Tatiana Suarez defeated Lupita Godinez via submission in the second round at UFC 327. This victory marks Suarez's second win following her only career loss to Zhang Weili. For Godinez, this represents the first stoppage loss of her professional career, a significant setback in her UFC run. The submission finish continues Suarez's reputation as a dangerous grappler in the women's division. The post celebrated the finish and anticipated more stoppages on the card.
Tatiana Suarez added another submission finish to her resume at UFC 327 on April 11, tapping out Lupita Godinez in the second round to move firmly back into title contention in the women's strawweight division.

Suarez, now 13-1, enters the conversation as arguably the most dangerous grappler at 115 pounds. The 35-year-old American, who trains out of Millennia MMA, holds a divisional ranking of second and carries a career takedown rate of 4.41 per 15 minutes — an elite mark that has consistently overwhelmed opponents on the mat. Her only professional loss came against reigning strawweight champion Zhang Weili, making Saturday's finish her second victory since that setback. At five-foot-five with a 66-inch reach and a 60 percent striking accuracy, Suarez is more than capable of setting up her grappling with purposeful offense on the feet.
For Godinez, the defeat carries added weight. The finish represented the first stoppage loss of her professional career, a notable development for a fighter who had previously shown the durability to go the distance under pressure. The loss is a significant blow to her standing in the division.

Why it matters
- Suarez's win at 13-1 puts renewed pressure on champion Zhang Weili, the one fighter to have beaten her
- A second-round submission finish reinforces Suarez as the premier grappling threat in the strawweight division
- Godinez suffering her first career stoppage raises questions about her path back to relevance at 115 pounds
- The result sets up a compelling title-fight argument for Suarez given her divisional ranking and the nature of the finish
Saturday, April 11, 2026









