Showing posts with label Ronda Rousey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ronda Rousey. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2016

By the Numbers: Who is the Bigger Star Conor McGregor or Ronda Rousey?


Dana White On Ronda Rousey"s Abrupt Exit at UFC 205 Weigh-Ins

"By far. Not even close, by far the biggest star ever."

~ Dana White

Those are words from UFC president Dana White when addressing former women"s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey ahead of her next fight being announced against Amanda Nunes on Dec. 30.

White has stated several times that the UFC has never seen a fighter with more impact in the sport than Rousey, but she has some serious competition from featherweight champion Conor McGregor.

McGregor has pulled in monstrous numbers on pay-per-view for the UFC while also becoming the highest paid fighter in the sport with a reported $40 million earned over the past year. He then became the first ever UFC fighter to land on the Forbes" 100 highest paid athletes list as well.

It"s a tough debate to settle considering Rousey has also managed to crossover into the mainstream with appearances in high-profile films such as "Furious 7", "Entourage" and "The Expendables 3" while becoming the face for brands such as Buffalo Jeans.

Of course, the UFC probably has no complaints either way considering McGregor and Rousey attract more attention than anybody else in the history of the sport. So arguing about which one is the bigger star only seems to add more money to the bottom line.

Still, it"s an interesting topic to debate so we"ve compiled some numbers available from pay-per-view buys, social media interactions and financial earnings to settle the question once and for all who is the bigger star:Conor McGregor or Ronda Rousey?

PAY-PER-VIEW BUYS

First off, as a privately held company, the UFC isn"t required to release any financial information including pay-per-view buys from any of their events.

Still, information has become available through interviews with notable executives like Dana White or reliable sources such as veteran reporter Dave Meltzer at the Wrestling Observer, who has released pay-per-view numbers for sporting and entertainment events for decades.

Of course, the numbers for pay-per-views are still ultimately just reported and the UFC hasn"t confirmed or denied if any of the figures are accurate.

For the purposes of this report, we will just examine the last three pay-per-view cards headlined by McGregor and Rousey:

CONOR MCGREGOR

UFC 194: Aldo vs. McGregor 1.2 million buys

UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz 1.6 million buys

UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 1.65 million buys

RONDA ROUSEY

UFC 184: Rousey vs. Zingano 600,000 buys

UFC 190: Rousey vs. Correia 900,000 buys

UFC 193: Rousey vs. Holm 1.1 million buys

It"s also worth noting that McGregor"s last pay-per-view in August for the rematch with Nate Diaz is reportedly the biggest selling card in UFC history with 1.65 million buys, trumping the prior record holder with UFC 100 in 2009.

Based solely on the last three fights, McGregor has sold a reported 4.45 million pay-per-view compared to Rousey with 2.6 million pay-per-view buys.

Advantage Conor McGregor

SOCIAL MEDIA

There are several different way to measure social media impact when it comes to McGregor and Rousey. When speaking about total followers, the race isn"t even close with Rousey far and away the bigger star on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

RONDA ROUSEY

Facebook: 11.1 million

Twitter: 3.2 million followers

Instagram: 8.6 million followers

CONOR MCGREGOR

Facebook: 4.3 million followers

Twitter: 2.68 million followers

Instagram: 7.4 million followers

Advantage Ronda Rousey

SOCIAL MEDIA IMPACT

Now these are a different set of rules entirely when it comes to social media impact for fighters. The Nielsen ratings system recently started gauging ratings on social media for television for sports with statistics returned for three of Rousey"s most recent fights and two of McGregor"s. The final fight the rematch with Nate Diaz fell into a new type of social media ratings with both Facebook and Twitter statistics and thus the information wasn"t available at the time of publication.

For the purposes of this section we will look specifically at Rousey"s two fights against Bethe Correia and Holly Holm and compare them to McGregor"s fights with Jose Aldo and the first bout with Nate Diaz. Also worth noting, Nielsen measures Twitter interactions from three hours before the event through three hours afterwards. All information courtesy of the Nielsen ratings system.

RONDA ROUSEY

UFC 190: Rousey vs. Correia had 934,000 total engagements on Twitter with 283,000 mentions of Rousey"s own Twitter handle @RondaRousey.

UFC 193: Rousey vs. Holm had 927,000 total engagements on Twitter with Rousey"s handle mentioned 115,000 times.

CONOR MCGREGOR

UFC 194: McGregor vs. Aldo had 603,000 total engagements with McGregor"s own handle @TheNotoriousMMA being mentioned 75,000 times.

UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz had 844,000 mentions with McGregor"s handle mentioned 66,000 times.

It must be noted, however, that while Rousey has more interactions based on her fights, McGregor has a much bigger reach in terms of total retweets and "likes" on his posts. McGregor"s tweet about retiring from the sport earlier this year has been the most retweeted post by an athlete in 2016 with over 160,000 retweets and more than 200,000 likes.

Advantage Ronda Rousey

LIVE GATES

This is a comparison of the live gate total money earned for attendance for the three most recent cards available for Rousey and McGregor. These totals are reported by the UFC following the end of each event.

Again, we are specifically looking at the last three fights for both Rousey and McGregor. In Rousey"s case, gate totals were not reported for her fight against Bethe Correia at UFC 190, so we had to look at her last headlining bout against Sara McMann from UFC 170 instead.

RONDA ROUSEY

UFC 170: Rousey vs. McMann $1.558 million (10,217 in attendance at the Mandalay Events Center in Las Vegas)

UFC 184: Rousey vs. Zingano $2.675 million (16,577 in attendance at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif.)

UFC 193: Rousey vs. Holm $6.8 million (56,214 in attendance at Etihad Stadium in Melbourne, Australia)

CONOR MCGREGOR

UFC 189: Aldo vs. McGregor $10.1 million (16,516 in attendance at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas)

UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz $8.1 million (14,898 in attendance at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas)

UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 $7.692 million (15,539 in attendance at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas)

Advantage Conor McGregor

FIGHT CARD APPEAL

When Rousey and McGregor fight, it not only benefits them but often times the people who compete on the undercard. For instance at UFC 205 this weekend in New York, McGregor is the headliner but his opponent Eddie Alvarez and fellow champions Tyron Woodley and Joanna Jedrzejczyk are expected to reap the benefits as well due to receiving pay-per-view points from the event.

Events headlined byRousey or McGregor are so popular that there are managers or competitors who will specifically try to get on one of those shows for maximum exposure.

FOX Sports polled several prominent mixed martial arts managers asking them this question if you were putting one of your fighters on a card, who would you rather have headlining Conor McGregor or Ronda Rousey?

Out of the six managers reached for comment, five said that they would rather have their fighter compete on a card headlined by McGregor.

"I think right now it would have to be Conor. Just based on numbers," one manager said when speaking to FOX Sports.

"100-percent Conor. He redefined the game," another manager wrote when responding by text message.

Another manager brought up the fact that Conor is the better choice also because he has better competition to help him sell the fights he"s in.

"Conor without a doubt. He has bigger name people to fight," the manager wrote in a text message to FOX Sports.

Only one manager out of the six chose Rousey with his/her response as follows:

"Ronda by far. She"s a bigger star, keeps it real and she respects all fighters and the game itself. Business and financially speaking, Rousey is way above. Principle, professionally, ethically speaking, Rousey is way above."

Based on the reactions from the managers, it appears it is more beneficial to fight on a McGregor card than anywhere else in the UFC right now.

Advantage Conor McGregor

SALARIES

There"s no exact way to determine who makes more between McGregor and Rousey outside of their reported fight purses when they compete in a state where those figures are readily available. Sadly, Rousey"s last two fights took place in Brazil and Australia and neither reports those salary figures to the media.

With that said, the salary figures that we can used based on information available comes from the Forbes" highest paid athletes list, which combines fight purses, pay-per-view bonuses, sponsorships and endorsements.

These figures are solely what"s being reported by Forbes, a leading financialmagazine, but neither McGregor or Rousey have confirmed these numbers. These are the most recent numbers reported by the magazine and also the highest reported earnings for either fighter.

Conor McGregor $22 million

Ronda Rousey $14 million

According to Forbes, both McGregor and Rousey earned a reported $4 million from their endorsements/sponsorships, so that category is dead even. It"s the fight salaries where they separate with McGregor pulling in $18 million with Rousey at $10 million.

Advantage Conor McGregor

RESULT: Conor McGregor is ahead in 4 out of 6 categories

Of course there are always a million different metrics that are nearly immeasurable like which one of the athletes is better known to the general public or who has a bigger impact with endorsements.

At the end of the day, these were the six categories with the most readily available information that could be compared between the two athletes. When it was all said and done, McGregor definitely had a bigger footprint, especially when it comes to the amount of money he generates for the UFC. Rousey undoubtedly had the advantage when it came to social media and overall social media impact during her fights, but it"s impossible to say if those interactions equate to more star power than McGregor.

McGregor might have Rousey beat in a few of these categories, but it"s clear that they are the two biggest stars in the sport today and there"s a good chance they may go down as the most prolific stars in the history of the UFC.

Source: http://www.foxsports.com/ufc/story/conor-mcgregor-ronda-rousey-who-is-the-bigger-star-by-the-numbers-ufc-110716

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Thursday, November 3, 2016

Stephanie McMahon Wants Ronda Rousey For WWE


Ronda Rousey Discusses Retirement From UFC
11/3/2016 12:45 AM PDT BY TMZ STAFF

EXCLUSIVE

Ronda Rousey"s MMA career is almost over, but her PRO WRESTLING career could just be getting started -- because Stephanie McMahon says she"s got her sights set on the UFC legend.

Vince"s daughter -- who also happens to be a minority owner and a HUGE honcho with the company -- was in NYC when we asked if the WWE had already begun the courting process.

FYI, Rousey is a BIG pro wrestling fan -- and not only made a cameo last year -- but regularly attends pro wrestling events around the country.

And with Stephanie telling us the WWE is setting a goal to have an all-women"s main event at WrestleMania one day ... we can"t think of a better headliner.

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2016/11/03/stephanie-mcmahon-ronda-rousey-wwe/

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Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Should Miesha Tate Apologize To Ronda Rousey For Her Comments?


Ronda Rousey tells Ellen DeGeneres that she considered suicide AFTER LOSING to Holly Holm #sideeye

Its no secret that MMA fighters Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate cannot stand each other. Their rivalry dated back to their Strikeforce days, and continued through to the establishment of a womens bantamweight division in the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

Its been Rousey that has thus far got the better of Tate, beating her and becoming a dominant womens champion in the UFC. That dominance was unceremoniously shattered in November thanks to a stunning defeat at the hands (or rather, the feet) of current Womens Bantamweight Champion, Holly Holm.

The loss left Ronda Rousey in a dark place mentally. ABC News reports that she even considered suicide following the defeat.

[I was] literally sitting there thinking about killing myself. In that exact second, Im like, Im nothing. What do I do anymore?

Whats particularly telling about the above quote is that it demonstrates what a horrible effect the cruel jokes and memes by others had on Ronda Rousey. Its worth noting that Miesha Tate was not only gleeful about her longtime rivals terrible loss, but she also joined in on the fun of mocking Ronda.

According to MMA Junkie, the initial reaction from Miesha Cupcake Tate was what youd expect from someone who just watched their biggest, most-hated rival get the beating of a lifetime.

Im f**king stoked; f**k Ronda Rousey. F**k her and her Nobody has the right to beat me. Nobody has the right to beat you? Well you just got beat, b***h.

She later had a softer response to the Rousey loss, though her opinion of the former champion remained critical. Said Tate, [Rondas] always portrayed herself as invincible and everybody bought into that so much that nobody was going to beat her, that she was going to retire undefeated and everything that shes said.

When you make a comment like, I can beat everyone in my division with one arm tied behind my back, I guess you should kind of expect that kind of backlash.

Though Miesha Tate initially seemed apologetic about her knee-jerk reaction, in recent weeks she has returned to harping on the fallen Ronda Rousey.

Miesha Tate: Ronda Rousey was the bull, Holly Holm was the matadorhttps://t.co/kNjZIQUOE4#UFC #UFC196 pic.twitter.com/mnm2yYuez2

FOX Sports: UFC (@UFCONFOX) February 13, 2016

Fox Sports reports that Tate referred to Rousey as a bull and Holm as the matador who beat her. She has, in fact, repeatedly harped on Ronda for losing. Whats interesting about this is the criticism seems to ignore the fact that Tate herself has yet to overcome Ronda. Rousey beat her during their Strikeforce days and in the UFC. Although Tate was unarguably cheated out of a rematch, those previous results still stand.

Its also important to note that Miesha Tate is still staring down a potential beat down herself should Holly Holm get the best of her something thats a very real possibility.

Perhaps Miesha Tate has let her rivalry with Ronda get the better of her; it seems that she lacks the record to back the level of personal criticism shes often aimed at Rousey. And thats before you consider Rouseys recent admission of suicidal thoughts.

Ronda Rousey reveals she had suicidal thoughts after Holly Holm loss https://t.co/UFrYFOBLbg pic.twitter.com/2FyizyyyuJ

Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) February 16, 2016

For her part, Holly Holm has admitted a reluctance to say anything in response to Ronda Rouseys Ellen interview. I dont want to say Im glad that she felt that way, said Holly during an interview. I dont want to say oh I am so sorry. Its something I think you have to dig through on your own. She added, In the long run [Ronda Rousey] will be stronger mentally from [the loss].

Meanwhile, its only a matter of time before we hear from Miesha Tate on the subject she is rarely silent on issues concerning her rival. Will she follow Holly up the high road, or cave to her dislike of Ronda? Its very possible, given her backtracking in the past, that Tate might hold back on criticism from this point forward. Still, it wont erase the way Miesha has repeatedly mocked and criticized Ronda since that bad loss in November.

Should Tate be sorry for her part however large or small in damaging Ronda Rouseys psyche?

[Photo by Quinn Rooney/Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images]

Source: http://www.inquisitr.com/2803316/should-miesha-tate-apologize-to-ronda-rousey-for-her-comments/

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Sunday, August 2, 2015

Ronda Rousey vows to punish Bethe Correia at UFC 190

Ronda Rousey vows to punish Bethe Correia at UFC 190

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Ronda Rousey vows to punish Bethe Correia at UFC 190

If you want a clear indicator of Ronda Rousey"s dominance, consider that the big question for her main-event bout at UFC 190 isnt whether shell beat challenger Bethe Correia its how quickly.

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Ben Fowlkes, USA TODAY Sports 2:35 a.m. EDT August 1, 2015

Bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey has vowed to punish Bethe Correia during their main-event bout at UFC 190. USA TODAY Sports

Ronda Rousey puts her unbeaten record and bantamweight title on the line against Bethe Correia in Rio de Janeiro.(Photo: Jae C. Hong, AP)

If you want a clear indicator of just how dominant UFC womens bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is, consider that the big question fans and media are debating ahead of her main-event bout at UFC 190 in Rio de Janeiro on Saturday (10 p.m. ET pay-per-view) isnt whether shell beat challenger Bethe Correia its how quickly.

And, lest you assume that faster is better, at least when it comes to proving ones superiority over an opponent in the cage, you should know that this is the rare situation where you might be wrong.

On paper, theres no good reason to think Correia (9-0 mixed martial arts, 3-0 UFC) stands a chance of beating Rousey (11-0, 5-0). The Brazilian challengers unbeaten record might look like a match for the champions, but not every winning streak is created equal.

For instance, the three opponents Correia has faced in the UFC so far are a combined 1-7. The fact that two of those opponents happened to be Rouseys friends and teammates, whom Correia gleefully picked off as if in a conscious effort to get the champs attention, is at least part of the reason why shes getting this title shot in her home country, despite being an 18-1 underdog according to some oddsmakers.

The other part is theres simply no one else left in the UFC womens bantamweight division. Rousey has demolished the four fighters below her in the UFCs official womens 135-pound rankings.

The only one of those four to make it out of the first round against Rousey is current top contender Miesha Tate, whom Rousey has already beaten twice. Of the three UFC title defenses that followed Rouseys second win against Tate, the longest a TKO victory over Olympic silver medalist wrestler Sara McMann took a little more than a minute. The other two lasted a combined 30 seconds.

This is whatRousey is known for, these quick and easy victories. After winning the bronze medal in judo at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, she tried her hand at amateur MMA in 2010 and then went pro in 2011. And it wasnt until her rematch with Tate in 2013 that she needed more than one round to put away any opponent.

Correia would seem to be a prime candidate for another early night. Shes smaller than Rousey, nowhere near as powerful or athletic, and nothing about the grappling prowess shes demonstrated so far in the UFC gives us any reason to think shell be able to avoid Rouseys signature submission, the armbar.

Nothing, that is, except for Rouseys promise to take her time and make Correias punishment last.

After Correia mocked Rouseys teammates in her post-fight celebrations, then appeared to take a jab at the suicide death of Rouseys father in interviews leading up to this fight, Rousey vowed to make Correia suffer, to humiliate her in addition to defeating her.

"Some things take longer,"Rousey said in May. "Like, a choke takes longer than an armbar, and a TKO takes longer than the choke. I might go for the prolonged finishinstead."

You might think that would make her something of a villain in Brazil, where shell be fighting in Correias backyard, but as former UFC heavyweight champion Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira pointed out when Rousey was mobbed by adoring Brazilian fans during this weeks open workouts in Rio, Rouseys star power eclipses her country of origin.

"Ronda now looks like the Mike Tyson of the (female fighters),"Nogueira says. "She has no nationality."

WATCH: CORREIA WANTS TO DESTROY THE ROUSEY MYTH

Bethe Correia is a huge underdog against bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey at UFC 190, but she is intent on shocking the world. USA TODAY Sports

That comparison is apt in terms of more than just pure celebrity. Like Tyson, Rouseys penchant for quick finishes makes her fights seem at times like they arent competitive enough to be worth the $59.99 purchase price on PPV. Unlike Tyson, she lives in an age when fights like her last one a 14-second submission win againstCat Zingano show up on the Internet in their entirety mere minutes after the fight is over.

In that sense, Rouseys promise to "drag it out and make the finish more exciting"might be the best possible selling point for what looks like a colossal mismatch. Rousey flipping another over-matched opponent onto her head, then extending her arm until she quits or has her elbow ruined, all in less time than it takes to microwave a cup of soup? Weve seen that. A vengeful Rousey expressing her violent wrath in patient, excruciating strokes? That would be something new.

As the fight draws closer, however, Rousey has begun walking back that promise somewhat. She admits she got "chewed out"by her mother, another former judo champion, for planning to prolong the bout. The longer the fight goes, even against an opponent as out of her depth as Correia seems to be, the more stressful it will be on her mother, Rousey notes.

"But Im going to be so dominant in every single second of it,"Rousey says. "Even though its going to be longer, shes not going to have to see her baby get hit."

Ben Fowlkes writes for MMAjunkie. Follow on Twitter @benfowlkesMMA.

GALLERY: IN THE OCTAGON WITH RONDA ROUSEY

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Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ufc/2015/07/30/ronda-rousey-vows-punish-bethe-correia-ufc-190/30913519/

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Monday, March 2, 2015

Watch Ronda Rousey beat Cat Zingano in 14 seconds in UFC 184 (updated)



On Friday, Ronda Rousey tweeted that she had never been more ready in her life for her UFC 184 championship fight against Cat Zingano and, on Saturday night, the world learned just what that meant.

Zingano came out charging and Rousey floored her with an armbar, winning the bantamweight fight in 14 seconds in the Staples Center in Los Angeles. It was tied, according to UFC, for the fastest submission in UFC history and was the fastest win in a UFC title fight.

It was a stunningly quick finish, even for a fighter of Rouseys unquestioned ability, and it came against Zingano, one of the few fighters believed to have a chance at ending her undefeated streak. But Rousey (11-0 in Mixed Martial Arts, 5-0 in UFC) extended her dominance of 2014, when she needed 1 minute, 22 seconds in two fights combined to defend her belt.

[Related:What's next forRousey? A movie, then another fight]We expected she might do something like flying right at me . . . but I have faster transition than anyone because my mom taught me, Rousey said afterward (via the Los Angeles Times) of her judo-fighting mother.

Zingano (9-1) was ready to go at it again, in spite of the finish. I want to do it again. . . . She had my arm, I saw her leg, went to grab it, and all of a sudden, Im tapping [out], she said. I just want to do it again.

[Related: Rousey says she'd like to give Zingano a rematch]

Rouseys latest win set Twitter on fire.

You get the idea. It was a breath-taking finish. And now what does Rousey do? Well, next up is a movie role, according to the UFCs Dana White (via Fox Sports), then her next fight will be scheduled. Rousey, though, told the Washington Posts Rick Maese that she understands fighting is most important for now.

I always prioritize fighting first, Rousey said. Everything comes from fighting. The only reason Hollywood is interested in me at all is because I fight and I win. So I have to protect that.

For now, she was happy just to celebrate the moment.

H/T Uproxx for the GIF

Step into the world of Rowdy Ronda Rousey as the 28-year-old UFC fighter prepares to defend her undefeated record. Or, as she puts it, the next chick to beat. (Lee Powell/The Washington Post)

After spending most of her career in traditional print sports journalism, Cindy began blogging and tweeting, first as NFL/Redskins editor, and, since August 2010, at The Early Lead. She also is the social media editor for Sports.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/early-lead/wp/2015/03/01/watch-ronda-rouseys-ridiculously-fast-victory-over-cat-zingano-in-ufc-184/



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Sunday, March 1, 2015

UFC 184 results, photos: Ronda Rousey needs just 14 seconds to tap Cat Zingano



LOS ANGELES Ronda Rousey extended her reign as UFC womens bantamweight champion in characteristically dominant fashion, submittingCat Zingano in 14 seconds to defend her title a fifth time.

Rousey (11-0 MMA, 5-0 UFC), 28, finished her opponent even faster than in her previous title defense, a 16-second railroading of Alexis Davis this past July. It was her 11th straight win and ninth via armbar, which she applied as Zingano (9-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC) charged her in the opening seconds of UFC 184s headliner.

The womens bantamweight title bout was the main event of todays UFC 184 event at Staples Center in Los Angeles. It aired on pay-per-view following prelims on FOX Sports 1 and UFC Fight Pass. UFC President Dana White said today the event is expected to generate a live gate of $2.7 million and was trending toward success on pay-per-view.

Zingano, 32, threw a flying knee and then applied a headlock to take Rousey to the mat. But while in motion, the champion reversed position and then scrambled to Zinganos back. At the same time, Rousey isolated the challengers arm, setting up a straight armbar that forced a quick tap from Zingano.

It was the fastest submission in UFC title fight history, beating Frank Shamrocks 16-secondarmbarof Kevin Jacksonat UFC 15.5.

We were expecting that she might just come out and just do something flying at me right away, Rousey said afterward. I originally thought I was going to check (the punch and throw a) left hook, but I just caught her instead. I was actually working on that armbar, not at that angle, but hey, it works.

Zinging, who suffered the first loss of her professional career and overcame great personal tragedy to fight for the title, was in shock at the turns of events and struggled to contain her emotions.

I want to do it again, she said. Just f-ck.

She had my arm, and I saw her leg, she added. It was in, but it wasnt in. F-ck. She f-cking won. She did it. That was a good armbar.

Rouseys dominance inevitably prompted the question of what was next for her career. She has only been past the first round once in five UFC fights and has never been in danger inside the UFCs octagon.

Honestly, I was impressed by Holly Holm tonight, said Rousey, referring to former the former boxing champs successful debut in the nights co-headliner. Ive always liked to test myself against that level of striking. Bethe Correia, shes undefeated Id like to take that 0 away from her.

Correia, 31, has beaten two of of Rouseys teammates in the UFC and called repeatedly for a shot at the champ. She attended tonights event and said backstage prior to the event that she would do whatever it takes to secure a title shot.

With few ready-made contenders left, however, Correia might not need to press too much to get her wish.

Up-to-the-minute UFC 184 results include:

  • Ronda Rousey def. Cat Zingano via submission (armbar) Round 1, 0:14
  • Holly Holm def. Raquel Pennington via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)
  • Jake Ellenberger def. Josh Koscheck via submission (north-south choke) Round 2, 4:20
  • Alan Jouban def. Richard Walsh via knockout (strikes) Round 1, 2:19
  • Tony Ferguson def. Gleison Tibau via submission (rear-n***d choke) Round 1, 2:37
  • Roan Carneiro def Mark Munoz via technical submission (rear-n***d choke) Round 1, 1:40
  • Roman Salazar vs. Norifumi Yamamoto no-contest (accidental eye poke) Round 2, 2:37
  • Tim Means def. Dhiego Lima via TKO (strikes) Round 1, 2:17
  • Derrick Lewis def. Ruan Potts via TKO (punches) Round 2, 3:18
  • Valmir Lazaro def. James Krause via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
  • Masio Fullen def. Alexander Torres via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)

For more on UFC 184, check out the UFC Events section of the site.

(MMAjunkies John Morgan, Matt Erickson and Steven Marrocco contributed to this report on site in Los Angeles.)

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Source: http://mmajunkie.com/2015/03/ufc-184-results-photos-ronda-rousey-needs-just-14-seconds-to-tap-cat-zingano



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