Porterville Recorder

Peña finds shocking UFC title victory

- By GREG BEACHAM AP SPORTS WRITER

LAS VEGAS — When Dana White strapped the bantamweig­ht belt around Julianna Peña's waist after one of the biggest upsets in UFC history, the promotion's president immediatel­y thought back to the first time he met her about eight years ago.

The way White remembers it, Peña found him at his sons' jiu-jitsu tournament. She charged up to the executive, stuck out her hand and said: “I'm going to fight for you someday, and I'm going to be a world champion.'"

Peña's journey from that cheeky introducti­on to this triumphant moment led her down a path she never could have anticipate­d, including detours for major reconstruc­tive knee surgery in 2014 and the birth of her daughter in 2018. She pursued her dream relentless­ly against those life obstacles and despite two recent losses, culminatin­g in a showdown Saturday night with the most accomplish­ed champion in women's mixed martial arts history.

When Peña emerged from UFC 269 as the first new bantamweig­ht champion since 2016, nobody in the sport appeared to be less shocked than the 10-to-1 underdog herself.

“I'm not surprised,” Peña said. “I know that I have a big, huge will and determinat­ion. You can do anything you want in this life. I've been through the wash. I have done it all. I've torn everything you could possibly think of. Ran over by cars, hit by dudes in the alleys. I've done it all. Nothing was going to stop me from getting this belt. This has been 13 years grinding, and it's finally come to fruition. It's my time.”

Peña's time as the UFC'S new 135-pound champ began with a career-defining victory over an opponent who hadn't lost since 2014.

Although she took plenty of damage from Nunes' punches and barely escaped the first round without losing by submission, Peña displayed shockingly effective striking that was too much for Nunes, the best striker in the women's sport. Nunes got hurt and tired in the second round before failing to escape the rear naked choke that ended her reign.

Nunes had beaten up almost everyone she had faced for the past seven years, including famously merciless knockouts of Ronda Rousey and Cris “Cyborg” Justino. Peña took Nunes' big shots and stayed upright — and Nunes didn't have the energy or the fortitude to come up with another plan.

“It doesn't matter how strong you are, how big you are, how hard you hit,” White said. “At the end of the day, in a fiveround fight, it comes down to who's in better shape.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY CHASE STEVENS ?? Julianna Pena, right, hits Amanda Nunes during a women's bantamweig­ht mixed martial arts title bout at UFC 269, Saturday, Dec. 11, in Las Vegas.
AP PHOTO BY CHASE STEVENS Julianna Pena, right, hits Amanda Nunes during a women's bantamweig­ht mixed martial arts title bout at UFC 269, Saturday, Dec. 11, in Las Vegas.

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