While an accidental clash of heads may have hindered Taila
Santos in the championship rounds of the UFC 275 co-main event,
flyweight queen Valentina
Shevchenko was also apparently limited during Saturday’s fight
in Singapore.
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Shevchenko revealed at the UFC 275 post-fight press conference that
she was at less than 100 percent due to a foot injury. “Bullet”
didn’t reveal the specifics behind the ailment, but pulling out was
never an option. It did, however, prevent her from engaging in her
traditional celebratory post-fight victory dance.
“Coming into the fight, I was injured. My foot was injured. All
week, fight week, UFC Performance Institute, physical therapists
they were working on my foot to get it back into the best shape,”
Shevchenko said. “The few kicks that I had like super strong, it
injured my foot … I hope it’s nothing serious that could delay my
return to the Octagon, but this is the reason why I didn’t
dance.
“Considering pulling out of the fight? Never. Every time I have
something, I try to deal with that first and actually I could not
walk on my foot when I got this injury. I could not jump on it. But
thankfully to the [physical therapists], they were able to get me
back and I kind of felt OK. When you’re in the fight, you have all
this adrenaline and you just kick no matter what and you kick and
think what’s going to happen.”
The bout itself was the toughest test of Shevchenko’s flyweight
reign to date. Santos controlled much of the grappling, but
Shevchenko held an advantage in significant strikes (77 to 55),
total strikes (234 to 128) and appeared to get stronger as the
fight progressed. That ultimately, carried more weight on the
scorecards than Santos’ control.
I did everything I had to do,” Shevchenko said. “I had challenging
fight. I had five rounds, and this is exactly what I wanted, an
opponent who is not giving up in the first second and goes until
the end. In this kind of fight you can show what you’re made of.
Your character, your mindset. No matter how hard, no matter how
difficult.
“She was inactive, and me being even in that position I was
striking, and I was feeling the power of the strikes, and I felt
how she reacted because it was hurting her. This is what counts the
most in mixed martial arts, is damage. I could even feel in the
fight round to round, you could see more damage showing on her face
more and more.”
While a return to bantamweight remains an intriguing option for
Shevchenko, she will be keeping a close eye on the Miesha
Tate–Lauren
Murphy clash scheduled for UFC 276. Tate has the type of star
power that could keep her at 125 pounds if she doesn’t face the
Julianna
Pena–Amanda
Nunes winner.
“I have to mention, July we have in flyweight we have an amazing
fight between two very strong fighters. It’s Lauren
Murphy and Miesha
Tate,” Shevchenko acknowledged. “It’s going to be an amazing
fight. If Lauren
Murphy gets a victory, a rematch maybe but not that soon.
Miesha
Tate wins the fight, I think this is what fans are going to
love to see and end of the year, pay-per-view, main event, I think
it’s going to be great.
“But still another option is Julianna and Amanda in bantamweight.
Once it’s going to be more towards finalizing, I will work to
building my body a little bit heavier, just a little bit so not to
lose the speed. A lot of options for me, just to choose which
one.”