UFC Hot Prospect Mackenzie Dern Isn’t the Next Rousey, but She Shows Promise

For nearly three full rounds Saturday at UFC 222, it was hard to justify the hype around Mackenzie Dern.
The hot prospect had her hands full with Ashley Yoder, whose southpaw stance frustrated Dern throughout their women’s strawweight fight at T-Mobile…

For nearly three full rounds Saturday at UFC 222, it was hard to justify the hype around Mackenzie Dern.

The hot prospect had her hands full with Ashley Yoder, whose southpaw stance frustrated Dern throughout their women’s strawweight fight at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Yoder‘s athleticism and conditioning also allowed her to keep the bout standing and avoid Dern‘s vaunted Brazilian jiu-jitsu game.

With time ticking away in the final stanza, however, Dern finally fully committed on a takedown attempt and put Yoder on the mat. Once there, she moved effortlessly to her opponent’s back and applied a rear-naked choke that might well have finished the fight if she’d had more time to work.

As it stood, Dern finished the bout latched like an anaconda around Yoder‘s back, and the display earned her a split-decision victory (28-29, 29-28, 29-28) in her Octagon debut.

“I’m very hard on myself, so I really wanted to get the submission,” Dern said at the post-fight press conference, via Sherdog.com’s Tristen Critchfield. “I’m a jiu-jitsu girl, so I’m disappointed unless I get it. But I am also much more than just jiu-jitsu, so going out and fighting a lot of stand-up was fun, and I’m glad I got to show that side of my game.”

Now comes the hard part: living up to the considerable expectations that preceded her arrival in the UFC.

If the Yoder bout proved anything, it’s that it’s going to be a slow burn with Dern. Here’s hoping she gets the chance to take things at her own pace.

The 24-year-old is the daughter of decorated BJJ ace Wellington “Megaton” Dias and was a bona fide submission grappling prodigy by the time she was 14 years old. After winning jiu-jitsu world championships at every belt level—including a run of golds in both gi and no-gi competition—her transition to MMA in the summer of 2016 garnered significant media attention.

A 5-0 record on the independent circuit scored her a UFC contract and even enticed a few comparisons to former women’s bantamweight champion and pay-per-view powerhouse Ronda Rousey.

You could say the bar was set pretty high for the Phoenix native before she even set foot on the big stage.

Now that her initial appearance is finished, we can say emphatically that Dern isn’t the next Rousey, but she showed enough potential to keep us interested in whatever happens next. The most important factor in her evolution as an MMA fighter will be whether she can mature at her own pace or if matchmakers rush her into the spotlight.

Say this for Dern: When things are clicking, she has an exciting style.

Though she was largely overmatched in the striking game by Yoder, it didn’t stop Dern from routinely wading into the fray with her own powerful punching combinations.

She never solved the riddle of Yoder‘s left-handed style, but Dern was the aggressor for much of the fight. Coupled with the ever-present threat of her world-class submissions, that devil-may-care attitude makes her eminently watchable.

Granted, there was a lot to be skeptical of, as well. Dern‘s takedowns were nonexistent for the first 14-plus minutes of the fight, meaning she didn’t get the chance to show her best skills until the closing moments. She also wasn’t able to utilize the clinch to her advantage and got briefly dropped by a Yoder left hand that landed behind her ear in the second round.

But she won—which was the only must-have on Day 1—and Dern is still young enough to build significantly on her tremendous grappling base.

She lacks the pervasive killer instinct of Rousey, the obvious athleticism of Holly Holm or the fearsome power of Cris “Cyborg” Justino, but Dern has something worth paying attention to.

She’s likely not going to become the UFC’s next megastar, and it seems a long shot she’ll even become a champion. But her enthusiasm for competition is infectious, and the unique combination of her youth and popularity makes her the sort of fighter the UFC should want to cultivate.

If anything, she just needs more time to round out her striking game and takedowns. Against UFC competition, she will need to not only be able to hold her own with stand-up fighters much better than Yoder, but also be able to dictate the terms of where a fight takes place.

Otherwise, her deadly BJJ skills will sit unused like a Formula 1 car you can’t take out of the garage.

There may also be questions about which weight division becomes Dern‘s home. Twice during her rise to the UFC, she competed in catchweight affairs (at 118 pounds and 120 pounds, respectively) and fought once at flyweight (125 pounds).

This week, she kept onlookers in suspense by being the last UFC 222 fighter to hit the scales during Friday morning’s official weigh-in. Dern ultimately made the upper reaches of the strawweight limit at 116 pounds, but it remains to be seen where she will stick.

The UFC’s new women’s flyweight division is still finding its legs, with recently crowned champion Nicco Montano at the helm. A healthy crop of contenders are also there, including UFC stalwarts such as Valentina Shevchenko, Lauren Murphy, Alexis Davis and Liz Carmouche.

You could make the case Dern‘s size makes her a more natural flyweight than strawweight, but she won’t get a break in her level of competition if she moves up.

By advancing to the UFC so fast and at such a young age, she’s starting far behind top-level fighters such as 115-pound champion Rose Namajunas and former champ Joanna Jedrzejczyk. Because of it, her handlers are going to need the patience and restraint to bring her along slowly.

That could be easier said than done, though. Neither strawweight nor flyweight is a deep division. If Dern puts together a few consecutive wins, the UFC might find itself in the unenviable position of needing to leverage her marketability in every way it can.

Hopefully, that doesn’t result with Dern getting rushed into deep water, where she would surely take a beating from the UFC’s elite. 

That would be a waste, considering the obvious promise of her grappling pedigree.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Sean O’Malley Stretchered out of UFC 222 After Suffering Major Leg Injury in Win

UFC bantamweight Sean O’Malley was taken out of the Octagon on a stretcher with a severe right leg injury Saturday night following his win over Andre Soukhamthath at UFC 222 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, according to Kevin Iole of…

UFC bantamweight Sean O’Malley was taken out of the Octagon on a stretcher with a severe right leg injury Saturday night following his win over Andre Soukhamthath at UFC 222 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, according to Kevin Iole of Yahoo Sports.

O’Malley suffered the injury in the third round after Soukhamthath hit him with a kick, buckling his leg. But O’Malley was able to finish the fight despite essentially only having the use of one leg.

              

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Cris Cyborg Beats Yana Kunitskaya Via 1st-Round TKO at UFC 222

Cris “Cyborg” Justino provided the latest example that she’s MMA’s most dominant woman with a first-round TKO win over Yana Kunitskaya in UFC 222’s main event in Las Vegas on Saturday. 
Cyborg wasted no time in charging across the Octagon and land…

Cris “Cyborg” Justino provided the latest example that she’s MMA‘s most dominant woman with a first-round TKO win over Yana Kunitskaya in UFC 222’s main event in Las Vegas on Saturday. 

Cyborg wasted no time in charging across the Octagon and landing a big overhand right, but it allowed Kunitskaya to latch on to a leg and work the champion to the mat. Once they got back up, Kunitskaya controlled Cyborg against the fence. 

The UFC showed the fight’s beginning moments on Twitter:

Then, things got ugly for the challenger. 

As soon as Cyborg created space, she started doing what Cyborg does: destroying whoever is in front of her. She put Kunitskaya down with a strong combination and followed with ground strikes until the referee ended the fight. 

It was a typical Cyborg performance. Mike Bohn of MMAjunkie put her dominance into context:

After the bout, Cyborg called for a matchup with UFC women’s bantamweight titleholder Amanda Nunes, per MMAFighting.com:

Cyborg’s victory was expected. She was a 1-8 favorite heading into the fight, according to OddsShark, and will continue to be in that position against every opponent. 

This bout won’t do much for her legacy. The former Invicta and Strikeforce champion has crushed many fighters, but her lack of quality opponents is the only detraction on her resume. 

The way Cyborg sees it, she proved she’s willing to take on anyone, anytime. She earned the win just 63 days after beating Holly Holm to close out 2017. 

“You know fighters always say, ‘Anywhere, any time,’ but in reality we always know there’s going to be a long time between our fights,” Cyborg said, per Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times. “This is old school. I was taught to always stay prepared and be ready, and when they called me and said they’d like me to fight [Kunitskaya], I checked my weight and said, ‘Let’s do that; it’s a great opportunity.'”

Where she goes from here is hard to discern. 

The women’s featherweight division was essentially created for her. There’s not even enough depth to have official UFC rankings. 

The next big-money fight would be a matchup against her fellow Brazilian Nunes. A superfight between the featherweight and bantamweight titleholders would be easily marketable, and Nunes is interested in Cyborg next, per MMAjunkie

Outside of that, fans will be left watching Cyborg crush inferior competition. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

MMA’s Greatest Female Fighter Cris Cyborg Continues to Dominate Opponents

Will there come a point when we tire of seeing Cris Cyborg obliterate lesser competition simply because it’s the only way we get to see her in the UFC? 
I don’t know the answer to that. I don’t even know if it’s a question we should be asking. Wha…

Will there come a point when we tire of seeing Cris Cyborg obliterate lesser competition simply because it’s the only way we get to see her in the UFC? 

I don’t know the answer to that. I don’t even know if it’s a question we should be asking. What I do know is that Saturday night in Las Vegas we saw the latest chapter in a timeworn story. 

Cyborg, the UFC’s women’s featherweight champion (and the division’s only member), beat Yana Kunitskaya via first-round bludgeoning to cap off a scintillating UFC 222. Poor Kunitskaya was a spirited foe, as so many of Cyborg’s opponents are, right up until the moment they realize all hope is gone. Kunitskaya even scored an ankle-pick takedown and kept Cyborg on the canvas for a minute or two before succumbing to a TKO. 

But Kunitskaya was also a bantamweight making both her UFC promotional debut and featherweight debut in a late-ish notice bout promoted solely to achieve the UFC’s weird goal of having a title of some sort defended in every UFC pay-per-view main event.

She was Joe vs. the Volcano. She was the coyote trying to best the roadrunner. What I’m saying is: We knew the end before the beginning. The very announcement of the fight spoiled its conclusion. And for Kunitskaya, the conclusion came the moment Cyborg got off the canvas. Kunitskaya’s chance was gone, fleeting like the wind. It only took a couple of punches from Justino to turn Kunitskaya’s visage into that of an overmatched, scared competitor. She was in over her head, and she realized it. 

And then it was done. Cyborg dropped her to the canvas. Kunitskaya covered her head in the ultimate sign of surrender. The fight was brief, and then it was gone. 

 

None of this is Cyborg’s fault. She’s in the world’s premiere fighting organization. It’s where she should’ve been competing from the beginning. Or at least from the moment president Dana White decided women were marketable enough to put his company’s weight behind.

That she was kept outside the castle walls for so long because of a particularly nasty mix of misogyny and the desire to protect the star power of the UFC’s former golden girl, Ronda Rousey, is, at best, unfortunate. 

It’s not her fault that no other woman in the UFC both (a) competes with regularity in her weight class and (b) is good enough to give her more than a reason to get a decent sweat going. Not even Holly Holm, who is indeed good, could do much beyond exhibiting the kind of grit and fortitude needed to last 25 minutes in the cage with Justino.

That Holm was lauded for the accomplishment is particularly indicative of Justino’s place in the world—merely not being forcibly turned ass over tea kettle was an admirable feat. 

 

And, look: It’s not the UFC’s fault, either. It’s doing the best it can in promoting her. That is something, at least—especially when you consider White once compared her to a male fighter and stomped around on stage in one of the more embarrassing acts by a human executive in modern sports history.

Now, the company is pushing her as the terrifying force of nature she is. That’s something akin to progress, even if White still owes her a world of apologies for the hurt he caused over the years. 

So what can the UFC do, if it’s already doing what it can? It could make a push to sign more top-tier featherweight fighters. The problem is, there’s no such thing. Sure, there are good fighters out there at 145 pounds, such as Invicta’s Megan Anderson. But Anderson and her ilk are merely good. And good, to speak plainly, is just not good enough. 

Cyborg cannot and should not attempt to drop to bantamweight, either. I used to beat the “all she has to do is lose some muscle mass” drum, like many of you, and then I realized how dumb I sounded. Justino is someone who strains to make 145 pounds as it is; asking her to drop a further 10 pounds solely because we want to see her against better fighters is selfish. We shouldn’t do that anymore, especially when we’re all realizing how dumb weight cutting is in the first place. 

There’s bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes. She looks like the best of the limited options. And still, she is yet another bantamweight fighter moving up. She’s a better bantamweight than anyone Justino has faced lately. But she’s still a bantamweight, and there isn’t much of a question as to who would win that fight. Justino is Nunes except, you know, much bigger, stronger and better in literally every way a person can be better at fighting than a peer.

What’s the answer? As I wrote earlier, I don’t know. I’m quite certain you don’t, either. Because it feels like this might be a situation where there are no good answers.

What we are left with is the privilege of seeing the greatest fighter in female mixed martial arts history while she plies her trade for the world’s biggest combat promotion. There was a time not long ago when that seemed out of the realm of possibility, and so I suppose one way to look at this thing is to just be grateful we’re able to see her in such a showcase. She deserves the platform. She deserves for the world to see her. 

It’s something, at least. 

 

But I can’t help wanting more than just something. More than repeated thrashings of inferior, smaller fighters. More than showcases. And I’m sure Justino would welcome more with open arms and flailing fists.

But maybe this is all there is.

The thing we, you and I and Justino, have to decide is: Is all there is enough to keep us happy?

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com