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By the Numbers: UFC 190



It’s no longer surprising when Ronda Rousey dispatches a foe inside of a minute, but the “Rowdy” one keeps finding entertaining ways to deal out misery nonetheless.

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The women’s bantamweight queen made short work of Bethe Correia on Saturday night, winning via knockout 34 seconds into their headlining encounter at the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro. A right hand behind the ear sent the Brazilian tumbling face first to the canvas, capping off yet another short-lived yet enthralling performance from the Olympic judoka. As the bodies pile up, so do the figures. Here is a by-the-numbers look at UFC 190, with statistics courtesy of FightMetric.com.

6: Consecutive title defenses for Rousey, moving her past Matt Hughes and Tito Ortiz and into fifth place for most title defenses in UFC history.

130: Total seconds needed by Rousey to defeat her last four opponents: Correia (34 seconds), Cat Zingano (14 seconds), Alexis Davis (16 seconds) and Sara McMann (66 seconds).

6: Consecutive finishes for Rousey, tying her with Jon Jones, Andrei Arlovski and Rich Franklin for the third-longest finishing streak in UFC history. Only Chuck Liddell (seven) and Anderson Silva (eight) have more.

6: Finishes in championship bouts for Rousey, No. 3 all-time in promotion history behind only Matt Hughes (eight) and Silva (nine).

11: First round finishes, in 12 professional victories for Rousey following her first-round knockout of Bethe Correia. Only Miesha Tate has made it past a round against the Olympic judoka.

19: Significant strikes landed by Rousey, in 32 attempts in her demolition of Correia. The Brazilian challenger, meanwhile, landed nine of her 14 significant strike attempts.

2: Knockdowns landed by Rousey in her UFC/Strikeforce career after she floored Correia with a right hand. The first came in her victory over McMann at UFC 170.

3,688: Days since Mauricio Rua defeated Antonio Rogerio Nogueira via unanimous decision in their initial meeting under the Pride Fighting Championships banner in 2005. Rua made it 2-0 against “Minotoro” on Saturday, taking a three-round verdict in the co-main event.

552: Significant strikes landed by Rua, No. 6 in UFC light heavyweight history behind Tito Ortiz (555), Matt Hamill (571), Fabio Maldonado (622), Forrest Griffin (796) and Jon Jones (916). Rua landed 53 significant strikes against Nogueira.

882: Total strikes landed by Rua, No. 7 all-time in the UFC at 205 pounds. “Shogun” outlanded Nogueira 82 to 73 in total strikes to surpass Ryan Bader (819). Matt Hamill is No. 6 with 931.

93: Significant strikes landed by Stefan Struve in his unanimous decision triumph over Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, the most of the 6-foot-11 Dutchman’s UFC career. Additionally, Struve landed 87 of his significant strikes at distance, while Nogueira landed 43.

13: Takedowns successfully defended by Struve. While “Minotauro” repeatedly tried to close the distance on his taller foe, the Brazilian landed his only takedown in 14 attempts in round two.

0: Takedowns landed by Antonio Silva in eight UFC appearances. “Bigfoot” didn’t need to get Soa Palelei to the canvas on Saturday, as he finished his foe standing 41 seconds into round two of their heavyweight encounter. Silva has not landed a takedown in a fight since he landed two in his Strikeforce victory against Fedor Emelianenko on Feb. 12, 2011.

41: Significant strikes by which Claudia Gadelha outlanded Jessica Aguilar (111 to 70) in their strawweight matchup. The Brazilian outlanded the ex-World Series of Fighting champ 37 to 19 in round one, 37 to 23 in round two and 37 to 28 in round three.

95: Significant strikes to the head landed by Gadelha. By comparison, Aguilar landed 35.

7: Submission victories in UFC competition for Demian Maia, the fourth most in the modern history of the promotion. Maia tapped out Neil Magny with a rear-naked choke 2:52 into the second round of their welterweight showdown.

10: Guard passes executed by Maia, who dominated position throughout his triumph before securing the submission.

8: Takedowns landed, in 14 attempts, for Patrick Cummins in his third-round stoppage victory over Rafael Cavalcante.

25: Takedowns landed by Cummins in his four UFC triumphs. The former Penn State University All-American landed a career-best 10 takedowns against Kyle Kingsbury in July 2014.

102: Total strikes landed by Cummins. By comparison, Cavalcante landed 24 total strikes. Cummins outlanded his foe 39 to 11 in round one and 51 to 12 in round two before finishing the fight 45 seconds into the final stanza.

41: Total strikes by which Iuri Alcantara outlanded Leandro Issa in the second and third round of their bantamweight clash. Alcantara pulled away over the final 10 minutes to capture a unanimous decision.

9: Takedowns successfully defended, in 10 attempts, by Alcantara.
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