USA TODAY US Edition

Nunes sees parenthood on the horizon

UFC star, partner have baby plans, but title defense is current focus

- Martin Rogers @mrogersUSA­T USA TODAY Sports

Amanda Nunes has a laundry list of items on her mind yet a singular focus to tick off all of them. They’re not exactly minor things, either. It’s all big, serious, life-changing stuff. Like getting married, becoming a mother, reaching financial security.

And, first of all this weekend, defending her Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip bantamweig­ht title to further establish herself as one of the biggest stars in mixed martial arts.

Nunes headlines UFC 213 against Valentina Shevchenko on Saturday a year after winning the title against Miesha Tate and six months after crushing Ronda Rousey with a spectacula­r 48-second triumph.

In that time she has become one of the sport’s most intriguing personalit­ies and a welcome antidote to the sometimes crude and boorish methods so many fighters use to promote themselves. The thoughtful approach the Brazilian and her partner, UFC wom- en’s fighter Nina Ansaroff, have taken to their planned future as parents is a prime example.

“Yes,” Nunes said with a smile when quizzed on the topic at a recent media event in Los Angeles. “Having a baby and bringing the baby into your life and filling it with love is a special thing. It is something we want.”

The timing of Nunes becoming a mother depends upon results in the octagon, but not her own. When the pair decide to try in earnest, they will use a sperm donor and Ansaroff would carry the child.

It might have happened already but for Ansaroff ’s victory against Jocelyn Jones-Lybarger in the strawweigh­t division in January.

“Actually this year I was supposed to have the kid,” Ansaroff said. “That’s what we planned. It was depending on my last fight. But I won. I’ve got a run (going). I’m going to take that run and go and be realistic. We want to get married and have kids, but in the right time period.”

Nunes was little-known before her win against Tate, but that upset in the main event of the company’s signature UFC 200 card propelled her into the spotlight as the first openly gay UFC champion. The display against Rousey pushed her further into the mainstream, and her face adorns billboards up and down The Strip this week.

“It’s been amazing,” Nunes said. “My dreams have come true. I’m ready to fight. I’m ready. I have to prove it. I will. I’m going for the finish.”

Nunes fought Shevchenko at UFC 196 in March 2016 and defeated her in a hard-fought threeround points decision. Neither has lost since.

Indeed, that fight was Shevchenko’s only defeat since 2010, and the Kyrgyzstan-born, Perubased martial artist with a fascinatin­gly diverse history is expect- ed to provide a ferocious challenge.

Shevchenko thinks that the longer format for title fights, five rounds instead of three, could help her. Nunes has explosive power, but her stamina has been questioned.

A Nunes win would give a degree of permanence to the bantamweig­ht division, which saw the belt passed around from Rou- sey to Holly Holm to Miesha Tate to the Brazilian in the space of eight months.

“She’s good for the sport, good for the fans and a great role model — a normal person,” Ansaroff said.

“She’s not a blond. She doesn’t wear dresses. But she has an even cooler story. She’s humble, came from simple beginnings, and I think she’s a great champion.”

“My dreams have come true. I’m ready to fight. ... I’m going for the finish.” Amanda Nunes, on her bout against Valentina Shevchenko on Saturday

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Amanda Nunes, left, celebrates with partner Nina Ansaroff after Ansaroff beat Jocelyn Jones-Lybarger in January.
MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS Amanda Nunes, left, celebrates with partner Nina Ansaroff after Ansaroff beat Jocelyn Jones-Lybarger in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States