Alright, so the other day I was catching up on some fights, and Jaqueline Amorim’s name came up. Watched a bit of her performance, really impressive stuff. Made me curious, you know? You see these athletes, especially in demanding sports like MMA, and you wonder about their journey, how long they’ve been at it. So, naturally, I wanted to find out her age.

My Little Search Journey
It started simple enough. Pulled out my phone while sitting on the couch. First thing I did was just open up a search engine, nothing fancy. Typed in “Jaqueline Amorim age”. Pretty standard stuff.
Got a bunch of results back right away. You know how search pages are, a mix of everything. Some quick answer boxes popped up, a few sports sites, maybe a fan wiki or two. Saw a number mentioned, but I’m always a bit skeptical with the first thing I see, especially from less official-looking places. Sometimes those info boxes or random sites are outdated or just plain wrong.
So, I thought, let’s try and verify this. I specifically looked for more reliable sources. Things I usually trust for fighter stats:
- Major MMA news outlets
- Official promotion websites (like the UFC’s athlete page, if they have one)
- Well-known fighter record databases (places like Sherdog or Tapology usually keep good track)
I clicked through a couple of those. Scanned her profile pages. Most of the reputable sites seemed to list the same date of birth. That’s usually a good sign, when you see consistency across places that make it their business to track this stuff.
Found her date of birth listed as April 22, 1995 on several of the trustworthy spots. Did a quick mental calculation, yup, that puts her in her late 20s. Seeing the same date pop up consistently made me feel confident that was the right info.
And that was pretty much it. Wasn’t too hard this time, thankfully. Sometimes finding what seems like simple information can send you down a rabbit hole, but this was straightforward. Just took a few minutes of checking reliable sources instead of taking the first number I saw at face value. It’s interesting context to have when watching someone compete.