“The other day, my last practice was a ground-and-pound drill. Normally she stays on the side—inside the Octagon—she’ll watch her little videos. When I got done with my practice, my coaches were like ‘She was watching you the entire time.’ She was watching you hammer fist that guy.’”
So I guess it’s never too soon to learn the family business?
“She definitely knows what I do…I don’t know if that’s a good thing that she’s watching me at this age—she’s only two-and-a-half—but I just know that I could talk to her all day long and give her advice all day long, but I want to be able to set an example for her instead and let her follow my example. I think it’s very important for her to see what Mommy does. Mommy is a fighter, and she knows that.”
Mommy is indeed a fighter, and an excellent one at that. Despite a series of injuries that have kept her out of action for extended periods, she perennially ranks among the elite bantamweights, and with her main card bout this Saturday against Germain de Randamie at UFC Fight Island 4, she finds herself in striking distance of that title shot that will tie a life’s work all together.
“God-willing, I complete my mission, I’ll be fighting for the belt. It’s the only thing that I see. I’ve only dropped one in the UFC. Girls with less than that have been fighting for the belt. I feel like it’s definitely my time.”
A glance at Peña’s resume makes it hard to disagree. The lone UFC loss she speaks of is to current flyweight champ Valentina Shevchenko, while owning notable wins over the likes of Jessica Eye, Cat Zingano and former flyweight champ Nicco Montano. In Peña’s mind, a win over “The Iron Lady” would erase any doubts.
“As far as future opponents go, I’m looking right now at Germaine de Randamie as the biggest challenge that I’ve ever had in my fighting career. Once I get past that, then it’s definitely Amanda [Nunes] for me, and I don’t see anything else other than that.
“Germaine de Randamie is an excellent fighter. She’s a former world champion and she’s a tough opponent. She’s very tall, she’s lanky, and she uses her reach very well. The fans expect her to want to stay up on her feet to save her life, and for me to try to get her down and ground her out into mashed potatoes. I think it’s the classic striker vs grappler matchup that the fans are going to be expecting.”
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If she can execute that game plan, it will reward nearly seven years of commitment and particularly patience. Since becoming the first woman to win The Ultimate Fighter in 2013, motherhood and a rash of untimely injuries have kept Peña’s cadence to an average of a fight per year. But far from being discouraged, Peña is reflective and pragmatic.
“Injuries are a part of the sport…you get injured, you heal, and you come back and get ready to fight again. That’s just the nature of the beast.
“It would be nice to fight three or four times a year,” she continues. “But I know this sport is brutal on the body, so you’ve just got to make sure that you’re healthy. In a dream world, I’d be fighting three to four times a year, and that would be nice, but it’s not the reality of the situation, especially being up in the Top 5—and always being up in the Top 5 in my career—there’s only so many people that you can fight and leap frog.“
Still, she recognizes the importance of activity, and hopes Saturday is the start of a faster pace.
“You have to stay in the viewers’ eyes. You have to be out there and you have to make them remember you. If you don’t fight in over two years, they don’t even remember who you are anymore. So I think it’s very important to continue to build my legacy and take as many fights as possible.”
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She’s managed to remain in the viewers’ eyes, if not always as a fighter.
“One of the things I love about MMA is that it has completely engulfed my life. Whether I’ve helped set up matchups, where I’ve reffed, and then commentating [for Combate Americas]. All of these things combined has helped me be a better fighter, just from looking at it from an outside view, and I definitely think that watching all those fights is a joy, it’s an honor. I love watching fights. I could talk about MMA to a rock or whoever will listen. So it’s something very fun. I enjoy it a lot.”
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But of course, what she really enjoys happens inside the Octagon, and Peña palpably radiates the awareness that her dream is within reach.
“I feel like it’s right there. I’ve always had the motivation and drive to want to succeed in this sport. I’ve always had the motivation and drive to get up in the morning and go put my body through the ringer. And of course, having that twelve pounds of gold around your waist has always been the thing that I keep my eyes on. Right now, Germaine de Randamie is standing in my way and it’s my job to finish her. I didn’t fight my entire career swimming in the ocean to die on the beach. I came to this beach to take over. I came to this beach to kill.”
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