And while Shevchenko needs little more motivation than keeping her belt, she comes to Singapore carrying a rejuvenated kind of energy that comes from returning home after a long time away. Early in 2022, Shevchenko visited Kyrgyzstan, spending nearly a month there. The trip carried major significance for Shevchenko as it was her first time back in the country in more than 10 years (other than a week-long stint she said “doesn’t count”).
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“It’s everything,” Shevchenko told UFC.com. “The spirit, the spirit of my people, the energy of the land, just everything. Even walking through the street and speaking with regular people, it’s such good energy that really charges you. Spending a lot of time riding horses, seeing the national game Kok-boru, it’s very brave. It’s gorgeous, and it’s amazing. It’s inspirational, and when you see your countrymen doing that brave game, you have to do the same. You have to maintain our tradition of being strong people.”
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Since capturing the flyweight belt in December 2018, Shevchenko not only habitually achieves that goal, but does so to a degree few UFC champions ever have. Her seven title fight victories rank ninth all-time in the promotion’s history, and should she add another ruby to her belt at UFC 275: Teixeira vs Prochazka, she’d tie Randy Couture and Jose Aldo for seventh. Only Amanda Nunes has won more than Shevchenko in the women’s divisions with nine.
It’s the way “Bullet” goes about her business – a balance of no-nonsense focus on each training session, fight camp and opponent with a full appreciation of the nomadic lifestyle martial arts competition brings her – that makes it all the more impressive. Whether she and her sister, Antonina, are flying planes in the desert, sailing a boat off the coast of Washington or learning new languages (Valentina speaks three fluently and is working on Thai), Shevchenko seems to dominate living, let alone fighting. That said, she understands fighting is the vehicle upon which everything depends, and her title defense against Taila Santos is no exception.
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“When I enter the Octagon, my goal is not just to win, it’s to show martial arts domination and the beauty of martial arts,” Shevchenko said. “I’m not thinking about legacy. All these thoughts, it’s after the fight. When I am there, I am in full (attention). I am not thinking about what I want to show. I just do that. I just do what I was prepared for, and I prepared for that all my life. I was training during all my life.”