Preview: UFC 251 ‘Usman vs. Masvidal’ Main Card
Namajunas vs. Andrade
John
Brannigan/Sherdog illustration
Women’s Strawweights
Rose Namajunas (8-4) vs. Jessica Andrade (20-7)ODDS: Namajunas (-210), Andrade (+175)
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Andrade’s win over Namajunas was basically a microcosm of both fighters. Namajunas’ career has been all about technique and overcoming adversity and evolution, but Andrade is all about brute force. Andrade came into the UFC as a raw bantamweight, but she held her own in terms of strength despite being at a huge size disadvantage. Still, her career at 135 pounds eventually stalled, as she could still overwhelm the worst athletes of the division but had trouble against opponents with some combination of strength and technique. After a 2015 loss to Raquel Pennington, Andrade decided to cut down to strawweight, which seemed like a high-risk, high-reward proposition at the time. Andrade would obviously benefit from some more size parity against smaller competition, but would cutting an extra 20 pounds drain her muscular frame? In retrospect, any concerns seem foolish, as Andrade immediately became an absolute bulldozer at 115 pounds, running over Jessica Penne and Joanne Calderwood before having a three-round war with Angela Hill. That all led to a one-sided loss in a title fight against Jedrzejczyk, which laid Andrade’s game bare. There is just no nuance to the Brazilian’s approach, and Jedrzejczyk managed to use her long frame to keep Andrade at bay and play matador. In response, Andrade just kept charging forward without any hint of a backup plan. Of course, it speaks to just what a physical force Andrade is that despite such a raw game she immediately set about another impressive run that, as it turns out, led to her winning the strawweight title. She became the first fighter to outright overpower Claudia Gadelha and knocked out the extremely durable Kowalkiewicz before wresting the belt away from Namajunas. Inside the cage, Andrade’s reign lasted all of 42 seconds, as Weili Zhang met her head-on and knocked her out, so this rematch against Namajunas is crucial. Andrade may not be able to adjust her game going forward, and this fight will prove whether or not she needs to.
The dynamic of this fight does not look to have changed much since the first one. Namajunas has not fought since losing her belt, and Andrade looks set to bring the same approach as always. While it may seem reductive to say that Namajunas will win this as long as she does not get dropped on her head again, that basically sums up the situation based on how the first fight went. There are some things that will always make Andrade a tougher matchup for Namajunas than she should be on paper. While “Thug Rose” has a long frame, she is more comfortable pressuring her opponents than moving from the outside, and her willingness to clinch put her in danger in their first fight and figures to do so here. However, outside of the fight-ending slam, Namajunas showed an ability to neutralize Andrade in those grinding exchanges; and outside of those stalemates, Namajunas was putting on a master class in terms of a striking match, making Andrade look one-dimensional in a manner similar to what Jedrzejczyk did, only causing more damage in the process. In the 14 months since their last bout, Namajunas and her camp are the much likelier side to adjust based off what went right and what went wrong and fight a smart fight going forward. As the first fight showed, Andrade can change everything in one moment, but unless that happens, this should be all one-way traffic. The pick is for Namajunas to keep building over the course of the fight and score a third-round stoppage.
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