She didn’t necessarily know if it would end the fight, but Rose
Namajunas
had an inkling that she would connect with a head
kick at some point during her matchup with Weili Zhang
at UFC
261
.

As it turned out, the head kick made Namajunas a two-time UFC
champion, as she floored Zhang with the maneuver before ending
their co-main event bout with follow-up hammerfists on the mat 1:18
into the opening stanza at Vystar Veterans Memorial Arena in
Jacksonville, Forida, on Saturday night.

The setup for the kick was almost as nice as the execution:
Namajunas feinted a low kick with her lead leg before going
upstairs and connecting cleanly with her opponent’s chin.

“I felt really good. I was calm. I had to control myself and
control my breathing and stay calm. She kinda touched me with the
low kicks and she hit a nice little jab, but I just stayed calm. I
don’t know how to explain it I guess,” Namajunas said.

“I saw her body fall over really stiff and I was like, oh dang that
definitely worked a lot better than I thought it was going to. But
I did see that kick landing in my mind leading up to this fight. I
didn’t think that was going to be the finish, but that was one of
many ways that I seen this fight going. As soon as she kinda turned
over, I thought there was maybe a moment she could pop back up and
wake back up again, but those hammerfists are just money and I knew
it was over after that.”

In victory, Namajunas became the first repeat female champion in
UFC history. In the past, luminaries such as Ronda
Rousey
, Holly Holm
and Joanna
Jedrzejczyk
have attempted to regain titles they lost only to
fall short. Namajunas, who initially contemplated retirement after
losing her belt to Jessica
Andrade
, plans on defending the championship for the long haul
while also fighting for a bigger cause.

“No matter who my opponents are, I want to defend this as many
times as I can,” she said. “But what I really want to do is to use
this to build MMA academies in a couple different locations, so
that’s the idea and vision that I had this week. I always knew an
idea of what I wanted to do, but I didn’t know how to work it into
my career and so that’s my plan. I still have to go hash it out,
but that’s my vision.”

For Namajunas, maintaining that motivation to compete ties in
directly with her out-of-the-cage endeavors.

“I want to produce fruit with this seed that I’ve been given. I
just want to give back, and I think that’s gonna be the main focus
right now.”

IMAK ADMIN

By IMAK ADMIN

Internationaler Kampfkunst und Kampfsport Kleinanzeiger