In the first-ever all-Chinese title fight in UFC history, Zhang Weili defeated Yan Xiaonan by unanimous decision Saturday, retaining her strawweight world championship at the T-Mobile Arena. Zhang Weili of China and Yan Xiaonan of China exchange strikes during their strawweight championship title fight at T-Mobile Arena on April 13, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. [Xinhua] Zhang, 33, kicked off her second defense of her second title reign with a low kick. The fight, the co-main event of UFC 300, appeared to be over at the end of the first round when Zhang applied a tight rear-naked choke, leaving Yan seemingly unconscious in the final seconds. However, Yan managed to survive and continue the bout. Zhang maintained her wrestling dominance in the second round, nearly submitting Yan with a total control time of nearly four minutes. Yan regained her momentum in standing in the third and fourth rounds as she took down Zhang several times with sidekicks and straight right hands. Despite Yan's efforts, Zhang prevailed in the final round with her grappling skills, sealing the victory with scores of 49-45, 49-45, 49-45. "It's a hard-fought win," Zhang said after the fight. "Xiaonan is a true fighter. We will keep at it and hopefully, there will be more all-Chinese affairs in the future." With five title fight wins, Zhang now ranks second in UFC women's strawweight history, trailing only Joanna Jedrzejczyk who has six wins. |
Voting technology company settles lawsuit against farKourtney Kardashian breaks silence on her 'Auntie Karen' Houghton nearly a month after her deathTravel boom sees 740 mln trips made in 3DeSantis signs bill limiting Florida book challengesJustin Trudeau's government raises taxes on wealthiest Canadians in federal budgetConnecticut's top public defender denies misconduct claims as commission debates firing herJohnny Depp embraces coKiefer Sutherland reunites with Stand By Me coArrests made a year after gold and cash worth millions were stolen at Toronto airportOutfielder Tommy Pham finalizes minor league deal with slumping White Sox