When Amanda Nunes announced her retirement, she exited the stage almost universally recognized as the greatest female mixed martial artist of all-time.
As Nunes’ competitive exploits drift further and further into the rearview mirror, a look at some of the numbers that accompanied her along the way:
35: Years of age for Nunes, who was born on May 30, 1988 in Pojuca, Brazil—a little more than 6,000 miles from UFC headquarters in Las Vegas.
13: Nunes wins by knockout or technical knockout, accounting for 57% of her career total. Her list of UFC victims: Holly Holm, Cristiane Justino, Raquel Pennington, Ronda Rousey, Shayna Baszler, Germaine de Randamie and Sheila Gaff. Nunes holds four other wins by submission (17%) and six more by decision (26%).
10: Seconds needed for Nunes to bury Nadja Nadja with punches on the Brazilian regional scene in July 2008. It ranks as the fastest of the five sub-minute finishes on her resume.
7: Promotions for which Nunes plied her MMA trade. In addition to her 16-2 mark in the UFC, she went 2-0 in Samurai Fight Combat, 1-1 in Invicta Fighting Championships, 1-1 in Strikeforce, 1-1 in Prime MMA Championship, 1-0 in Bitetti Combat and 1-0 in Demo Fight.
12: Consecutive victories for Nunes from March 21, 2015 to March 6, 2021. It was her longest stretch of uninterrupted success.
773: Significant strikes landed by Nunes as a UFC women’s bantamweight, placing her third on the promotion’s all-time list at 135 pounds. Only Aldana (959) and Pennington (922) have connected with more.
300,000: Dollars in post-fight bonuses banked by Nunes across her 18 assignments in the UFC. She was awarded “Performance of the Night” five times.
62: Rounds started by Nunes as a mixed martial artist. She went the distance on seven different occasions and compiled a 6-1 record in those bouts. The lone outlier was a unanimous decision defeat to Sarah D'Alelio at Invicta 4 on Jan. 5, 2013.
8: Fighters other than Nunes who have held UFC titles in two weight classes. Randy Couture, B.J. Penn, Conor McGregor, Georges St. Pierre, Daniel Cormier, Henry Cejudo, Jon Jones and Alex Pereira comprise the list.
.653: Cumulative winning percentage between the five women—D’Alelio, Julianna Pena, Cat Zingano, Alexis Davis and Ana Maria—who defeated Nunes. They sport a combined record of 62-33.