Mixed Martial Arts-Pioneer Rousey gains redemption with retirement fight win over Carano


May 16, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Ronda Rousey (blue gloves) fights Gina Carano (red gloves) in a women's featherweight bout at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

May 17 (Reuters) - It was ⁠almost ten years in the making, but Ronda Rousey finally got to end her storied mixed ⁠martial arts career the way she deserved with a 17-second win over Gina Carano, nailing ‌her signature armbar submission before quitting the sport for good.

On Saturday, the 39-year-old Olympic judo bronze medallist gave fans in attendance and those watching on streaming service Netflix one final glimpse of the skills that made her a household name, taking down Carano and ​quickly submitting her before confirming that her fighting days are done.

"There's ⁠no way I could have ended it ⁠better than this. I want to have some more babies, and I got to get cooking," mother-of-two Rousey ⁠beamed ‌in her post-fight interview in the cage.

When the UFC announced a women's bantamweight division in late 2012, Rousey was anointed their first champion and she went on a dominant run, throwing many ⁠of her opponents to the mat before arm-locking them in the first ​round, exactly as she did ‌with Carano.

However, much of the allure of MMA is that there are so many ways to ⁠lose, and when ​Rousey suffered a stunning head-kick knockout loss to Holly Holm in November 2015, it was the beginning of the end for the sport's first and biggest female star.

Just over a year later she made an attempt at a comeback, eschewing ⁠media obligations before taking on champion Amanda Nunes, but the ​fiery Brazilian obliterated Rousey in 48 seconds with a flurry of devastating punches, knocking her outand effectively ending her MMA career.

Saturday's unexpected return under the banner of Jake Paul's Most Valuable Promotions was partially an attempt by Paul ⁠to muscle in on the UFC's decades-long dominance of the sport, but it was also an opportunity for Rousey to set the record straight before finally walking off into the sunset.

In taking on the 44-year-old Carano, who hadn't fought in 17 years and is now better known as an actor, she chose an opponent ​who perhaps could rival her as a female pioneer in the sport, ⁠but who was no match for her in the cage, and Rouseygot to cement her legacy with one last ​signature victory.

"I feel like a ghost was banished, and it's just ‌lifted a weight off of me that I didn't ​realise I was still carrying in that way," Rousey smiled as she spoke at a media conference.

"This is exactly what I needed, and that was closure."

(Reporting by Philip O'ConnorEditing by Christian Radnedge)

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