She is an athlete, an actress, an Olympian.
At 28, Ronda Rousey is the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s (UFC) highest-paid competitor, male or female.
At a time when pay equity in sports (the Matildas, anyone?) is but a dream, this is something of a miracle. Especially when you consider the male-oriented blood-sport in which she excels.
She’s notorious because of her skill, because of her charisma, and arguably because she’s a woman who participates in sport in which many believe her sex has no place.
Each UFC match begins with Rousey contemplating how best to inflict grievous bodily harm on her opponent, but she is not, as she has been called, a “barbarian”.
Rousey will come to Australia to fight at Etihad Stadium on November 15, and wrote about her sport, and what led her to it, for the Herald-Sun.
“August of 2008,” she begins, “in Beijing, China, and I was doing everything I could to break the arm of a woman I barely knew from Algeria.”
Not to actually do it, she says, but to let her opponent know that she can, and therefore secure a surrender.
When she’s in the cage, Rousey’s not thinking about hurting her opponent, she’s “problem solving”, she wrote in the Sun-Herald.
Top Comments
She is simply awesome
what an awesome role model. Love her!