Sherdog’s Official Mixed Martial Arts Rankings

Sherdog.com StaffJun 22, 2016



Women’s Bantamweight


1. Miesha Tate (18-5)

Tate came up short in her first bid for UFC gold but did not allow her second chance to go to waste. At UFC 196, “Cupcake” pulled off a fifth-round upset submission of Holly Holm to become the top female bantamweight in MMA. Tate, who has now won five in a row, will defend her belt for the first time against Amanda Nunes at UFC 200 on July 9.

2. Holly Holm (10-1)

Less than four months after Holm shocked the world by knocking out Ronda Rousey, “The Preacher’s Daughter” found herself on the receiving end of an upset in the co-main event of UFC 196. Holm fought a measured and technical fight against Miesha Tate but let her guard down in the fifth round and paid the price when she was put to sleep by a rear-naked choke. She will attempt to bounce back in the UFC on Fox 20 main event in July, when she confronts Valentina Shevchenko.

3. Ronda Rousey (12-1)

Rousey was on the receiving end of a Holly Holm head kick knockout that was equal parts brutal and stunning at UFC 193 on Nov. 14. The first defeat of the decorated judoka’s MMA career came before a record-setting crowd in Melbourne, Australia, and cost her the UFC women’s bantamweight title, shattering her aura of invincibility. Rousey is expected to return in late 2016 or early 2017, though exactly when and against whom remain anyone’s guess.

4. Amanda Nunes (12-4)

Nunes continued her march toward a UFC title shot on March 5, when she wiped out prospect Valentina Shevchenko in a largely one-sided unanimous decision. The win was the third in a row for the Brazilian “Lioness,” who went a full three rounds for the first time in six Octagon appearances. Nunes will challenge Miesha Tate for the women's bantamweight championship at UFC 200 in July.

5. Tonya Evinger (18-5)

Evinger won her ninth consecutive bout and defended her Invicta bantamweight belt for the first time on May 7 in a five-round wipeout of fellow veteran Colleen Schneider. Ten years into her MMA career, the Missouri native seems to have hit her stride, having taken out solid competition in six straight outings under the Invicta banner.

6. Sara McMann (9-3)

McMann has struggled since her 66-second title fight loss to Ronda Rousey at UFC 170 over two years ago, barely and questionably topping Lauren Murphy while losing to Miesha Tate and Amanda Nunes. The Olympic silver medalist got back into the swing of things on May 29, dominating Jessica Eye for 15 minutes en route to three 30-27 shutout scorecards.

7. Valentina Shevchenko (12-2)

After bursting onto the scene with a win over tough vet Sarah Kaufman, “Bullet” had her upward trajectory halted at UFC 196. The 28-year-old Kyrgyzstan native was overwhelmed and out-grappled by rising contender Amanda Nunes, dropping a unanimous decision after three rounds. Shevchenko has accepted her next assignment: a July 23 showdown with former champion Holly Holm in the UFC on Fox 20 headliner.

8. Julianna Pena (7-2)

Sidelined with injuries for a year after winning the 18th season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” Pena has returned in fine form to pick up a pair of victories in 2015. The 26-year-old collected her biggest win to date at UFC 192, where Pena outmuscled Jessica Eye on the ground to take a unanimous decision and improve to 3-0 inside the Octagon. She will take on the returning Cat Zingano at UFC 200 on July 9.

9. Raquel Pennington (7-5)

Pennington on April 16 eked out a narrow split decision over former UFC title contender Bethe Correia, putting the Coloradan on her first winning streak since 2012. Though her Octagon tenure has been up and down, “Rocky” has earned victories against the likes of Jessica Andrade, Roxanne Modafferi and Ashlee Evans-Smith.

10. Lauren Murphy (9-2)

Murphy arrived in the UFC as the Invicta bantamweight champion but soon dropped the first two bouts of her career in decision losses to Sara McMann and Liz Carmouche. The 32-year-old Alaskan got back on track Feb. 21 with her first Octagon victory, a last-minute ground-and-pound stoppage of newcomer Kelly Faszholz.

Other Contenders: Bethe Correia, Germaine de Randamie, Ashlee Evans-Smith, Sarah Kaufman, Marion Reneau.

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