An elite Brazilian jiu-jitsu competitor and daughter of BJJ standout Wellington “Megaton” Dias, the 25-year-old rising star identifies as both American and Brazilian and wanted the chance to compete in front of the fans that are sure to pack Jeunesse Arena on Saturday night.
One of the people in attendance will be her father, who will be seeing his daughter compete inside the Octagon for the very first time.
“It’s so cool that my dad is going to be there,” said Dern, who squares off with Amanda Cooper in the middle bout of this weekend’s Pay-Per-View main card. “To have my dad there and be able to represent Brazil in this fight, abd have my family and the fans there (is awesome).”
Between being the daughter of a well-known jiu-jitsu player and having tremendous success of her own from a very early age, Dern spent her formative years and early adulthood in the spotlight, and the intensity has only increased since she began making the transition to mixed martial arts. While most fighters get to make their professional debuts in relative obscurity, Dern’s took place under the microscope and each performance since has been subject to scrutiny.
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It’s a difficult position to be in for any fighter, as those early bouts are when you’re supposed to be able to make mistakes and progress is more important than perfection. It’s especially difficult when your notoriety outpaces you experience, which is where Dern stands heading into her seventh professional bout.
“My first pro fight – I never did amateur – so many people were watching it in comparison to a lot of other fighters that do their first MMA fight,” recalled Dern, who picked up a split decision victory over Ashley Yoder in her promotional debut at UFC 222 in March. “Knowing people are watching, it doesn’t really matter if they’re for or against me – just to know I have all these eyes on me makes me perform way better.
“We always say, ‘No pressure, no diamonds,’ so I definitely think I’m good under pressure.”
Not only will Saturday’s appearance in Rio de Janeiro be Dern’s second fight in three months in the UFC, but it continues a torrid pace the Arizona-born fighter has kept since picking up her third career victory over Katherine Roy in March 2017.
Out of action for seven months following that bout, Dern returned to the cage in October 2017, signed with Invicta FC and defeated former title challenger Kaline Medeiros two months later and made her Octagon debut this past February. Including that bout with Roy, this will be the submission specialist’s fifth appearance just under 14 months.
“I’m definitely aware of it, but I try not to take the critics seriously,” she said of the questions about rushing back into the cage when perhaps more time in the gym would be the smarter long-term play. “It gets to me through the grapevine, but I try not to look at it or pay too much attention to the critics or the compliments.
“I totally understand, but I’m also not going to fight every two months. It happened to be that I had my debut March 3 and then the Rio card was so soon and I wasn’t injured or anything, so I wanted to jump at this opportunity to be able to fight in Brazil, in Rio, because it’s a great card to be on.”
In addition to simply taking the opportunities that have been presented to her thus far, Dern also views the hectic schedule she’s kept as part of her accelerated education in a new sport and a chance to learn important lessons about herself and what she needs to continue working on during this early stage of her career, rather than down the road when the stakes are higher.
“I think it’s good that I go through these rounds now instead of going and getting a submission every fight in 10 seconds or 15 seconds and go to a title shot never being through five rounds, never having to push myself to the limit,” said Dern. “Any time I can push myself to the limit, that’s good. I think that’s an important learning experience.
“It’s so good to feel like I’m a white belt again with the striking and new things,” she added. “At the same time, it’s also hard because I was on the top of my world in jiu-jitsu and then you have to start the ladder all over again. It’s mixed feelings.
“I’m glad I was able to start all over again at the bottom of the ladder, but with the whole jiu-jitsu community behind me, so I’m not doing it alone. I’m very fortunate and very lucky.”
And she’s excited to have that boisterous, supportive Brazilian jiu-jitsu community behind her this weekend as she faces off with Cooper, whom she plans on finishing on Saturday night.
“Brazil is the biggest fan base that I have, so it’s definitely a really big motivation for me to win this fight,” she said. “I’m Brazilian and I’m a Brazilian jiu-jitsu fighter, so to be able to show jiu-jitsu and represent Brazil by jiu-jitsu will be amazing. I don’t know if it will be an armbar or a choke, but I’m sure that there will be a submission in this fight.”