The Star Malaysia

Rousey adopts low-key approach for comeback fight

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LOS ANGELES: Ronda Rousey (pic) is returning to mixed martial arts today after a 13-month absence, taking on Amanda Nunes for the bantamweig­ht title at UFC 207.

Just don’t expect to hear about it from Rousey.

The once-dominant champion has largely declined to promote her comeback bout, skipping nearly every traditiona­l pre-fight media responsibi­lity.

Rousey’s silence leaves Nunes and the other fighters on the card in the awkward position of doing all the dirty work to sell the UFC’s end-of-the-year, pay-per-view event in Las Vegas.

“I really don’t know what’s going on with Ronda right now,” Nunes said recently. “This whole thing, I really don’t know. I think the UFC is doing it for her. I think the UFC has been doing all the promos for her. I think she can do whatever she wants.”

Rousey is the most marketable name in the game and perhaps the biggest mainstream star in MMA history, and her return from last year’s shocking knockout loss to Holly Holm should be one of the biggest sports events of the holiday period.

Rousey (12-1) largely vanished from public after her defeat, but agreed to return for a title shot at Nunes (13-4), who won the belt in July.

Rousey’s decision to limit herself to a few talk-show appearance­s and a fleeting interview or two has forced Nunes – who has a tiny fraction of Rousey’s fame – to carry the promotiona­l weight along with talkative men’s bantamweig­ht champion Dominick Cruz, who takes on unbeaten Cody Garbrandt in the co-main event at T-Mobile Arena.

Nunes has gamely done hours of interviews in her ever-improving English to promote the show. The Brazilian champion thinks she knows why the UFC has given a free pass to Rousey.

“The UFC wants to make it easier for her, so she doesn’t feel like she’s not the champion anymore,” Nunes said.

“They want to make her feel like she’s not the second. They want to make me the second, to make her get stronger or something. I feel like they promote her, so she can be strong, like, ‘ Ronda, Ronda, Ronda, Ronda.’ But she knows she’s the challenger. I’m the champion.”

You might not know it from the UFC’s posters, videos and TV commercial­s, which are thoroughly dominated by Rousey’s glowering face. She agreed to appear in those in-house promotions, in which Nunes is practicall­y a footnote – a decision criticised on Twitter by no less than Joe Rogan, the UFC’s lead colour commentato­r.

Rousey became one of the world’s most famous female athletes during her meteoric rise from Olympic judo to MMA dominance, thrashing a series of overmatche­d opponents.

Her rise ended last November with a head kick from Holm, who made Rousey look unprepared in their lop-sided fight. Rousey cited the gruelling grind of fight promotion as a factor in her loss, and she was stunned by the gleeful reactions of schadenfre­ude on social media after her defeat.

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