Women’s Flyweight
1. Valentina Shevchenko (24-4-1) | UFC [1]
Shevchenko was a woman on a mission in the UFC 306 co-main event, as she dominated Alexa Grasso with takedowns and positional control en route to a clear-cut unanimous decision triumph at the Sphere in Las Vegas. “Bullet” regains the flyweight belt she lost to Grasso in a massive upset at UFC 285 and evens their trilogy at 1-1-1. Perhaps more impressively, Shevchenko improved to 9-2-1 during her current run of 11 straight title fights, further solidifying her status as the greatest female flyweight of all-time.2. Alexa Grasso (16-4-1) | UFC [2]
Grasso spent much of her trilogy bout against Valentina Shevchenko on her back, and the Mexican star paid the price, as she relinquished her flyweight title in a unanimous decision loss at UFC 306. Grasso struggled to find her range on the feet and outside of a couple submission attempts, was unable to seriously threaten her rival over the course of the 25-minute affair. Still, Grasso is 1-1-1 against Shevchenko overall, so she shouldn’t be too far from contention at 125 pounds.3. Manon Fiorot (12-1) | UFC [3]
Fiorot relied on her physical advantages at UFC on ESPN 54, as she cruised to a unanimous decision triumph over Erin Blanchfield in the evening’s main event at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Fiorot’s winning streak now stands at seven, and while it wasn’t an especially enthralling performance, it’s hard to deny the Frenchwoman her place as the division’s No. 1 contender.4. Erin Blanchfield (13-2) UFC [4]
After suffering her first UFC defeat against Manon Fiorot in March, Blanchfield rebounded with a pivotal, five-round unanimous decision triumph against former strawweight queen Rose Namajunas in the UFC Edmonton co-main event. “Cold Blooded” started slowly, but she was gradually able to take control over the bout’s final 15 minutes. With victories over Namajunas, Taila Santos and Jessica Andrade already on her resume, the New Jersey native has targeted a showdown against former 125-pound champ Alexa Grasso for her next Octagon appearance.5. Taila Santos (22-3) | PFL [5]
Santos mixed clean combination striking with opportunistic grappling to take a hard-fought unanimous verdict over Bellator flyweight queen Liz Carmouche in the PFL semifinals on Aug. 2. Santos, who came up short in her bid for UFC gold at 125 pounds, will get a crack at $1 million and the PFL flyweight crown against Dakota Ditcheva.6. Liz Carmouche (22-8) | PFL [6]
Carmouche missed weight and then was unable to outduel Taila Santos in a PFL flyweight semifinal matchup on Aug. 2 in Nashville. That ends a nine-bout winning streak for “Girl-Rilla,” who was competitive in her first defeat since falling to Valentina Shevchenko in August 2019. Carmouche appears to have plenty left in the tank at 40 years old, and if the PFL adds a bantamweight division as she has requested, that could be the next step in her career.7. Natalia Silva (18-5-1) | UFC [7]
Silva kept her momentum going at UFC Fight Night 242, taking a clear-cut unanimous decision over former strawweight queen Jessica Andrade in the evening’s co-main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The 26-year-old Brazilian has won six straight in the Octagon — and 12 in a row overall — which puts her on the short list of intriguing new contenders at 125 pounds.8. Maycee Barber (14-2) | UFC [8]
A gritty effort propelled Barber to a three-round verdict over former title challenger Katlyn Cerminara at UFC 299, potentially moving “The Future” into position for a championship opportunity of her own down the road. Barber has won six consecutive outings since falling to reigning 125-pound queen Alexa Grasso in February 2021. Barber was forced to withdraw from a headlining clash against Rose Namajunas in Denver on June 13.9. Katlyn Cerminara (18-6) | UFC [9]
Though she was typically game throughout, Cerminara ultimately didn’t have enough for Maycee Barber, as she dropped a unanimous verdict in their bout at UFC 299 in Miami on March 9. The New Jersey native has lost back-to-back fights for the first time in her career, and at 35 years old, the former flyweight title challenger appears to be facing a long road back to the top of the division.10. Rose Namajunas (13-7) | UFC [10]
Things appeared to be going well for Namajunas in the early rounds against Erin Blanchfield at UFC Edmonton, but “Thug” Rose was unable to keep the fight at her preferred range down the stretch. That resulted in a narrow five-round defeat for the former strawweight champion, who falls to 2-2 since moving to 125 pounds and sees her title hopes dashed for the time being.Other Contenders: Amanda Ribas, Viviane Araujo, Karine Silva, Jessica Andrade, Tracy Cortez.
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