UFC 250: Amanda Nunes dominates Felicia Spencer for her 11th consecutive win

Tribune Content Agency

LAS VEGAS — UFC 250 was supposed to take place in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on May 9. It was supposed to be a homecoming for two-division UFC champion Amanda Nunes. But nothing that was supposed to happen over the last three months has gone according to plan because of the coronavirus outbreak.

Although COVID-19 forced the UFC to move the event to the company’s training center in Las Vegas one month later, it could not change the inevitable result as Nunes defended her UFC women’s featherweight championship with a unanimous-decision victory over Felicia Spencer.

The victory gives Nunes 11 consecutive wins, the longest winning streak among women’s fighters in UFC history and tied for the second-longest active streak behind Khabib Nurmagomedov’s 12 straight victories. Nunes, whose 13 wins are the most by a female fighter in UFC history, was defending her featherweight title for the first time since winning it in December 2018, as her last two fights have been for her bantamweight championship.

Cody Garbrandt, who seemed destined for superstardom when he won the UFC bantamweight championship Dec. 30, 2016, notched his first victory since that night with a dramatic knockout punch of Raphael Assuncao as the second-round buzzer sounded. The victory broke a three-fight losing streak dating to his win over Dominick Cruz at UFC 207.

In other fights on the main card, Aljamain Sterling, the No. 2 UFC bantamweight, defeated Cory Sandhagen, the No. 4 UFC bantamweight, with a rear-naked choke in the first round. Neil Magny defeated Anthony Rocco Martin in a welterweight bout by unanimous decision, and Sean O’Malley beat Eddie Wineland with a one-punch, walk-off knockout in the first round.

UFC’s first pay-per-view back in Las Vegas since the pandemic coincided with the reopening of the Las Vegas Strip for the first time since March 17. The long layoff might have led to one gambler placing a historic wager. Before the main event, a William Hill bettor in Las Vegas placed a $1-million bet on Nunes, which paid $1,166,666.70. According to the sportsbook operator, it’s the largest bet ever taken on an MMA event in William Hill’s history.

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