Prediction: Valentina Shevchenko via Decision
Valentina Shevchenko vs Manon Fiorot is one of those rare matchups where it truly feels like two fighters from the future are colliding—two women who have operated on a different level than their peers for years. From a betting perspective, this is clearly a dog or pass situation. Shevchenko is the more proven fighter at the elite level, with championship-caliber composure, timing, and adaptability. Even though Fiorot has been the one I’ve pegged as the next big challenge to the throne since she arrived in the UFC, that was more about stylistic potential and physical tools—not a guaranteed heir to the title. Because when you get down to the details, this is still a razor-thin fight between two extremely complete martial artists.
Fiorot has always stood out for her athleticism—fast feet, crisp striking, and a point-fighting background that gives her the ability to rack up damage without taking much in return. She’s faster than most of Shevchenko’s past opponents and uses a lot more lateral movement, which means Valentina will have to make adjustments early to get her reads. Fiorot doesn’t just march forward or stand in front of her opponents. She circles, picks her moments, and stays at a range where she can pick her shots. On paper, this seems like the kind of movement that could disrupt Shevchenko’s rhythm.
But this is where Shevchenko’s strengths make her such a live dog. She’s never rushed, never frustrated, and she doesn’t chase. She waits. She analyzes. She downloads information and counters with precise, devastating combinations. And she’s a specialist at punishing predictability, especially with her kicks. While Fiorot may be faster and more active early, that very activity becomes a pattern—and patterns are what Shevchenko exploits best. Fiorot has a major technical habit she’s never cleaned up: the way she leans heavily to her left when throwing her right hand. Her chin rises and her weight shifts, exposing her to a perfectly placed right high kick. And she’s been clipped with that exact strike multiple times. Against a fighter like Shevchenko, who throws lightning-fast kicks with no telegraph and has surgical timing, that kind of opening can be the difference in a close fight.
Another reason this is dog or pass: physical parity. Both women are strong, neither is easy to take down or control, and both have a natural ability to dictate tempo against most opponents. But in this fight, it’s unlikely that either one will be able to physically dominate the other. Fiorot won’t just walk Valentina down and bully her the way she has against lesser competition. And Shevchenko won’t be able to assume she can just get to her spots without dealing with that fast movement and long-range striking. It’ll be tense, calculated, and likely low volume at times.
So if you’re betting this fight, the value sits with Shevchenko as the underdog. Not because Fiorot isn’t legit—she is. She might even take over the division in time. But Shevchenko has the championship experience, the higher finishing instincts, and the tactical weapons to capitalize on a mistake Fiorot has yet to correct. It’s close. It’s competitive. But in these kinds of chess matches, it’s often the one who can make a single adjustment mid-fight that wins. Shevchenko has made a career out of doing exactly that.