Manawatu Standard

Rousey gives fight the silent treatment

- GREG BEACHAM

sevens programme, NZR made some silly comments about the flanker that were made to look even more absurd when he was selected in the All Blacks soon after.

The Kiwis’ internatio­nal season was woeful.

From the caning they copped from Australia in Perth, to drawing with Scotland when they got to the Four Nations and capitulati­ng to the Kangaroos in the final, the whole campaign reflected poorly on the code.

Mind you, the New Zealand Rugby League had to have expected that when they hired David Kidwell as coach. England had the NRL’S most experience­d and successful coach (Wayne Bennett), Australia the architect of more State of Origin series wins that anyone else (Mal Meninga), while New Zealand went with a guy whose head-coaching experience was confined to kids’ teams. Ronda Rousey climbed on the scale and glared into the distance while the crowd roared. Moments later, she directed that withering gaze at UFC bantamweig­ht champion Amanda Nunes, who stared right back.

Rousey then left the stage at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas yesterday without a word to Nunes or the thousands of fans gathered largely to support her at the weighin on the eve of UFC 207.

Rousey (12-1) was arguably the most dominant mixed martial arts fighter in the young sport’s history until she lost her belt 13 months ago in a stunning knockout. After devoting a year to getting back on top, Rousey is determined to earn her redemption today with her skills, not her words.

Her comeback fight against Nunes (13-4) is the main event in the UFC’S traditiona­l end-of-theyear show in its hometown.

Nobody is certain which Rousey will show up in the cage.

Will it be the confident judo genius who thrashed a series of over-matched opponents while blazing a trail into the mainstream for women’s MMA and the UFC in general?

Or will it be the shaky, distracted veteran who stumbled, flailed and eventually got stopped by Holly Holm’s head kick in Australia last year?

‘‘I’m not sure how it’s going to be, but she could do a lot of things,’’ Nunes said. ‘‘Nobody knows, but I know I’m going to be ready. We will see about her.’’

Just don’t ask Rousey what she thinks. She has largely refused to promote her fight, even declining to speak to the UFC’S broadcast team after stepping on the scale.

The UFC reluctantl­y agreed to Rousey’s media blackout, realising it could cost the promotion untold numbers of pay-per-view buys.

‘‘It’s definitely not ideal,’’ UFC President Dana White said of Rousey’s decision. ‘‘It’s what she asked for.’’

Instead, Rousey expressed her thanks in an Instagram post moments after the weigh-in. ‘‘Looking forward to proving you all right tomorrow,’’ she said. ‘‘It’s going to be the happiest New Year ever.’’

Rousey has a nascent acting career and innumerabl­e endorsemen­ts, but her celebrity still hasn’t outstrippe­d her athletic accomplish­ments, as it did for fellow women’s MMA trailblaze­r Gina Carano. Rousey could have walked away from the sport already, but her willingnes­s to return underlines her determinat­ion to get back on top.

The women’s bantamweig­ht belt has changed hands three times in the last 13 months, and nobody has successful­ly defended it. Holm lost the belt when Miesha Tate choked her unconsciou­s in March, and Tate lost the title when Nunes brutalised her at UFC 200 in July.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? New Zealand cricket captain Brendon Mccullum bowed out with a 54-ball hundred against Australia.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES New Zealand cricket captain Brendon Mccullum bowed out with a 54-ball hundred against Australia.
 ??  ?? Chief executive Andy Martin and New Zealand Football didn’t cover themselves in glory with regard to Alex Jones.
Chief executive Andy Martin and New Zealand Football didn’t cover themselves in glory with regard to Alex Jones.
 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Shot putter Tom Walsh had a tremendous year.
PHOTO: REUTERS Shot putter Tom Walsh had a tremendous year.

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