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Women’s Strawweight
1. Rose Namajunas (8-3)
Namajunas got the better of Joanna Jedrzejczyk in their rematch, outpointing her rival over the course of five hard-fought rounds in the UFC 223 headliner at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. What made the triumph more impressive than her first-round stoppage of Jedrzejczyk at UFC 217 in November was the fact that Namajunas had to overcome adversity against an opponent who was experienced in five-round affairs. “Thug” Rose will return to the Octagon for the first time in more than a year, when she faces Jessica Andrade in hostile territory at UFC 237.2. Joanna Jedrzejczyk (15-3)
Once regarded as the top female pound-for-pound talent in the sport, Jedrzejczyk now finds herself looking up at the top of two separate divisions following a loss to Valentina Shevchenko for the vacant flyweight strap at UFC 231. While the 31-year-old Poland native showed no quit in the bout, she simply had no clear answers for her opponent over the course of the 25-minute affair. Jedrzejczyk has promised a return to 115 pounds in 2019, but the question remains if the weight cut will prove too draining as she grows older — particularly after moving up a division.3. Jessica Andrade (19-6)
One-punch knockouts are rarely-seen in women’s MMA, so Andrade sent an emphatic message with her first-round finish of fellow former title challenger Karolina Kowalkiewicz at UFC 228. With that win, “Bate Estaca” may have very well set herself up as the next strawweight No. 1 contender for reigning champion Rose Namajunas. Andrade has won six of her last seven in the Las Vegas-based promotion overall and will get her desired title shot against Rose Namajunas on home soil in Curitiba, Brazil, at UFC 237.4. Tatiana Suarez (7-0)
Suarez has been touted as a future championship contender and she showed why at UFC 228, dominating ex-champ Carla Esparza for nearly three rounds before earning a TKO stoppage late in the fight. The freestyle wrestling ace improved to 4-0 within the Las Vegas-based promotion, giving her the longest active winning streak in the division and setting up a fight with another highly-ranked contender.5. Nina Ansaroff (10-5)
Ansaroff authored the most complete performance of her career to date at UFC 231, as she landed offense at range and fended off takedowns en route to a unanimous verdict against former title challenger Claudia Gadelha. After beginning her promotional tenure on a two-bout skid, Ansaroff has won four fights in a row — tying her for the longest active winning streak in the UFC at 115 pounds.6. Claudia Gadelha (16-4)
Gadelha may still be one of the world’s 10 best strawweights, but she appears to be far removed from her days of challenging for a title in the UFC. The 30-year-old Brazilian lost for the second time in three outings at UFC 231, as she struggled to close the distance against Nina Ansaroff in a decision defeat. That losing streak could very easily be three, considering the contentious nature of her split-decision victory over Carla Esparza at UFC 225.7. Tecia Torres (10-3)
While Torres was never out of her depth against Joanna Jedrzejczyk, “The Tiny Tornado” was also never managed to truly threaten the former strawweight queen in their matchup at UFC on Fox 30. After capturing victories in six of her first seven Octagon appearances, Torres has dropped back-to-back contests at the hands of Jedrzejczyk and Jessica Andrade, pushing her down the 115-pound pecking order. Torres will try and get back on track against Weili Zhnag at UFC 235 on March 2.8. Karolina Kowalkiewicz (12-2)
Kowalkiewicz fought back admirably following an early barrage from Jessica Andrade at UFC 228 but collapsed when the Brazilian landed a massive right hook 1:58 into the opening stanza of their co-main event bout. Coming into the bout, the Pole had some momentum as a contender thanks to a two-bout winning streak and a previous victory over current champ Rose Namajunas. Kowalkiewicz will try to begin a slow climb back into the title picture against Michelle Waterson at UFC on ESPN 2 in Philadelphia on March 30.9. Carla Esparza (13-6)
One can never question Esparza’s heart, but that wasn’t nearly enough against the wrestling prowess of Tatiana Suarez at UFC 228. Suarez took Esparza down repeatedly, bludgeoned her with ground-and-pound and eventually earned a stoppage 4:33 into the third frame. After climbing back into contention with back-to-back decisions over Maryna Moroz and Cynthia Calvillo, “Cookie Monster” has dropped two straight fights.10. Livia Renata Souza (12-1)
Aggressive on her feet and opportunistic on the mat, Souza delivered as advertised in her Octagon debut at UFC Fight Night 137 in Sao Paulo. The former Invicta FC champion blitzed Australia’s Alex Chambers with punches against the fence, landed a quick takedown and secured a mounted guillotine choke for the tapout 1:21 into the opening round. With her finishing ability — 10 of her 12 wins have come inside the distance — “Livinha” should prove to be a welcome addition to the UFC’s strawweight division. Souza will return to action against Sarah Frota at UFC Fight Night in Fortaleza, Brazil, on Feb. 2.Other Contenders: Cynthia Calvillo, Michelle Waterson, Felice Herrig, Cortney Casey-Sanchez, Virna Jandiroba
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