Author: Thomas Albano

  • 3 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber

    3 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber

    It was back to the UFC APEX this past Saturday night, as the UFC held its May 31 Fight Night event — UFC Vegas 107: Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber in its headquarters.

    The night ended up being history making in a way no one expected — the scheduled main event of the evening did not make the walk to the Octagon.

    The planned main event between Blanchfield and Barber would have been a battle of top-five women’s flyweight contenders. Blanchfield has won 10 of her last 11 and was to come into this fight off a November win over Rose Namajunas. Barber, meanwhile, is on a six-fight win streak and would have competed for the first time since UFC 299 after battling several health issues during 2024.

    Only nine bouts went ahead on the night — five on the main card and four in the prelims. The final event of the evening, the originally scheduled co-main event, saw Mateusz Gamrot compete in his first fight since his UFC 305 loss to Dan Hooker, as he took on L’udovit Klein.

    The main card also featured Dustin Jacoby taking on Bruno Lopes, a women’s featherweight battle between Ketlen Vieira and Macy Chiasson, and Zachary Reese facing Duško Todorović.

    Let’s now take in the good and the bad with this week’s edition of Hits and Misses!

    Miss – Boy, Did This Card Fall Apart

    I can’t say for certain that this was the worst card in the history of the UFC like some on a certain social media platform are saying. But after the entertaining Apex night that was the UFC Fight Night on May 17, this one, held in the same venue just two weeks later, definitely has to be up there for the Worst Card of 2025.

    Firstly, “card subject to change” really came into play in this show. Andreas Gustafsson originally gets booked with Jeremiah Wells before an injury to Wells sees him replaced by Trevin Giles — only for Giles to be pulled on the day of weigh-ins after falling in the bathroom. Ramiz Brahimaj and Billy Ray Goff faced each other because their original opponents, Oban Elliott and Ko Seok-hyun, respectively, had visa issues. So, the UFC decided to play “le switcheroo.” Michael Aswell filled in on just days’ notice against Bolaji Oki after MarQuel Mederos fell ill.

    And then of course came what happened in the main event — when Maycee Barber’s sudden medical issue resulted in her fight with Erin Blanchfield being canceled right before Octagon walks. The Fight Night became UFC Fight Night: Gamrot vs. Klein IN RETROSPECT. That is insanity.

    And it’s only after all that you can point to a lack number of fights, a lack of star power, and a lack of finishes.

    Despite some entertaining evenings such as UFCs 314 and 315, as well as the Burns vs. Morales card of two weeks ago, UFC Vegas 107 provided us a stark reminder that the sport of MMA is in a recession period — and that (even some WWE fans may tell you) the UFC under TKO’s rule just may be providing us the darkest modern timelime in this promotion.

    Hit – Jordan Leavitt Reminds Us How Entertaining He Can Be

    Only one finish came on the preliminary card, and fortunately it was such a highlight, as Jordan Leavitt pulled off a quick submission of Kurt Holobaugh.

    Both men are great grapplers, but Leavitt proved he was the better fighter on this night. He not only was the one who initiated the ground battle, but he dominated with top pressure but putting Holobaugh to sleep with a choke.

    On top of that, he had a solid worm celebration that he showed off following his victory.

    Leavitt hasn’t been the most dominant since bursting onto the UFC scene from Dana White’s Contender Series, but he’s had some great finishes. In addition to this one against Holobaugh, he’s also earned bonuses from his slam KO of Matt Wiman and his finish of Victor Martinez.

    This was Leavitt’s first fight after missing all of 2024, and he reminded fight fans just how exciting he can be to watch here.

    Miss – Ketlen Vieira’s Weight Issues, Macy Chiasson’s Performance

    Ketlen Vieira and Macy Chiasson was a fight I had my eye on solely based on their names alone in this card that didn’t have the greatest of star power. Unfortunately, their name values and their status as top-five bantamweight contenders couldn’t save a fight that ultimately proved to sound a lot better on paper.

    It was a one-sided slaughtering on the side of Vieira. After landing some powerful strikes early on, Vieira was dominant on the ground for most of the fight, overwhelming Chiasson with top pressure and strong positioning, limiting most of Chiasson’s offense. It wasn’t until the closing stages of the last round that Chiasson tried to blitz and overwhelm Vieira on the feet — and even then it wasn’t enough.

    On the Vieira side of the things, it was a strong performance. Unfortunately, part of the problem with this fight is that it took place at a weight class the UFC doesn’t do anything with anymore (not like they did much with it in the first place either) — women’s featherweight. The two were scheduled to face off at 135, but the fight was moved to 145 on the day of weigh-ins because of “weight management” issues on the side of Vieira.

    If this fight had taken place at its originally intended weight class, I think there would have been a lot more talk about her being in line to face the winner of next week’s Julianna Pena vs. Kayla Harrison title fight. There still can be, but the weight management issues will definitely bring that into question. This is especially after how May also saw weight management issues get involved in Jose Aldo’s retirement fight with Aiemann Zahabi.

    Meanwhile, for Chiasson, this was just a brutal outing. This was definitely a step back after a 2024 that saw her earn performance bonuses in finishes of Pannie Kianzad and former title challenger Mayra Bueno Silva. You just have to hope it was an off night, she dusts off and gets back to the planning room and can get back to her recent powerful self in her next outing.

    Hit – Dustin Jacoby Delivers Some Needed Violence

    When this card needed a wake-up call, Dustin Jacoby was the one to deliver it. He also had one of the only finishes on the night, pulling off a quick, powerful victory over Bruno Lopes.

    Jacoby rocked Lopes with a jab. Then he did more damage with an elbow. Then a couple of hooks started a wild flurry against Lopes, who was up against the fence, before Lopes crumbled to the mat for an easy first-round finish.

    After getting knocked out by Dominick Reyes last year, which brought about four losses in five fights, things looked grim for Jacoby. But back-to-back knockout victories now show just how fun it can be to watch the former GLORY Kickboxing star.

    Hopefully this is the start of him getting back to winning ways that he had when he came into the UFC in 2020.

    Hit – From Injury To Shining Performance For Ramiz Brahimaj

    If Jordan Leavitt had the great submission and Dustin Jacoby had the great KO, then Ramiz Brahimaj had the upset of the evening and the feel-good moment of it.

    Brahimaj pulled off a strong submission victory of his own, taking out Billy Ray Goff. He got Goff down and to his back quickly before Goff stood up and got the fight in a clinch, landing a strong elbow in the process. Brahimaj, however, showed off slick submission skills by going from a guillotine choke attempt to a ninja choke that put Goff to sleep — ending things before the referee could.

    Brahimaj was a major underdog going into the fight, and that just adds to the story of how a spinal injury could have ended his career just a couple of years ago.

    A feel good moment for Brahimaj, and it’s hopefully more positive momentum that he can ride.

    Miss – Erin Blanchfield And Maycee Barber Don’t Make The Main Event Walk

    The main event promo package on ESPN+ had just finished airing. The camera transitioned back to the UFC APEX. But no music played. At first I’m sitting there thinking “Well, typical UFC on ESPN and a production botch” — only to then see that the commentary team was confused by no fighters making the walk out just as I was.

    And when the camera transitioned back over to the UFC commentary team before a throw to a sudden commercial break, I just knew this fight wasn’t happening. And indeed it didn’t.

    Unfortunately, since COVID, we’ve seen instances of sudden cancelations of bouts during cards. Trevin Giles fainted moments before his scheduled bout with Kevin Holland. Chas Skelly was already in the Octagon when his February 2021 fight with Jamall Emmers was scrapped due to Emmers suffering back spasms. We’ve seen several instances in this five-year timespan where fighters are pulled on the day of the event due to illness or some sort of medical issue.

    But if we’re talking exclusively main event fights, we haven’t seen a thing like this happen since UFC 24 in March 2000, when Kevin Randleman slipped backstage and received a concussion, canceling a scheduled heavyweight title bout with Pedro Rizzo — ruining the whole “First Defense” tagline of that card.

    As of press time, we have no official word as to what happened other than a last-minute medical issue. Blanchfield claimed in an interview on the broadcast that Barber suffered a seizure but she wouldn’t entertain a re-scheduling with Barber due to Barber’s “unprofessionalism.”

    If it’s true Barber suffered a seizure for whatever reason, Blanchfield’s call of someone being “unprofessional” feels dirty. But simultaneously, you have to feel for her, being ready to go after all her work and preparation — only for the fight to be called off as she’s getting ready to make the walk. Fortunately, she did reportedly receive her show and win money.

    Also, it’s such a shame that Barber goes through this after battling a litany of health issues stemming from Epstein-Barr that included a nine-day hospitalization, with Barber’s health getting so bad to the point she felt she was going to die. And now, here we are. And knowing how brutal the MMA fanbase, let alone the whole industry, can be, this historic circumstance — combined with her weight miss and Blanchfield’s doubts Barber would make it to the cage — may end up being a bad PR time for her.

    The sudden main event cancelation was just the cherry on top of the gross sundae that was the May 31, 2025 UFC Fight Night event.

  • Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber UFC Vegas 107 Main Event Canceled Right Before Walkouts

    Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber UFC Vegas 107 Main Event Canceled Right Before Walkouts

    Just when you think you’ve seen it all in the sport of Mixed Martial Arts, something always can happen to leave you in shock. And UFC Vegas 107 had such an event.

    The scheduled main event bout between Erin Blanchfield and Maycee Barber was canceled just before the fighters were scheduled to walk out for the fight. ESPN had just played the main event promo package but neither fighter appeared for entrances.

    After a long commercial break, the UFC commentary team announced that Barber had suffered a medical issue and was pulled from the fight by the UFC’s medical staff at the last minute.

    Blanchfield claims that Barber suffered a seizure prior to walkouts.

    Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber Main Event Scrapped Right Before Walkouts At UFC Vegas 107

    This was to be Barber’s first fight since her victory over Katlyn Cerminara at UFC 299. Barber had battled various health issues over the past year, including a bout with Epstein-Barr that resulted in her being hospitalized for nine days.

    Barber had missed weight by half a pound the day before the event. Blanchfield had suggested earlier in the week that Barber may not make it to the fight — and said in a backstage interview immediately after the cancelation that she would, at the word of her coaches, not entertain any sort of re-scheduling with Barber.

    There has been one other occurrence where the UFC lost its main event during the card itself. UFC 24 was originally scheduled to be headlined by UFC heavyweight champion Kevin Randleman defending his title against Pedro Rizzo until Randleman slipped on the concrete floor backstage, hospitalized with a concussion.

    Blanchfield has won 10 of her last 11 bouts, with her sole loss in the span coming against recent title challenger Manon Fiorot. This would have been Blanchfield’s first fight since her win over Rose Namajunas in November.

    Barber was to have entered this fight on a six-fight win streak.

  • ‘Give Him A Top Five Opponent’ – Fans And Fighters React To Mateusz Gamrot Putting On Grappling Clinic Vs. L’udovit Klein At UFC Vegas 107

    ‘Give Him A Top Five Opponent’ – Fans And Fighters React To Mateusz Gamrot Putting On Grappling Clinic Vs. L’udovit Klein At UFC Vegas 107

    Mateusz Gamrot is claiming he’s still a top name at lightweight, making the statement of contender status with a win over L’udovit Klein in the co-main event of UFC Vegas 107.

    Gamrot set the tone early with relentless pressure, mixing striking with takedowns and control. Though Klein had a brief moment when he stunned Gamrot with a jab, Gamrot secured multiple takedowns, controlling from the back and hammering Klein with punches and knees.

    Gamrot continued to smother Klein in the second round, staying active from top position with strikes and stifling Klein’s offense. He used positional grappling effectively, even threatening an arm-triangle to maintain control. Klein came out more aggressive, trying to change the tide with kicks and combinations. While he had some success at range, Gamrot’s takedowns and top control continued, sealing him the round and fight. He ended strong in side control, landing ground-and-pound and securing a crucifix.

    Mateusz Gamrot Dominates In Decision Win Over L’udovit Klein In UFC Vegas 107 Co-Main Event

    https://twitter.com/ProchazkaSzn/status/1929016288623423610
    https://twitter.com/Jimbo_J_/status/1929015566867530058

    Gamrot rebounds here after falling short against Dan Hooker at UFC 305 last year.

    Klein sees a seven-fight unbeaten streak (6-0-1) snapped with the loss here tonight.

  • VIDEO: Ramiz Brahimaj Pulls Off First-Round Submission In Shocking Fashion

    VIDEO: Ramiz Brahimaj Pulls Off First-Round Submission In Shocking Fashion

    Ramiz Brahimaj didn’t let odds get in the way of a major injury a couple of years ago, and he didn’t let them get in the way of pulling off a huge victory over Billy Ray Goff during the main card of UFC Vegas 107.

    The fight started slow before Brahimaj secured an early takedown, quickly scrambling and getting to Goff’s back. Goff escaped and managed to land a clinch elbow during the round. Brahimaj went from the clinch into a guillotine choke attempt — before transitioning it to a ninja choke attempt. The choke became tight quickly, and he managed to choke out Goff for the victory.

    Ramiz Brahimaj Puts Billy Ray Goff’s Lights Out At UFC Vegas 107

    As of a few hours prior to UFC Vegas 107’s start ,Brahimaj was a +320 underdog heading into the bout, per DraftKings.

    Brahimaj is now 2-1 since returning to action from a devastating spinal injury that could have been a career ender. He is 4-3 overall since coming into the UFC from LFA in 2020.

    Goff has now lost back-to-back fights after a seven-fight win streak.

  • Third Annual Noche UFC Event Being Moved To San Antonio, Goes From PPV To Fight Night Card

    Third Annual Noche UFC Event Being Moved To San Antonio, Goes From PPV To Fight Night Card

    The third annual Noche UFC event to be held this September will be having a change of location from its original plans.

    Per an announcement on the UFC Vegas 107 broadcast, the event will now be taking place on September 13 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas — instead of its originally planned location of Guadalajara, Mexico.

    Furthermore, rather than a planned pay-per-view event with UFC 320, Noche UFC 3 will now be a Fight Night card — akin to the original.

    Noche UFC 3 Becomes Fight Night Card, Moves To San Antonio

    Rodrigo Del Campo Gonzalez had earlier reported several issues with the construction of Arena Guadalajara. In the latest update, all events scheduled for the arena up to September 4 had been canceled or postponed. This put the idea of Noche UFC 3 being held at the arena in doubt.

    Rumors had called for a potential move to Las Vegas, given the Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford bout targeted for that same weekend in the city.

    What the future is of a planned UFC 320 event is currently unknown.

    The first Noche UFC event was a Fight Night card held in 2023, featuring Alexa Grasso and Valentina Shevchenko battling to a draw in their second women’s flyweight title fight.

    The third Noche UFC event, UFC 306, was held at The Sphere in Las Vegas and featured Merab Dvalishvili capturing the UFC bantamweight title from Sean O’Malley in the main event and Shevchenko regaining the women’s flyweight title from Grasso in their trilogy co-main event.

  • VIDEO: Dustin Jacoby Obliterates Bruno Lopes In Destructive Display At UFC Vegas 107

    VIDEO: Dustin Jacoby Obliterates Bruno Lopes In Destructive Display At UFC Vegas 107

    In a card that hasn’t had the most impressive of performances, Dustin Jacoby offered probably the biggest highlight so far with a quick, scary finish of Bruno Lopes at UFC Vegas 107.

    After some leg kick trading to start things, Jacoby landed a jab that rocked Lopes. Jacoby then landed a small flurry that included a strong elbow to do more damage. Jacoby landed a couple of hooks before a flurry of activity on Lopes, who was being held up by the cage before slumping for Jacoby to get the KO win in under two minutes.

    Dustin Jacoby Fires Away En Route To KO Of Bruno Lopes At UFC Vegas 107

    Jacoby has now won back-to-back fights and has come out on top in three of her last five. He came into this fight off a late knockout of Vitor Petrino at UFC Tampa in December.

    Lopes, the former LFA light heavyweight champion and Dana White’s Contender Series alumnus, is now 1-1 in the Octagon. He made his UFC debut in January, scoring a decision over Magomed Gadzhiyasulov.

  • ‘Would Have Been More Impressive If Vieira Had Made Weight’ – Fans And Fighters React To Ketlen Vieira Putting On Dominant Display Over Macy Chiasson At UFC Vegas 107

    ‘Would Have Been More Impressive If Vieira Had Made Weight’ – Fans And Fighters React To Ketlen Vieira Putting On Dominant Display Over Macy Chiasson At UFC Vegas 107

    Ketlen Vieira’s UFC Vegas 107 performance was stained a bit by weight management issues, moving her scheduled bout with Macy Chiasson from bantamweight to featherweight. It was, however, still a one-sided victory she had during the main card against Macy Chiasson.

    Chiasson looked to stay on the outside and move around, finding early success with her boxing from distance. Vieira, however, displayed strong counterstriking, landing a number of power punches to the head and body. Vieira landed some damaging shots in close with about two minutes left in the round before Chiasson brought the action to a clinch battle against the fence.

    The action quickly went to the ground to start the second, and Chiasson’s size and strength was more on display there. Even when stuck in Chiasson’s guard, Vieira displayed dominant pressure, and Chiasson seemed to have little answer. Even as Chiasson tried to scramble, Vieira countered most of Chiasson’s moves and was on top for just about all of the frame.

    Chiasson tried to pressure Vieira with grappling to start the third, but Vieira got right back on top as the action went to the ground. Chiasson was able to scramble back to her feet with less than 90 seconds remaining, but Vieira, a judo expert, was able to counter Chiasson’s attempts to regain control. Chiasson re-scrambled and tried to attack with ferocity in the closing seconds, but it wasn’t enough.

    Vieira swept the judges’ scorecards to take the decision.

    Ketlen Vieira Scores One-Sided Decision Over Macy Chiasson At UFC Vegas 107

    https://twitter.com/snapxjitsu/status/1928995834412118220

    Vieira has now won four of her last six, rebounding from a loss to upcoming bantamweight title challenger Kayla Harrison at UFC 307.

    Chiasson is now 3-3 in her last six.

  • VIDEO: Jordan Leavitt Breaks Out The Worm After Putting Kurt Holobaugh To Sleep At UFC Vegas 107

    VIDEO: Jordan Leavitt Breaks Out The Worm After Putting Kurt Holobaugh To Sleep At UFC Vegas 107

    Jordan Leavitt continues to be someone to watch out for in the UFC’s lightweight division, as he made quick work of MMA veteran Kurt Holobaugh during the UFC Vegas 107 preliminary card.

    Leavitt wasted no time taking Holobaugh to the mat in this battle of ground experts. Leavitt established top control and bringing pressure right away. Holobaugh attempted to get up, but Leavitt was able to keep him down. When Holobaugh tried to escape again, Leavitt turned the scramble into a choke attempt, locking up a D’Arce. Holobaugh went out, giving Leavitt a submission win in less than two minutes.

    Jordan Leavitt Chokes Out Kurt Holobaugh In Just Over 90 Seconds At UFC Vegas 107

    Following his victory, Leavitt busted out a celebration — doing the worm at the end of his in-the-cage interview.

    Fortunately for Leavitt, he didn’t pull a Johnny Walker and get hurt during it.

    Leavitt is now 5-3 in the UFC and rebounds from a loss he suffered against Chase Hooper in November 2023. This was Leavitt’s first fight since that loss.

    Holobuagh is now just 2-3 in the UFC since returning with his win during The Ultimate Fighter season 31.

  • UFC Vegas 107 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber Card

    UFC Vegas 107 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Erin Blanchfield vs. Maycee Barber Card

    UFC Vegas 107 is almost upon us, and MMA News is here to keep you updated with the current odds for this weekend’s lineup.

    The upcoming event takes place Saturday, May 31, at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada. The main card begins at 9 PM ET/6 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6 PM ET/3 PM PT.

    A top-5 flyweight contenders battle will top off tonight’s action, as former title challenger Erin Blanchfield takes on Maycee Barber.

    Also making the walk on Saturday will include Mateusz Gamrot and L’udovit Klein (who battle in the lightweight co-main event), as well as Dustin Jacoby, Ketlen Vieira and Macy Chiasson.

    UFC Vegas 107: Blanchfield vs. Murphy Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC Vegas 107 (as of 1:30pm ET on 5/31), courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Erin Blanchfield (-238) vs. Maycee Barber (+195)
    • Mateusz Gamrot (-155) vs. Ľudovít Klein (+130)
      Ramiz Brahimaj (+320) vs. Billy Ray Goff (-410)
    • Dustin Jacoby (-192) vs. Bruno Lopes (+160)
    • Ketlen Vieira (+114) vs. Macy Chiasson (-135)
    • Zachary Reese (-198) vs. Duško Todorović (+164)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Jafel Filho (+102) vs. Allan Nascimento (-122)
    • Kurt Holobaugh (+200) vs. Jordan Leavitt (-245)
    • Bolaji Oki (-470) vs. Michael Aswell (+360)
    • Rayanne dos Santos (-205) vs. Alice Ardelean (+170)
  • ‘Embrace The Grind’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 1 Recap

    ‘Embrace The Grind’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 1 Recap

    Welcome, everyone, to the first edition of a weekly series here on MMANews called 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.

    This season’s coaches have both coached previous TUF seasons but will not be two current active fighters who will go on to face each other at the end of the season. Instead, we get two names who MMA fans are more than familiar with — two guys who butt heads every week on their own ESPN TV program — Good Guy, Bad Guy. Those two names, of course, are Daniel Cormier and Chael Sonnen.

    This season of TUF will focus on flyweights and welterweights, and it will feature 16 fighters from 10 different nations.

    This season’s participants include:

    • Flyweights:
    • Arshiyan Memon: A 7-0 fighter from India — the first Indian participant in TUF history.
    • Eduardo Henrique: A 13-2 fighter from Brazil who has fought for promotions including LFA and Jungle Fight — and is the former LFA flyweight champion.
    • Furkatbek Yokubov: A 14-4 fighter from Uzbekistan who is a kickboxing and wrestling specialist. He has competed in UAE Warriors, the LFA, and Belarusian Fighting Championship. He is a former BFC flyweight champion.
    • Idiris Alibi: A 10-0 fighter from Kazakhstan who, up until now, has fought exclusively in Naiza FC — and is their former flyweight champion.
    • Imanol Rodriguez: A 5-0 fighter from Mexico, who has competed for Combate Global, Budo Sento Championship, and Fury FC. All five of his wins have come via a finish, and not one of his fights has reached the third round.
    • Joseph Morales: A 12-2 fighter from the United States who has fought three times for the UFC between 2017 and 2018, defeating Roberto Sanchez but losing to Devieson Figueiredo and Eric Shelton. He’s 3-0 since his UFC release, including capturing the flyweight title in Urijah Faber’s A1 Combat promotion.
    • Roybert Echeverria: A 10-2 fighter from Venezuela who has fought for Titan FC, Xtreme Fighting Nation, and Anthony Pettis FC, having captured flyweight gold in APFC back in November. He fought on Dana White’s Contender Series in 2022, losing to Jafel Filho.
    • Tumelo Manyamala: A 6-1 fighter from South Africa who has scored finishes in all of his victories so far. All of his wins have come in the EFC Africa promotion, with his sole loss being a split decision in his lone bout for UAE Warriors.
    • Welterweights:
    • Alex Sanchez: A 15-3 fighter from Mexico who has fought for promotions including Lux Fight League, UWC, Combate Global, and Urijah Faber’s A1 Combat. He is a former tournament champion in Combate and a former lightweight champion in A1 Combat.
    • Andreeas Binder: A 10-2 fighter from Ireland known for his expertise in judo. Binder was recently the welterweight champion of Levels Fight League and has also fought for Cage Conflict and Clan Wars. He had been scheduled for a pair of bouts with the PFL in 2023 and 2024, but both fights fell out.
    • Daniil Donchenko: An 11-2 fighter from Ukraine who has primarily fought for Naiza FC, where he was recently a lightweight champion.
    • Diego Bianchini: A 9-1 fighter who is a product of the Fighting Nerds. Known as “The Brazilian Bad Boy,” six of his wins have come via submission, including a sub-two-minute submission of Bakhromjon Mashrapov at LFA 178 last year.
    • Jeff Creighton: “Jazzy” Jeff is an 11-2-1 fighter from the United States. Creighton is a noteworthy U.S. welterweight prospect who has fought for a number of noteworthy regional promotions, including Bellator, Urijah Faber’s A1 Combat, Fury FC, King of the Cage, and Cage Warriors. He has won welterweight gold in A1 Combat and in Melee Combat Championship.
    • Matt Dixon: An 11-1 fighter from the United States who has primarily fought in the Xtreme Fight Night promotion, having been a former welterweight champion there. Dixon fought on Dana White’s Contender Series in 2020, where he lost to Orion Cosce.
    • Richard Martins: A 9-1 fighter from Brazil who hasn’t lost since dropping his second professional fight. All but one of his wins have come via a finish (including seven wins via KO/TKO), and his last four fights have all come in the LFA.
    • Rodrigo Sezinando: An 8-1 fighter from Brazil who has scored finishes in all but one of his victories. He is a former Battlefield Fight League super lightweight champion and the former Samourai MMA welterweight champion.

    Now, let’s dive into this week’s season premiere episode!

    Recap of The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 – Episode 1

    In typical Dana White fashion, he promises the best season ever.

    After the TV/streaming audiences are given introductions to the two UFC Hall of Fame coaches, White notes that there will be previous TUF contestants who will be giving insights into this season’s contestants. This week’s guest is season one winner and former UFC light heavyweight champion Forrest Griffin.

    White tells the contestants to not be scared and to keep their heads on straight with the opportunity ahead of them.

    We now go into evaluations, with Sonnen working with fighters in the boxing ring and Cormier working with fighters on the wrestling mats.

    Sonnen and Cormier both note how they are looking for fighters’ attitudes and motivations, in addition to their speed, technique, power, and athleticism.

    Cormier emphasizes that he’s looking for good wrestling — with him even being brutally honest in saying he was disappointed by the flyweights’ lack of urgency in their wrestling. Eduardo Henrique, however, impresses Cormier with his striking in the boxing ring.

    Team Selection

    Griffin leads the Team Selection process. Cormier wins the coin toss and decides he wants to pick the first fighters. Flyweights will be picked first, followed by welterweights, then back to flyweights, and so on.

    The teams end up as follows:

    • Cormier Flyweights:
    • Eduardo Henrique
    • Idiris Alibi
    • Imanol Rodriguez
    • Tumelo Manyamala
    • Cormier Welterweights:
    • Rodrigo Sezinando
    • Daniil Donchenko
    • Jeff Creighton
    • Alex Sanchez
    • Sonnen Flyweights:
    • Joseph Morales
    • Furkatbek Yokubov
    • Roybert Echeverria
    • Arshiyan Memon
    • Sonnen Welterweights:
    • Diego Bianchini
    • Matt Dixon
    • Richard Martins
    • Andreeas Binder

    Joseph Morales was surprised by Henrique getting picked No. 1 overall over him, feeling that he is not only the better striker, but the better all-around product. Sonnen appeared to agree.

    In a humorous moment, as Cormier is trying to give a motivational speech to Sanchez and Binder, the final picks, noting that Brandon Moreno was a final pick on TUF and ended up a world champion, Sonnen “dozed off” to try and get Cormier to move things along.

    Griffin tells the fighters they are now part of the 20-year legacy of TUF and that they need to make their moments count.

    TUF House

    Of course, no TUF season is complete without the fighters running into the TUF House — their home for the duration of the competition.

    Memon, who is seen immediately washing his foot in a bathroom sink, discussed his pride in being the first TUF contestant from India. Binder, meanwhile, notes the cultural diversity that is present in the house.

    Sezinado proposes a friendly barbeque before the fighters all “smash each other.” Dixon and Morales note how Sezinado is perhaps the most energetic and “crazy” of all the TUF contestants so far. Bianchini, meanwhile, notes how he’s not here to make friends, especially in his weight class — just to whoop the competition.

    Team Cormier Training Session

    Cormier discusses with his team the importance of hard work and “embracing the grind” (ETG, as Cormier puts it), even when things get tough.

    “Make it the best part of your day,” Cormier said.

    Michael Chiesa, who is a part of Cormier’s coaching staff, remembers the opportunities TUF provided him and how it feels full circle to be back as a coach.

    Team Sonnen Training Session

    Sonnen notes that most TUF coaches miss the fact that coaches are vulnerable to overplanning (or underplanning) and overtraining and hurting their fighters in such a short time.

    “A coach is not going to be able to help an athlete very much, in the short period of time that we’re here,” Sonnen said. “But he can damn sure hurt him.”

    Sonnen also took pride in that his team has no weak links — noting that the competition is so fierce this year that it’s more than likely a No. 1 pick could fall.

    Fight Announcement

    Team Sonnen picks the first fight: flyweights Joseph Morales will battle Eduardo Henrique in a battle of No. 1 flyweight picks! Sonnen notes that Morales told Sonnen this is what he wanted, with Morales attributing the decision to his hard-headedness. Henrique appeared to not be surprised to be a target, given his status as a recent LFA flyweight champion.

    Henrique Fight Prep

    Cormier notes that Henrique isn’t much of a wrestler, but he’s a great striker. The focus of their training camp is going to be working on his wrestling.

    DC states that the key to victory will be for Henrique to keep distance and force Morales to exchange strikes with him.

    We then get a video package of Henrique’s highlights in the LFA.

    We get a bit of a look into Henrique’s life, too, noting how his mom went down a wrong path and trafficked drugs while working in a bar when Henrique was a baby. As a result, Henrique was raised by his grandparents.

    Morales Fight Prep

    Morales showed photos of his wife and two sons, who he misses while in the TUF House. Morales noted that if it wasn’t for the support of his wife, he probably wouldn’t be chasing the MMA dreams he has.

    Morales also noted his previous tenure with the UFC, noting he felt invulnerable until running into Deiveson Figueiredo and getting finished by him.

    “I’ve felt like I’ve improved a lot. I’m ready to get back into the UFC and fight the best guys,” Morales said.

    Morales told Sonnen he wanted to get into Henrique’s face and pressure him, trying to get Henrique to over-commit before taking him down. Sonnen emphasized Morales cannot settle for being on the bottom in grappling exchanges.

    Morales also noted it’s been about two years since his last fight and he feels an extra sense of motivation. Morales noted how Henrique’s weakness is his ground game, and he looks to catch and submit him or open him up with elbows.

    Colby Covington is seen working with Morales on his wrestling work, with Sonnen noting how fighters look to him when trying to improve the aspects of their game — especially with wrestling.

    The Fight: Eduardo Henrique vs. Joseph Morales

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

    Henrique weighs in at 125.5, but Morales weighs in at 126.5 — a half-pound overweight. Morales weighs in successfully at 126 with the box.

    Of particular note, Sezinado and Bianchini trade barbs during the weigh-ins, with Sezinado even flipping the Team Sonnen member off.

    Sonnen added that he didn’t appreciate Team Cormier chanting “You’re going to die” toward Morales in Brazilian, with Henrique also bringing a prop with him to the weigh-in and face-off. The two got into each other’s faces and had to be separated by the commission and Sonnen.

    Finally, it’s fight day and we’re ready to see the two throw down!

    Eduardo Henrique vs. Joseph Morales

    Round 1

    The two exchange right away. Morales appears to be trying to pressure as promised. Left hand from Morales. Henrique flashes a knee and a jab. Low kick from Henrique. Right hand from Morales. Henrique misses a jumping knee. Jab to the body by Henrique. One-two by Henrique. Combination from Henrique. Jab to the body by Morales. Both men land. Body shot and a kick from Henrique. Low kick from Henrique. Left hand catches Henrique. Henrique answers.

    Morales shoots in and scores a takedown. Morales gets to Henrique’s back quickly. Morales’s coaches tell him to hand fight. More calls for hand fighting from both corners now. Morales wraps an arm around Henrique’s neck, and he scores THE TAPOUT!

    2:25 into the first round, and the No. 1 overall pick of this TUF season goes down via submission! Joseph Morales is one step closer to coming back to the UFC!

    White attributed the victory to Morales’ previous UFC experience and called it “an impressive finish.”

    Winner: Joseph Morales (Team Sonnen) via first-round submission (rear-naked choke, 2:25)

    Conclusion

    Morales is emotional backstage following the win, noting how good it felt to shut Team Cormier up.

    “I feel that I proved I’m one of the top flyweights here,” Morales said. “The pressure is on me to win the show, but I thrive under the pressure.”

    Henrique noted he made mistakes in the fight, but “every champion makes mistakes.” His coach tells him to take the loss on the chin and learn from it — and to bounce back.

    For next week’s fight, the first at welterweight (which is also picked by Sonnen due to the coin toss and Cormier’s choice of picking the first fighters) Team Cormier’s Daniil Donchenko will take on Team Sonnen’s Richard Martins.

    Will Team Sonnen draw first blood in both weight classes to start the season? Or will Team Cormier bounce back in the first 170-pound matchup of the season?

    Find out next week!

    We get a brief montage previewing some of the drama and action that awaits in the rest of the season, as well as some future TUF guests.

    Thanks for joining me in the inaugural edition of The TUF Stuff!

  • “Micromanagy and Stubborn”: Cory Sandhagen Opens Up on Mistakes Before Umar Nurmagomedov Bout

    “Micromanagy and Stubborn”: Cory Sandhagen Opens Up on Mistakes Before Umar Nurmagomedov Bout

    In his most recent bout earlier this month, Cory Sandhagen put on a masterclass performance, pulling off a second-round stoppage of Deiveson Figueriedo in the main event of UFC Des Moines. It was a showing that left many people wondering how sooner it’ll be before we see Sandhagen challenging for the UFC bantamweight championship.

    Funny enough, it was a complete turnaround from when we saw Sandhagen in a title eliminator bout. Prior to facing Figueriedo, Sandhagen’s most recent bout had been a fight with Umar Nurmagomedov in the main event of UFC Abu Dhabi last August — with a shot at the 135-pound gold on the line.

    Against the former flyweight champion, Sandhagen got the better of Figueiredo on the feet and outperformed him in the grappling exchanges. None of that could be said in his fight with Nurmagomedov, with the Dagestani fighter completely wiping the floor with Sandhagen in a one-sided, dominating performance.

    In his recent appearance on the Overdogs Podcast with Mike Perry, Sandhagen said the scorecards told a different story than what the fight came down to. He, in particular, pointed out a mistake of choosing moments an all-around, 25-minute battle.

    “I definitely didn’t perform my best, but I made little tiny errors that would have made the fight winnable for me,” Sandhagen said. “I just got really hyper-focused on having big moments, and that’s just not what I do. I overthought that one a lot too because Umar had a unique style, and I’m the type of idiot to overthink stuff and overdo stuff. I’ll just make corrections and be ready for him next time.”

    Cory Sandhagen Says He Let His Coaches Coach In Lead Up To Fight vs. Deiveson Figueiredo

    Sandhagen added that part of the issue also stemmed from taking control of the training camp he had in the weeks leading up to fighting Nurmagomedov. Looking back, Sandhagen felt he overstepped boundaries and got in the way of his coaches trying to help him perfect his craft.

    Sandhagen said he made sure he took a step back this time around.

    “One major change I made from the last camp to this one was I let my coaches do their job,” Sandhagen said. “Before, I was really micromanagy. This camp, I was just like, ‘Hey guys, last camp I put way too much on my plate and that was my bad. This time, I’m going to just listen and be a good student.’ That took so much stress and junk off my mind. These guys are better than I am at a lot of things – they know more stuff. It’s my own stubbornness that sometimes gets in the way.”

    Sandhagen has now won four of his last five and awaits the winner of the Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2 title fight that headlines UFC 316 for a potential title shot.

  • 7 Hits and 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Gilbert Burns vs. Michael Morales

    7 Hits and 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Gilbert Burns vs. Michael Morales

    It was back to the UFC APEX on Saturday Night, as the UFC hosted another Fight Night card in its headquarter city of Las Vegas with UFC Vegas 106: Gilbert Burns vs. Michael Morales.

    Even in a card with a small audience like the UFC APEX always provides, all of the fighters, from the prelims to the main event, look to show off and put on a spectacular performance that can be their next ticket to a bigger opportunity. The result this time around was an absolutely fun card that saw strong performances from youth to veterans alike.

    The main event was an anticipated clash between a former welterweight title challenger in Burns and a rising welterweight star in Morales.

    Burns was once that rising star in the welterweight scene, but things have not been the same for him since losing his welterweight title match against Kamaru Usman at UFC 258. He entered this bout on a three-fight losing streak, having lost to former champion Belal Muhammad, new champion Jack Della Maddalena and another rising contender in Sean Brady.

    Morales, meanwhile, has been a name to watch out for since his arrival to the UFC from Dana White’s Contender Series a few years ago. Morales had won all five Octagon battles he had entering tonight. In 2022, Morales got off on the right foot with finishes of Trevin Giles and Adam Fugitt, and he followed that up with decision wins over Max Griffin and Jake Matthews. Most recently, Morales had scored a first-round finish of Neil Magny.

    The main card also featured a lightweight clash between Sodiq Yusuff and The Ultimate Fighter season 32 winner Mairon Santos, a middleweight battle between Dustin Stoltzfus and Nursulton Ruziboev, and a featherweight battle between Julian Erosa and Melquizael Costa.

    Who shined? What was bad? Let’s find out together with the hits and misses of UFC Vegas 106!

    Hit – Didn’t Watch The Prelims? Missed A Lot Of Exciting Finishes

    I heard all the talk entering the card. “It’s the APEX.” “There is nothing special about these prelims.” “This is a skippable show.” Isn’t it funny how there have been plenty of times where those phrases have been uttered and yet the prelims prove to be exciting? Heck, I think the UFC Vegas 106 prelims were better than the main card!

    Did the strawweight contender opener between Tecia Pennington and Luana Pinhiero not do you anything? Well then what could have done something is how all the other prelim bouts — six — each produced a solid finish. Hyun Sung Park scored a choke in his first fight in a year. Denise Gomes pulled off a brutal showing of violence. Luana Santos scored a finish in the closing seconds of round two. Yadier del Valle got a dominant finish in his Octagon debut. Jared Gordon with a blasting knockout. Finally, Gabriel Green went from being troubled to causing it with his second-round submission.

    I would hope we have learned our lesson by now about not judging a book (for main card or prelims) by its cover. Yes, 2025 hasn’t been the greatest year of MMA, but we’ve seen plenty of fun from the prelims before. They’re always worth keeping an eye on for one reason or another, and tonight showed that.

    Miss – It’s Still The Apex…

    …This is the one thing I can’t defend.

    I’m not going to spend too much time on this one because I know I’m preaching to the choir and the UFC isn’t going to listen. But, come on. We just had a solid streak of shows in Kansas City, Des Moines, and Montreal, showing just how important a live crowd is to these events. And now we find ourselves back in the low-audience UFC APEX, and we’ll be at the UFC APEX again for the UFC’s next card at the end of the month.

    I understand they do it for the sake of saving money, but imagine what that finish-filled prelims would have been like in front of a major live audience. Imagine what Gilbert Burns vs. Michael Morales would have been like in front of a true, notable arena.

    It’s never going to happen, but I really wish the UFC was on the road full time with these Fight Night events like the old days. The good news is after May, it looks like the next UFC APEX event (not counting The Ultimate Fighter shows) won’t be until August. Let’s appreciate what we get in the next two months then.

    Hit – Denise Gomes’ Destruction

    Denise Gomes may be a force to be reckoned with in the women’s strawweight division if she continues to perform the way that she did against Elise Reed.

    It wasn’t a contest from the minute the fight started. An early rocking right hand, an elbow that did damage on Reed’s face, top pressure on the ground, attempting an arm-triangle before the end of the first. It looked like a black belt who has been training their craft for their years doing battle with an inexperienced, new white belt. Another strong shot early in the second round, followed by ground-and-pound, put things away for good.

    Obviously there may be a little concern since Gomes started her Octagon run 2-2. But when you consider what she did against Yazmin Jauregui in one of those performances, combined with that she’s now won three straight and five of six (with her only loss in the span against Angela Hill), perhaps it’s time that Gomes’ next fight comes against someone in the top 15.

    Hit – Yadier del Valle’s Debut

    Yadier Del Valle’s nickname is “The Cuban Problem.” And if he performs in the UFC as well as he did in his Octagon debut at UFC Vegas 106, he may just become a problem for the featherweight division.

    Up against Connor Matthews, Del Valle brought the pressure right away with both leg kicks and combinations. And once he caught a kick from Matthews, it was done from there. Del Valle dumped Matthews to the ground and swarmed him with pressure before grabbing a hold of his back and scoring the tapout with a choke.

    Del Valle is 9-0 and had strong performances in promotions like Fury FC and Combate Global before his appearance on Dana White’s Contender Series last year. It will be interesting to see what the UFC throws at Del Valle next.

    Hit – Jared Gordon Brings The Power

    Here’s a feel-good showing. Veteran Jared Gordon has had his ups and downs the last few years in the Octagon. But going up against another veteran in Thiago Alves on this night, Gordon made the most of this opportunity by landing a devastating one-punch knockout.

    Gordon was strong on the ground, but Moises wasn’t easy, landing an elbow from the bottom that busted Gordon open. Moises would scramble back to the feet and exchange with Gordon. But once Gordon perfectly timed a right hand that landed on the button, the fight was done.

    Gordon is now unbeaten in three of his last four, and it’ll be interesting to see if the UFC books him gatekeeper style against a lower-ranked lightweight contender or another lightweight name on the rise. Gordon was also scheduled to fight earlier this year against Kauê Fernandes before a visa issue saw him replaced by Mashrabjon Ruziboev (and then Ruziboev fell ill) — would the UFC be interested in trying to run one of these pairings back?

    Hit – Melquizael Costa and Julian Erosa Produce A Banger

    Melquizael Costa and Julian Erosa opened the main card and broke the streak of consecutive finishes. But the pair made up for it by putting on a memorable back-and-forth, strike-filled clash that could have some rumblings of one of the most entertaining fights of 2025.

    Costa and Erosa had a war. The first round saw Costa showing off sharp strikes, while Erosa battled back with gritty clinch work and solid pressure. Costa rocked Erosa during the second round, but Erosa stayed in the fight and had some late flurries before the frame’s end. Both men cracked one another in the final round, with the two trading devastating shots, along with counters and takedowns, before Costa walked away with the 29-28 win on all three judges’ cards.

    Only one man got his hand raised, but, as cliché as it is to say, no one lost in this fight. I hope both men are given another opportunity to entertain and deliver in a big way in their next-booked bouts.

    Hit – Mairon Santos Continues To Look Better

    Mairon Santos was taking on a notable name in Sodiq Yusuff in just his third UFC bout. But credit given where it’s due, Santos looked great, and the fight — which ended in a decision win for him — showed just how far he’s come in his MMA career.

    Santos was able to mix hard shots with aggression and timing, taking control of the opening frame. Santos continued to find striking success over the next two rounds, clearly controlling the second round overall before a third round where he landed the more effective strikes again. Santos also nullified Yusuff’s grappling, stopping takedown attempts — and when Yusuff landed one with just over two minutes left in the fight, he managed to get up quickly.

    A winner of The Ultimate Fighter season 32, Santos is now 3-0 in the UFC and continues to look good. It’ll be interesting to see what tougher competition he gets next. And if he wins his next fight, and looks good doing so, maybe it’ll then be time to see him against some ranked competition to see how he fares.

    Miss – New Weight Class Does Nothing For Sodiq Yusuff

    When you move to a new weight class, the hope is that you look good while doing so — win or loss. But not only did Yusuff lose this fight, it wasn’t his best work either. In fact, two judges and plenty of online pundits felt Yusuff didn’t win a single round against Santos.

    This now marks three losses in a row for Yusuff. Granted, those other two losses were a comeback-losing performance against Edson Barboza that earned Fight of the Night honors and getting stopped by Diego Lopes, who recently challenged for the featherweight title. But ever since blowing that lead in the fight against Barboza, Yusuff just hasn’t looked the same.

    It’s not the worst of skids, but with him about to turn 32 years old tomorrow, May 19, he needs to make something happen in his next fight. Otherwise, perhaps Yusuff’s days as someone to watch out for, a viable contender at 145 (or 155 for that matter) may be done.

    Hit – Michael Morales May Be Next

    There was one common thought among fight journalists and fight fans alike after UFC Vegas 106 — Michael Morales is just 25 years old. Let me say that again — he is 25 (TWENTY-FIVE) years old. And look what Morales did against Gilbert Burns.

    After utilizing his footwork and jab during the opening round, Morales cracked Burns with an uppercut. Burns was able to get a takedown, but Morales stood right back, landed another crushing blow before another flurry that did Burns in.

    To quote commentary after the fight, no one has done to Burns what Michael Morales did. He doesn’t turn 26 for another month, and he is about to crack the top 10 of the welterweight division. It may even be at Burns’ No. 8 spot entering this fight, considering not only did he beat Burns, but Morales is better than the guys sandwiched between them — Colby Covington, Geoff Neal and Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson.

    Obviously there can be a little uncertainty right now with who is next. The division just had a shake-up with Jack Della Maddalena beating Belal Muhammad for the welterweight title, Islam Makhachev is about to jump up to 155 and challenge for that title and Kamaru Usman and Joaquin Buckley still have to face off in the main event of UFC Atlanta in June. But regardless, it’s time to capitalize on Morales’ age and momentum and give him a top-five contender in the main event of a Fight Night or co-main event of a pay-per-view next (or a featured bout if that PPV has two title fights).

    Miss – The End For Gilbert Burns?

    For fans of Gilbert “Durinho” Burns like myself, this one is going to hurt.

    Burns has been an entertaining and fan-favorite part of the welterweight division. There was once a time where people thought he was going to be the next UFC welterweight champion. In fact, when he challenged Kamaru Usman at UFC 258, he may have been just a few seconds away from doing so. But Usman survived and finished Burns — and since then, nothing has been the same.

    Burns has now lost four straight. The loss to Usman has started a rough stretch where he’s now lost six of his last nine fights. Now it’s one thing to pick apart the losses — from the names that he’s faced (Usman, Khamzat Chimaev, Muhammad, JDM, etc.) to circumstances (taking the UFC 288 fight with Muhammad on really short notice). But fact is fact — he’s on a bad losing skid. And the negative momentum has only been compounded with a loss to this rising name in Morales.

    https://twitter.com/TakeruCigarra/status/1923909700598317498

    It’s a worse streak than what Yusuff is on, and the worse part? Burns is about to turn 39 in July. You know what they say: Father Time is everyone’s worst enemy, especially for an athlete. This loss has solidified Burns as a gatekeeper at 170 — which isn’t the worst thing in the world, but it also eliminates him from serious title contention. He may have had his one chance and blown it.

    Burns has been helping other fighters in training camps. Burns has dabbled with podcasting. There’s a great life for him outside of actively fighting — and perhaps it’s time he considers the dreaded “r” word in this sport. It hurts to say as someone who loves watching Burns fight. But at this point, it might be what’s best.

    If you want to make the defense of the skid as I stated before, fine. But if Burns has another fight and loses his fifth straight, what’ll be there to say then?

  • ‘This Good At 25 Is Frightening’ – Fans & Fighters React As Michael Morales Runs Through Gilbert Burns In UFC Vegas 106 Headliner

    ‘This Good At 25 Is Frightening’ – Fans & Fighters React As Michael Morales Runs Through Gilbert Burns In UFC Vegas 106 Headliner

    Michael Morales took the opposition of former UFC welterweight title challenger Gilbert Burns and made the fight look like a walk in the park, needing just one round to finish Burns in the UFC Vegas 106 main event and move to 18-0.

    Morales looked to take control right away, moving toward the center, while Burns stayed patient on the outside. Burns started with leg kicks before trying to bring heat. But Morales was ready and utilized strong footwork and his jabs to keep Burns at bay.

    After some exchanging, Morales rocked Burns with an uppercut. Burns looked to respond with a takedown, and while he was successful, Morales was able to get up quickly. He then rocked Burns with a right hand and followed it up with a flurry.

    Burns attempted another takedown that was easily shaken off before another flurry dropped “Dorinho” and brought the action to a quick close.

    Michael Morales Makes It Look Easy Against Gilbert Burns In UFC Vegas 106 Main Event

    Morales has been on a strong run since making his UFC debut in 2022. Prior to tonight, his track record included finishes of Trevin Giles, Adam Fugitt and Neil Magny, as well as decisions over Max Griffin and Jake Matthews.

    Burns has now lost four straight and is 3-6 stretching back to his unsuccessful challenge of then-welterweight champ Kamaru Usman at UFC 258.

  • UFC Confirms Patchy Mix Signing, Will Debut At UFC 316 In Newark

    The UFC has confirmed that former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix has signed with the promotion, making the announcement prior to the main event of UFC Vegas 106 on May 17.

    The UFC added the confirmation that Mix will make his debut on short notice at UFC 316 in Newark on June 7, filling in for Marlon “Chito” Vera against Mario Bautista.

    Mix is 20-1 in professional MMA and was a part of the Bellator roster from 2019 until the promotion’s folding in 2024. His sole loss came in his first title fight, suffering a comeback loss at the hands of Juan Archuleta in a bantamweight title fight at Bellator 246.

    Patchy Mix Signs With UFC, Will Face Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    Mix, however, ran through Kyoji Horiguchi, Magomed Magomedov and Raufeon Stots to win the Bellator Bantamweight Grand Prix and the interim Bellator bantamweight title before defeating Sergio Pettis at Bellator 301 to become undisputed Bellator bantamweight champion.

    Mix defended the title in a controversial split decision win at the Bellator Champions Series held in Paris one year ago today. He then had a tumultuous public falling out with the PFL, who purchased Bellator at the end of 2023, before he and the promotion officially parted ways on May 13.

    Bautista has won seven straight and last fought at UFC 307, scoring a controversial decision win over Jose Aldo.

    UFC 316 will be headlined a pair of title fights. The main event will see Sean O’Malley challenge Merab Dvalishvili in a bantamweight title rematch from their Noche UFC 2 encounter. The co-main event features Julianna Pena defending the UFC women’s bantamweight title against former PFL champion Kayla Harrison.

  • ‘This Kid Really Is Special’ – Fans React To Mairon Santos Showing Improvements In Decision Win Over Sodiq Yusuff At UFC Vegas 106

    ‘This Kid Really Is Special’ – Fans React To Mairon Santos Showing Improvements In Decision Win Over Sodiq Yusuff At UFC Vegas 106

    Mairon Santos appears to be growing more as a fighter, and he impressed in his toughest battle yet, defeating Sodiq Yusuff at UFC Vegas 106.

    Santos’ strides were seen in the opening round, as after a little feeling out process, he was able to take control and landed the more effective strikes in a close round. Yusuff was explosive when he did attack, but Santos also stopped a Yusuff takedown attempt in the middle of the round.

    Santos took more notable control in the second, however, clearly landing the bigger strikes. The third round was a little more even with less significant strikes. Yusuff seemed to be in control of the pacing, but Santos was landing the better shots. Yusuff was able to score a takedown with just over two minutes to go in the fight, but Santos quickly scrambled and got back up to his feet almost right away.

    Two judges scored the fight 30-27, with the remaining 29-28, all for Santos.

    Mairon Santos Scores Decision Win Over Sodiq Yusuff At UFC Vegas 106

    https://twitter.com/Gwapogi25/status/1923903616433434923

    The fight was scheduled to just be a part of the main card before being bumped to co-main event status after Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig was canceled at the last minute.

    Santos is now 3-0 in the UFC, also scoring a split decision over Francis Marshall at UFC 313 and knocking out Kaan Ofli to win the featherweight portion of season 32 of The Ultimate Fighter.

    Yusuff has now lost three straight.

  • Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig Postponed Due To Last-Minute Medical Issue

    Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig Postponed Due To Last-Minute Medical Issue

    The UFC Vegas 106 co-main event between Rodolfo Bellato and Paul Craig has been scrapped from the card at the last minute due to a medical issue for Bellato.

    The UFC broadcast team announced the bout would not be happening during the card, following Nursulton Ruziboev’s win over Dustin Stoltzfus.

    The broadcast team said the fight will still happen — either at the UFC Fight Night event on May 31 or at UFC 316 on June 7.

    Rodolfo Bellato vs. Paul Craig Scrapped At Last Minute From UFC Vegas 106

    The main card bout between Sodiq Yusuff and Mairon Santos will now serve as the evening’s co-main event bout.

    Bellato is currently 1-0-1 in the UFC, finishing Ihor Potieria in his debut in December 2023 and battling Jimmy Crute to a draw at UFC 312.

    Craig has lost three straight and five of his last six.

  • ‘Cut Those Bonus Checks Now’ – Fans & Fighters React As Melquizael Costa Edges Out Julian Erosa In War At UFC Vegas 106

    ‘Cut Those Bonus Checks Now’ – Fans & Fighters React As Melquizael Costa Edges Out Julian Erosa In War At UFC Vegas 106

    The main card opener of UFC Vegas 106 may have snapped the five-finish streak the card was running on during the prelims, but it made up for it with a back-and-forth battle that saw Melquizael Costa score a decision over Julian Erosa.

    The fight was a whirlwind from the very beginning, with Costa’s kicks and strike precision were on display, including a head kick that could have finished things in the opening round. Erosa, however, managed to turn things around with clinch work and his own pressure.

    Costa rocked Erosa early in the second round with a one-two, but Erosa managed to survive the Brazilian’s storm. Erosa then returned fire with spinning attacks and a flurry to close the round strong, doing his own damage to Costa in the process.

    The two men laid everything down in the final round, with both men landing counters, while Costa looked to keep pressure. From backfists and elbows, to takedowns and a flying knee — nothing was off limits.

    Ultimately, Costa came away with the decision win, with 29-28 scores on all three judges’ cards in a fight that could have fallen either way.

    Melquizael Costa Beats Julian Erosa In Entertaining UFC Vegas 106 Main Card Opener

    Costa has now won four straight fights and is 5-2 in the Octagon since joining the UFC at the start of 2023.

    Erosa sees a three-fight win streak snapped with this loss. He took this fight on short notice, having just fought a month ago at UFC 314 — where he scored a first-round finish of Darren Elkins.

  • VIDEO: Jared Gordon Flattens Thiago Moises With Single Right-Hand Shot At UFC Vegas 106

    VIDEO: Jared Gordon Flattens Thiago Moises With Single Right-Hand Shot At UFC Vegas 106

    Jared Gordon’s power was on full display at UFC Vegas 106, putting away Thiago Moises with a jaw-dropping knockout in a solid performance during the event’s preliminary card.

    After catching a body kick, Gordon dropped Moises to the canvas and looked to dominate with ground-and-pound. Moises would not be deterred, however, landing an elbow from bottom that cut Gordon. Gordon, however, stayed strong and continued to rain down blows.

    Once Moises scrambled to his feet, the two exchanged until Gordon landed a beautifully feinted right hand that dropped Moises to the canvas. Gordon landed one follow-up shot before the ref waved off the fight, with Moises out of it.

    Jared Gordon Drops, KOs Thiago Moises At UFC Vegas 106

    Gordon has now won two of his last three fights. He’s just 3-3-1 since a win streak was snapped by Grant Dawson in 2022.

    Moises has now lost three of his last five and five of his last nine.

  • VIDEO: Yadier Del Valle Makes Statement With Strong Performance, Submission Win In Debut

    VIDEO: Yadier Del Valle Makes Statement With Strong Performance, Submission Win In Debut

    Yadier Del Valle pulled off a fascinating performance in his Octagon debut, making quick work of Connor Matthews during the preliminary card of UFC Vegas 106.

    Del Valle focused on leg kicks to make Matthews uncomfortable before adding in combinations, bringing forward pressure on to Matthews. Matthews tried a kick, but Del Valle caught it and brought Matthews to the ground, where he landed a few strong elbows.

    Matthews attempted a guillotine out of desperation, but Del Valle easily got out of it. Matthews would soon give up his back while trying to scramble, and Del Valle locked up a rear-naked choke for the first-round submission.

    Yadier Del Valle Submits Connor Matthews In UFC Debut At UFC Vegas 106

    Del Valle now improves to 9-0. This was his first fight since a decision victory over Antônio Monteiro on Dana White’s Contender Series last year.

    Matthews has now dropped three straight Octagon fights since his 2023 appearance on DWCS.

  • ‘This Woman Is A Menace’ – Fans React To Denise Gomes Bulldozing Finish At UFC Vegas 106

    ‘This Woman Is A Menace’ – Fans React To Denise Gomes Bulldozing Finish At UFC Vegas 106

    If there is one person in the women’s strawweight division to be on the watch for, it’s Denise Gomes. And that was emphasized with perhaps another one of the most dominant performances in the history of the division at UFC Vegas 106.

    Gomes needed just one round and 30 seconds to put away Elise Reed in a dominant, one-sided showing during the event’s preliminary card.

    Gomes lands a right hand almost right away, and despite Reed’s efforts to battle back, Gomes’ power is too much. Reed was rocked by another right hand, and a brutal elbow furthered that damage. On the ground, Reed tried to cling and hold the position, but Gomes’ pressure was too much, even threatening an arm-triangle before the end of the round.

    Sensing Reed was still hurt, Gomes landed a devastating right hand before some ground-and-pound brought the fight to a quick close — just 30 seconds into round two.

    Denise Gomes Obliterates Elise Reed At UFC Vegas 106

    This marked Gomes’ third win in a row and her fifth win in her last six. Her third finish now brings her into a tie for the second-most finishes in the history of the UFC’s women’s strawweight division.

    Reed has consistently had wins and losses, not able to chain more than one win or loss together, since her UFC debut in 2021.

  • VIDEO: Hyun Sung Park Finds Big Success In First Fight In Over A Year At UFC Vegas 106

    VIDEO: Hyun Sung Park Finds Big Success In First Fight In Over A Year At UFC Vegas 106

    Hyun Sung Park may have sent a message to the flyweight division by barely breaking a sweat in a quick outing against Carlos Hernandez during the UFC Vegas 106 prelims.

    Park took the lead early with leg kicks, trying to set the pace and control the cage. After some exchanging, Park landed a solid one-two that did damage before landing a pair of harsh knees and a slam.

    Park then managed to get to Hernandez’s back with ease, locking up the choke and scoring the first-round submission.

    Hyun Sung Park Scores Submission Of Carlos Hernandez In Less Than Three Minutes

    This was Park’s third UFC bout — and his first since December 2023. It was in 2023 where the Road to UFC alumnus scored finishes of Seung Guk Choi and Shannon Ross.

    Hernandez, a 2021 alumnus of Dana White’s Contender Series, has consistently traded wins and losses since joining the roster.

  • What’s Next After UFC 315? Full Confirmed UFC 316 Main Card For Newark On June 7

    What’s Next After UFC 315? Full Confirmed UFC 316 Main Card For Newark On June 7

    UFC 315 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 316 in Newark, New Jersey.

    The promotion was in Montreal last week, where the Bell Centre played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its fifth numbered event of the year. Of note were headline wins for Jack Della Maddalena and Valentina Shevchenko, as well as important victories for Aiemann Zahabi, Natália Silva and Benoît Saint Denis.

    While the aftermath of the May 10 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the welterweight title picture to the bantamweight championship conversation.

    TWEET

    At UFC 316, set for the Prudential Center on June 7, Merab Dvalishvili will defend the UFC bantamweight championship against the very man he took the belt from, “Sugar” Sean O’Malley. After Dvalishvili won a decision to claim the gold when these two first met at Noche UFC 2 in September, he will look to show the win was not a mistake. O’Malley, who hasn’t fought since the loss, will be eyeing revenge and hoping to reclaim the gold.

    Stakes will also be high in the co-headliner, as two-time women’s bantamweight champion Julianna Peña looks to make her first defense since winning it back at the expense of Raquel Pennington in 2024. She will be doing battle with Kayla Harrison, who will be looking to claim the gold and fulfill the hype set for her after coming over to the UFC from the PFL in January 2024.

    Gastelum, Vera, Luque Set The Stage For Title Headliners At UFC 315

    Before Dvalishvili and Peña make the walk to put their championships on the line, a number of notable names will take to the Octagon looking to make the most of their position on the major UFC 316 card.

    That includes former interim middleweight title challenger Kelvin Gastelum. Weeks before he and Israel Adesanya enter the UFC Hall of Fame for their memorable UFC 236 clash, Gastelum will face the up-and-coming Joe Pyfer. Gastelum will look to make it two wins in a row and three wins in his last four, while Pyfer will look to continue his rising momentum in his first fight since knocking out Marc-André Barriault at UFC 303.

    Prior to that, another former title challenger will be in action, as Marlon “Chito” Vera is set for action against another bantamweight contender, Mario Bautista. Vera will be looking to get back to winning ways, having lost three of his last four. Last year, Vera came up short against former rival O’Malley in a 135-pound title fight and dropped a decision to Deiveson Figueiredo. Bautista, meanwhile, has won seven straight and will be fighting for the first time since his controversial UFC 307 win over Jose Aldo.

    The main card is scheduled to open with a pair of exciting welterweights in Vicente Luque and Kevin Holland doing battle. Luque has won two of three, having most recently submitted Themba Gorimbo at UFC 310 in December. Holland is 2-2 in his last four, scoring a unanimous decision win over Gunnar Nelson at UFC London just a couple of months ago.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of Johnny Walker and Bruno Silva, who are slated to feature on the prelims.

    See below for the UFC 316 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

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

    Preliminary Card (bout order TBA):

    • Flyweight: Bruno Silva vs. Joshua Van
    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane Da Silva vs. Wang Cong
    • Light Heavyweight: Johnny Walker vs. Azamat Murzakanov
    • Heayvweight: Serghei Spivac vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih vs. Yoo Joo-sang
    • Welterweight: Khaos Williams vs. Uros Medic
  • 7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    For the first time in a decade, the UFC arrived to Montreal, looking to bring the Bell Centre a night of memorable action with two title fights and some rising stars to watch out for.

    It was the UFC’s first visit to the biggest city in the Canadian province of Quebec since UFC 186 in 2015 — a card that was headlined by Demetrious Johnson retaining the UFC flyweight title against Kyoji Horiguchui.

    Though Canadian talent was featured during the course of the evening, the main event’s focus was on the welterweight championship clash between Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena.

    Muhammad had entered UFC 315 on an unbeaten streak that stretched back to 2019. He had risen his way up the ranks and all the way up to the UFC championship, taking out names such as Demian Maia, Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, Sean Brady and Gilbert Burns. He captured the gold with a decision win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304.

    Standing across the cage from him was Jack Della Maddalena — who was given this opportunity a couple of months ago when Shavkat Rakhmonov was still unable to make the walk due to injury. JDM hadn’t lost since dropping his first two bouts as a pro and was a perfect 7-0 in the UFC. It was also JDM’s first fight since defeating Burns at UFC 299 last year.

    Gold was also on the line in the co-main event as Valentina Shevchenko looked to defend the UFC women’s flyweight championship against Manon Fiorot.

    This was Shevchenko’s first fight not against Alexa Grasso since recapturing the 125-pound title in their trilogy fight back in September. Outside of the 20 months or so that Grasso was wearing the gold, Shevchenko had been dominating the division since winning the title at UFC 231 in December 2018. Most, if not all, challengers that came up against her were completely outclassed.

    Like her title challenger counterpart on the evening, Fiorot hadn’t lost a fight since her own professional MMA debut. Fiorot had quickly made impressions since entering the UFC, taking out notable names in the division that included Mayra Bueno Silva, Jennifer Maia, Katlyn Cerminara, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield.

    Who delivered in Canada? Who didn’t? Let’s go into it together with the hits and misses of UFC 315!

    Hit – Hometown Hero Barriault

    I had been in debate about whether or not to include this, given Bruno Silva being stretchered out at the end of this fight. But with Silva seemingly okay in the UFC’s updates, and “bonuses” misses I need to give, I’ve decided to give this a hit.

    Marc-André Barriault had one of the earliest strong performances on the night, finishing Silva during the early prelims. After both men landed big early and Silva momentarily dumped Barriault to the mat, Barriault put Silva away with some vicious elbows in the clinch. They didn’t just do big damage, but one of them dropped Silva out cold.

    It was an incredible and much-needed performance for Barriault. Coming into this fight off three straight losses, Barriault may have been facing the chopping block with a loss here. Instead, he gets to have a major knockout and memorable performance in front of a crowd in his home country.

    Miss – Whatever Those Judges’ Scorecards Were

    To quote commentary after Melvin Manhoef vs. Rafael Carvalho at Bellator 155, “The only thing more disappointing than that fight, was that horrendous decision.” Not only was Mondestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba a letdown, but the nature of the bout’s decision left MMA fans either scratching their heads or filled with rage.

    Though it wasn’t his most exciting performance, Cutelaba appeared to do enough over three rounds. He applied early pressured, delivered damaging calf kicks and had strong clinch work. Though Bukauskas had his moments — especially in the final round where he stuffed takedowns and landed counters — his overall output was inconsistent. Despite Cutelaba’s early work, the judges were split in baffling fashion.

    Even if you don’t consider this fight a robbery, the nature of the scorecards being all over the place is what is confusing. How do we get to a point where there is a 30-27 scorecard for one fighter and a 30-27 for the other? How the heck did Pasquale Procopio see all three rounds for Bukauskas anyway? There are more questions than answers, and we’re never going to get any (I have problems with two judges giving Belal Muhammad round one in his fight against Jack Della Maddalena, too, but I digress…)

    Once again, coming out of an MMA card, we’re talking about bad judging. How is it 2025 and we’re still on this? It’s tiring, and if we’re not going to get the Global/PRIDE scoring system into the Unified Rules of MMA, then why can’t we at least hear from judges after controversial scorecards like these? Sadly, that’ll never happen.

    Hit – Jasmine Jasudavicius On The Rise

    I’ve been a fan of Jasmine Jasudavicius for a little while now, and it’s clear that she may be a future star in the flyweight division after the performance she put on in the win over former strawweight champion Jessica Andrade.

    Using her physical advantages, Jasudavicius overwhelmed Andrade on the feet before taking her down with ease. She then swiftly transitioned into a rear-naked choke for the submission win.

    The performance was as emphatic as it was efficient, pushing Jasudavicius firmly into title contention. Will she be next in line for a shot at the title? No. But this fight has shown she’s ready for top competition. And it will be interesting to see what Jasudavicius can do against another notable contender in the division right now — be it former champ Alexa Grasso, Erin Blanchfield, Maycee Barber or Rose Namajunas.

    Hit – Is Natalia Silva Ready For A Title Shot?

    Jasmine Jasudavicius may be still another couple of fights away from a title shot. Natalia Silva, on the other hand, may be next in line after her strong win over former champion Alexa Grasso.

    Silva utilized her speed and sharp strikes to control all three rounds against the former champion. Silva repeatedly found success with leg kicks, quick combinations and slick footwork, while Grasso struggled to find openings and momentum.

    Silva has now scored victories over two former UFC champions in Jessica Andrade and Grasso. And the kind of performance she put on against the very woman who interrupted Valentina Shevchenko’s dominance at 125 might be enough to make her next in line for the gold. If not, a title eliminator against another top-5 ranked performer isn’t out of the question — and a win there would make it undeniable.

    Hit – A Wild Third Round Between Jose Aldo And Aiemann Zahabi

    Jose Aldo’s MMA career might not have ended with a win or a tribute video package. But it did end with an exciting bout against Aiemann Zahabi that included a final round that could be up for Round of the Year nominations in any MMA End of Year awards.

    Aldo’s forward pressure and combinations had brought him an early edge in the fight, but a strong performance in the second round from Zahabi made the fight close. The third round, however, saw wild momentum swings. Aldo dropped Zahabi early but couldn’t find the finish. A fatigued Aldo when saw Zahabi capitalize, unloading punches, elbows, and ground-and-pound as he looked for a finish of his own. In a fight that saw so close, Zahabi’s late momentum in the final two rounds earned him the nod in a fight that could have been scored either way.

    Though Zahabi is 37, this win continues a string of success he has been on for the last five years now. People will have their opinions on how he’d perform against the best contenders in a stacked bantamweight division, but it can’t be denied that he’s at least earned the opportunity to fight a top-10 contender at 135 now.

    Hit – A Tribute To A Legendary Career

    I could focus on Aldo’s weight issues entering this week. I could focus on his gas tank emptying out during the flurry in the third round. But I’m not going to do any of that.

    I’m instead going to take the time and pay my respects to one of the greatest careers this sport has seen. Jose Aldo is one of the reasons we talk about the lighter weight classes in the modern day and age of MMA. During the times when the UFC wasn’t hosting fights below 155 pounds, people like Jose Aldo were making a killing and showing their talents. Aldo dominated the featherweight scene in the WEC, and that continued when he became the inaugural UFC featherweight champion, pulling off victory after victory before competing against Conor McGregor at UFC 194 — one of the industry’s most memorable and highly publicized title fights.

    From Cub Swanson to Urijah Faber, from Chad Mendes to “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung-Jung, from Frankie Edgar to Max Holloway, Jose Aldo has been in the cage with some of the greatest to ever be in this sport. And not only did he dominate in his prime, but Aldo even showed he could still go as he nears 39 years of age.

    A happy retirement to the legend and UFC Hall of Famer! A toast to his memorable career!

    Hit – One Step Closer To The Next Women’s Superfight?

    There were plenty of questions about Valentina Shevchenko heading into this fight. In spite of winning back the women’s flyweight title in September, the interruption to her reign, combined with Manon Fiorot’s size and winning streak, led to Shevchenko being pegged as the underdog heading into this fight despite being defending champ.

    But Shevchenko proved how oddsmakers sometimes just don’t get it.

    Shevchenko started strong with sharp striking and a takedown in the first round, but Fiorot took control in the middle rounds with clinch control and increased aggression. Shevchenko tried to take momentum back in the fourth with powerful body kicks, a takedown, and a knockdown in the closing seconds. The fifth round remained tight, but Shevchenko’s consistency and impactful moments throughout earned her the unanimous decision on all three scorecards.

    So, what’s next for Shevchenko? There are still a couple of names in contention (like the aforementioned Silva and Jasudavicius). But, of course, the fight plenty of people want to see is a superfight between Shevchenko and women’s strawweight champion Weili Zhang. Zhang will probably still have to deal with Virna Jandiroba, then depending on if the UFC matchmakers want Silva as the next flyweight challenger or not, a Zhang win there could mean there can’t be another fight but it.

    Hit – JDM Turns Opportunity Into Gold

    Jack Della Maddalena would have gotten the opportunity to be a champion tonight. He was supposed to be fighting in the main event of UFC London a couple of months ago, taking on Leon Edwards. But with Shavkat Rakhmonov still on the sidelines, JDM was granted the chance to challenge Belal Muhammad. Now, after 25 minutes in the Octagon, JDM has managed to turn a sudden chance into a jackpot, walking out of UFC 315 the new UFC welterweight champion.

    JDM largely dictated the pace with technical striking. Muhammad held his own early and even managed to secure some positional control late, including a takedown and brief back control in round four. JDM’s striking volume and accuracy, as well as his ability to stuff takedowns, however, kept him in control for most of the fight. Despite Muhammad’s best efforts in the fifth, including a moment where he appeared to wobble his challenger in the fifth and landed ground control, JDM consistently rebounded and reasserted his rhythm, likely sealing a close but clear decision win and the championship.

    You have to feel good for someone like JDM completing his rise toward the gold. This opens up a lot of potential options for what could be next at 170, and here’s hoping that this injects some excitement in the division.

    On that note of what could be next, however…

    Miss – No Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria?

    A longstanding belief heading into this past weekend’s card was that a JDM win would result in Islam Makhachev moving up to 170 to challenge him for the UFC welterweight championship. That very well may still be the case even though there’s no official announcement yet.

    But it those are the plans, then unfortunately JDM’s victory brings us a monkey’s paw scenario. As it would mean a lightweight title fight between Islam Makhachev and Ilia Topuria would be off.

    Let me state this for the record: I was not a fan of Topuria’s decision to vacate the featherweight championship. Though he won the belt and retained it once against two of the greats in, respectively, Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway (the former of whom has now regained the title), there were still fights to be had for Topuria at 145. He didn’t clear the division; Diego Lopes and Movsar Evloev were chomping at the bit for title opportunities. Topuria’s reign was supposed to present us with fresh ideas for the division.

    That said, if we don’t get to see Topuria vs. Makhachev, it will be a disappoint. These two are without question two of the best athletes in the sport. And in a time when we say MMA is in a recession, in a time when Jon Jones seems to not want to unify the heavyweight title with Tom Aspinall, in a time in which the sport’s biggest star ever in Conor McGregor appears to be out of the picture for good now (for better or worse [maybe and instead of or]), and when one of the UFC’s other pound-for-pound names in Alex Pereira appears to be having negotiation issues with the promotion, a major fight like Topuria vs. Makhachev is a welcome sight.

    Topuria vs. Oliveira and JDM vs. Makhachev are solid fights, but it will be a case of “what could have been” if this is the case. And if Topuria vs. Makhachev does ever end up getting booked, we’d hope it’s not a case of “[insert timeframe here] too late.”

    But on that note…

    Miss – STILL No UFC 317 Main Event?

    UFC CEO Dana White promised us an answer to the questions regarding a UFC 317 main event (including the situations seen above) following UFC 315. But lo and behold, UFC 315 has come and gone, and we still don’t have an answer.

    White didn’t even appear at the press conference. Instead, Dave Shaw, the UFC’s Senior Vice President of International Operations, was there and promised an answer would be delivered in the coming week.

    To which my response is, it better.

    From the time of this piece’s publication, we are 47 days out from UFC 317, which is this year’s International Fight Week card. It’s had it’s fair share of shake-ups to main events in its history, but it’s always an event UFC puts a lot of stock into.

    And with just under seven weeks to go, an event that has all these attached events to it — a Hall of Fame induction ceremony, fan expo, etc. — has no announced main event. Even UFC 318 to be held the following month has a main event announced.

    UFC 315 was supposed to give us answers. Right now we’re still left with questions, and if we don’t get answers in a few days time, the UFC needs to be given even more flack.

  • ‘If The Man Don’t Want It Let’s Move On’ – Magomed Ankalaev Claims He Was Offered Alex Pereira Rematch For UFC 317

    ‘If The Man Don’t Want It Let’s Move On’ – Magomed Ankalaev Claims He Was Offered Alex Pereira Rematch For UFC 317

    One day removed from UFC 315, in spite of promises made in the days leading up to the event, there is still no announced main event for UFC 317 on June 28 in Las Vegas — as part of the UFC’s annual International Fight Week.

    The expectation had been (and still is) that Ilia Topuria would be involved in the main event for a lightweight title fight — either against Islam Makhachev or Charles Oliveira.

    But on X (formerly Twitter) on May 11, one champion spoke up about supposedly receiving an opportunity to headline the card — UFC light heavyweight champion Magomed Ankalaev.

    Ankalaev’s next fight is expected to be a rematch with former champion Alex Pereira, and Ankalaev claims that such a rematch was offered to him for one of the UFC’s biggest annual events. Ankalaev defeated Pereira to win the UFC’s 205-pound title at UFC 313 in March.

    Ankalaev says he is still up for competing at the event — even if he suggests Pereira might not be.

    Magomed Ankalaev Suggests He’s Ready, Was Offered To Fight At UFC 317

    This comes just a couple of days after Pereira’s own account had a post that claimed he was being mistreated by the promotion — only for Pereira to make another post hours later claiming his account was hacked.

    Daniel Cormier himself, for what it’s worth, claims Pereira is lying and saying the post was the result of negotiations going awry.

    Dana White, UFC’s CEO, seemed to confirm earlier this week that the plan for UFC 317’s headline bout would have been Topuria vs. Makachev (with a win for Belal Muhammad at UFC 315) or Topuria vs. Oliveira (with a win by Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315).

    JDM won the welterweight title this weekend, with people subsequently assuming that the result would be Makhachev moving up to welterweight and Topuria and Oliveira fighting for a vacant title next month.

    But White did not show up to the UFC 315 post-fight press conference, and UFC executive David Shaw claims the main event should be announced within the coming days.

    What might not be helping this would-have-been-simple layout — Makhachev insisting he’s moving up to challenge JDM and be a double champion, not desiring to vacate the lightweight title.

  • ‘It’s Time To Move Forward’ – Jose Aldo Reflects On Decision To Retire Following Loss At UFC 315

    ‘It’s Time To Move Forward’ – Jose Aldo Reflects On Decision To Retire Following Loss At UFC 315

    After coming out of retirement almost exactly one year ago, UFC Hall of Famer Jose Aldo hung up the gloves again at UFC 315, following a loss in a highly competitive battle with Aiemann Zahabi.

    During his Octagon interview, Aldo reflected on how he didn’t have the heart for competing in MMA anymore.

    He reiterated these points on social media on May 11, while simultaneously desiring more time to be with his family and giving thanks to the UFC and Dana White.

    “Over the past few years, I rekindled the dream of becoming a champion once again. I trained as I always did, gave more than I ever had. But while cutting weight, something inside me said: “You don’t need to do this anymore.” And I listened.

    “It’s time to move forward. To live for my wife, for my kids. To celebrate the story I wrote with every war, every belt earned through blood and faith.”

    Jose Aldo Says He’s Listening To Inner Self In Choosing To Retire

    Aldo and Zahabi were originally scheduled to compete in a bantamweight bout. Aldo, however, reportedly had difficulties in making the weight, and the decision was made to change the fight to a featherweight one on the day of UFC 315 weigh-ins.

    Aldo seemed to get the better of Zahabi’s slow start early on, working his combinations on the rising contender. But Zahabi picked up momentum toward the end of the round, and the second frame was a back-and-forth, 50-50 battle.

    Aldo appeared to stun Zahabi during the third round and rushed for the finish. Aldo, however, seemed to gas out, resulting in Zahabi taking over and going on to win the fight via a controversial unanimous decision.

    Aldo came out of retirement last year at UFC 304, defeating Jonathan Martinez. Aldo then dropped another controversial decision, this time against Mario Bautsita, at UFC 307.

    Aldo, the longtime former UFC and WEC featherweight champion, had originally retired in September 2022, the same day his son was born and one month after dropping a decision to current bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 278.