Author: Thomas Albano

  • ‘One Of The Top 10 Featherweights On The Planet’ – Fans React To Jesus Pinedo Quickly KOing Gabriel Braga To Move On To Featherweight PFL World Tournament Final

    ‘One Of The Top 10 Featherweights On The Planet’ – Fans React To Jesus Pinedo Quickly KOing Gabriel Braga To Move On To Featherweight PFL World Tournament Final

    After each man scored a win over the other, Jesus Pinedo and Gabriel Braga met in a trilogy bout that also served as a semifinal in the 2025 PFL World Tournament at featherweight.

    And just like in their second encounter, which saw Pinedo win the 2023 PFL featherweight title, Pinedo knocked out Braga to claim the spot in the tournament final.

    After a brief couple of exchanges, Pinedo landed a sharp counter right hook that stunned Braga, followed by another hook that dropped Braga. Pinedo landed ground-and-pound briefly to put the fight, and rivalry, away for good.

    Jesus Pinedo Delivers Stunning Fast KO Of Gabriel Braga In Trilogy Bout, Moves On To Featherweight Final

    BACKGROUNDS

  • ‘Super NyQuil’ – Fans Critical Of Logan Storley’s Performance As He Moves On To PFL World Tournament Finals

    ‘Super NyQuil’ – Fans Critical Of Logan Storley’s Performance As He Moves On To PFL World Tournament Finals

    Logan Storley’s wrestling was on full display as he took a decision win over Masayuki Kikuiri at the PFL World Tournament event in Nashville to clinch a spot in the welterweight final.

    From the opening bell, Storley imposed his gameplan with relentless wrestling and pressure, delivering on early takedown attempts and suffocating top control and ground-and-pound. Kikuiri showed some resilience with the pressure, and he appeared to do some damage with his striking during the second round.

    Storley, however, repeatedly grounded him and maintained control with clinch knees and mat returns. Storley continued his grind in the third round, delivering more on takedowns and pressure against the fence, leaving Kikuiri little room to do much damage, as the former Bellator interim champion cruised to a decision win.

    Logan Storley Earns Welterweight Final Spot In PFL World Tournament With Win Over Masayuki Kikuiri

    https://twitter.com/MmaRicky/status/1933373659227279406

    Storley has now won four of his last five, showing some rebounding after losing his welterweight title shot against Yaroslav Amosov in February 2023 and missing the playoffs in the 2024 PFL season.

    Kikuiri now sees a five-fight win streak snapped, which included three straight finishes between Bellator and PFL performances.

  • ‘Dominant And Drained Him’ – Fans React To Movlid Khaybulaev Putting On Grappling Master Class To Lock Up Featherweight PFL World Tournament Final Spot

    ‘Dominant And Drained Him’ – Fans React To Movlid Khaybulaev Putting On Grappling Master Class To Lock Up Featherweight PFL World Tournament Final Spot

    Movlid Khaybulaev put on a dominant display of takedowns and grappling pressure, as he took a clear decision over Taekyun Kim at the PFL World Tournament semifinal event in Nashville to lock up a spot in the 145-pound final fight.

    From the opening round, Khaybulaev repeatedly grounded Kim with takedowns, neutralizing his offense and constantly wearing him down with clinch control, top pressure, and knees to the legs. Kim showed heart in trying to escape Khaybulaev’s relentless grappling offense, especially in the later moments of the fight, but it all was for naught.

    Khaybulaev’s takedowns, top control, and consistent damage proved to be too much over the course of 15 minutes, totaling nine takedowns in that timeframe. The last takedown came in the closing seconds to seal a dominant win, with Khaybulaev sweeping the scorecards.

    Movlid Khaybulaev Clinches Finals Spot With Win Over Taekyun Kim In PFL World Tournament

    https://twitter.com/strongandjacket/status/1933365566443532769

    Khaybulaev, the 2021 PFL featherweight champion, remains unbeaten and now advances to the finals, where he will meet the winner of the trilogy fight between Jesus Pinedo and Gabriel Braga.

    Kim, a veteran of Brave CF and UAE Warriors, suffers just the second loss of his professional MMA career.

  • VIDEO: Magomed Umalatov Delivers Faceplant, Walk-Off KO To Bounce Back From First Defeat, Weight Miss

    VIDEO: Magomed Umalatov Delivers Faceplant, Walk-Off KO To Bounce Back From First Defeat, Weight Miss

    After the last half-year proved to be one to forget for him, Magomed Umalatov is back in a big way, scoring a first-round knockout of Anthony Ivy during the early card of the PFL World Tournament semifinals event in Nashville, Tennessee.

    Umalatov stuffed an early takedown attempt from Ivy and appeared to do damage with a knee to the body. He then got the better of Ivy on the ground, showing off effective pressure and ground-and-pound.

    Ivy made his way back to his feet, but as he tried to push forward, Umalatov cracked him with a quick left hand. Another one from Umalatov immediately after then sent him crashing to the mat face-first, as Umalatov immediately celebrated before the referee officially stepped in to wave off the bout.

    Umalatov finished as the runner-up in the 2024 PFL welterweight tournament, falling short against fellow countryman Shamil Musaev. It was the first loss of Umalatov’s MMA career, and he fell just short again of a PFL title.

    Umalatov then was scheduled to compete in the welterweight portion of the PFL World Tournament this year before missing weight and medical issues forced him off his originally scheduled bout with Logan Storley in April.

    Ivy, who missed weight for this bout, was riding a seven-fight win streak, coming into this bout off a submission of Jaleel Willis in a showcase bout during last year’s PFL Playoffs.

  • ‘I Have To Give It My All…To Make Them Proud’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 3 Recap

    ‘I Have To Give It My All…To Make Them Proud’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 3 Recap

    Welcome, everyone, to the third edition of The TUF Stuff!

    Each week, I’ll be guiding you through a recap of this season’s edition of The Ultimate Fighter, providing updates on what happens in each episode — from the drama and storylines out of the Octagon, to the looks into who the competing fighters are, to what goes down inside the cage.

    This season celebrates the 20th anniversary of TUF. That inaugural season from 2005 helped to influence many future MMA fans, media members, and fighters (yours truly included). And now, two more fighters this summer will get the opportunity to call themselves TUF champions when it’s all said and done.

    Last week saw the first welterweight matchup of the season, as Team Cormier’s Danill Donchenko put on a dominant performance against Team Sonnen’s Richard Martins, not allowing Martins into the fight much. Team Cormier drew first blood at 170 after Team Sonnen took the first flyweight bout in the first episode.

    Recap of The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 – Episode 3

    Tonight, it’s back to the 125-pound weight division, as Team Cormier’s Imanol Rodriguez takes on Team Sonnen’s Arshiyan Memon.

    Let’s get into episode three of The Ultimate Fighter!

    Team Sonnen Training Session

    Colby Covington talks with Diego Bianchini about fighting in Brazil, praising the Brazilian fans and fighters like Demian Maia. Of course, that fight brought a lot of controversy and notoriety for Covington. Covington says he’s using the opportunity to talk to fighters like Bianchini — a training partner of Maia’s — about the importance of marketing oneself as a fighter. Bianchini was very receptive to Covington’s advice.

    TUF House

    Danill Donchenko says that Bianchini is trying to live up to his name of “The Brazilian Bad Boy” in the house, but he’s not buying it. Bianchini, a member of the Fighting Nerds, says he’s not here to make friends. More bad blood brews between Bianchini and Brazilian rival Rodrigo Sezinado. Sezinado insinuates Bianchini is all hype. Mehman says Bianchini is trying to intimidate all of the Team Cormier fighters, but he’s not here for it.

    Team Cormier Training Session

    Cormier mixes in fight-based exercises with working the bike, trying to simulate the pace of a fight.

    “A fight is not 25 minutes of a burst,” Cormier explains. “Burst, peel back some. Burst, peel back some.

    Cormier’s fighters say this kind of training is difficult, but they are reaping the benefits. Team Cormier’s coaches yell right in front of the fighters on the bikes, and Cormier laughs, saying it looks like something out of a movie.

    Team Sonnen Training Session 2 – Carla Esparza joins

    Sonnen brings in former TUF winner and strawweight champion Carla Esparza as this week’s guest trainer. Esparza ran through the competition on season 20 of the show to become the inaugural UFC women’s strawweight champion — defeating Rose Namajunas in the final.

    Esparza tells the fighters they’re in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and to put in all the hard work in both training and their fights.

    Esparza explains to the team how she fakes out fighters to put throw up a knee before changing her angles to utilize her expert-level wrestling.

    Esparza reflects on all of the highs and lows of her career and says at the end of the day, she wants to be able to look back on her time on TUF and in the UFC — and appreciate everything that they were.

    Imanol Rodriguez Backstory

    Rodriguez looks at a photo of him from when he was little and gets emotional, not wanting to waste the opportunity in front of him. Rodriguez says he wasn’t sure he’d get to this point when he was little — and says the younger version of him would be proud of him.

    Rodriguez reflects on growing up in Mexico, showing his family, which runs a taqueria. Rodriguez began in judo when he was younger and currently trains at the Blackxicans and the Brazilian Warriors, the latter of which is led by UFC fighter Diego Lopes.

    Arshiyan Memon Fight Prep

    Back at the TUF House, everyone seems to be very amused by Memon and his antics, from how he remembers fighters names, and calling one fighter Mr. Bean, to purposely talking loud to spoil plans.

    Memon mentions his kickboxing experience that gives him a striking edge — then adds that he’s improved his ground game through picking up wrestling moves to help with takedown defense.

    Sonnen tells Memon to not waste time on the ground if on the bottom and try to stand up right away. If on top, however, Sonnen tells Memon to do damage there, as Rodriguez is not a submission threat.

    Sonnen says his words and advice appeared to light more of a fire under him: “He strikes me as a guy as someone who hasn’t had anyone believe in him.”

    Sonnen highlights Memon’s striking speed and says that boxing speed and working his combinations will be the key to success against Rodriguez.

    “This guy is a powerhouse at 125,” Sonnen said. “He has the physical strength, I’ve seen him in bad positions…and I’ve seen him power out of the spots. I think it’s going to make a big difference.

    “This is going to be a long, drawn-out battle, but Arshion will win this.”

    Arshiyan Memon Backstory

    Memon, the first Indian fighter in TUF history, explains the financial struggles of most of the common people who lives in Mumbai. Memon explains the ups and downs of living in such a heavily populated area with his small family. Memon helps his dad with his small grocery shop.

    Memon always loved sports and took up kickboxing at the end of his schooling before his kickboxing coach pushed him to MMA. Memon now runs his own academy.

    “Because of me, MMA is growing in my hometown,” he said. “In India, everyone now wants to become a professional MMA fighter.”

    Memon discussed his strong sense of faith and how it keeps him humble. Memon promises to take his country proud in the competition.

    Imanol Rodriguez Fight Prep

    Cprmier tells Rodriguez to keep pressure and to keep his head moving. Cormier tells Rodriguez he’s the better fighter — making note of how Memon’s stance often leaves his head exposed.

    Cormier adds that Rodriguez’s training is “crazy” and like a “psychopath.”

    “He can wrestle, he’s got that great striking, and he can grapple. He can do it all.”

    Cormier adds that Rodriguez should focus on body strikes, noting that’s where Rodriguez can do heavy damage to Memon.

    We then get a bit of a montage of Rodriguez’s time on the regional circuit.

    Rodriguez re-affirms he will focus on head movement and look to make Memon crumble with body blows.

    The Fight: Imanol Rodriguez vs. Arshiyan Memon

    —–IF YOU HAVEN’T WATCHED THE EPISODE AND DON’T WANT TO BE SPOILED, THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO TURN AWAY NOW.———

    Rodriguez weighs in at 125. Memon weighs in at 126. Fight is on!

    Jeff Creighton calls Rodriguez a “savage” and “one of the most explosive flyweights I’ve ever seen.” Andreeas Binder compares Memon to a bull, focusing on his strength, calling him the “Mumbai Monster.” UFC CEO Dana White says he’s been really looking forward to this fight between undefeated fighters on the biggest stage the pair has ever had.

    Rodriguez tells Memon he doesn’t understand how much of a dog he is. The two trade some words before being led off by their coaches.

    Memon says it’s a dream to get on a major world stage like this and will use this to gain confidence in future fights. He says he wants to fly the Indian flag high on this stage. Rodriguez, meanwhile, notes the importance of strategy in this first fight and that this is the first step toward becoming a UFC champion.

    Imanol Rodriguez vs. Arshiyan Memon

    Round 1

    Memon on the front foot to start. He throws a low kick. Another low kick. Rodriguez tries to come forward. Round kick gets blocked by Rodriguez and he connects on a few punches. Another round kick from Memon. Memon misses a couple of left hooks. A hard kick lands low on Rodriguez, hitting him right in the cup.

    The fight soon resumes. One-two from Rodriguez. A couple of more kicks from Memon. Rodriguez pressing the action. Rodriguez rushes in, and Memon goes for a clinch, but Rodriguez fets away. A low kick is caught by Roidriguez. Rodriguez lands on the body and Memon is hurt. Rodriguez brings them to the ground and starts to throw ground-and-pound. Memon warned multiple times for grabbing the cage. Rodriguez goes into side control. Memon gets away.

    Memon is soon forced back to the feet. Memon works a combination on Rodriguez now. A right hand by Memon. Memon clinches up. Rodriguez presses him into the fence before separating. Memon goes for a takedown but Rodriguez stuffs in. Rodriguez then gets to Memon’s back on the ground. Rodriguez searches for the neck. Rodriguez flattens him and lands a couple of punches. He goes back to searching for the choke. Memon turns over and is mounted right away. Cormier yells for ground-and-pound, but Rodriguez doesn’t deliver.

    Memon gets back to his feet and presses. Low kick from each man. Memon blocks a kick and comes forward with his attacks. Rodriguez stuns Memon with a combination. He’s flurrying him! Memon is against the fence and eating those shots! The ref steps in!

    Imanol Rodriguez gets the win in a fight that Dana White calls “one of the best fights I’ve seen in a minute.”

    Conclusion

    Sonnen says Rodriguez “fought like he was Nate Diaz.” He notes that Memon tried to fire back and left his chin open in the process — and Rodriguez took advantage of that.

    Cormier says Rodriguez initially struggled with range, but once he found it, he poured on the shots.

    White gives credit to Memon for his chin and his inability to quit. White says Rodriguez “is the kind of fighter we want in the flyweight division.”

    Rodriguez takes in White’s words and is humbled by them but isn’t done.

    White gives credit to an emotional Memon and assures him he’ll be fight. Memon said he appreciated White’s motivation but feels disappointed. Cormier comforts Memon backstage as well, complimenting him and telling him to keep his head up. Memon promises to improve from the loss.

    With Team Cormier’s victory, he names the next welterweight fight: Team Cormier’s Jeff Creighton vs. Team Sonnen’s Andreeas Binder. The two seem to promise each other the fight of the season.

    Matt Serra will be next week’s guest, sharing his experience and strategies with Team Sonnen.

    But, uh oh! Looks like Binder has had weight cutting issues in the past — and they’re going to come back to haunt him?!?

    What will happen next week? Join alongside us then!

    Thanks for joining me for another edition of The TUF Stuff!

  • UFC Rankings Report: Merab Dvalishvili Moves To No. 2 In Men’s Pound-For-Pound

    UFC Rankings Report: Merab Dvalishvili Moves To No. 2 In Men’s Pound-For-Pound

    The UFC Rankings Report is back after some time away!

    And after all the action that went down in Newark this past weekend at UFC 316, MMA News has you covered with this week’s complete updates.

    Men’s Pound-For-Pound: UFC bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili has improved two spots to #2, positioning himself just behind #1 Islam Makhachev. This allows him to jump Jon Jones and Ilia Topuria, who fall to #3 and #4, respectively.

    Women’s Pound-for-Pound: Following her UFC women’s bantamweight title win, Kayla Harrison jumps up four spots to #3. The now-former two-time champ, Julianna Pena, falls two spots to #5. Additionally, Natalia Silva has moved up two spots to #6, while Alexa Grasso and Erin Blanchfield each fall two spots, to #7 and #8, respectively. Finally, Tatiana Suarez (#12) has improved in the ranks, swapping places with Rose Namajunas (#13).

    Women’s Strawweight: No changes.

    Women’s Flyweight: Wang Cong finds herself in the rankings at #14 following her win at UFC 316. Casey O’Neill improves one spot to #13. Karine Silva falls one spot to #12. Ariane Da Silva, meanwhile, falls two spots to #15.

    Women’s Bantamweight: With Harrison taking the champion’s spot, Pena falls to #1 contender, while former champ Raquel Pennington falls one spot to #2.

    Flyweight: Joshua Van jumps up four spots to #10. Falling two spots are Tagir Ulanbekov (#12) and Bruno Silva (#14), the latter of whom was defeated by Van at UFC 316.

    Bantamweight: With his win over Patchy Mix at UFC 316, Mario Bautista moves up one spot to #9, jumping over former champion Henry Cejudo (#10). Umar Nurmagomedov also jumps up one spot to #2, swapping places with former champ Petr Yan (#3).

    Featherweight: No changes.

    Lightweight: No changes.

    Welterweight: Kevin Holland finds himself in the rankings now at #14, replacing the man he defeated at UFC 316, Vicente Luque. He jumps Michael Page (#15), who remains in place, while Luque falls out of the rankings.

    Middleweight: Reinier de Ridder (#12) jumps up a spot in the rankings, swapping places with Paulo Costa (#13).

    Light Heavyweight: Following his win at UFC 316, Azamat Murzakanov (#11) moves up one spot in the rankings, swapping places with Johnny Walker (#12).

    Heavyweight: With his win at UFC 316, Waldo Cortes-Acosta moves up three spots to #8. The man he defeated, Serghei Spivac, falls two spots to #2. Marcin Tybura also improves a spot in the rankings to #7. Derrick Lewis and Tai Tuivasa fall one spot to #10 and #11, respectively.

    You can view the full updated UFC rankings here.

  • What’s Next After UFC 316? Full Confirmed UFC 317 Main Card For Las Vegas On June 28

    What’s Next After UFC 316? Full Confirmed UFC 317 Main Card For Las Vegas On June 28

    UFC 316 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 317 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    The promotion was in Newark last week, where the Prudential Center played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its sixth numbered event of the year. Of note were headline wins for Merab Dvalishvili and Kayla Harrison, as well as important victories for Joe Pyfer, Mario Bautista and Kevin Holland.

    While the aftermath of the June 7 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the bantamweight title picture to the lightweight and flyweight championship conversations.

    At UFC 317, set for the T-Mobile Arena on June 28, a new UFC lightweight champion will be crowned when former featherweight champion Ilia Topuria faces former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira for the vacant title in the main event. The title will be vacated once the two are in the Octagon, as current champion Islam Makhachev is planning to move up to welterweight to challenge Jack Della Maddalena.

    Topuria himself vacated the featherweight championship earlier this year. He had won the title at UFC 298 in February 2024 and retained the belt with his finish of Max Holloway at UFC 308 before deciding he wanted to move up and capture a title in a second weight class. Oliveira defeated Michael Chandler for the then-vacant lightweight title at UFC 262 and retained it against Dustin Poirier at UFC 269 before losing his title on the scales prior to facing Justin Gaethje at UFC 274. Oliveira most recently defeated Chandler in a rematch at UFC 309.

    Gold will also be on the line in the co-main event, as Alexandre Pantoja defends the UFC flyweight championship against Kai Kara-France. After defeating Brandon Moreno for the title at UFC 291, Pantoja has retained the belt three times, defeating Brandon Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301 and Kai Asakura at UFC 310. Kara-France, meanwhile, has won four of his last six, finishing Erceg in about four minutes at UFC 305.

    Costa, Dariush, Diniz Set The Stage For Title Headliners At UFC 317

    Before Topuria, Oliveira, Pantoja and Kara-France make their way out to the Octagon for the title fights, a number of notable names will take to the Octagon looking to make the most of their position on the major UFC 317 card.

    That includes former title challenger Paulo Costa, who looks to gain some positive momentum against the challenge of rising middleweight contender Roman Kopylov. Costa has lost four of his last five and has only fought four times since unsuccessfully challenging Israel Adesanya for the UFC middleweight championship at UFC 253. He most recently fought at UFC 302 last year, losing to Sean Strickland. Kopylov, meanwhile, has won six of his last seven, most recently scoring a literal last-second, head-kick knockout of Chris Curtis in January.

    Prior to that, Beneil Dariush looks to finally get back in the win column as he takes on recent lightweight title challenger Renato Moicano in a battle of top-10 ranked lightweights. Dariush was once on an eight-fight win streak but will come into this fight off back-to-back losses against Oliveira and Arman Tsarukyan. That loss to Tsarukyan came in December 2023, marking a year-and-a-half away for Dariush. Moicano was on a four-fight win streak entering UFC 311 when he received the opportunity on just one day’s notice to challenge Makhachev for the lightweight title, though ultimately falling short.

    The main card is scheduled to open with a heavyweight clash featuring Jhonata Diniz and Justin Tafa. Since coming into the UFC off of Dana White’s Contender Series, Diniz has defeated Austen Lane and Karl Williams but suffered a TKO loss to Marcin Tybura at UFC 309. After a four-fight unbeaten streak, Tafa will enter this fight off back-to-back losses against Williams and Tallison Teixeira, the latter coming four months ago at UFC 312.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of Jack Hermansson and Vivane Araujo, as well as a flyweight clash between Brandon Royval and Manel Kape all of whom are expected to be featured players on the event’s preliminary card.

    See below for the UFC 317 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

    • Lightweight Championship: Ilia Topuria vs. Charles Oliveira
    • Flyweight Championship: Alexandre Pantoja (C) vs. Kai Kara-France
    • Middleweight: Paulo Costa vs. Roman Kopylov
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Renato Moicano
    • Heavyweight: Jhonata Diniz vs. Justin Tafa

    Preliminary Card (full card and bout order TBA):

    • Flyweight: Brandon Royval vs. Manel Kape
    • Middleweight: Jack Hermansson vs. Gregory Rodrigues
    • Women’s Strawweight: Viviane Araujo vs. Tracy Cortez
  • 7 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2

    7 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2

    For the third consecutive year, the UFC brought an early June pay-per-view offering to New Jersey. This year’s card was filled with some entertaining action and names, in addition to scheduled title bouts on the evening.

    The main event of the evening saw Merab Dvalishvili look to defend the UFC bantamweight championship against former champion Sean O’Malley. This was a rematch from their original encounter in the main event of the second Noche UFC event — UFC 306 — at The Sphere in September. Dvalishvili won a clear five-round decision to become the new champion and hand O’Malley just the second loss of his professional MMA career.

    While this was O’Malley’s first fight since losing the title, Dvalishvili retained the title against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 this past January.

    The co-main event also saw bantamweight gold at stake, as Julianna Pena defended her championship against Kayla Harrison.

    Pena returned to the Octagon and won back the championship in controversial fashion against Raquel Pennington at UFC 307 in October. Pena had also reigned as champion for about seven months after her shocking upset over Amanda Nunes at UFC 269 until losing the title back to her at UFC 277. Harrison is a former two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion; since joining the UFC, she has finished Holly Holm and scored a decision over Ketlen Vieira.

    Who pulled off all the stops in New Jersey? Who had a night to forget? Let’s look back with all the hits and misses of UFC 316!

    Hit: Yoo Joo-sang Lands A Picture-Perfect Quick KO For A Picture-Perfect Debut

    “The Korean Zombie” would be proud of “Zombie Jr.”

    The UFC 316 early prelims’ biggest highlight definitely came from Yoo Joo-sang, who delivered a solid knockout of Jeka Saraigh in less than 30 seconds.

    The finish looked something right out of the Jose Aldo vs. Conor McGregor UFC 194 ending. Saraigh attempted to charge forward on Joo-sang, firing off a one-two. Not only was Joo-sang able to keep away from the punches, but he also delivered picture perfect quick left hook. That simple shot was hit so accurately and perfectly timed that it was enough to cause Saraigh to faceplant unconscious to the mat.

    In his post-fight interview, Joo-sang promised to deliver a championship to “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung, who fell short of capturing UFC featherweight gold twice. If Joo-sang’s future performances echo his work in the short time we saw him here, and he continues to develop, maybe one day down the line that will be a possibility.

    Hit: Andreas Gustafsson Puts On Beating In UFC Debut

    If you ever read the name Khaos Williams, you know you just might be in for a solid fight. But it wasn’t Khaos who was bringing the chaos in this prelim fight — it was his opponent, Andreas Gustafsson, who put on the show in his UFC debut.

    Gustafsson set the tone immediately, charging into the clinch and landing knees, overwhelming Williams with constant pressure right from the get-go. Williams defended some of Gustafsson’s shots well, but his volume and pacing was too much.

    That set the tone for the rest of the fight. Gustafsson did damage early in the second and scored multiple takedowns during the round, controlling the fight against the cage and landing several knees and elbows, bloodying Williams up.

    Gustafsson continued the relentless pressure en route to a solid, dominant, one-sided decision win.

    After a strong performance on Dana White’s Contender Series last year, and following it up with this showing, I, for one, will be looking forward to watching Gustafsson’s next fight in the Octagon.

    Hit: Add Another Finish For Azamat Murzakanov

    Azamat Murzakanov has developed a reputation of a finisher, and it was the left hook that was his key to success in putting away Brendson Ribiero during the UFC 316 prelims.

    Some solid left hooks early on already did damage to Ribiero before another one dropped him. Murzakanov then murked his opposition by raining down ground-and-pound from multiple positions until Ribiero reportedly verbally tapped to strikes.

    This improves Murzakanov to 15-0 with 11 finishes and a 5-0 record since joining the UFC from DWCS. This a win streak that also includes knockouts of Tafon Nchukwi, Devin Clark and Alonzo Menifield, as well as a decision over Dustin Jacoby.

    Murzakanov has been ranked No. 12 for a little while now, and regardless on if this fight pushes him into the top-10 or not, it’s definitely time for him to face some top-10 ranked competition at light heavyweight.

    Murzakanov was scheduled to face Volkan Oezdemir a couple of years ago before having to pull out of the fight. Perhaps it’s time we see that one go down now. If not, some of the fighters Murzakanov is sandwiched between will all be facing off soon — with Nikita Krylov scheduled to face Bogdan Guskov in Abu Dhabi this July and Johnny Walker to face Zhang Mingyang in the UFC Shanghai main event in August. Those outcomes could also play roles in determining Murzakanov’s next matchup.

    Hit: Joshua Van Continues His Surge At Flyweight

    Joshua Van has been a name to watch at flyweight since arriving to the UFC a couple of years ago. And it seems he’s fitting more and more into his own, and that couldn’t have been further on display with his last-minute finish of Bruno Silva in the featured UFC 316 prelim.

    Van dropped Silva three times during the fight — which has never been done before in a flyweight UFC bout. Van kept his distance and was able to use his striking from there to overwhelm Silva over the course of the near-full three rounds. Van dropped Silva one time each over the course of the remaining two rounds. And after nearly finishing the fight with ground-and-pound at the end of the second, he managed to put him away in the third.

    Van is now 14-2 in his career and 7-1 in the Octagon, with his sole loss coming against Charles Johnson last year. Van will now be most likely just shy of the top 10 at flyweight, and one of the names in the top 10 — after some more shaking up potentially happens with 125-pound contests set for the rest of the summer — should be Van’s next opponent.

    Hit: Is Kevin Holland A Welterweight Contender For Good?

    There were questions about what Kevin Holland we were going to get entering this fight. Were we going to get the one who is laser focused and puts his power on display? Or were we going to get the one who’s more focused on talking and doesn’t put up as strong of a performance?

    Fortunately for fight fans, we got to see Holland at his best, as he opened the UFC 316 pay-per-view bout with a submission of Vicente Luque.

    https://twitter.com/HelmsMMA/status/1931539272848535819

    After stopping an early takedown attempt from Luque, Holland wobbled him with an elbow, starting a run where Holland’s physical advantages and striking helped to give him an early edge in the fight. Holland then dumped Luque to the ground in the second and managed to submit Luque with a D’Arce choke.

    Holland has now won three of five and is now 2-0 with two performance bonuses since dropping back to 170. Holland admitted in his post-fight interview that he hopes to be at welterweight permanently as opposed to jumping between there and 185. With Luque at No. 14 entering this fight, Holland may find himself back in the welterweight rankings — and we’ll see where things from here for the “Trailblazer.” Holland asked for Colby Covington next — and that might be a fight that could do wonders for him.

    Miss: Patchy Mix Falls Flat, Fails To Live Up To Debut Hype

    Let’s state this for the record: Mario Bautista hasn’t lost in four years and came into this fight ranked No. 10 at bantamweight. He’s has such upward trajectory, and Mix took this fight on about three weeks’ notice. Something does need to be said that Bautista has shown he is ready for higher-ranked competition.

    That, however, doesn’t deter from the fact that Mix looked awful in his Octagon debut.

    It’s always been stated that Mix was one of the greatest talents in MMA that wasn’t signed to the UFC. But you wouldn’t know that based on the way he fought at UFC 316.

    Mix looked flat. He was flat footed, with Bautista controlling the pacing and direction of the action. Bautista was more of the forward fighter, and Mix didn’t seem to get his hands going until it was way too late. Bautista managed to bloody up Mix over the course of three rounds, while Mix had little control, didn’t go for any takedowns, and just looked like the pressure got to him.

    Maybe this is just me overthinking, but Mix’s performance is a bit of a blow to the overall MMA landscape. It allows for the narrative to be pushed that “the UFC is the place to be” and that other organization’s top stars and champions can’t handle those of the UFC. The sad part is, we’ve seen much better from Mix to know he is better than this. And while I don’t want to take anything way from Bautista’s winning ways, the story here is going to be how much of a disappointment Mix was in the Prudential Center this evening — to the point a near-hometown crowd booed him at the end of the fight.

    You only get one UFC debut. Unfortunately, Mix blew it, and blew it big.

    Miss: Be Joe Pyfer? Maybe Not On This Night

    Sometimes we need to be careful when we talk about a fight being boring. A fighter’s ultimate objective is to win at any cost, and that sometimes means using his skillset and tools above putting on a show.

    The thing about Joe Pyfer’s performance in his win against Kelvin Gastelum at UFC 316 is that things completely fell off the rails after the first round.

    Pyfer dropped Gastelum in the fight’s opening seconds and dominated, overwhelming the soon-to-be UFC Hall of Famer with a variety of strikes, including another knockdown, via a head kick, that nearly finished the fight.

    Then, Pyfer went into cruise control from there. He threw single punches at the expense of working combinations. Gastelum’s striking appeared to get stronger as the round went on. Pyfer may have been in control for a time, but Gastelum prevented a takedown attempt of his — and most agree that Gastelum took the third round.

    When Pyfer was awarded his contract on DWCS, Dana White ripped other fighters for not having the killer instinct Pyfer had. Where was that killer instinct tonight? Because, yes, Gastelum is a tough fighter with a tough chin, but Pyfer had several moments early on where he could’ve finished the fight. Where did the Pyfer from round one go?

    For someone who was facing competition to determine if he’s ready for upper-level competition again after a loss to Jack Hermansson, I’m not sure this was it.

    Hit: Kayla Harrison Wins Gold, Amanda Nunes Is Back, The Dream Fight Is On

    When Raquel Pennington defeated Mayra Bueno Silva to become UFC bantamweight champion in January 2024 — months after Amanda Nunes bowed out of MMA, the conversations felt like women’s 135 had hit rock bottom.

    After UFC 316, that may feel like a bit of a memory.

    Days after Pennington’s title win, the UFC signed Kayla Harrison, fresh into a free agency after running out her contract with the PFL, where she was a two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion. There were plenty of questions about how she’d handle the cut down to 135, and while she looked rough in the weight cut for this title fight against Julianna Pena, she showed how dominant she could be.

    Receiving this title shot off a finish of Holly Holm and dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira, Harrison used her significantly larger frame and strength to overwhelm Pena and take her to the floor more than once. After threatening a couple of submissions, Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in judo, locked up a kimura to score the tapout and UFC women’s 135-pound gold.

    It would be enough to talk about how Harrison was fulfilled her destiny in this sport and become a champion in multiple promotions, in more than one weight class at that, but then came the return of “The Lioness.”

    After multiple teases, Nunes confirmed in the Octagon that, despite her impending induction into the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025, she was coming out of retirement. And the plan is that we will get Harrison vs. Nunes next.

    This was a fight fans dreamed of when both were on top in their respective promotions years ago. Now, this fight is about to be reality. And I’m all about it. I don’t know about all of you, but I can’t wait to see when this fight goes down — and I hope these two get a pay-per-view main event billing.

    Hit: Men’s Bantamweight Is Merab Dvalishvili’s World

    Merab Dvalishvili had plenty of hype around him when he won a UFC contract through Dana White’s Lookin’ for a Fight years ago. And while he lost his first two UFC bouts, he has done nothing but win since. And at this point, even the UFC CEO admits it’s uncertain right now if anyone in the men’s 135-pound division can defeat him.

    Dvalishvili proved his first victory over Sean O’Malley was no fluke. Not only did he defeat an O’Malley that dropped all distractions and gimmicks, he finished him.

    Dvalishvili again showed that his wrestling was too much for “The Suga Show” to handle. And as he hunted for a submission in the third round, O’Malley tried to defend by going onto his back — only for Dvalishvili to impressively hold onto a choke and score a North-South choke submission victory.

    This makes it a dominant decision and finish over O’Malley, as well as a comeback decision win over Umar Nurmagomedov at the start of this year. Dvalishvili is an absolute beast in the cage, and tonight’s performance only proves that. Even though it’s rare for him to get finishes, tonight has shown it’s not out of his capabilities.

    Bantamweight is a killer division, and it’ll be exciting to see Dvalishvili vs. Cory Sandhagen if that truly is next. But at this point, we might be living in Dvalishvili’s 135-pound world for quite some time to come.

  • ‘The Type Of Champion That The UFC Needs’ – Fans & Fighters React To Merab Dvalishvili Putting On Dominant Display Against Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    ‘The Type Of Champion That The UFC Needs’ – Fans & Fighters React To Merab Dvalishvili Putting On Dominant Display Against Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    Merab Dvalishvili has been a grappling beast his whole MMA career, but the one knock on him may have been a lack of finishes.

    That knock can’t be applied to him in his performance at UFC 316, as he submitted Sean O’Malley in the main event to retain the UFC bantamweight championship.

    O’Malley stayed on the outside and tried to keep distance early in the opening round. While O’Malley scored a couple of decent shots early, a pair of slips, led him into Dvalishvili’s grasp. The defending champ scored a pair of takedowns during the round, delivering the same kind of top pressure that troubled O’Malley in their first meeting.

    The second round proved to be much closer, with both men having moments. Dvalishvili continued with his relentless grappling pressure, but O’Malley appeared to land the stronger strikes — and defended most of Dvalishvili’s takedown attempts well enough.

    The third round, however, saw Dvalishvili land a big takedown on O’Malley. No matter O’Malley’s defenses, Dvalishili’s top pressure was too much. Late in the round, Dvalishvili managed to lock up a D’Arce choke, even when O’Malley gets his back to the mat, putting Dvalishvili in the North-South position. The North-South choke scored Dvalishvili the tap to retain the gold.

    Merab Dvalishvili Retains Bantamweight Title Over Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    This was a rematch from Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306), which saw Dvalishvili score a decision over O’Malley to capture the 135-pound championship.

    This was Dvalishvili’s second bantamweight title defense. He retained the title in comeback decision fashion against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311.

    This was O’Malley’s first fight since losing the title. It’s just his third professional MMA loss and second time being finished — following his loss to Marlon “Chito” Vera five years ago.

  • Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

    Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

    As has been previously speculated and teased, even after the announcement of her impending UFC Hall of Fame induction, “The Lioness” is back.

    During an athlete panel held ahead of UFC 316, former UFC women’s bantamweight and featherweight champion Amanda Nunes announced her intentions to un-retire and challenge for the belt she previously held on two occasions.

    That was confirmed at the event itself. Following Kayla Harrison’s bantamweight title win over Julianna Pena, Harrison called out Nunes to enter the Octagon.

    “That’s the next fight,” Harrison said.

    Nunes, who was in the crowd, was allowed into the Octagon and confirmed her intentions to return and face Harrison.

    Amanda Nunes Returning, Aiming For Third Reign As UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion

    “I’m back,” Nunes said.

    Nunes has had history with both women in the women’s title fight. The lone time since Nunes’ first title win in 2016 that Nunes didn’t rule over 135 was when Pena shocked the world and finished Nunes at UFC 269 to capture the UFC women’s bantamweight championship. Nunes would regain the championship from Pena at UFC 277 but retire before a trilogy fight that Pena greatly desired.

    Meanwhile, Nunes and Harrison has been teased as a potential dream match when Harrison was on top of the PFL’s women’s lightweight division while Nunes was a champ-champ in the UFC.

  • ‘Kayla Harrison vs. Amanda Nunes Is Going To Rule’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kayla Harrison Capturing Bantamweight Title At UFC 316

    ‘Kayla Harrison vs. Amanda Nunes Is Going To Rule’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kayla Harrison Capturing Bantamweight Title At UFC 316

    Kayla Harrison emphatically asserted that she would become UFC women’s bantamweight champion — and she did just that in the co-main event of UFC 316, becoming the champion by scoring a second-round submission of Julianna Pena.

    Harrison came out on the front foot, appearing to control the fight and land the stronger shots in the opening minutes. Harrison managed to lock up Pena and pin her against the fence in less than two minutes before managing to take the defending champion down. Harrison worked her way into half guard, while Pena looked to control posture. Pena looked to land punches from up top, but the challenger’s pressure seemed to be too much.

    Pena landed an up-kick that seemed to do damage, but with Harrison’s knee down, the strike was illegal, and the referee deducted a point from Pena.

    Pena appeared to land respectable shots early in the second round, but she was letting Harrison control the pacing of the fight and letting her come forward. Harrison locked Pena up against the fence again. Pena appeared to do well defending Harrison’s takedown efforts but Harrison managed to get her down halfway through the round. Despite Pena’s efforts to control Harrison’s arms, and to get her legs around Harrison, Harrison managed to bully her to the mat and threatened a neck crank, then an arm-triangle.

    With less than 10 seconds left in the second round, Harrison managed to twist Pena’s arm into a kimura from side control, scoring the tap out and becoming the new champion.

    Kayla Harrison Becomes UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion By Submitting Julianna Pena

    Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medal judoka and two-time PFL champion, jumped to the UFC from the PFL last year. Her title shot came after a finish of former champion Holly Holm at UFC 300 and a dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira at UFC 307.

    This was Pena’s first defense since winning the title at UFC 307 with a controversial decision over Raquel Pennington. Her first reign started at UFC 269 with a major upset over Amanda Nunes. She’d lose the title back to Nunes at UFC 277.

  • ‘Overrated’ – Fans React As Joe Pyfer Earns Lackluster Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    ‘Overrated’ – Fans React As Joe Pyfer Earns Lackluster Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    Joe Pyfer’s continued to rise up the ranks at UFC 316, though perhaps not in the strongest performance as some would have liked against future Hall of Famer Kelvin Gastelum in one of the featured fights of the evening.

    Pyfer came close to finishing the fight twice during the opening round. Very early on, he dropped Gastelum with a right hand before swarming on him. Pyfer went on to dominate the round, landing a strong head kick that rocked Gastelum before dropping him with another right hand.

    Pyfer looked to get back to work in the second round, using his physical advantages as the two hand fought in the first minute. Pyfer landed a strong right hand that appeared to hurt Gastelum, who despite his feints and experience, wasn’t able to do much damage on Pyfer. Gastelum managed to get into a rhythm and find a jab late, landing in close, and especially to the body. Pyfer, meanwhile, appeared to slow down and only threw single punches during the course of the round.

    Both men appeared to have moments in the third round. While Pyfer worked a notable combination early, Gastelum prevented a takedown attempt of his — and Gastelum appeared to land stronger punches late in the round. It wasn’t enough, however, as the judges all scored the fight for Pyfer.

    Joe Pyfer Scores Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    https://twitter.com/OlivessOmar/status/1931555300651254128

    Pyfer has now won seven of his last eight. This marked his first fight in about a year, having most recently knocked out Marc-Andre Barriault at UFC 303.

    Gastelum has now lost four of his last six, though he came into this bout off a win over Daniel Rodriguez last year.

  • ‘Biggest Fraud Check Of 2025’ – Fans React To Patchy Mix Falling Short In Decision Loss To Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    ‘Biggest Fraud Check Of 2025’ – Fans React To Patchy Mix Falling Short In Decision Loss To Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    There was plenty of hype heading into UFC 316 for the impending debut of former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix, who had been considered one of the best fighters to have not been signed by the UFC.

    Unfortunately, he didn’t fight as such in his first bout in the Octagon, losing handedly to Mario Bautista.

    Mix’s first five minutes were rough — looking like the slower fighter and not doing enough with his footwork. Bautista was able to control the action with his jab, landing a number of shots that resulted in Mix getting busted up on his face. This included one jab that appeared to rock him early, and one shot that did damage right before the horn.

    Mix showed some improvement in the second round, including a solid head kick midway through the round. He found moments, including drawing some blood from Bautista under one of his eyes. Bautista, however, continued to stay busy and work combinations, overwhelming Mix with volume, including a surge in the final minute that did damage.

    Mix looked to come out aggressive to start the third, but Bautista was right there to answer back. Mix couldn’t get a takedown and continued to get tagged by Bautista’s right hand, which opened a cut on Mix’s face. Mix would land a couple of solid shots and a knee late in the round, but it wasn’t enough.

    Patchy Mix Underwhelms In UFC Debut Against Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    https://twitter.com/WhyGarth/status/1931545303452115269

    Bautista has now won eight straight, having come into this fight off wins over Jose Aldo and Ricky Simon.

    Mix is a former Bellator bantamweight champion, having defeated the likes of Raufeon Stots, Magomed Magomedov and Sergio Pettis. Mix’s most recent fight prior to tonight came at the Bellator Champions Series event in Paris in May 2024, edging out Magomedov in a controversial decision to retain the Bellator bantamweight championship.

  • Mark Kerr Announced For UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    Mark Kerr Announced For UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    Mark Kerr’s name has been going around the MMA circle of late, thanks in part to the new movie about his life — The Smashing Machine — in addition to his legend status in the sport.

    And now, Kerr gets to be cemented for good in honor of his achievements, as he has been announced as the final member of the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

    The announcement came during the pay-per-view portion of UFC 316, which Kerr was in attendance for.

    Jon Anik added that Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, who plays Kerr in The Smashing Machine, will be present at the Hall of Fame ceremony in Las Vegas on June 26 to personally induct Kerr.

    Mark Kerr Announced As Final Member of 2025 UFC Hall Of Fame Class

    Kerr was a collegiate wrestler at Syracuse, becoming a multiple-time EIWA champion and winning the NCAA national championship at 190 pounds in 1992.

    Kerr was also a multiple-time ADCC champion, winning gold in 1999, 2000 and 2001.

    Kerr made his professional MMA debut in 1997, winning three times in one night to win the heavyweight tournament at World Vale Tudo Championship 3. He then joined the UFC and won the heavyweight tournaments at both UFC 14 and UFC 15.

    Kerr would then join PRIDE in its earliest days and won six straight. He, unfortunately, would then lose six of his next seven, going on a downward skid. Kerr then won a pair of fights before ending his MMA career on five straight losses, including losses to Oleg Taktarov, Jeff Monson and Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal.

    Kerr joins the likes of Amanda Nunes, Vitor Belfort, Robbie Lawler, producer Craig Piligian and the UFC 236 fight between Kelvin Gastelum and Israel Adesanya as the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

  • ‘Wasn’t On My Bingo Card’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kevin Holland Locking Up Submission Victory Over Vicente Luque

    ‘Wasn’t On My Bingo Card’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kevin Holland Locking Up Submission Victory Over Vicente Luque

    Kevin Holland may very well find himself back in the welterweight rankings after UFC 316, scoring a second-round submission victory over Vicente Luque in the pay-per-view’s opening bout.

    Luque looked for an early takedown before Holland’s strikes forced Luque to abandon it. Holland appeared to wobble Luque during the first couple of minutes with an elbow. Luque responded well, but it resulted in a hematoma behind Luque’s left ear. Both men had their moments during this frame, but Holland’s physical advantages helped give him the edge.

    Holland managed to catch a kick of Luque’s early in the second round, putting him to the mat. It was there where Holland put Luque away by securing a D’Arce choke and scoring the submission.

    Kevin Holland Submits Vicente Luque At UFC 316

    Holland has now won two straight and three of his last five. This was Holland’s second fight back at 170 after scoring a decision win over Gunnar Nelson at UFC London.

    Luque is now 2-2 in his last four and has now lost four of his last six.

  • ‘Could Very Easily See Him Winning A UFC Title’ – Fans & Fighters React To Joshua Van Scoring UFC Flyweight-Record 3 Knockdowns In UFC 316 Victory

    ‘Could Very Easily See Him Winning A UFC Title’ – Fans & Fighters React To Joshua Van Scoring UFC Flyweight-Record 3 Knockdowns In UFC 316 Victory

    Joshua Van continues to make noise and surge up the flyweight rankings, defeating Bruno Silva in a clinic that capped off the UFC 316 preliminary card.

    Van’s crisp striking was on display from the opening frame, overcoming Silva’s leg-kick-based attack by trying to keep distance and using a variety of punches, including a left hook that dropped Silva late in the round.

    Van came out in the second round looking to dictate the pace again, controlling the action with more distance work and use of his jab. Van scored another knockdown in this round with a right hand. Though Silva scored a takedown during the second round, Van got around it and managed to trouble Silva some more with a hook and ground-and-pound before the end of the round.

    Van continued to overwhelm with accurate and powerful striking in the third round. Van dropped Silva with a right hook and some more ground-and-pound put Silva away about four minutes into the final frame.

    Joshua Van Puts Beating On Bruno Gustavo Da Silva At UFC 316

    Van, who improves to 14-2, has now won four straight and 11 of his last 12. This marked his fifth fight in an 11-month span; that span also included a loss to Charles Johnson and wins over Edgar Chairez, Cody Durden and Rei Tsuruya.

    Silva has now lost two straight after a four-fight win streak. He came into this fight off a loss to Manel Kape in December.

  • ‘Murzakanov Is A Hammer’ – Fans & Fighters React To Azamat Murzakanov Starching Brendson Ribiero In Another Strong Finish At UFC 316

    ‘Murzakanov Is A Hammer’ – Fans & Fighters React To Azamat Murzakanov Starching Brendson Ribiero In Another Strong Finish At UFC 316

    Azamat Murzakanov can add another impressive knockout to his performance, needing just over three minutes to put away Brendson Ribiero during the preliminary card of UFC 316.

    Murzakanov looked to take control right from the start with his power. He landed a couple of noteworthy left hooks early, one of which appeared to really hurt Ribiero. Another left hook managed to drop Ribiero. Murzakanov managed to get into mount, raining down ground-and-pound. Ribiero looked to get away but gave up his back, and Murzakanov continued to rain down blows until Ribiero submitted to strikes.

    Azamat Murzakanov Scores Yet Another Finish At UFC 316

    Murzakanov is now 5-0 in the Octagon since coming into the UFC off Dana White’s Contender Series. His was his first fight since his performance bonus-earning knockout of Alonzo Menifield at ABC Abu Dhabi last August.

    Ribiero is now just 2-3 in the UFC since coming into the promotion off his own DWCS appearance.

  • Ben Askren In Critical Condition, Hospitalized For Pneumonia

    Ben Askren In Critical Condition, Hospitalized For Pneumonia

    Note: This is a developing story

    UPDATE: Amy Askren, wife of Ben Askren, has posted an update to Facebook, confirming Ben Askren is unresponsive in the hospital. Amy Askren says that Ben Askren suddenly developed pneumonia.

    Former Bellator and ONE Championship welterweight champion Ben Askren has reportedly been hospitalized and is in critical condition, battling a staph infection.

    Tom Ryan, the head coach of the Ohio State wrestling team, sent out a tweet just before 7pm ET on June 7, asking the wrestling community to send prayers for Askren and his family.

    A couple of hours later, Chael Sonnen would tweet out that Askren is alive and for his family’s request of privacy to be respect. Pat Mineo of The Wrestling Room would follow up with the confirmation that Askren is battling a staph infection.

    Ben Askren Battling Severe Staph Infection, In Critical Condition

    Prior to MMA, Askren was a key collegiate wrestler at the University of Missouri, becoming a three-time Big 12 champion and two-time NCAA Division-I champion. He also won gold at the 2005 Pan American Games in freestyle wrestling.

    Askren was a key figure in Bellator’s early days, winning the season 2 welterweight tournament before defeating Lyman Good at Bellator 33 to become Bellator welterweight champion. He’d defend the title four times before departing Bellator for ONE Championship toward the end of 2013.

    In his first year with ONE, Askren defeated Nobutatsu Suzuki to become ONE welterweight champion. He’d retain that title four times as well before retiring as champion at the end of 2017.

    He’d come out of retirement in 2018 after his contract was traded by ONE to the UFC in exchange for Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson. After controversially defeating Robbie Lawler at UFC 235, Askren was the victim of the fastest KO in UFC history when he was beat by Jorge Masvidal at UFC 239. He’d then be submitted by Demian Maia UFC Singapore before retiring from MMA for good in November 2019.

    Askren then fought Jake Paul in boxing in April 2021, getting stopped in just one round.

  • VIDEO: Yoo Joo-sang Faceplants Jeka Saragih With Conor McGregor-Esque Hook At UFC 316

    VIDEO: Yoo Joo-sang Faceplants Jeka Saragih With Conor McGregor-Esque Hook At UFC 316

    Yoo Joo-sang made an emphatic statement in his UFC debut at UFC 316, scoring the fourth-fastest finish in a debut performance at featherweight.

    Joo-sang needed just 28 seconds to put away Jeka Saraigh during the event’s preliminary card.

    Saragih looked to come after Joo-sang with a one-two. Joo-sang, however, saw it coming and stepped back away from the charge. Joo-sang then connected with a quick left hook that sent Saragih down, crumbling, like a stack of bricks, face first to the mat.

    Yoo Joo-Sang Scores Impressive Sub-30-Second KO In UFC Debut At UFC 316

    Joo-sang, who said he hopes to deliver a UFC title to the man he looks up to, “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung, is now 9-0 in MMA. The former AFC and Heat featherweight champion earned his fifth career finish in this bout tonight — with four of five now coming in the first round.

    Saragih has now lost three of four since entering the Octagon off a pair of 2022 victories on Road to UFC.

  • UFC 316 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley, Pena vs. Harrison, And More

    UFC 316 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley, Pena vs. Harrison, And More

    UFC 316 is almost here, and we here at MMANews are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on Saturday, June 7. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6PM ET/3PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature a UFC bantamweight championship rematch between current champion Merab Dvalishvili and former champion Sean O’Malley.

    In the co-main event, Julianna Pena makes her first defense in her second reign as UFC women’s bantamweight champion, taking on former two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion Kayla Harrison.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Kelvin Gastelum facing Joe Pyfer, former Bellator champion Patchy Mix making his Octagon debut against Mario Bautista and Vicente Luque going toe-to-toe with Kevin Holland.

    UFC 316: Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley 2 Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 316 as of June 6 at 8:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili (-310) vs. Sean O’Malley (+250)
    • Women’s Bantamweight Championship: Julianna Pena (+455) vs. Kayla Harrison (-625)
    • Middleweight: Kelvin Gastelum (+295) vs. Joe Pyfer (-375)
    • Bantamweight: Mario Bautista (+150) vs. Patchy Mix (-180)
    • Welterweight: Vicente Luque (+180) vs. Kevin Holland (-218)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Bruno Gustavo da Silva (+500) vs. Joshua Van (-700)
    • Light Heavyweight: Azamat Murzakanov (-600) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (+440)
    • Heavyweight: Serghei Spivac (-155) vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta (+130)
    • Welterweight: Khaos Williams (-198) vs. Andreas Gustafsson (+164)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane da Silva (+350) vs. Wang Cong (-455)
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih (+400) vs. Yoo Joo-sang (-535)
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld (-470) vs. Yanal Ashmouz (+360)
    • Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos (-170) vs. Mark Choinski (+142)
  • Watch Merab Dvalishvili, Sean O’Malley Face Off At UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    Watch Merab Dvalishvili, Sean O’Malley Face Off At UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    We’re about 24 hours away from UFC 316, and MMANews is here to bring you the video from the ceremonial weigh-ins for the card!

    UFC 316 takes place on June 7 from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

    The main event will see a rematch for the UFC bantamweight championship, as this time it’s Merab Dvalishvili defending the title against Sean O’Malley. Dvalishvili won the championship by defeating O’Malley in the main event of Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306) in September and defended the title against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311. The UFC women’s bantamweight gold will also be at stake in the co-main event, as defending two-time champion Julianna Pena faces the challenge of former two-time PFL champion Kayla Harrison.

    The rest of the main card will also see Kelvin Gastelum taking on Joe Pyfer, former Bellator champion Patchy Mix facing Mario Bautista and Kevin Holland going toe-to-toe with Vicente Luque.

    Only Ariane da Silva missed weight – coming in six pounds over the limit – but all fights are in tact and are a go for tomorrow night!

    The ceremonial weigh-ins present the last opportunity for opponents to face off before they meet inside the Octagon. Check them out below via the UFC’s official YouTube channel!

    UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-In Video

  • UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2 Full Weigh-In Results

    UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2 Full Weigh-In Results

    We are just one day away from UFC 316, and we’ve got the official weigh-in results for you here at MMANews.

    Just as they have the last two years, the UFC brings its early June pay-per-view offering to the city of Newark, New Jersey. The world’s fighting leader will provide the Prudential Center with two title fights and a whole lot of action to go down.

    The main event will see Sean O’Malley look to re-capture the UFC bantamweight championship against the man who took it from him, Merab Dvalishvili. Dvalishvili took a clear unanimous decision, troubling O’Malley with his grappling expertise, when the two first faced off at Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306) in September. While O’Malley has not fought since the loss, Dvalishvili successfully defended the title against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 in January.

    The co-main event will also have 135-pound gold on the line, as women’s champion Julianna Pena defends the title against Kayla Harrison. Pena became a two-time champion at UFC 307 in October, scoring a controversial decision win over Raquel Pennington to reclaim the gold. Pena’s first run with the belt came when she upset Amanda Nunes in December 2021 at UFC 269 — only to lose it back to her at UFC 277. Harrison, a former two-time PFL champion, has defeated Holly Holm and Ketlen Vieira since jumping ship to the UFC.

    The main card will also see Kelvin Gastelum taking on Joe Pyfer, the UFC debut of former Bellator champion Patchy Mix against Mario Bautista and Vicente Luque battling Kevin Holland.

    UFC 316 Weigh-In Video, Results

    UFC 316 takes place Saturday, June 7 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. The main card begins at 10 PM ET/7 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6 PM ET/3 PM PT.

    See above for a replay of the UFC 316 Weigh-In Show, and check out the full results below.

    Main Card:

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili (134) vs. Sean O’Malley (135)
    • Women’s Bantamweight Championship: Julianna Pena (135) vs. Kayla Harrison (135)
    • Middleweight: Kelvin Gastelum (185) vs. Joe Pyfer (185)
    • Bantamweight: Mario Bautista (135) vs. Patchy Mix (135)
    • Welterweight: Vicente Luque (170) vs. Kevin Holland (170)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Bruno Gustavo da Silva (125) vs. Joshua Van (125)
    • Light Heavyweight: Azamat Murzakanov (205) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (205)
    • Heavyweight: Serghei Spivac (251) vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta (265)
    • Welterweight: Khaos Williams (170) vs. Andreas Gustafsson (170)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane da Silva (132*) vs. Wang Cong (125)
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih (145) vs. Yoo Joo-sang (145)
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld (156) vs. Yanal Ashmouz (155)
    • Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos (155) vs. Mark Choinski (155)
  • Watch UFC 316 Press Conference Video Featuring Dvalishvili, O’Malley, Pena, Harrison, And More

    Watch UFC 316 Press Conference Video Featuring Dvalishvili, O’Malley, Pena, Harrison, And More

    We’re in the midst of UFC 316 fight week, and with the build reaching it’s boiling point, it’s time to make things potentially boil further with a good ol’ fashion question-and-answer session.

    The sixth UFC pay-per-view event of the year goes down from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, on Saturday, June 7. UFC 316 will be headlined by a UFC bantamweight championship rematch featuring champion Merab Dvalishvili and former champion Sean O’Malley.

    The co-main event will also see gold on the line, as Julianna Pena makes her first defense in her second reign as women’s 135-pound UFC champion, taking on former two-time PFL champion and Olympic gold medalist Kayla Harrison.

    The main card of UFC 316 will also feature middleweight action from Kelvin Gastelum and Joe Pyfer, the UFC debut of former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix (who takes on Mario Bautista) and a welterweight clash between Vicente Luque and Kelvin Gastelum.

    As per tradition, the UFC pay-per-view main card participants will be featured in a press conference during fight week. This is the opportunity for fighters to answer questions from media and fans, as well as potentially lay in some smack talk on their opponents.

    Check out a live stream of the presser below via the UFC’s official YouTube channel, commencing at 5 PM ET.

  • UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley Staff Predictions

    UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley Staff Predictions

    For the third year in a row, the UFC brings its early June pay-per-view offering to the city of Newark, New Jersey, as the UFC goes down at the Prudential Center. Get yourself ready and in the know with another edition of MMA News staff fight predictions.

    The event will be available exclusively on ESPN+ pay-per-view on Saturday, June 7. The main card will begin at its usual 10pm ET start time, with preliminary card action kicking off at 6pm ET.

    The main event of the evening will be a second clash over the UFC bantamweight championship between Merab Dvalishvili and Sean O’Malley. The two first met at Noche UFC 2 — UFC 306 — this past September, with Dvalishvili taking a strong decision win to claim the gold and become just the second man to defeat O’Malley. Dvalishvili retained the title in comeback decision fashion against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 this past January, while this marks O’Malley’s first fight since the title loss.

    The co-main event of the evening will also see a title be decided, as Julianna Pena defends the UFC women’s bantamweight championship against former Olympic gold medalist and two-time PFL champion Kayla Harrison. This marks Pena’s first defense of the title since her controversial decision victory over Raquel Pennington at UFC 307 in October to win the title. On the same card, Harrison, in her second fight since jumping ship to the UFC, scored a dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira to earn the title shot.

    The UFC 316 main card will also see middleweight action featuring Kelvin Gastelum and Joe Pyfer, Mario Bautista taking on the debuting former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix and a welterweight encounter featuring Vicente Luque and Kevin Holland.

    UFC 316: MMA News Staff Predictions

    With UFC 316 just a couple of short days away,  Ryan Jarrell, Pranav Pandey, and myself (Thomas Albano) have provided our picks for the fights that make up the main card.

    Below, you can check out the current leaderboard through five cards in 2025.

    1. Pranav Pandey (13-9)
      Thomas Albano (12-10)
    2. Ryan Jarrell (11-11)

    And now, let’s take a look at everyone’s picks for UFC 316!

    Welterweight: Vicente Luque vs. Kevin Holland

    Images: UFC.com

    Pranav Pandey: Honestly, I’m not quite sure where Holland stands these days. His recent form has been all over the place, especially when compared to a battle-tested veteran like Luque. Sure, Holland got back in the win column with his victory over Gunnar Nelson, but truth be told, that fight felt awkward and lacked real rhythm. Meanwhile, “The Silent Assassin” looked sharp in his last outing. That said, facing someone like Holland presents a unique challenge. “Trailblazer” holds a significant reach advantage, and in my opinion, he’s going to use every inch of it to keep Luque’s grappling threat at bay. If Holland stays composed and strategic, this could turn into a frustrating night for Luque. (Prediction: Holland)

    Thomas Albano: This is the fight on the main card that I’m having the most trouble picking. Both Vicente Luque and Kevin Holland can flash power. Both Luque and Holland have strong grappling abilities. Both men have had a mix bag of results in their most recent string of match-ups – and both have had struggles against upper-level competition.

    This is one of those fights that could fall either way. I and others in the MMA media space probably give the edge in power to Holland versus the edge in grappling to Luque. While Holland has problems with consistency, there should be concern about Luque’s health given his losses to Joaquin Buckley and Geoff Neal. I’m not the most confident in this pick, and I wouldn’t put any money on this fight. But if I had to pick a side, while my initial gut reaction was to go with Luque, I’m going to go with the “Trailblazer” here. (Prediction: Holland)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is a tricky fight for me to pick because I think Luque at his best would beat Holland. Even with his most recent victory over Themba Gorimbo, I am not sure the ‘Silent Assassin’ is still in his prime. Kevin Holland is always a wild card to me and it wouldn’t surprise me to see him go in and look like the absolute best version of himself. It also wouldn’t surprise me to see him get finished like he did against RDR. This is a coin flip to me, and I’ll side with Luque because I would imagine he restored his confidence after his recent quick victory over a rising star. (Prediction: Luque)

    Consensus: 2-1 Holland

    Bantamweight: Mario Bautista vs. Patchy Mix

    Images: UFC.com, PFL

    Pranav Pandey: It’s an intriguing stylistic matchup. Bautista is a high-pressure, in-your-face fighter who relentlessly pushes the pace and blends his striking with slick level changes. He knows his strengths and leans into them with purpose. On the other hand, Mix is stepping into the Octagon for his promotional debut. While I haven’t seen a ton of him firsthand, what I do know is that “No Love” is a submission savant. I’m more than ready to hop aboard the hype train and see if he can put the clamps on someone as durable and aggressive as Bautista. (Prediction: Mix)

    Thomas Albano: I’m excited to see Patchy Mix back in action, now competing in the UFC. During his time as Bellator champion, I always viewed him as a face of the promotion – especially during the time period he was there after PFL purchased Bellator (tumultuous as it was). He legitimately up until his official signing weeks ago, at least in my mind, was one of the top talents not signed to the UFC. And he’ll already have the opportunity to make a big statement in this one.

    Mario Bautista is not going to be a pushover. Bautista has a pressure-heavy, striking-heavy style, bringing forth plenty of power and momentum into his fights against opponents who may not be ready. And considering his wins over Ricky Simon and Jose Aldo (controversial as the latter was) last year, he’s ready to face a competitor like Mix. If Mix can take advantage and bring the fight to his world – to the mat – and negate Bautista’ striking game as much as possible, he can pick up the win here. And I believe that very well can happen come Saturday. (Prediction: Mix)

    Ryan Jarrell: I really like what I’ve been seeing out of Mario Bautista during his win streak. Forget all the haters that jumped all over him for his game-plan against Jose Aldo. At the end of the day he got the job done and had his hand raised. I do think Patchy Mix will be a force in the UFC and someone to contend with at the top of the division for quite some time. But there is something to be said about the octagon jitters and historically speaking, debuting fighters have not faired well when competing with the elite regardless of the division. Give me Bautista to edge out a tough fought decision and continue his march up the top 15. (Prediction: Bautista)

    Consensus: 2-1 Mix

    Middleweight: Kelvin Gastelum vs. Joe Pyfer

    Images: UFC.com

    Pranav Pandey: In my opinion, Gastelum still has that bulldozer-like durability he’s always been known for, but his inconsistency over the years makes me hesitant, especially against a power-punching sniper like Pyfer, who holds a clear reach advantage. I don’t think this will be an easy outing for either man, but if “Bodybagz” can manage the range and dish out damage from the outside, I could easily see him picking apart Gastelum, whose tendency to absorb shots has often put him in dangerous waters. (Prediction: Pyfer)

    Thomas Albano: I really don’t want to come off as I’m quickly writing Gastelum off. After all, he has victories in two of his last three fights (including his most recent one), and he’s had some noteworthy performances regardless of result. But given Joe Pyfer’s momentum, and Gastelum losing a lot more than he’s been winning over the last several years, this just feels like a situation where an older fighter is being brought in as a lamb to slaughter for the younger rising star. I’ll respect Gastelum for trying to fight fire with fire, but he’ll need to mix up his grappling skills with it to have a shot in this one. And even then, I’m not sure if his pressure will be enough against the precision, speed, and power behind Joe Pyfer’s hands. (Prediction: Pyfer)

    Ryan Jarrell: I think this fight is a case where one guy is coming into his fighting prime and the other guy is on the way out. If Gastelum can recreate his younger self he can definitely make this a tough one for Pyfer to win. But I just don’t see him having enough to deal with the power and physicality of his younger foe. I respect Gastelum so I will say he toughs it out and doesn’t get finished, but I expect him to lose rather handily on the judges score cards. (Prediction: Pyfer)

    Consensus: 3-0 Pyfer

    UFC Women’s Bantamweight Title: Julianna Pena vs. Kayla Harrison

    Images: UFC.com

    Pranav Pandey: This fight feels genuinely tough for me to call. Peña will undoubtedly come into this matchup riding the wave of confidence that comes with being the reigning champion, and I get the sense she’s a bit more polished across the board when it comes to all-around MMA skills. But Peña also has a weak spot in her takedown defense—an area where former Olympian Kayla Harrison is poised to exploit her advantage. Still, I believe it’s never that straightforward with the gritty “Venezuelan Vixen,” who fights with relentless heart and refuses to back down.

    On the other hand, Harrison showed some vulnerability in striking during her last bout against Ketlen Vieira, yet she weathered the storm with composure. If she keeps her grappling sharp and capitalizes on Peña’s takedown defense, I believe Harrison will drag the champ into deep waters where she thrives and ultimately emerge victorious. (Prediction: Harrison)

    Thomas Albano: I have been following Kayla Harrison since she won her second Olympic gold medal in 2016 – and then transitioned into the sport. She dominated the PFL scene, becoming a two-time champion and fell just short of three titles (and Larissa Pacheco is not a loss to be ashamed of). Of course, there were questions on how she’d handle the step up in competition at the UFC level – and I think it’s safe to say, after her finish of Holly Holm and her dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira, Harrison was more than delivered.

    It was cool to see Julianna Pena re-capture the UFC women’s bantamweight title at UFC 307, but not everyone was happy with her receiving the nod over Raquel Pennington. I was uncertain, too. And while Pena has shown some power, I don’t think she’s going to be any match for Harrison’s judo expertise and grappling abilities. I’m also curious how the size battle will go here (Pena has a three-inch reach advantage, but Harrison has the height edge and has competed in a heavier weight class previously). Like the oddsmakers feel, I expect to hear “and new” in the co-main event of the evening. (Prediction: Harrison)

    Ryan Jarrell: According to the odds, we should have a new champion when this title fight concludes. I am very interested to see how the challengers cardio holds up if Pena is able to hang in there and deliver some punishment of her own in the early rounds. At the end of the day, I do expect Kayla’s wrestling and control time to be the difference in this one. I’m not terribly confident she will finish the champion, but I do expect her to win via decision because of her elite grappling skill set. (Prediction: Harrison)

    Consensus: 3-0 Harrison

    UFC Bantamweight Title: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley

    Images: UFC.com

    Pranav Pandey: Here we go again with the rematch. In their first meeting, Dvalishvili put on a masterclass in pressure fighting. It honestly felt like he had O’Malley tactically trapped from the opening bell. The Georgian’s breakneck pace and chain-wrestling blitz were overwhelming, and “Suga” looked like he had no escape route. However, I think this time around, things could look drastically different. O’Malley has likely overhauled his strategy. What has me particularly curious is the influence of Demetrious Johnson in his camp. I’m genuinely eager to see what kind of tools “Mighty Mouse” might’ve passed down, because if O’Malley shows up as a more complete, defensively sound version of himself, we might just get a tactical chess match instead of a one-sided beating.

    But “The Machine” has finely tuned his blend of striking and grappling into a weapon that has repeatedly proven his dominance. I struggle to imagine him finding himself in any real trouble during this fight. Sure, “Suga” carries the knockout threat; there’s no denying that. However, I firmly believe Dvalishvili’s ironclad chin and unyielding toughness will see him through any storm. I fully expect him to weather every challenge effortlessly and sail smoothly to yet another dominant win. (Prediction: Dvalishvili)

    Thomas Albano: Merab Dvalishvili has been someone who has seemed unstoppable in the division. His relentless pressure and his wrestling expertise have led him to plenty of success before, and it led to him fulfilling his potential and becoming champion the first time he met Sean O’Malley in the Octagon. I’m one of those who isn’t a fan that O’Malley is receiving a rematch in his first fight since while Dvalishvili already defended the belt four months ago.

    On one hand, you could look at that circumstance and say O’Malley’s time off to develop and better prepare, combined with Dvalishvili needing to come from behind to retain against Umar Nurmagomedov may point to O’Malley recapturing the title. After all, Aljamain Sterling only defended the title three months before he faced O’Malley and lost. That said, O’Malley’s grappling hasn’t been his greatest asset, and I need to see true improvement out of him – and we haven’t had that opportunity yet. And when you manage to put on the performance Dvalishvili did against someone in the great Nurmagomedov family, my confidence is fully behind “The Machine” in this one. (Prediction: Dvalishvili)

    Ryan Jarrell: After I watched Suga put away Aljamain Sterling, I wondered if anyone could stop the Suga Show at 135 pounds. Enter a machine, who literally never stops. Merab will get hit and O’Malley will have the chances he hopes to clip the Champion and potentially get a finish. But until I see it actually happen, I cannot pick against Merab. His output picks up as the fight goes deeper and his opponents have no chance but to wilt to his pressure. I don’t think O’Malley will have the answers in this rematch and I expect a very similar visual to the first go round. (Prediction: Dvalishvili)

    Consensus: 3-0 Dvalishvili


    That’ll do it for our UFC 316 staff picks! What do you think? Do your predictions look similar? Let us know in the comments section!

    Also, you can check out the full UFC 316 card below.

    Main Card:

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley
    • Women’s Bantamweight Championship: Julianna Pena vs. Kayla Harrison
    • Middleweight: Kelvin Gastelum vs. Joe Pyfer
    • Bantamweight: Mario Bautista vs. Patchy Mix
    • Welterweight: Vicente Luque vs. Kevin Holland

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Bruno Gustavo da Silva vs. Joshua Van
    • Light Heavyweight: Azamat Murzakanov vs. Brendson Ribeiro
    • Heavyweight: Serghei Spivac vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta
    • Welterweight: Khaos Williams vs. Andreas Gustafsson

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane da Silva vs. Wang Cong
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih vs. Yoo Joo-sang
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld vs. Yanal Ashmouz
    • Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos vs. Mark Choinski
  • ‘I Want To Feel His Blood’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 2 Recap

    ‘I Want To Feel His Blood’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 2 Recap

    Welcome, everyone, to the second edition of The TUF Stuff!

    Each week, I’ll be guiding you through a recap of this season’s edition of The Ultimate Fighter, providing updates on what happens in each episode — from the drama and storylines out of the Octagon, to the looks into who the competing fighters are, to what goes down inside the cage.

    This season celebrates the 20th anniversary of TUF. That inaugural season from 2005 helped to influence many future MMA fans, media members, and fighters (yours truly included). And now, two more fighters this summer will get the opportunity to call themselves TUF champions when it’s all said and done.

    Last week saw the usual premiere fun, as coaches Daniel Cormier and Chael Sonnen picked their teams, fighters got to move into The TUF House, and we got the first fight of the season.

    There wasn’t any short of drama already though! Team Cormier welterweight Rodrigo Sezinado showed that he seemed to be the most energetic one of this bunch; however, that put him at odds with Team Sonnen welterweight Diego Bianchini.

    It was a battle of No. 1 overall picks as Team Cormier’s Eduardo Henrique took on Team Sonnen’s Joseph Morales. Though Morales needed the box to weigh in successfully, his grappling advantage worked to his plan, as the UFC alumnus submitted the former LFA champion in less than three minutes — eliminating the No. 1 overall pick of the competition in the very first fight of the season!

    Recap of The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 – Episode 2

    Tonight, it’s the first 170-pound fight, as Team Cormier’s Daniil Donchenko will take on Team Sonnen’s Richard Martins. After striking first blood at flyweight, can Team Sonnen do the same at welterweight?

    Let’s get into episode two of The Ultimate Fighter!

    Team Sonnen Training Session

    Good to see Morales giving Henrique some love after the fight. Morales says “there wasn’t as much blood as I wanted” and that he wanted to set the tone by taking out the No. 1 pick. He said the job isn’t done until he wins the TUF title.

    Chael Sonnen introduces this week’s special TUF alum guest — former UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw. UFC President White goes into Dillashaw’s run on TUF as a contestant (finishing runner-up) and a coach against rival Cody Garbrandt.

    Dillashaw told the contestants that TUF provided an opportunity for escape from the real world, and he said that his TUF coach, Michael Bisping, was able to give him sound advice that’d help lead to his successful career.

    Dillashaw leads the training session, and all of the team seems to be very receptive to him. Dillashaw, by the way, adds that while he couldn’t wait to retire as a fighter, he now misses the adrenaline that fighting provides.

    Danill Donchenko Backstory

    Danill Donchenko talks about home life in Ukraine and mentions that three of his friends from school died in the Ukraine-Russia conflict. A video package then airs about Donchenko’s life with loved ones in Ukraine. Donchenko calls it an honor to represent his country on TUF.

    Donchenko talks about joining the world of MMA as a young boy, learning how to defend himself, and moving to Thailand with $800 in his pocket to train and make a new life for himself. Video footage shows of Donchenko training at Tiger Muay Thai, alongside training partner Robert Valentin — who was a runner-up on last year’s season of TUF.

    Donchenko says that “No one will beat me. I can smash everyone, and I can prove it.”

    Martins Fight Prep

    Martins admits to Sonnen that he wants to strike with Martins because he’s more comfortable — and he thinks he’s a better striker than Martins. Sonnen seems to would rather Donchenko make use of his jiu-jitsu brown belt — but Martins says that’s his “Plan B.” Martins says that Donchenko uses his kicks more, and he plans to neutralize that and make him feel his punches.

    We then see footage of some of Martins’ fights on the regional circuit, showing off his Muay Thai style. Martins admits he prefers to end fights via KO.

    Martins notes how Donchenko focuses on low kicks and that he wants to be aggressive. Sonnen feels Martins’ size disadvantage might actually give him the edge when it comes to speed — and make him difficult to hit.

    TUF House

    Manyamala reflects on being in the TUF House, saying it’s a surreal experience that he couldn’t have imagined. He and other fights look back on the famous picture of season 1’s TUF cast. With no phone or TV access, the pictures serve as entertainment — and as a goal for fighters to have their picture up in the house one day.

    Richard Martins Backstory

    Martins reflects on how the TUF experience has left him away from his wife — and how much he misses her. Martins discusses life in Brazil with his wife and the support she has for his dream.

    Martins then guides us on a tour of his house, showing off his birds.

    Martins’ team uses an Aikido Gym, sharing the space. Martins has been able to train full time for four years now and says he feels he’s at his best now.

    Donchenko Fight Prep

    Cormier says Martins has power and pressure, and that Donchenko needs to lead the dance and mix up his strikes. Cormier praises Donchenko’s creativity in his striking, and he tells Donchenko he needs to put that on display in the fight.

    Donchenko says he loves Martins’ style, but Donchenko says Martins will not have the time to realize what will happen — promising a fast finish.

    We then get footage of Donchenko competing on the regional circuit. Donchenko describes his fighting style as “putting a lot of damage on my opponent.”

    Donchenko promises he will kick and throw a lot of punches; he promises to do anything for the win.

    The Fight: Danill Donchenko vs. Richard Martins

    —–IF YOU HAVEN’T WATCHED THE EPISODE AND DON’T WANT TO BE SPOILED, THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO TURN AWAY NOW.———

    Donchenko weighs in at 171. Martins weighs in at 169.5. Fight is on!

    Jeff Creighton says Martins is a great opponent for Donchenko because of his experiencing and striking power. Matt Dixon, meanwhile, says Martins being so well-rounded will make the difference, calling Martins “the cream of the crop.”

    Donchenko promises that the fight will show how he will fight and says he promises to fight like it’s the last one of his life. Martins, meanwhile, says he is quite a distance away from home, and that he knows he is ready.

    Danill Donchenko vs. Richard Martins

    Round 1

    Donchenko opens with leg kicks, while Martins tries to close the distance right away. Strong front kick thrown by Donchenko. Strong right hand ROCKS Martins! Donchenko swarms Martins against the fence. Donchenko continues to lay it in! Herb Dean warns Martins to fight back – and Martins clinches Donchenko up JUST before Dean was going to step in! Wow!

    Clinch battle against the fence, with Donchenko’s back to it. Sonnen telling Martins to keep the underhook, while Donchenko lands a knee. Cormier telling Donchenko to turn out of the clinch. Elbow and a turn — and Donchenko escapes. A couple of right hands from Donchenko. Martins catches a kick. Right hand from Donchenko. One-two from Martins. Low kick from Donchenko, followed by a right. Cormier yelling at Donchenko to stop loading up on his punches.

    Left hand from Donchenko. Low kick from Donchenko. Donchenko misses a high kick, and Cormier tells him to slow down. Donchenko throws a left. Sonnen tells Martin to just touch him. Cormier telling Donchenko he’s “way ahead” and telling him not to rush things again. Donchenko pressures Martins back. Low kick from Donchenko. Combinations from both men now. Leg kick from Donchenko. Sharp round kick from Martins. Front kick from Donchenko. Low kick from Donchenko. Another combination from Donchenko before the horn — capping off a strong round from the Ukranian.

    Round 2

    Martins coming out on the front foot, trying to gain some momentum here. Left jab from Martins, and Donchenko answers with a low kick and a jab. Donchenko trying to come forward here. Quick left from both men. Right hand and a low kick from Donchenko. Martins presses, but Donchenko presses right back. Left hand from Donchenko. Cormier telling Donchenko to keep ahead.

    Donchenko grabs a leg and presses Martins against the fence. Strong one-two from Donchenko on the separation. Right hand, followed by a one-two from Donchenko. Right hand from Martins. Right hand now from Donchenko. Low kick from Donchenko. Sonnen begging for activity from Martins. Right hand from Donchenko. More combinations from Donchenko as the halfway point lands.

    Left hands from Donchenko. Sonnen trying to bring a sense of urgency into Martins. “Touch him now!” Right jab from Martins. Donchenko flashes the left. Front kick from Donchenko to the body. One-two thrown by Donchenko. Low kick from Donchenko. Combination from Donchenko. A couple of more kicks from Donchenko.

    A couple of left hands from Martins, but Donchenko answers back. One minute left. Cormier telling Donchenko to keep pushing. Dana White is shown on screen mentioning how Donchenko has done everything in this fight to Martins, and yet Martins still stands. Donchenko lands one takedown briefly on Martins. Donchenko continues to press. One-two from Donchenko. Knee by Martins, but Donchenko with a one-two again. Quick left hand from Martins. The horn sounds.

    Donchenko’s eye is busted up — but that’s the fight. A decision is in after two rounds.

    Dominant performance from Donchenko.

    Winner: Danill Donchenko via unanimous decision after two rounds

    Conclusion

    White gives his commentary, noting that Donchenko went into the fight to make a statement. The coaches were impressed by Donchenko but noting that Martins did little to answer back — or couldn’t answer back because of Donchenko’s assertive pressure, taking charge of this fight from the very beginning and, in Sonnen’s words “leading the dance” the whole way. White noted that Martins had good exchanges, but Donchenko was too much for him.

    Team Cormier draws first blood at 170.

    Martins reflects and says he wishes he could have done more, but he feels it was a learning experience. He says while he feels sad now, this will allow him to improve things and “everything will work out.”

    Donchenko says he promised violence — and he proved it. He promises his gloves will read “UFC” soon.

    With Team Cormier’s first victory, he names the next flyweight fight: Team Cormier’s Imanol Rodriguez vs. Team Sonnen’s Arshiyan Memon. The two have an intense staredown with some expletives — though it’s more entertaining than tense.

    Carla Esparza will be the guest fighter next week, joining Team Sonnen. But it looks like Sezinado and Bianchini’s drama will continue to boil next week at the TUF House!

    What will happen next week? Join alongside us then!

    Thanks for joining me in the second-ever edition of The TUF Stuff!