantamweight MMA continued at UFC 215 on Saturday. The Lioness defended her belt against bitter rival Valentina Shevchenko, winning by split decision in the main event at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. 

The Amanda Nunes era of women’s bantamweight MMA continued at UFC 215 on Saturday. The Lioness defended her belt against bitter rival Valentina Shevchenko, winning by split decision in the main event at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. 

Ariel Helwani of MMA Fighting tweeted the scores for the champion:

The fight got off to an inauspicious beginning. Nunes—who is known for her fast, furious starts—slow-played the first frame, preferring to pick her battles. Shevchenko wasn’t willing to oblige, and a staring contest with light leg kicks ensued for the first few minutes. 

Ben Fowlkes of MMAjunkie provided a good summary of the round:

The second frame once again slowed to a snail’s pace. Neither fighter was willing to let her hands go, but Shevchenko was able to sneak in shots that made impact. Patrick Wyman of the Washington Post noted that the slow pace favored the challenger:

The third round was difficult to score as both fighters had moments but neither landed anything that significantly changed the bout. Josh Gross of The Guardian gave the round to Nunes:

The fourth round was the best one to that point for Shevchenko. With Nunes’ timing and distance figured out, the challenger was able to land clean counters that made the fourth frame hers. The UFC passed along the highlight of the best punch from the round:

In a pivotal fifth round, Nunes looked to score takedowns early. While Bullet fended them off, she made a crucial mistake by going for a head-and-arm throw that allowed Nunes to take Shevchenko’s back. Although the challenger eventually worked her way to the feet, Nunes was then able to score the takedown and finish the round on top. 

E. Spencer Kyte of The Province expressed the frustration with Shevchenko’s ill-fated throw attempt: 

The final takedown was likely what convinced two judges to give the fight to the defending champion. After the bout, Shevchenko voiced her displeasure with the close decision, per Helwani:

The win closes the book for now on a rivalry that goes back to when the two combatants first met at UFC 196. Nunes’ unanimous-decision victory set her up for a championship win over Miesha Tate, and she hasn’t looked back. 

Nunes went on to cement her standing as the No. 1 women’s bantamweight by demolishing Ronda Rousey in the first round in her title defense.

Still, Shevchenko was the most recent challenger to come close to dethroning the champion. Nunes dominated the first round and won the second before Shevchenko took over the fight in the third. 

Things heated up between the two when Nunes pulled out of the first attempt at their rematch at UFC 213. The champion withdrew hours before the fight due to sinusitis. 

Shevchenko didn’t buy the story and went to Instagram to say she believed it all came down to a bad weight cut for Nunes:

 

Whatever the reason for the withdrawal, she was ready at UFC 215. The champion silenced the challenger; now the question becomes: How long will she hold on to the belt?

While Rousey was the face of the organization when she was champion, Nunes doesn’t expect the same treatment. 

“I honestly don’t care in this moment,” Nunes said, per Kevin Iole of Yahoo Sports. “If they want to promote me, make me a focus, cool. That’s good for both of us and there would be more money for me, of course. But if no, if they don’t want to promote me, that’s cool, too. I have money. I made more money than I ever thought.”

That money will likely keep rolling in if she continues to win. With Rousey not officially retired yet and names such as Holly Holm and Cris “Cyborg” Justino just one weight class away, there will be plenty of opportunities for the champion to get big fights.

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Rafael dos Anjos vs. Neil Magny Result: Winner and Reaction from UFC 215

Rafael dos Anjos is here to stay at 170 pounds. Facing Neil Magny in the show’s co-main event of UFC 215, the former lightweight champion put on an absolutely dominant performance, scoring a first-round submission victory.
Dos Anjos tends to be a stron…

Rafael dos Anjos is here to stay at 170 pounds. Facing Neil Magny in the show’s co-main event of UFC 215, the former lightweight champion put on an absolutely dominant performance, scoring a first-round submission victory.

Dos Anjos tends to be a strong starter, and Magny attempted to meet that head-on, applying early pressure for a brief time. That backfired in a big way, however, as Dos Anjos made the adjustments and wrestled Magny to the mat in the first 30 seconds of the fight, landing in half-guard and keeping the pressure high on top.

Magny had no real answer for this, and Dos Anjos eventually stepped into mount and sunk in a deep arm-triangle choke, forcing the tapout at 3:43 of the first round.

This is a much-needed big win for Dos Anjos.

While the Brazilian was riding high in 2015, looking the part of a potentially long-reigning champion at 155 pounds, things went into a tailspin in 2016, starting with his withdrawal from a UFC 196 bout with Conor McGregor. That fateful turn, alongside Nate Diaz’s upset win, saw him robbed of a massive payday and placed on the backburner of his own division.

The situation went from bad to worse to irreparable when he dropped the title to Eddie Alvarez and then lost to Tony Ferguson.

He entered UFC 215 amid a hard reboot to his career at 170 pounds, starting in June with a win over Tarec Saffiedine. This decisive win over Magny, however, cements his place in the welterweight top 10 and propels him right into the title picture.

On the flipside, this is a brutal turn for Magny. The 30-year-old has been hovering around the perimeter of the UFC’s welterweight top 10 for a long while now, bouncing in with wins over the likes of Hector Lombard and Kelvin Gastelum or bouncing out with stoppage losses to Demian Maia and Lorenz Larkin. While he ranks highly in the division, his footing near the top is far from secure and that makes losses like these sting badly.

That said, neither man’s future is clear exiting this event.

Magny may have been steamrolled in this fight, but his hectic schedule should see him to return to the cage in short order, possibly before year’s end. He could face (and defeat) a number of different top-10 competitors and immediately make up the ground he lost here.

 

Dos Anjos, meanwhile, has a strong on-paper claim to a title shot and possibly stands as the worst on-paper matchup in the UFC for champion Tyron Woodley, but he lacks the following to force himself into contention in any sort of timely way. His next fight could be a top contender bout against someone like Robbie Lawler on a big pay-per-view or he could end up on the slow road back to the top and face a hot upstart like Santiago Ponzinibbio on the prelims of a UFC on Fox event.

Things should become clear in the coming months, however, as the UFC look to get Woodley back into the cage for one of their upcoming pay-per-view events.

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