Ronda Rousey's 17-second win over Gina Carano wasn't a letdown; it was vintage | Bobby Burack
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There was widespread disappointment when Ronda Rousey submitted Gina Carano in just 17 seconds on Saturday.
The bout carried enormous hype. It marked Netflix’s first MMA broadcast in partnership with Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions. Carano didn’t land a punch, and the fight ended before some viewers had fully settled in.
Critics called the finish cheap, staged and anticlimactic.
And yet, the fight unfolded exactly as it should have. It was a reminder of exactly who Ronda Rousey was at the peak of her prowess.
Ronda Rousey and husband Travis Browne embrace after Rousey defeated Gina Carano in her featherweight bout during the main card of Netflix's Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano at Intuit Dome on May 16, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images for Netflix)
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The truly disappointing outcome would've been had Rousey struggled to put Carano away.
A quick submission via her trademark arm bar was vintage. During Rousey's prime, arguably the most dominant stretch in women’s MMA history, her fights often looked exactly like that.
She knocked out Alexis Davis in 16 seconds at UFC 175 in 2014. She submitted Cat Zingano with an arm bar in 14 seconds at UFC 184. Both fights ended faster than Saturday’s bout against Carano.
In a bit of an upset, Bethe Correia lasted a full 34 seconds before Rousey knocked her out at UFC 190.
On Saturday, Rousey closed her MMA career the same way she built it, by overwhelming opponents almost immediately.
Ronda Rousey (blue glove) defeated Gina Carano (red glove) by submission via a


