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Sherdog’s Official Mixed Martial Arts Rankings

Women’s Strawweight


Women’s Strawweight


1. Joanna Jedrzejczyk (14-0)

Jessica Andrade figured to be Jedrzejczyk's toughest UFC title challenger to date at UFC 211, with her combination of punching power and submission skills. Instead, “Joanna Champion” shut down Andrade's powerhouse game from the get-go, outlanding her Brazilian counterpart by a wide margin to earn a 25-minute shutout and her fifth straight UFC title defense. Jedrzejczyk is now 8-0 in UFC competition and unquestionably the top woman in the sport.

2. Claudia Gadelha (15-2)

The events of UFC 212 in Rio de Janeiro only strengthened the notion that the women's strawweight division is “Joanna, Claudia and everybody else.” In a showdown with the unquestioned third-best woman in the weight class, Gadelha ripped through Karolina Kowalkiewicz, choking her out in just over three minutes. The performance is a reminder that there is still hope for the 28-year-old Gadelha -- who is relocating full-time to Albuquerque, New Mexico -- to get a third fight with her tormentor Joanna Jedrezjczyk.

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3. Karolina Kowalkiewicz (10-2)

Coming off of the first loss of her pro career to Polish counterpart Joanna Jedrzejczyk, it seemed like a tall task for Kowalkiewicz to jump back into the Octagon against the No. 2 woman in the weight class, Claudia Gadelha. Kowalkiewicz may be one of the 10 best women in the game, but she was no match for Gadelha, who took her down and choked her out in barely three minutes.

4. Rose Namajunas (6-3)

One of the most exciting and charismatic women in the entire sport, Namajunas was pegged to be an MMA star the minute she flying armbarred Kathina Catron in Invicta Fighting Championships four years ago. As the 24-year-old continues to learn and develop despite consistently facing elite fighters in the best women's MMA division, those predictions are starting to come true. At UFC on Fox 24 on April 15, Namajunas blew away Michelle Waterson on network TV, head kicking “The Karate Hottie” before choking her out. “Thug Rose” is now 4-1 in her last five bouts, her lone loss coming via split decision to recent UFC title challenger and pound-for-pound entrant Karolina Kowalkiewicz.

5. Jessica Andrade (16-6)

Andrade's impressive trio of wins over Jessica Penne, Joanne Calderwood and Angela Hill made her more than a deserving challenger for Joanna Jedrzejczyk headed into UFC 211 in Dallas on May 13. Yet in spite of Andrade's heavy hitting and submission savvy, “Joanna Champion” used her jab, leg kicks and combinations to batter the Brazilian en route to a clean sweep on the scorecards over 25 minutes, sending Andrade to the back of the line at 115 pounds.

6. Tecia Torres (8-1)

When Torres topped Bec Rawlings in February, “The Tiny Tornado” was non-committal about her immediate future in the cage, stating that she may take time away from fighting to complete her master's degree. Perhaps pending matrimony changes things. After getting engaged to girlfriend and fellow UFC standout Raquel Pennington in May, Torres opted to take a short-notice bout against Juliana Lima at “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 25 Finale.

7. Angela Hill (6-3)

Hill used her first UFC release to rip off four straight wins, capture the Invicta strawweight title and earn a second trip to the Octagon. Though “Angie Overkill” lost a spirited, exciting decision to Jessica Andrade in February, it has only stoked the fire for fans who want to see more of the entertaining striker. Hill will take on Ashley Yoder at “The Ultimate Fighter 25” Finale on July 7.

8. Livia Renata Souza (10-1)

Because the woman that took her Invicta strawweight title, Angela Hill, jumped back to the UFC, former champion Souza has been left fairly directionless. Will she fight for a vacant Invicta title? Will she head to the UFC? Her immediate future remains uncertain, but to her credit, Souza has found a way to pick up quality victories. She destroyed Invicta 105-pound champ Ayaka Hamasaki on March 25, knocking her out in less than two minutes.

9. Cortney Casey (6-4, 1 NC)

After picking up wins over Randa Markos and Jessica Aguilar, it seemed as though the largely overlooked Casey was coming into her own at 115 pounds. Then the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation stripped her of a May victory over Aguilar, stating that “Cast Iron” had tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone. Later, the UFC and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency went public and claimed the TDLR had botched Casey's test. The announcement was followed by the news that Casey's B-sample from the fight came back negative for elevated T levels. Plain and simple, Casey was a victim of an ignorant athletic commission, and as sad as it may be, she now needs to fight in order to have her legitimate win reinstated.

10. Carla Esparza (12-4)

It has been a difficult two years for the first woman to wear UFC 115-pound gold. After the promotion's inaugural strawweight queen was savaged in her first title defense against Joanna Jedrzejczyk in March 2015, Esparza bounced back with a win over Brazil's Juliana Lima, only to suffer a surprising upset loss to Randa Markos in February. “Cookie Monster” took another step toward righting her ship on June 25, easily outwrestling Ukraine's Maryna Moroz for 15 minutes.

Other Contenders: Joanne Calderwood, Angela Lee, Randa Markos, Maryna Moroz, Viviane Pereira.

Continue Reading » Women’s Atomweight
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