feature-image
feature-image

Alexa Grasso had just delivered one of the biggest statements of her comeback at UFC Seattle. A clean left followed by a straight right on Maycee Barber, and within seconds, she went down. And as she went down, Grasso secured a choke to seal the win. Officially, it was recorded as a knockout at 2:42 of Round 1—clinically executed and exactly what she needed after a three-fight winless run.

Terrell Owens holding Dude Wipes XL

But as the crowd held its breath, new cageside footage revealed an unexpected reaction from Grasso that spoke louder than her knockout blow. Instead of celebrating, she made a choice that defined the moment.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

As Barber remained unresponsive on the canvas for over a minute while the UFC medical staff attended to her, Grasso, instead of celebrating, stayed on her knees nearby, watching Barber make it back to her feet. New cageside footage, later shared online by Oscar Willis from TheMacLife, showed her waiting quietly, not reacting, not turning away, just staying there until Barber began to recover.

ADVERTISEMENT

Inside the cage, everything happened fast. Barber was pressing forward early, holding the center. Alexa Grasso stayed composed on the outside. Then one opening was all it took as the left hand landed clean on her jaw. ‘The Future’ dropped awkwardly, tried to react, but she was already fading. The choke followed, but it was almost secondary. Referee Mike Beltran stepped in quickly, recognizing Barber was already out of it.

What followed was the concern as Barber remained on her back, eyes wide open but unresponsive, for more than a minute. That’s when the tone inside the arena shifted. And context matters here.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2025, Maycee Barber’s fight with Erin Blanchfield at UFC on ESPN 68 was called off due to a medical emergency just before her walkout. A year earlier, in 2024, she had spent nine days in the hospital dealing with a serious infection. So when she stayed down longer than usual, it wasn’t just a routine concern.

That’s where Alexa Grasso’s reaction lands differently. She didn’t rush to the cage wall, didn’t celebrate immediately, just took the time to show sportsmanship and class in a moment of concern for her opponent. There’s a quiet comparison here to MMA legend Lyoto Machida, who was known for bowing or kneeling after finishes as a sign of respect—different style, same idea—a pause before the celebration.

ADVERTISEMENT

Maycee Barber eventually sat up, got to her feet, and walked out with assistance. The crowd responded in relief more than celebration. Only then did Alexa Grasso allow herself to acknowledge the win. Now, the question becomes, what’s next for the Mexican fighter?

Alexa Grasso lays out her “goal” to get back into title contention

For Alexa Grasso, this wasn’t just a win; it was a reset. Coming into UFC Seattle, she was 0-2-1 in her last three, including losing the belt back to Valentina Shevchenko and a decision loss to Natalia Silva at UFC 315. Another setback would’ve pushed her further down the ladder. Instead, she stopped Maycee Barber in under three minutes.

ADVERTISEMENT

That changes things. Before the fight, Grasso wasn’t making bold claims about title shots. If anything, she sounded measured when asked about getting back into the title race.

“Hopefully, yes. I don’t know how many fights I need to be (in) the talk about being a contender,” Grasso told the media ahead of the fight. “The fights I need to do, as much as I need to do, I will do it again. That’s the goal again.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Barber wasn’t just another name. She was on the edge of a title shot herself and was riding high on a seven-fight win streak. Beating her and doing it decisively puts Alexa Grasso right back into the conversation. What happens next depends on timing and matchmaking, but the direction is clear. Grasso has reinserted herself into the top tier. Whether it’s another contender fight or a direct path back to the belt, she’s no longer on the outside looking in.

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Written by

author-image

Dushyant Patni

2,495 Articles

Dushyant Patni is a Senior UFC Writer at EssentiallySports, bringing over eight years of diverse writing experience and a Master’s in English Literature to the fight game. For the past two years, he has been a key figure at the ES Fight Night Desk, covering live MMA action with a sharp eye for subtle in-round details that often escape casual viewers. A lifelong combat sports enthusiast, Dushyant’s passion spans boxing, Bruce Lee’s martial arts philosophy, PRIDE FC’s golden era, and modern-day UFC.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Gokul Pillai

ADVERTISEMENT