Jasmine Jasudavicius earned a unanimous decision victory over Karine Silva at UFC Winnipeg, with all three judges scoring the bout 29-28 in her favor. The win improves Jasudavicius to 15-4 and gets her back on track after suffering a recent loss. Silva falls to 19-7 with the defeat, marking her second consecutive loss and third setback in her last four fights. The women's flyweight bout went the full three rounds with Jasudavicius controlling enough of the action to secure the decision. Details of the specific exchanges and fight strategy were not provided in the original report.
Jasmine Jasudavicius returned to the win column at UFC Winnipeg, earning a unanimous decision over Karine Silva in a women's flyweight bout that went the full three rounds. All three judges scored the contest 29-28 in favor of Jasudavicius, who controlled enough of the action across the three rounds to claim the victory.

Jasudavicius, a 37-year-old Canadian fighting out of Niagara Top Team, improves to 15-4 with the win and rebounds from a recent setback. Ranked ninth in the women's flyweight division, she stands five-foot-seven with a 68-inch reach and brings consistent output to her fights, landing 3.7 significant strikes per minute at a 45 percent accuracy rate. She also averages 2.59 takedowns per 15 minutes, making her a well-rounded threat in the division.
Silva, known as "Killer," drops to 19-7 with the defeat. The 32-year-old Brazilian, who trains with The Fighting Nerds and is ranked 11th at flyweight, now carries two consecutive losses and has gone 1-3 in her last four outings. Silva stands five-foot-five with a 67-inch reach and is particularly active on the ground, averaging 1.5 submission attempts per 15 minutes alongside 2.3 takedowns in the same span.

Why it matters
- Jasudavicius moves from ninth to a potentially stronger position in the flyweight rankings with the win over a fellow top-15 fighter.
- Silva's slide — two straight losses and three defeats in four fights — raises questions about her standing in a competitive division.
- The matchup pitted two orthodox grapplers with similar takedown rates, making Jasudavicius's edge in striking volume and accuracy a likely factor in separating them on the scorecards.






