By Spear Sports
Popular UFC fighter, Antonina Shevchenko, has announced her retirement from mixed martial arts to pursue her passion for flying full-time.
The news was shared in a touching tribute by her sister, reigning UFC flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko, who posted a heartfelt message on social media celebrating her sibling’s remarkable career transition.
The 39-year-old Kyrgyzstani-Peruvian fighter, known as “The Panther,” has decided to hang up her gloves after a distinguished three-decade martial arts career that saw her compete across multiple disciplines and continents.
Valentina’s post revealed that the decision was made two weeks ago, marking the end of an era for one of combat sports’ most accomplished sister acts.
Antonina’s journey into aviation is no mere retirement hobby. Over the past seven years, she has quietly been building an impressive flying resume while still competing in the UFC. Her accomplishments in the cockpit are as striking as those in the cage: from solo trans-American flights in a single-engine Cessna 172 to navigating some of the world’s most challenging landing strips in the Caribbean.
The former fighter has served as a lieutenant in the Civil Air Patrol, an organisation with roots in the Second World War, and spent a year captaining eight-seater aircraft in Puerto Rico before transitioning to business aviation on America’s East Coast.
Her experience includes landing at the notoriously difficult Gustaf III Airport in Saint Barthélemy, a destination feared by many commercial pilots for its short runway and mountainous approach.
This new chapter comes after a fighting career that reads like an atlas of combat sports history. Antonina claimed her first world title in Muay Thai in 2003, the same year she became an MMA champion in South Korea. Her 11 world championships span three striking disciplines, complemented by a third-degree black belt in taekwondo. The Shevchenko sisters’ extraordinary journey took them from their early training in Kyrgyzstan to eight years living along the Amazon River in Peru, where they honed their skills under coach Pavel Fedotov.
Valentina’s tribute highlighted the surprising parallels between their two vocations: “The profession of a pilot demands extensive knowledge, concentration, willpower, and responsibility – qualities that are strikingly similar to those required for a successful career as a Muay Thai and MMA fighter.” She noted how Antonina’s rigorous training regimen had prepared her for the exacting standards of aviation, from mastering complex navigation systems to communicating in multiple languages across international airspace.
The retirement marks the end of an era for the fighting siblings who have been inseparable throughout their careers. While Valentina continues to dominate the UFC’s flyweight division, Antonina will now focus on ascending through the ranks of commercial aviation. Her transition serves as a testament to the transferable skills elite athletes possess – proving that the discipline required to succeed in the octagon can propel one to new heights, quite literally, in entirely different fields.
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