MVP MMA 1 goes May 16 at the Intuit Dome. Netflix has the broadcast. Gina Carano, who last fought in 2009, takes the other side of the main event. The combat sports calendar has been packed all spring and somehow this became the story that ate everything else.
The Carano Fight and What It Sets Up
Gina Carano was a pioneer. First major female MMA star, Strikeforce headliner, moved to Hollywood, did Haywire and Deadpool and The Mandalorian before everything else happened. Seventeen years since her last competitive punch. Rousey's been out nine. The ring rust is mutual. Her Strikeforce record was 7-1. The loss came against Cris Cyborg in 2009 and Carano walked away from the sport that night. She's mentioned wanting to come back a few times over the years but nobody paid attention until the Netflix deal materialized. Carano is 44. Rousey is 39. Neither has thrown a competitive punch this decade. Carano spent most of the last decade acting. Action movies kept her in some kind of physical shape, but filming stunts and training for a real MMA fight are different sports. Rousey transitioned into professional wrestling, which at least involves taking bumps and maintaining cardio, though the concussion issue complicates how much credit you give that preparation. Both camps have been quiet about specifics. No leaked sparring footage, no training partner interviews, no gym check-ins from reporters. For a Netflix-promoted fight, the media blackout around the actual training has been unusual.Why People Are Still Watching
The card sold out at the Intuit Dome within hours of going on sale. Most Valuable Promotions is promoting the event and Netflix's 300 million subscribers give it a reach that dwarfs anything the UFC puts on Paramount+ on a regular Saturday night. Rousey called it the biggest women's fight in history during the press conference. That claim is debatable, but the attention is not. Jorge Masvidal tried to get on the card and said the UFC blocked him from accepting the spot. The full undercard includes names from across MMA promotions, and the production quality Netflix demands means the broadcast will look different from anything combat sports has seen on a streaming platform.The Kayla Harrison Feud Goes Back to 2005
Rousey and Harrison first competed against each other at the 2005 U.S. Judo Championship. Harrison was still early in her senior-level path. Rousey already had the reputation. Their judo resumes explain why the comparison followed both of them for so long:- Harrison won Olympic gold in 2012 and 2016.
- Rousey took Olympic bronze in 2008.
- Both carried elite judo credentials into MMA.
- The difference is that Rousey became the earlier MMA star, while Harrison built the longer combat-sports résumé before entering the UFC title picture.
What They've Been Saying About Each Other
Rousey at the Netflix press conference called Harrison a sister who got everything she wanted and traced the feud back to disputes over judo accolades. Harrison's response came on Jorge Masvidal's Death Row MMA podcast, where she called Rousey irrelevant and dismissed the Carano fight. The strange part is that Harrison also gave Rousey credit in the same conversation. "I will never take away the fact that Ronda is probably the most important female fighter. If it weren't for her, I wouldn't have a job." Amanda Nunes called the return "great for women's MMA" last week. So the dynamic is complicated. They respect what Rousey built, they just don't think she should be building on it anymore. The back and forth has been going on for months and the behind-the-scenes maneuvering tells you more than the public insults do. Chael Sonnen reported in August 2025 that Rousey's inner circle had let it be known she would fight Harrison for the title if Harrison retained it. Rousey would come back to fight Kayla, not Amanda. Sonnen added that he didn't think it would happen, but confirmed the source was Rousey's camp. "I can confirm the story came from Ronda," he said. Harrison's neck surgery timeline makes anything before late 2026 unlikely.The Fitness Question Around the Comeback
Rousey spent a chunk of 2024 talking publicly about concussions. Not in vague terms. She said training jabs triggered symptoms, which at the time sounded like someone explaining why they'd never fight again. The WWE run after that disclosure surprised the medical community, and this return to a sport where getting hit in the head is the core product raises the stakes even higher. The thing about Carano's 17-year layoff is that it cuts both ways. Fans on cricket bet forums and across combat sports discussion boards have pointed out that the absence means Carano's timing will be gone, her footwork will be rusty, and Rousey won't face the version of Carano that beat everyone except Cyborg. That's probably true. But it also means we don't know what Carano has left, and surprises in combat sports tend to come from the fighter nobody expected to land the shot that lands it. The athletic commissions in Los Angeles will need to clear both fighters medically, and that process hasn't been public. Rousey has to pass neurological evaluations, and given what she's said publicly about her symptoms, the commission's medical staff will be thorough. If she clears, the fight happens and the concussion history becomes her risk to carry. If she doesn't clear, the main event disappears 11 days before a sold-out arena and a Netflix broadcast that's already been promoted to 300 million subscribers. The stakes of that medical clearance go beyond Rousey's career.| Detail | Information |
| Event | MVP MMA 1 |
| Promoter | Most Valuable Promotions (Jake Paul) |
| Broadcast | Netflix (300M+ subscribers) |
| Venue capacity | ~18,000 (sold out within hours) |
| Rousey's MMA record | 12-2 |
| Carano's MMA record | 7-1 |
| Harrison's current status | UFC bantamweight champion, recovering from neck surgery |
| Rousey-Harrison judo rivalry | Since 2005 U.S. Judo Championship |