Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jedrzejczy­k determined to recapture title

Ex-bantamweig­ht champ won first 14 fights before defeats

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

Former UFC women’s bantamweig­ht champion Joanna Jedrzejczy­k enjoyed her reign as champion so much she can’t wait for her chance to win back her belt.

Not everything about the experience was positive for the native of Poland, who lives and trains in south Florida.

Jedrzejczy­k, 30, was a bit taken aback by the discovery certain people were less than enthusiast­ic about her accomplish­ments.

“People are so jealous after you make your dreams come true because they want what you have, but they’re not willing to put in the work to get there,” Jedrzejczy­k said by phone from Calgary, Alberta, where she will fight Tecia Torres on the main card of UFC on Fox 30 on Saturday night. “I feel motivated every day because it’s not just about achieving all your goals

UFC on Fox 30 capsules: and dreams, it’s about putting in the work to get there.

“Winners put in the work. This is what I’m doing. I’m not waiting. I’m fighting just a couple months after losing a five-round title fight. This is crazy. I didn’t have enough time with my family. I was homesick, but I know the reason and it’s going to make victory taste even better because of that.”

Jedrzejczy­k is one of three former champions on the four-fight main card, which airs on Fox at 5 p.m. Four fights from the preliminar­y card also will air on Fox at 3 p.m.

Former lightweigh­t champ Eddie Alvarez takes on Dustin Poirier in a main event rematch of a controvers­ial bout in May 2017. After a wild backand-forth start, Alvarez landed two illegal knees to Poirier on the ground to end the fight, which was ruled a no-contest.

Jose Aldo, the former longtime featherwei­ght champion, will look for his first win in more than two years when he takes on durable slugger Jeremy Stephens.

It has been a while since Jedrzejczy­k got to feast on a win. After winning the first 14 fights of her career and looking for all the world like she would break Ronda Rousey’s record for consecutiv­e UFC title defenses by a female, she was knocked out by Rose Namajunas in November after a brutal weight cut left her depleted.

Jedrzejczy­k then came into the April rematch feeling much better, only to drop a unanimous decision she still disputes.

“The second one hurt more because I know I won the fight,” she said. “But you can’t keep the anger. I turned the page. You must keep going forward, and that’s what I’m doing. That’s why I’m different than other fighters. I’m obsessed with getting better every day. That’s where my focus is right now.”

Jedrzejczy­k’s determinat­ion to win back the title might be keeping her fighting at 115 pounds. When she was champion, she often discussed moving up to the newly created 125-pound division. Now all she wants is another chance against Namajunas.

Jedrzejczy­k had spent back-toback camps focusing solely on preparing for Namajunas, a tremendous athlete with range and flashy submission skills. Torres is a shorter opponent who packs power in her punches and keeps opponents off balance with her ability to attack from different angles and keep a low center-of-gravity.

Jedrzejczy­k is more concerned with herself, however.

“The preparatio­n is the actually the same,” she said. “It’s always the same. I’m a hard worker no matter what. That’s what makes me different. Discipline, discipline, discipline. I’m powerful. I’m strong. Everything I do is getting better. You will see that on Saturday.”

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

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