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Gina Carano returns from a 17-year break to make an improbable MMA comeback against Ronda Rousey

Sport

Gina Carano returns from a 17-year break to make an improbable MMA comeback against Ronda Rousey
Sport

Sport

Gina Carano returns from a 17-year break to make an improbable MMA comeback against Ronda Rousey

2026-05-15 07:52 Last Updated At:08:01

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The idea of returning to any professional sport after a break of nearly 17 years seems preposterous.

Doing it in a sport as dangerous as mixed martial arts? Gina Carano realizes it seems like something that could — maybe should — only happen in the movies.

Carano is doing it anyway Saturday night when she fights Ronda Rousey in the main event of Netflix's first MMA show. Their bout could be the most-watched combat sports event of the year, and it puts the 44-year-old Carano back under the competitive spotlight she left in 2009, when she was 27.

The trailblazing fighter built and lost a high-profile acting career in the lengthy interim, but an offer from Rousey and a revelatory return to MMA training have altered her perspective on what’s possible and what’s important in life.

“I think this fight is happening right when it should,” Carano said this week after she was cheered at a promotional public workout on famed Venice Beach. “Right now, I’m in such a solid place. I had to go through life in order to get here, and maybe other people get there a little bit younger. But for me, I’m a little bit of a late maturer. It happened for me now, and I'm so happy.”

Carano actually knows plenty about Hollywood — and about Hollywood endings, too.

Carano was one of the most famous fighters from the early days of MMA, when the violent sport struggled for legitimacy and media attention in the 2000s. She was the first woman to become a crossover star, with her face on CBS and Showtime several years before the UFC began promoting women's fights with Rousey's ascendance.

A week after Cris Cyborg stopped Carano in August 2009 in the first women’s bout to headline a major MMA event, she got a call from film director Steven Soderbergh, who had seen her fight on TV. He hired Carano to star in “Haywire,” a superb action thriller that catapulted her toward bigger and bigger roles in the years to come.

Although acting took over her life, Carano never forgot about martial arts — and she grinningly points out that she never retired.

She still trained to keep fit, and because her husband and longtime partner, Kevin Ross, is a now-retired kickboxer. She occasionally entertained offers for a comeback, but the timing and the money were never right.

Instead, she became passionate about watching the professional sport, even hosting parties at her home for UFC, One Championship and Glory kickboxing events.

“When I was able to step away from mixed martial arts, I became such a fan,” Carano said. “And now to be back around it, and to have Ronda and (co-main event fighter) Nate (Diaz) and people that I had some sort of connection with in the past, but now being on their card and fighting one of them, I’m still a fan, (but) it’s pretty wild to be able to be here and be a part of it.”

Carano's acting career crashed in 2021 after she made a series of incendiary social media posts espousing strident right-wing views. Her talent agency dropped her, Lucasfilm condemned her actions, and she has only appeared in two films released by conservative producers in the half-decade since.

Carano said her fall from entertainment grace left her downbeat, overweight and battling additional undisclosed health problems. That's how Rousey saw her idol in a television interview a couple of years ago, and it inspired them to get together to make the fight that's happening Saturday.

“She was my hero getting into the sport, and this is what brought us together,” Rousey said. “We went from acquaintances to … well, we’re trying our best not to be friends and not communicate. I desperately want to hit her up for every press conference and be like, ‘What color are you wearing?’ Because I really want to be able to match, so I have to try and pick colors that will match anything.”

The fight also compelled Carano to return to serious MMA training — the time-consuming work of building stamina, sharpening her striking power and dulling her shins and fists to the pain inherent in the sport.

Training has changed in the past decade-and-a-half — and so had Carano, who felt a mid-life grounding and focus she never had before.

“Oh man, it’s been hard,” Carano said. “Training has been grueling, but it’s just the consistency — once you give into the fact you’re going to get up and dedicate yourself to this every single day until you fight, and you’re responsible for that. Nobody else is. None of my coaches are telling me, ‘You have to do this.’ (I realize) I have to do this. I have to do it for myself. ... I just think I’m a better overall martial artist than I was ever, and my head is actually attached to my body this time around. I was in the clouds in my 20s. I do not miss that."

More than 6,100 days after her loss to Cyborg, Carano will enter another cage at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California. Carano has rebuilt her game in the gym, and she seems quietly confident she can strike with Rousey, who is ending her own 9 1/2-year absence from competition.

While Rousey has claimed this is her final fight, Carano said she has no idea what her sporting future holds — and she likes it that way.

“I took responsibility for everything that happens in the cage on Saturday,” Carano said. “I feel like the ‘hard’ is what makes it worth it, because this week I don't have to cut any weight. I feel great. I wish all my training camps would have been like this. I wish we would have always been in this good-vibes situation. But we lived and we learned, and here we are, getting to relive it and do it right.”

AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports

FILE - Mixed Martial arts fighter Gina Carano speaks during a news conference, Thursday, May 29, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano, File)

FILE - Mixed Martial arts fighter Gina Carano speaks during a news conference, Thursday, May 29, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano, File)

SEATTLE (AP) — A tourist from Washington state is facing federal charges after a witness recorded what prosecutors say was a video of him hurling a coconut-sized rock at an endangered Hawaiian monk seal just off a Maui beach last week.

Igor Mykhaylovych Lytvynchuk, 38, made arrangements to surrender in the Seattle area on Wednesday as special agents with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration were seeking to arrest him, Assistant U.S. Attorney Aislinn Affinito in Honolulu said.

He is charged with harassing and attempting to harass a protected animal.

Lytvynchuk, who lives in Covington, Washington, was in U.S. District Court in Seattle on Thursday. A judge ordered him released pending another court appearance in Honolulu on May 27.

Greg Geist, a federal public defender who represented Lytvynchuk at the hearing, said Lytvynchuk hired an attorney in Hawaii, whose name was not immediately listed in the case docket. After the hearing, Geist declined to acknowledge questions from an Associated Press reporter or identify the attorney Lytvynchuk hired.

Two supporters who attended the hearing declined to comment.

The video drew widespread condemnation and demands for prosecution in Hawaii, including from Maui’s mayor.

A state Department of Land and Natural Resources officer last week investigated a report of Hawaiian monk seal harassment in Lahaina, the community that was largely destroyed by a deadly wildfire in 2023. A witness showed the officer video of the seal swimming in shallow water while a man watched from shore.

“In the cellphone video, the man can be seen holding a large rock with one hand, aiming, and throwing it directly at the monk seal," prosecutors said in a criminal complaint. The rock, described by a witness as the size of a coconut, narrowly missed the seal's head, but caused the “animal to abruptly alter its behavior,” the complaint said.

When a witness confronted the man, he said "he did not care and was ‘rich’ enough to pay any fines," according to the complaint.

Maui Mayor Richard Bissen said the charges send a clear message that cruelty toward protected wildlife won't be tolerated. He identified the seal as “Lani,” a known and beloved character along Lahaina's waterfront, whose return after the wildfires brought a sense of healing and hope during a difficult time.

But the state natural resources department said in an email that it likely was not Lani, as it lacked certain markings.

“Humanity and the instinct to protect what is vulnerable are still values people can unite around," Bissen said in an emailed statement.

The mayor said he called the U.S. attorney in Honolulu to advocate for prosecution.

Lytvynchuk is charged with violations of the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Hawaiian monk seals are a critically endangered species. Only 1,600 remain in the wild.

If convicted, Lytvynchuk faces up to one year in prison for each charge. He also faces a fine of up to $50,000 under the Endangered Species Act and a fine of up to $20,000 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Kelleher reported from Honolulu. Associated Press writer Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu contributed to this report.

This undated drivers license photo provided by the U.S. District Court of Hawaii shows Igor Mykhaylovych Lytvynchuk, from Washington state, who is accused of throwing a coconut-sized rock at the seal named "Lani." (U.S. District Court of Hawaii via AP)

This undated drivers license photo provided by the U.S. District Court of Hawaii shows Igor Mykhaylovych Lytvynchuk, from Washington state, who is accused of throwing a coconut-sized rock at the seal named "Lani." (U.S. District Court of Hawaii via AP)

This undated drivers license photo provided by the U.S. District Court of Hawaii shows Igor Mykhaylovych Lytvynchuk, from Washington state, who is accused of throwing a coconut-sized rock at the seal named "Lani." (U.S. District Court of Hawaii via AP)

This undated drivers license photo provided by the U.S. District Court of Hawaii shows Igor Mykhaylovych Lytvynchuk, from Washington state, who is accused of throwing a coconut-sized rock at the seal named "Lani." (U.S. District Court of Hawaii via AP)

FILE - Cars pass in front of the federal building housing the U.S. District Court in Honolulu on March 7, 2014. (AP Photo/Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, File)

FILE - Cars pass in front of the federal building housing the U.S. District Court in Honolulu on March 7, 2014. (AP Photo/Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, File)

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