The Film Room: Amanda Nunes vs. Raquel Pennington
UFC 224 available for order on Amazon Prime
(Prime Video PPV)
Amanda Nunes will headline her fourth pay-per-view event in a row when she defends her Ultimate Fighting Championship bantamweight title against Raquel Pennington in the UFC 224 main event this Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.
Nunes captured 135-pound gold at UFC 200 a little less than two
years ago, as she decimated Meisha Tate with punches before
dispatching her with a rear-naked choke. She has since begun
compiling a case as one of the greatest female mixed martial
artists of all-time. Pennington, meanwhile, finds herself on a
career-best four-fight winning streak that includes victories over
Tate, Jessica
Andrade and Bethe
Correia. Now, she has her chance to dethrone the sport’s
bantamweight queen.
This installment of The Film Room puts the paths Nunes and Pennington took to UFC 224 under the microscope:
Nunes was relatively unknown before her win over Tate, and some felt she did not deserve a chance at the belt, let alone the opportunity to headline one of the biggest UFC events to date. Instead of shying away from the moment, Nunes silenced the critics with her first-round finish of one of the pioneers of woman’s MMA. After the Brazilian won the title, fans and pundits started to take Nunes more seriously -- and rightfully so. She has quietly become one of the best strikers in the division and has the grappling skills necessary to hold her own on the ground or quickly return to her feet.
Nunes is known as a pressure fighter, but what makes her style so interesting is her patience while being the aggressor. Sounds weird, right? Notice how Nunes pressures Tate to the cage but never overextends or throws any wild strikes. The biggest problem for most pressure fighters is the threat of counters. Nunes has been exceptional at pressuring just enough to make her opponent uncomfortable, and she intelligently picks her strikes while avoiding her opponents’ return fire.
Against Ronda Rousey, many thought Nunes’ aggressiveness would result in the two women engaging in the clinch or another position from which the “Rowdy” judoka could hit one of her patented armbars. Instead, Nunes applied intelligent pressure, never allowed Rousey to tie-up and picked her apart with a series of jabs and right hooks. While she swung wildly at times, Nunes was unconcerned with Rousey’s ability -- or inability -- to counter.
Although better known for her striking, Nunes holds the rank of
black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and offers some of the most
vicious ground-and-pound in the UFC. Fighters are oftentimes too
busy jockeying for position on the ground, forget to strike and
wind up being forced to their feet by an impatient referee. Nunes
knows how to posture and strike from any position, leading to a
number of ground-and-pound finishes.
Pennington has spent her entire career as an underdog, and her encounter with Nunes will be no different. A lifelong athlete, she did not start her formal martial arts training until she was 19. Now, just six years into her professional MMA career, Pennington has a chance to shock the world and continue thriving as the underdog, like a real-life Rocky Balboa.
Pennington excels fighting off of her back foot, an ability that could serve her well against the champion. Few fighters can maintain their composure when faced with an aggressive opponent, often folding under the pressure. Against Andrade, perhaps the most aggressive fighter in the bantamweight division at the time, Pennington controlled the distance with deadly accurate jabs before stepping back and landing right hands while Andrade flailed forward.
Even with her back to the cage, Pennington can absorb strikes on the forearms and come back with counter right hands. Pennington’s ability to excel under pressure is a rare skill in any fighter, let alone someone who has only been training for 10 years.
While Pennington’s standup is the straw that stirs the drink for her, she has a stealthy good clinch game and proven submission skills. She secured one of the few bulldog choke finishes in Ultimate Fighting Championship history when she put away Ashlee Evans-Smith at UFC 181 in December 2014. Pennington locked in the choke while standing, dropped to her knees to add leverage and continued to apply pressure until Evans-Smith lost consciousness.
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Amanda Nunes will headline her fourth pay-per-view event in a row when she defends her Ultimate Fighting Championship bantamweight title against Raquel Pennington in the UFC 224 main event this Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.
Advertisement
This installment of The Film Room puts the paths Nunes and Pennington took to UFC 224 under the microscope:
The Cusp of Greatness
Nunes was relatively unknown before her win over Tate, and some felt she did not deserve a chance at the belt, let alone the opportunity to headline one of the biggest UFC events to date. Instead of shying away from the moment, Nunes silenced the critics with her first-round finish of one of the pioneers of woman’s MMA. After the Brazilian won the title, fans and pundits started to take Nunes more seriously -- and rightfully so. She has quietly become one of the best strikers in the division and has the grappling skills necessary to hold her own on the ground or quickly return to her feet.
Nunes is known as a pressure fighter, but what makes her style so interesting is her patience while being the aggressor. Sounds weird, right? Notice how Nunes pressures Tate to the cage but never overextends or throws any wild strikes. The biggest problem for most pressure fighters is the threat of counters. Nunes has been exceptional at pressuring just enough to make her opponent uncomfortable, and she intelligently picks her strikes while avoiding her opponents’ return fire.
Against Ronda Rousey, many thought Nunes’ aggressiveness would result in the two women engaging in the clinch or another position from which the “Rowdy” judoka could hit one of her patented armbars. Instead, Nunes applied intelligent pressure, never allowed Rousey to tie-up and picked her apart with a series of jabs and right hooks. While she swung wildly at times, Nunes was unconcerned with Rousey’s ability -- or inability -- to counter.
The Usual Underdog
Pennington has spent her entire career as an underdog, and her encounter with Nunes will be no different. A lifelong athlete, she did not start her formal martial arts training until she was 19. Now, just six years into her professional MMA career, Pennington has a chance to shock the world and continue thriving as the underdog, like a real-life Rocky Balboa.
Pennington excels fighting off of her back foot, an ability that could serve her well against the champion. Few fighters can maintain their composure when faced with an aggressive opponent, often folding under the pressure. Against Andrade, perhaps the most aggressive fighter in the bantamweight division at the time, Pennington controlled the distance with deadly accurate jabs before stepping back and landing right hands while Andrade flailed forward.
Even with her back to the cage, Pennington can absorb strikes on the forearms and come back with counter right hands. Pennington’s ability to excel under pressure is a rare skill in any fighter, let alone someone who has only been training for 10 years.
While Pennington’s standup is the straw that stirs the drink for her, she has a stealthy good clinch game and proven submission skills. She secured one of the few bulldog choke finishes in Ultimate Fighting Championship history when she put away Ashlee Evans-Smith at UFC 181 in December 2014. Pennington locked in the choke while standing, dropped to her knees to add leverage and continued to apply pressure until Evans-Smith lost consciousness.
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Related Articles