Ronda Rousey mocked by rival in response to question about UFC legend’s boxing ability

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Ronda Rousey’s boxing skills or lack thereof are still trashed to this day.

Once the pound-for-pound best female fighter on the planet, Ronda Rousey absolutely dominated her first 11 opponents inside the cage with her world-class judo skills.

Rousey was a Olympic Gold Medalist in judo and reigned as the UFC women’s bantamweight champion from 2012 to 2015, making quite a few enemies along the way.

The hall-of-famer had one of all-time worst exits from the UFC, her striking exposed in back-to-back KO losses to former boxing champion Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes, who went on to become the consensus greatest female fighter of all time.

It took less Nunes less than a minute to send Rousey into MMA retirement with a standing TKO. Rousey’s head coach Edmond Tarverdyan went viral in the corner for yelling ‘head movement’ repeatedly to his fighter as she ate a barrage of punches from the champion.

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Ronda Rousey catches stray from Cris Cyborg

Still taking shots at Rousey almost six years later is grand slam champ Cris Cyborg, a heated rival ‘Rowdy’ never fought inside the Octagon as they were in separate weight classes and for a time, different promotions.

Earlier this week, a boxing page asked how the retired Rousey would have done as a boxer: “Champion? Contender?”

Cyborg issued a brutal response.

“I once saw her shadow boxing and her shadow won,” Cyborg said of Rousey’s boxing ability.

Most of Rousey’s wins came by her signature armbar submission but her striking was highly-touted at one point for knocking out two opponents in 50 seconds combined. Joe Rogan once claimed Rousey could take out half of the men’s UFC bantamweight division in her heyday.

Cris Cyborg was considered WMMA’s scariest striker for years until she was folded by Amanda Nunes in less than a minute at UFC 232 in 2018.

Cris Cyborg nearing retirement herself

Cyborg, 39, left the UFC in 2019 with a winning record and signed with Bellator thereafter.

Cyborg won the featherweight belt in her promotional debut and defended it multiple times before crossing over the boxing ring and eventually the PFL SmartCage.

The all-time great defeated champ Larissa Pacheco to win the PFL featherweight title in October, adding another championship to her collection.

Cyborg says she currently has two fights left on her PFL contract, saying she will retire once it is completed.

“This is my legacy tour,” Cyborg responded to a fan on X.

For the time being, Cyborg returns to the boxing ring on May 17.



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UFC Kansas City star lost one of the weirdest fights ever to original ‘Ultimate Fighter’

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Michel Pereira was one-half of an all-time mismatch in 2020.

The UFC’s most acrobatic striker recently went on a 8-fight tear through the welterweight and middleweight divisions, racking up finishes with his explosive, unpredictable style. Pereira eventually had his momentum crushed by top contender Anthony Hernandez in a five-round main event last October.

Prior to his first headliner, Pereira’s last defeat came in a welterweight bout he absolutely dominated.

On Feb. 15, 2020, Michel Pereira battled the first-ever ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ winner Diego Sanchez in his backyard of Alburquerque, New Mexico, in what is regarded as one of the strangest UFC fights of all time.

Before the fight began, ‘Demolidor’ performed a breakdancing routine while the announcer introduced him.

For Sanchez’s intro, the 38-year-old UFC veteran walked towards Pereira with his hands on his hips, popping bubbles in his mouth as the referee backed him away from his opponent.

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Michel Pereira used Diego Sanchez for target practice

Two seconds after the bell sounded, Sanchez front-flipped for a rolling thunder kick that barely missed Pereira. It was all downhill for Sanchez from there.

12 years older, Sanchez was one step behind Pereira on the feet with the Brazilian spamming bruising kicks to the body. Pereira would open up his arsenal of strikes with an Anthony Pettis ‘Showtime Kick’ off the cage and a flying knee for good measure.

Meanwhile, Sanchez flipped into another rolling thunder kick that missed.

After a tough first round, Sanchez was told by his one-man corner and then-guru Joshua Fabia that he had won the opening round on points despite being massively outgunned.

In round 2, Pereira stung Sanchez with kicks to the body and a right cross that got his attention. Pereira lured in Sanchez to the cage before using it to spring off his back foot to land a sporadic combo of strikes.

“I’ve known Diego for a long period of time, this is just very strange for me,” coach-analyst Trevor Wittman said of Sanchez’s performance in between rounds.

“I don’t see what’s going on right here. For me it’s hard to watch.”

“This guy’s so much bigger than him. He’s massive,” UFC commentator Daniel Cormier said of Pereira.

“So much bigger, so much more explosive. So many things,” Wittman said.

“I’ve never seen anyone foam from the mouth. I’ve been doing this a long time and I’ve never seen it,” Wittman said of Sanchez.

How in the world did Michel Pereira lose after strong start?

Pereira’s attacks really started to wear on Sanchez’s body in the final round which saw Pereira showboating at the beginning, not even looking at his opponent while standing firm in the center of the Octagon.

Landing a takedown on Sanchez, Pereira got up to his feet to do a backflip on his grounded opponent (he nearly got disqualified for this move in a previous fight).

Not long after that, Pereira pursued the finish with massive knees to the body and to the head of Sanchez.

Pereira sat down Sanchez with a knee to the body and a likely few strikes away from the stoppage, Sanchez received an illegal knee to the head while he was grounded, opening up a cut on his forehead with blood trickling out.

The referee paused the contest, bringing in the doctor to check on Sanchez. After a few minutes, Sanchez said he could not continue with referee Jason Herzog disqualifying the dominant Pereira for the illegal knee.

Diego Sanchez got the win at home but not in the way he wanted. This was Sanchez’s final victory in his his 44-fight career. The Albuquerque-native won the premier season of ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ at middleweight, defeating Kenny Florian back in 2005.

As for Michel Pereira, the exciting striker is 8-1 since his DQ loss and returns at UFC Kansas City next weekend against middleweight Abus Magomedov.



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Norris keeps McLaren on top in final Saudi practice

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Lando Norris beat teammate Oscar Piastri to top spot in final practice for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in a foreboding demonstration of pace by McLaren to go more than 0.6s quicker than any other team.

Despite FP3 taking place in the late afternoon, with the track temperature an unrepresentative 115 degrees F, Norris got surprisingly close to beating last year’s pole time.

His benchmark of 1m 27.489s was just 0.017s slower than Max Verstappen’s pole-getting best in 2024 and only 0.024s faster than teammate Piastri.

Piastri had seemed set to end the final practice session at the top of the order after the final run on fresh softs, but Norris squeezed an extra 0.182s from his used rubber to move from second to first off the back of an impressive purple final sector.

The Australian attempted to respond on his used tires but aborted the effort after a wobble put him off line and spoiled the lap.

George Russell followed in third, but the Mercedes driver was 0.627s slower than Norris. The rest of the top 10 is spread over a smaller gap.

Max Verstappen moved up to fourth with a last-gasp lap on old tires that put him 0.845s off the pace after another session beset by niggles, this time including engine braking.

He displaced Charles Leclerc who dropped to fifth just 0.038s further back.

The Monegasque commented over radio at the end of the session that he felt that was the maximum from the Ferrari in these warm conditions.

Williams teammates Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz were 0.9s and 1.081s off the pace respectively but secured top midfield honors for the team ahead of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly, who was 1.136 slower than Norris’s benchmark.

Repairs to Yuki Tsunoda’s car after his late crash in FP2 yesterday were ongoing until almost halfway through the session, the Japanese driver thanking the team for its work as he joined the session with around 35 minutes still on the clock.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli completed the top 10 for Mercedes.

Isack Hadjar battled a water bottle problem on his way to 11th ahead of a despondent Lewis Hamilton, who sounded in equal parts mystified and defeated by his 0.408s gap to teammate Leclerc and 1.291s deficit to top spot.

Liam Lawson was 13th ahead of Fernando Alonso and Jack Doohan, who will see the stewards later in the day for crossing the white pit lane entry line early in the session.

Oliver Bearman was 16th ahead of Nico Hulkenberg and Esteban Ocon.

Gabriel Bortoleto missed FP2 with a fuel leak, costing him the only session run in representative conditions.

The Brazilian completed a session-high 24 laps in a bid to make up for lost running, putting him ahead of only Lance Stroll at the bottom of the pile.

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Justin Gaethje screamed at referee for late stoppage after battering UFC Hall of Famer to KO win

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Fans are accustomed to seeing Justin Gaethje backflipping off the Octagon after his UFC wins.

‘The Highlight’ went airborne after picking up a decision victory of Rafael Fiziev at UFC 313 last month.

However, Justin Gaethje‘s wild celebrations were temporarily put on hold after he beat Donald Cerrone in September 2021.

The former interim lightweight champion instead directed an angry outburst at referee Jerin Valel.

Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC
Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC

Justin Gaethje’s angry reaction to beating Donald Cerrone

With less than a minute left in the first round, Gaethje dropped the UFC Hall of Famer.

Donald Cerrone popped straight back up before falling face first after a series of follow up shots.

Gaethje momentarily hesitated to throw more punches as he expected the referee to step in.

The 36-year-old whacked his opponent twice more before shooting the in-cage official a dirty look.

Cerrone, who was curled up in a ball, ate one more punch before the referee finally waved things off.

After being pushed off ‘Cowboy’, Gaethje began angrily shouting and gesturing at the referee, who he clearly felt should’ve stepped in much earlier.

In contrast, Cerrone could be seen protesting the stoppage while wobbling around the UFC Octagon.

Justin Gaethje calls for title shot

Islam Makhachev hasn’t fought since quickly tapping out Renato Moicano at UFC 311 in January.

The lightweight champion is currently weighing up the options for his next UFC title defense.

Ilia Topuria, Belal Muhammad, Charles Oliveira, and Paddy Pimblett are all under consideration.

As is Gaethje, who recently revealed he hopes to face Khabib Nurmagomedov’s protege this summer.

“I’m ready to fight, I’m ready to fight in June,” he told The Schmo earlier this month.

“I don’t know, I think Makhachev said he wants to fight in June. I’m hoping I get that call sooner rather than later so I can [start preparing]

“I’m 4-1 in my last five fights, only losing to Max Holloway. We’ve got Oliveira, who already lost [to Makhachev]. [Arman] Tsarukyan really f—– it up. I don’t think they’ll give it to him, and then Topuria.

“I can see them giving it to Topuria, so we’ll see what they do.”



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Five-time World’s Strongest Man’s uppercut KO from hell left opponent out cold for several minutes

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Mariusz Pudzianowski’s MMA experiment is still going strong 16 years after his debut.

The 48-year-old was crowned ‘World’s Strongest Man’ five times before transitioning to MMA in 2009.

Mariusz Pudzianowski picked up a high-profle win over Butterbean at the start of his new career.

The Polish fan favorite also has a knockout victory over Bobb Sapp on his 27-fight record, but the most vicious win in MMA came at KSW 70 in May 2022.

Photo by Maciej Gillert/Gallo Images via Getty Images Poland/Getty Images
Photo by Maciej Gillert/Gallo Images via Getty Images Poland/Getty Images

Watch World’s Strongest Man’s greatest KO

Pudzianowski proved age is just a number when he went on a five-fight win streak at 45 years old.

‘Dominator’ capped off his incredible run by brutally knocking out Michał Materla.

Just 107 seconds was all Pudzianowski needed to put Materla out cold for several minutes.

An uppercut from hell sent the 31-9 fighter flying before an unnecessary follow-up punch nailed him to the floor.

Wild celebrations quickly evolved into widespread concern when Materla failed to get back to his feet.

Thankfully, he eventually walked out the cage and made a full recovery after clashing with Pudzianowski.

What’s next for Mariusz Pudzianowski?

The former strongman hasn’t fought since suffering a shock loss in June 2023.

Pudzianowski was stopped by a former heavyweight boxer, Artur Szpilka, who is famous for suffering a bad knockout loss against Deontay Wilder in 2016.

It was recently announced that Pudzianowski will return to the cage for a fight with fellow ‘World’s Strongest Man’, Eddie Hall, who will make his MMA debut at KSW 105, which takes place at the Prezero Arena in Gliwice, Poland, on April 26.

Hall originally called to face Pudzianowski after winning a bizarre 2vs1 fight last June.

Now he’s training with UFC champion Tom Aspinall for a very serious step up in opposition.



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Shaikin: Zach Neto isn’t Mike Trout, but he might be capable of saving the Angels

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Los Angeles Angels' Zach Neto, left, and Jo Adell congratulate each other after the Angels defeated the San Francisco Giants 2-0 in a baseball game Friday, April 18, 2025, in Anaheim, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Angels teammates Zach Neto, left, and Jo Adell celebrate after a 2-0 win over the San Francisco Giants on Friday night at Angel Stadium. Neto has proven to be a difference-maker for the Angels. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

This is Star Wars weekend at Angel Stadium, and on Friday the Angels activated their best player from the injured list, so the graphics on the video board pretty much wrote themselves: “Return of the Neto.”

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That would be Zach Neto, not Mike Trout. It could be Trout again, but for last year and again in his season debut Friday, the Angels’ best player was Neto.

For Ron Washington, the Angels’ manager, young players earn their stripes, then they earn them all over again. On Friday, Neto batted seventh.

“When you have a superstar like Mike, when he gets going, he’s the type of guy who can carry the team,” Washington said. “We’re not expecting Neto to carry this team.”

Read more: Tyler Anderson shines and Zach Neto makes an impact in Angels’ win over Giants

There is nothing controversial in that statement. Trout is bound for Cooperstown, a three-time most valuable player. The idea that a third-year shortstop would be the guy on which Angels fans were waiting did not sit well with Neto.

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“I’m not the savior,” Neto said. “I’m just here to do my job.”

He might be a savior, if not the savior. As Neto completed his rehabilitation from shoulder surgery, the replacement shortstops in Anaheim batted .159 with a .372 OPS. In 2021, the last season before the adoption of the universal designated hitter, Angels pitchers batted .150 with a .377 OPS.

Neto put up 5.1 WAR last season, according to Baseball Reference, bettered among American League West players only by Oakland slugger Brent Rooker (5.6) and Houston slugger Yordan Alvarez (5.4).

Zach Neto hits a two-run double against the San Francisco Giants in the second inning Friday.

Zach Neto hits a two-run double against the San Francisco Giants in the second inning Friday. (Luke Hales / Getty Images)

You may have heard of the two players immediately behind Neto: Texas shortstop Corey Seager (5.0), winner of a World Series championship with the Dodgers and another with the Rangers; and ex-Houston outfielder Kyle Tucker, now with the Chicago Cubs, who could be the winner of a half-billion dollars in free agency in the coming winter.

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“If what he did last year is his ceiling, we’re in trouble,” Washington said of Neto, “meaning that there’s a lot more.”

In his first at-bat of the season, against San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, Neto rocketed a 106-mph one-hopper that sent Giants shortstop Willy Adames staggering.

As the ball headed into the left-center field alley, Neto raced around first base and dove headfirst into second. The hustle double drove in Nolan Schanuel with the game’s first run, and Neto subsequently scored the game’s second run on an error by Giants third baseman Matt Chapman.

Final score: Angels 2, Giants 0.

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The Angels had returned home dragging a four-game losing streak, and Trout said Neto was just what the doctor ordered. For the past week, as Neto completed his minor league rehabilitation assignment, Trout said Neto repeatedly texted him.

“He was bugging me to go to the front office and tell them to bring him back,” Trout said.

“His energy, you can feed off that. The last couple games, the energy has been down a little bit, unlike the first week and a half of the season. We’ve got to pick it up. He’s got some talent, and he knows it.”

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Joe Rogan provides retirement update as he explains Dana White clause in his UFC contract  

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Joe Rogan still loves working for the UFC after almost three decades with MMA’s premier promotion.

The podcaster made his UFC debut on the night the first heavyweight champion was crowned in 1997.

28 years later, Joe Rogan is one of the most famous people on the planet, with a nine-digit net worth.

Still, he turns up for several UFC shows a year to provide commentary and give the event a boost.

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Joe Rogan provides retirement update

A small group of fans jokingly told Rogan to retire after his awful Paddy Pimblett impression at UFC 314.

Days later, the 57-year-old revealed that he has no plans to walk away from his UFC gig anytime soon.

The only thing that could prompt his departure is Dana White quitting his role as UFC CEO.

“I just enjoy it. I don’t think about retiring, no,” Rogan said on a recent episode of his podcast.

“If Dana White quits, I might quit, but that’s it. It’s actually in my contract. If he leaves, I leave.

“In my contract if he leaves, I don’t have to stay.

“I wouldn’t be doing it if it wasn’t for him. He’s my friend. He talked me into doing it.

“I started working for the UFC in 1997 when it was nothing, nobody was watching then.”

Joe Rogan wants UFC rule changes

Rogan may be happy in his UFC job, but that doesn’t mean he’s 100 percent content with the sport.

During the UFC 314 broadcast, he called for a rule change after he saw a fighter ‘blantantly cheating‘.

Rogan says all fence grabs and eye pokes should result in an immediate one point deduction from the offending fighter.

More recently, he shared some ‘wacky ideas’ he has to improve the sport of MMA.

“There’s many times I wish I was running the UFC,” Rogan admitted.

“I would change so many different things… I got some wacky ideas.

“I don’t even think they should fight in a cage. I think the cage is an unnecessary element in fighting. To push someone against something or to be able to get up from something. I don’t think it’s necessary.

“I think it should be in like a basketball court. Like a basketball court that’s matted up. Have a big space. Have a warning track where if you go outside the warning track too many times, you could lose points.”



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Khabib Nurmagomedov reacts to protégé’s 32-second knockout win over UFC veteran

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Khabib Nurmagomedov has shared a three-word reaction his teammates win at PFL 3.

Just before Fabian Edwards knocked out Impa Kasanganay in the main event of the evening, Gadzhi Rabadanov squared off against 15-fight UFC veteran Marc Diakiese in the co-headliner.

Khabib Nurmagomedov‘s protege stretched his winning run to 11 in a row at Universal Studios Florida.

Just 32 seconds was all he needed to secure his place in PFL lightweight tournament semi final.

Gadzhi Rabadanov celebrates his 32-second KO win over Marc Diakiese
2025 PFL World Tournament: First Round at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida, Friday, April 18, 2025. Credit: Cooper Neill / PFL

Khabib Nurmagomedov praises Gadzhi Rabadanov

Early in round one, Rabadanov caught a body kick and bundled his PFL 3 opponent to the floor.

Once there, he unleashed a series of nasty ground and pound strikes to knock Diakiese out cold.

The Russian shushed the crowd as he calmly celebrated by jogging around his rival’s lifeless body.

Soon after, Nurmagomedov shared cageside footage of his teammate’s empathic KO win.

The former UFC lightweight champion added a caption that congratulated Rabadanov.

“Dominant performance, brother,” Nurmagomedov wrote alongside clapping emojis on his Instagram story.

Will Khabib Nurmagomedov ever fight again?

Nurmagomedov retired from MMA after choking out Justin Gaethje at UFC 254 in October 2020.

Several years later, a large group of fans are still begging ‘The Eagle’ to make a UFC comeback.

Last October, Nurmagomedov responded to rumors about his potential return to the Octagon.

“There is no chance, none. Not even 1%, minus [chance],” he said.

“If you guys need champions, I’m helping my brothers to become champions… We have Islam [Makhachev] as a champion, we have Umar [Nurmagomedov] as the next contender, we have Usman [Nurmagomedov] as champion – we have a lot of champions.

“You guys are never going to miss me because in our team and our gym, we create champions – you guys are always going to have champions, don’t worry.”



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Leon Edwards mounts the cage to celebrate brother’s KO win over former world champion

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Leon Edwards is back smiling after his brother’s sensational knockout win at PFL 3.

The former UFC welterweight champion has understandably been down in the dumps since suffering the first stoppage loss of his career against Sean Brady, who dominated him en route to a fourth round submission win at UFC London last month.

It was Leon Edwards‘ second defeat in a row, having lost to Belal Muhammad at UFC 304 in July 2024.

However, the attention turned to his brother, Fabian Edwards, in Orlando, Florida, on Friday night.

Leon Edwards and Fabian Edwards celebrate at PFL 3
2025 PFL World Tournament: First Round at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida, Friday, April 18, 2025. Credit: Cooper Neill / PFL

Leon Edwards celebrates his brother’s latest win

The younger Edwards sibling headlined PFL 3 in a fight against former light heavyweight champion Impa Kasanganay, who won the $1million tournament in 2023 before making it all the way to the final last year.

However, he got cut, wobbled, and taken out inside two rounds by ‘The Assassin’ at Universal Studios Florida.

Fabian immediately mounted the cage to celebrate bouncing back from a loss to middleweight champion Johnny Eblen in style.

Moments later, Leon scaled the fence and began celebrating the KO win with his brother, who he gave a high five and a hug.

The 14-4 PFL star now moves on to the semi finals of PFL’s new $500,000 single-elimination tournament.

What’s next for Leon Edwards?

This is the first public appearance ‘Rocky’ has made since falling short against Brady.

In a recent Instagram post, Edwards broke his weeks-long silence after UFC London.

“Still HIM,” he captioned a image of him back in the gym working on his game.

In the build-up to his latest fight, Fabian told Bloody Elbow about his brother’s 2025 comeback plan.

“Obviously he’s in training for himself just developing and pushing and fixing whatever he needs to fix and then helping me alongside that,” he said. “Develop, help me, then look for a fight probably end of the year.

“He’s been around watching my sparring, he’s flown out with me to Florida and he’s alright. He’s around the family and everyone and that’s about it… The UFC has never done us any favors in terms of the match-ups.

“They’ve never thought, ‘okay stylistically, they’re a good matchup for Leon,’ they’ve always thought about it like ‘who can we give him to not have him win?’ They’ve been successful with the last two but we just keep pushing.

“Our coaches just say ‘keep winning, then they can’t deny you’. That’s what he done. He kept winning, got himself a title and defended it. Not many people can say they’ve done that so you can’t erase that from history.”



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Yoshinbou Yamamoto continues stellar start, out-dueling Jacob deGrom in Dodgers win

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Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto throws a pitch to the Texas Rangers.

Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers during the fourth inning of a 3-0 win over the Texas Rangers on Friday. Yamamoto threw seven shutout innings. (Julio Cortez / Associated Press)

One of the starting pitchers Friday night has two career Cy Young Awards.

The other is making an early case to win one of his own.

For years, Jacob deGrom has (when healthy) been the gold standard of major league pitching. He has a career ERA of 2.54. He is a four-time All-Star and two-time strikeout king. In 2018 and 2019, he won back-to-back Cy Young honors.

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In the Dodgers’ 3-0 win over deGrom’s Texas Rangers, however, Yoshinobu Yamamoto was the best pitcher.

Read more: Anticipating birth of first child, Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani goes on paternity leave

Although deGrom gave up just one run over seven strong innings, Yamamoto spun seven scoreless frames at Globe Life Field. Where deGrom struck out seven and walked a batter, Yamamoto had 10 strikeouts and no free passes.

It helped the Dodgers win this series-opening matchup between the last two World Series champions, even though they were without Shohei Ohtani, who went on the paternity list in anticipation of the birth of his first child.

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And it further cemented one of the most promising early storylines of this Dodgers season — continuing to affirm Yamamoto, in just his second MLB season, as someone who could be competing for hardware this fall.

Friday presented a new challenge for Yamamoto, who entered the game with a 1.23 ERA in his first four starts. His fastball didn’t have its usual life, sitting a tick lower than normal at 95 mph. His splitter, while still wicked, was a little wilder than typical.

So, the 26-year-old Japanese star dug deeper into his bag of tricks. What he came up with kept the Rangers off balance.

A rare area of weakness for Yamamoto early this season had been his curveball. Though manager Dave Roberts last year called it one of the best he’s seen from a right-hander, opponents entered the night batting .429 against it. Yamamoto hadn’t registered a strikeout with it once.

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On this night, though, Yamamoto snapped off a flurry of big-bending curves to the Rangers. It generated four whiffs on 11 swings. It accounted for two of his strikeouts, including one to Joc Pederson that stranded runners at second and third in the third. And of the seven that Texas put in play, only two fell for knocks.

As Yamamoto worked deeper into the game, he also mixed in his rarely used slider, giving Rangers hitters a different look the second and third time through.

He fanned Jake Burger with one to end the fourth, stranding yet another runner at second. He used it again on his 102nd and final pitch, recording a strike ‘em out, throw ‘em out double-play to complete seven innings for only the third time in his MLB career.

Yamamoto’s splitter was still effective, totaling seven whiffs (four of them strikeouts) on 17 swings. And with his four-seamer playing down, he incorporated more sinkers and cutters into his arsenal.

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It all served as a reminder that Yamamoto — whose 0.93 ERA is now best in the National League — is much more than a two-weapon pitcher. That, after brief flashes of brilliance last year, he is starting to put all the pieces together for a breakout sophomore big-league campaign.

On the backside of his career at age 36, deGrom was almost as good in what turned into a vintage pitcher’s duel. He yielded just three hits, and retired 13 of the final 14 batters he faced. But back in the first inning, he threw an elevated fastball to leadoff man Tommy Edman (who was filling in for Ohtani at the top of the batting order). Edman whacked it for his NL-leading seventh home run.

It proved to be deGrom’s only real mistake.

But the way Yamamoto was dominating, it was one too many.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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