Hard to believe, but the UFC women’s strawweight division will (officially) turn three this year. It’s actually been a lot of fun sorting it out, especially with the original bundle of straws being dropped into the aquarium reality of The Ultimate Fighter franchise like a kind of divisional meet-and-greet. That season — the most compelling in years — gave rise to Angela Hill (today’s Twitter titan), the confectionary duo of Bec Rawlings and Angela Magana (still double trouble), Carla Esparza (the original champ), Joanne Calderwood (all subtitles and volume adjustment) and Felice Herrig (nobody rolled her eyes better).
And of course it produced Rose Namajunas, who fights tonight in Kansas City as the co-main event at UFC on FOX 24 against Michelle Waterson, the former atomweight champion of Invicta FC. It’s been a strange ride for “Thug” Rose, who has grown up with the division.
Namajunas, you might remember, emerged as the intrigue on the show, the one that Dana White and company tinseled with unreasonable expectations. If Phil Nover was the next GSP, and Uriah Hall the next Anderson Silva, the then 21-year old Namajunas was the next Ronda Rousey. But it wasn’t quite that simple. She lost to Esparza in the TUF 20 Finale, in a bout that was perhaps too much too soon. Two-and-a-half years later, Namajunas, now 24, remains an intrigue from that original cast, even as others — like current champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk, Paige VanZant and Waterson — have come in and made the division their own.
Still, the early setbacks feel as misguided as they do meaningful. There is a feeling about Namajunas that continues to hover in wait — as if the sparks we’ve seen in her fights with Hill and Tecia Torres are part of a fiery whole that everyone expects will one day fully materialize. Maybe it was the way she showed up on relative short notice for her fight with VanZant looking like a Hare Krishna. There was something piercing and inevitable about Namajunas in that fight, something focused and unburdened that filled in a few blanks. We knew that she spoke with a hood-inflected slang that didn’t feel very Wisconsin — that “thug” nickname carries a back-story, after all! — but it was that she refused to make it a beauty pageant with VanZant that carried import.
The revelation: There’s more to Rose....
Read Full Article HERE: The evolution of ‘Thug’ Rose runs as deep as the strawweight division