Makhachev and Shevchenko Reign: New P4P Leaders in UFC

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Islam Makhachev and Valentina Shevchenko Reach the Top in Alofoke Deportes’ P4P Ranking

In a day full of emotions for mixed martial arts fans, Islam Makhachev and Valentina Shevchenko were crowned as the number one in the pound-for-pound rankings of Alofoke Deportes. Both fighters demonstrated their worth with resounding victories at UFC 322. On Saturday morning, Makhachev woke up in second place in the men’s rankings. Meanwhile, Shevchenko occupied the same spot in the women’s list. However, by the end of the day, both athletes ascended to the top after dominant performances in the octagon. Shevchenko’s day began as the women’s flyweight champion, defending her title with a unanimous decision over Zhang Weili. On the other hand, Makhachev, former lightweight champion, had no trouble dethroning Jack Della Maddalena at welterweight. A notable difference between both performances was the ranking level of their opponents. Zhang, Shevchenko’s rival, was number one in the ranking, which made their fight a clash between the two best women in MMA. For his part, Della Maddalena, whom Makhachev defeated, was in eighth place among the men.

Below, we present the updated rankings of Alofoke Deportes’ pound-for-pound classifications.

Men’s Pound-for-Pound Ranking

  • Islam Makhachev
UFC Welterweight Champion Makhachev fulfilled his promise to become a two-division champion by neutralizing Della Maddalena’s striking threat with relative ease at UFC 322. This victory ties him with Anderson Silva for the longest winning streak in UFC history, with 16 wins, and places him on the list of the greatest MMA fighters of all time. With an incredible amount of talented welterweight contenders, he will not lack opponents. However, the fight everyone wants to see is a showdown with the current lightweight champion, Ilia Topuria.
  • Ilia Topuria
UFC Lightweight Champion After knocking out two of the best featherweights in UFC history (Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway) in 2024, it would be difficult for Topuria to surpass that in 2025. He moved up to lightweight with the goal of challenging Makhachev, but with Makhachev moving up a division, Topuria captured the vacant title by knocking out Oliveira at UFC 317.
  • Merab Dvalishvili
UFC Bantamweight Champion Dvalishvili is having one of the most impressive streaks in the UFC bantamweight division. Not only did he defeat Sean O’Malley for the second time in nine months at UFC 316, but he also demonstrated a new facet of his game, finishing O’Malley with a guillotine in the third round. Since August 2022, Dvalishvili has defeated José Aldo, Yan, Henry Cejudo, O’Malley (twice), Umar Nurmagomedov, and Sandhagen. And he will defend his title again, in a rematch with Yan, in December, becoming the only champion in UFC history to defend a title four times in a year.
  • Tom Aspinall
UFC Heavyweight Champion It can be argued that Aspinall is the most dynamic, skilled, and talented heavyweight the sport has ever seen. He is dominating his opponents in an unparalleled way. No one can last a round with him. He hoped to prove his supremacy against Jon Jones, but Jones chose to withdraw, elevating Aspinall from interim champion. His first defense of the undisputed belt ended anticlimactically, as an eye poke caused his fight at UFC 321 with Gane to be declared a no-contest.
  • Alex Pereira
UFC Light Heavyweight Champion A stellar 2024 consolidated Pereira’s place as a star in UFC, but he faced possibly his toughest test as light heavyweight champion when he entered the octagon with Ankalaev at UFC 313. Pereira had dealt with strikers, but the question was whether he could do the job against a talented grappler. Pereira kept the fight standing, but fell short by unanimous decision. He changed that result violently when he faced Ankalaev in a rematch at UFC 320.
  • Khamzat Chimaev
UFC Middleweight Champion After five years of anticipation, Chimaev finally fought for a championship at UFC 319, and the result was one of the most dominant title fight performances in UFC history. Chimaev did not finish, but completely demolished Du Plessis in their five-round bout and answered questions about his endurance along the way. If Chimaev can stay healthy and compete frequently, he still has plenty of time to climb to the top of this list.
  • Alexandre Pantoja
UFC Flyweight Champion The UFC flyweight king has amassed four title defenses, including two in pay-per-view main events in 2024. He built his winning streak to eight in his UFC 317 victory over Kara-France, whom he had already defeated before. He will defend the belt against Yan at UFC 323. Pantoja is quickly lapping the 125-pound division.
  • Alexander Volkanovski
UFC Featherweight Champion It seemed that the sport had begun to write Volkanovski’s eulogy after his knockout loss to Topuria in February 2024. Volkanovski noticed this and set out to prove to everyone that he still has a lot left by recapturing the featherweight belt at UFC 314. His age (36) will likely remain a topic before the fight, which is fine because Volkanovski enjoys proving people wrong.
  • Jack Della Maddalena
UFC welterweight Della Maddalena’s retention of a top 10 spot might be a surprise, but it speaks to a few things. One, of course, is that there’s no shame in losing to Makhachev. And two, this might be the deepest welterweight division in MMA history. Della Maddalena’s eight-fight win streak in this division still means a lot. And although Della Maddalena had a bad night at UFC 322, the perception of his talent hasn’t changed drastically because of it.
  • Dricus Du Plessis
UFC Middleweight

Before being submitted by Chimaev and losing the belt, Du Plessis was dominating the middleweight division with 11 consecutive victories, including four in a row over champions or former champions (Sean Strickland twice, Israel Adesanya, and Robert Whittaker). Can he rebuild for another attempt against Chimaev?

  • Max Holloway
UFC Lightweight Holloway has won four of his last five fights, alternating between lightweight and featherweight. The only defeat was against Ilia Topuria, who now reigns in Holloway’s current division, lightweight.

Women’s Pound-for-Pound Ranking

  • Valentina Shevchenko
UFC Flyweight Champion Shevchenko’s dominance was questioned in 2022 and 2023, when she had a 1-1-1 record in a trilogy with Alexa Grasso. Now, that seems like a long time ago. Shevchenko has reasserted herself as the best flyweight in the world, and now she has affirmed herself as the number one in the world, period. It wasn’t surprising that she beat Zhang, but it was surprising how easy she made it.
  • Zhang Weili
UFC flyweight / strawweight It’s difficult to gain weight, especially at the highest level. That sounds like an obvious thing to say, but Zhang had been dominant at 115 pounds for so long that some of us might have taken for granted how big a challenge it would be to move up to 125. UFC 322 was a bad night for Zhang, but she doesn’t have many of those. And if she decides to stay at 125, it certainly seems reasonable that she’ll do better in the future.
  • Kayla Harrison

UFC Bantamweight Champion

PFL’s face for a long time is also quickly becoming the face of the UFC women’s divisions. With a dominant victory over Peña at UFC 316, Harrison has a 4-0 record in the UFC and has the prize to add to her two Olympic judo gold medals. However, she will not have it easy in her first title defense, because Nunes returns with the belt in sight.
  • Cris Cyborg
PFL featherweight It had been a while since Cyborg had fought an elite MMA opponent until she faced Pacheco in 2024. That was a legitimate matchup, and many within the industry predicted Cyborg’s downfall. Instead, she eliminated the two-weight PFL champion, nullifying all of Pacheco’s momentum. One of the original pioneers of women’s MMA is still going strong, and she will go for the vacant PFL title against Collins, an Australian with a 6-0 record but little high-level experience.
  • Manon Fiorot
UFC flyweight Fiorot fell short in her challenge against Shevchenko, the champion, at UFC 315. But by defeating Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield in her two previous fights, Fiorot has shown that she has the tools to become a champion.
  • Mackenzie Dern
UFC strawweight Dern’s rise to the 115-pound throne was truly a changing of the guard. She is the first champion of the division since 2019, because the previous three champions (Zhang Weili, Carla Esparza, and Rose Namajunas) were in their second reigns. Dern, almost a decade into her MMA career after multiple world jiu-jitsu championships, has won three fights in a row.
  • Natalia Silva
UFC flyweight Silva appears to be the candidate for future UFC champion after a dominant performance against Grasso at UFC 315. Silva’s style of hitting and moving has frustrated even the highest-level opponent, and she has youth on her side, as she will not turn 30 until 2027.
  • Erin Blanchfield
UFC flyweight Blanchfield avenged her 2019 defeat to Cortez emphatically at UFC 322, submitting her in the second round of their rematch. At only 26 years old, Blanchfield continues to evolve with improved striking and suffocating grappling. She will have to wait her turn for a title opportunity, with Natalia Silva likely next, but Blanchfield’s turn is certainly coming.
  • Dakota Ditcheva
PFL flyweight Ditcheva not only won the PFL flyweight season last year, but she did so in spectacular fashion: a TKO finish over Taila Santos, who once challenged for a UFC title. Ditcheva opened her 2025 campaign by dominating Inaba in the co-main event of the first PFL Champions Series card in Cape Town, South Africa.
  • Julianna Peña
UFC bantamweight Peña is a two-time women’s bantamweight champion, with one of those reigns made possible by one of the biggest upsets in UFC history, her submission victory in 2021 over Amanda Nunes. Peña’s four most recent appearances have been in title fights, so she is made for big moments.
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