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Women’s Strawweight
1. Weili Zhang (20-1)
Zhang was devastating on her home soil, putting an end to Jessica Andrade’s title reign in just 42 seconds at UFC Fight Night 157 in Shenzhen, China. “Magnum” pummeled Andrade with punches, elbows and knees at close range for a surprisingly quick finish to become the first Chinese champion in UFC history. Zhang’s professional winning streak is now at 20, a run that includes four victories in the Octagon. While the 30-year-old Black Tiger Fight Club member figures to be a valuable asset as the promotion continues to make inroads in China, she also showed she may just be scratching the surface of her potential by dispatching one of the most powerful women in the division. Zhang is expected to compete in the United States for her next title defense, but assuming her progression continues, a pay-per-view headlining spot in China is a realistic goal in the future.2. Jessica Andrade (20-7)
Andrade’s championship reign proved to be short lived – one of the shortest in UFC history, in fact – as she suffered a 42-second technical knockout loss to Weili Zhang in the UFC Fight Night 157 headliner in Shenzhen, China on Aug. 31. The Brazilian’s willingness to engage ultimately cost her when Zhang clipped her with a right hook and unloaded with knees, elbows and punches in close quarters for a surprisingly quick finish. That ends a four-bout winning streak for “Bate Estaca,” who was coming off consecutive knockout wins over Rose Namajunas and Karolina Kowalkiewicz.3. Rose Namajunas (8-4)
Namajunas looked sharp in her second title defense at UFC 237. That is, until challenger Jessica Andrade knocked her unconscious with a slam 2:58 into the second round of their headlining bout in Rio de Janeiro. Namajunas’ reaction after the defeat was one of relief, and it seems as though the 26-year-old could be leaning toward an early retirement. If she does decide to stick around, “Thug” Rose has shown a propensity to make great strides from bout to bout, and that includes UFC 237, where she battered, bloodied and dropped Andrade on the feet. Given a little more time to clear her head, it’s possible that Namajunas’ perspective could change, but don’t expect a quick turnaround either way.4. 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 will return to 115 pounds for her next Octagon appearance when she faces Michelle Waterson at UFC Fight Night in Tampa on Oct. 12.5. Tatiana Suarez (8-0)
Suarez may still very well be a future champion, but she showed some flaws in a victory over Nina Ansaroff at UFC 238. The American used her wrestling to bank two rounds on the judges scorecards, but faded in the third round. Perhaps even more concerning was Ansaroff’s ability to land offense in the final stanza. Nonetheless, Suarez captured a unanimous decision for her fifth consecutive triumph within the Las Vegas-based promotion. The Milennia MMA product could be an interesting potential foe for newly-crowned champion Weili Zhang, though she may need another victory to truly enter the title conversation.6. Nina Ansaroff (10-6)
Ansaroff didn’t beat the highly-touted Tatiana Suarez at UFC 238, but she did show some chinks in the American wrestler’s armor. Ansaroff spent most of the first two stanzas on her back but did a decent job neutralizing Suarez’s offense with her guard. In round three, Ansaroff took advantage of her tiring opponent to land 30 significant strikes — more than Suarez’s first-four UFC foes landed combined. Nonetheless, Ansaroff dropped a unanimous decision to see her four-bout winning streak snapped.7. Claudia Gadelha (17-4)
Gadelha relied exclusively on her standup to capture a unanimous decision triumph over Randa Markos in a preliminary matchup at UFC 239. While it wasn’t the most enthralling performance, it was a welcome victory for “Claudinha,” who recently began training under the guidance of coaches Mark Henry and Ricardo Almeida. The former strawweight title challenger has won two of her last three Octagon appearances and has been booked to meet Cynthia Calvillo at UFC on ESPN 7 in Washington, D.C. on Dec. 7.8. Carla Esparza (14-6)
The former strawweight queen earned a quality victory at UFC Fight Night 150, as she edged previously unbeaten prospect Virna Jandiroba in a hard-fought unanimous decision victory. Esparza had a slight edge on the feet, but four takedowns were key to her victory, which snapped a two-bout skid for “Cookie Monster.” Next up, Esparza will square off against Alexa Grasso at UFC Mexico City on Sept. 21.9. Cynthia Calvillo (8-1)
Calvillo has returned to her winning ways since coming back from a suspension for a positive marijuana test at UFC 219. In her most recent two outings, the Calvillo has bested Cortney Casey and Poliana Botelho to rebound from her lone career defeat, which came at the hands of Carla Esparza at the aforementioned UFC 219 event. The Californian has won five of her six Octagon appearances overall and remains a rising contender at 115 pounds. Calvillo was forced to withdraw from a proposed bout with Livinha Souza at UFC Sacramento due to a broken foot. She will turn to action against former title challenger Claudia Gadelha at UFC on ESPN 7 on Dec. 7.10. Michelle Waterson (17-6)
Always one of the most marketable fighters in the UFC, Waterson finds herself on the verge of title contention after authoring a three-fight winning streak against Karolina Kowalkiewicz, Felice Herrig and Cortney Casey. “The Karate Hottie” will get a real opportunity to test her championship mettle when she squares off against former 115-pound queen Joanna Jedrzejczyk on Oct. 12.Other Contenders: Brianna Van Buren, Alexa Grasso, Marina Rodriguez, Felice Herrig, Livinha Souza.
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