NEWS


UTA Power Rankings: The Final Ledger of 2025

Posted on December 29, 2025 by WrestleUTA.com in Category: News

As of December 28, 2025 — Post Season’s Beatings

Season’s Beatings is in the books, and with it, the final chapter of the 2025 United Toughness Alliance calendar. After a year defined by dominance, breakthroughs, chaos, and reinvention, the Power Rankings have been finalized—locking in the names that defined the year and setting the tone for what comes next.

These are not projections.
These are not trends.
This is the record.


#1 – Jarvis Valentine — 90.00 pts

Crossing the 90-point threshold and finishing the year at 90.00, Valentine didn’t simply dominate — he controlled the pace of the entire promotion. Championships changed. Contenders rose and fell. Tours reshaped divisions. And through it all, Valentine remained the constant at the top.

This wasn’t a hot streak.
This was a year-long reign of authority.

When history looks back on 2025, it will be remembered as The Year of Jarvis Valentine.


#2 – Chris Ross — 65.25 pts

Chris Ross closes the year as the undisputed second force in UTA. At 65.25 points, Ross separated himself from the pack and spent 2025 as the only competitor who felt even remotely close to Valentine’s orbit.

If Valentine ruled the year, Ross chased it harder than anyone else.


#3 – Gunnar Van Patton — 50.00 pts

No one changed their trajectory more dramatically in 2025 than Gunnar Van Patton.

Finishing at #3 with 50.00 points, Gunnar’s late-year surge transformed him from a dangerous unknown into a legitimate elite-tier threat. His East Coast Invasion run, capped by Season’s Beatings, forced the locker room — and the rankings — to take notice.

This placement isn’t about potential anymore.
It’s about arrival.


#4 – Maxx Mayhem — 43.25 pts

Maxx Mayhem ends the year just outside the podium at #4. His chaotic, high-impact presence left a mark on every division he touched, and his ability to swing momentum kept him relevant all year long.

Unpredictable. Violent. Always dangerous.


#5 – Marie Van Claudio — 41.75 pts

Marie Van Claudio finishes the year inside the Top 5, and that alone speaks volumes.

At 41.75 points, MVC proved that longevity and relevance are not mutually exclusive. She didn’t rely on nostalgia — she earned her place through timely performances, presence, and an ability to remain dangerous in one of the most competitive women’s divisions UTA has ever seen.

Few competitors navigated 2025 with as much intelligence and impact. The “First Lady of UTA” remains a pillar heading into the new year.


#6 – Susanita Ybanez — 40.50 pts

Susanita Ybanez finishes her breakout year at #6, capping off one of the most impressive ascents of the season. What began as promise turned into performance, and performance turned into legitimacy.

2025 made Susanita a contender.
2026 may make her a champion.


#7 – Angela Hall — 38.00 pts

Angela Hall’s consistency earns her a Top 10 finish at #7. As Women’s United States Champion for much of the year, Hall proved she could thrive under pressure and remain steady while chaos swirled around her.

Reliable. Resilient. Dangerous.


#8 – Amy Harrison — 37.00 pts

Amy Harrison’s 2025 arc was about reclamation.

Finishing at #8, she weathered setbacks, rebuilt momentum, and proved she still belongs among the elite. This wasn’t the year she dominated — it was the year she reestablished herself.

That matters heading into 2026.


#9 – Eric Dane Jr. — 33.25 pts

Eric Dane Jr. ends the year just outside the upper tier, but firmly inside the conversation.

At 33.25 points, his year was marked by steady presence and solid performances, even when the spotlight shifted elsewhere. He didn’t collapse — and he didn’t disappear.

The foundation is there.
The question is what he builds on it next year.


#10 – Valkyrie Knox — 27.00 pts

Valkyrie Knox closes the year at #10, a stark contrast to where she stood earlier in the season.

Months removed from championship gold, Knox found herself fighting uphill as the women’s division surged around her. While still dangerous, her ranking reflects a year where momentum slipped as others rose.

Season’s Beatings did not erase her legacy — but 2026 will demand a response.


Final Word on 2025

These rankings tell the story of the year:

  • Jarvis Valentine ruled it.
  • Chris Ross chased it.
  • Gunnar Van Patton shocked it.
  • The women’s division elevated it.
  • And Season’s Beatings closed it.

The books are closed on 2025.
The slate is about to be wiped clean.

2026 begins now.

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