Author: Thomas Albano

  • ‘We Just Lost Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria’ – Islam Makhachev, Other Fighters & Fans React To Jack Della Maddalena Capturing UFC Welterweight Championship At UFC 315

    ‘We Just Lost Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria’ – Islam Makhachev, Other Fighters & Fans React To Jack Della Maddalena Capturing UFC Welterweight Championship At UFC 315

    At the end of 2024, the expectation was Shavkat Rakhmonov would be the first challenger for UFC welterweight champion Belal Muhammad. But injury to Rakhmonov led to opportunity for Jack Della Maddalena, who was thrusted from planned Fight Night London main event to a title shot.

    And JDM has made the most of his sudden opportunity, defeating Muhammad in a major upset to become the new UFC welterweight champion in the main event of UFC 315 in Montreal.

    The first round featured plenty of striking as the two felt each other out. Della Maddalena was getting the better of the exchanges and even shoved off an attempt by Muhammad to pin him against the fence. Muhammad was clearly holding his own in the striking department, however. This continued into the second round; JDM continued to dictate the pace, with Muhammad attempting to go strike-for-strike with him. Even when Muhammad attempted to get the fight to the ground, Della Maddalena was able to prevent it.

    By round three, Della Maddalena was in a solid flow, connecting at will on the defending champion, especially with his straight shots. Muhammad was answering and going toe-to-toe, but JDM seemed to remain in control. Muhammad looked to pick up the pace in round four, increasing the volume in his striking. JDM prevented another takedown, but Muhammad was able to get to his back. Muhammad, who appeared to be landing the stronger strikes in the round, pressed the action late with JDM against the fence.

    JDM connected on a few solid straights early in the fifth round, busting open Muhammad. But Muhammad wobbled JDM with a straight of his own before scoring a takedown. JDM was able to work his way back up with about two minutes left. He started to connect more on Muhammad, and he appeared hurt. JDM went into a clinch, however, giving Muhammad another opportunity. Muhammad rolled through on a takedown attempt and got on top. Despite some difficulty, JDM was able to get back to his feet.

    Jack Della Maddalena Upsets Belal Muhammad For UFC Welterweight Title At UFC 315

    JDM originally came into the UFC through Dana White’s Contender Series in 2021, and he’s now 8-0 and a world champion in the Octagon. Della Maddalena, who hasn’t lost since dropping his first two professional MMA fights, fought for the first time tonight since defeating Gilbert Burns in March 2024.

    This loss snaps an 11-fight win streak Muhammad had been on since 2019. It was his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship since defeating Leon Edwards at UFC 304 back in July.

    The expectation now is that Islam Makhachev will give up the UFC lightweight championship to challenge JDM for the 170-pound title in the future.

  • ‘Weili Vs Valentina Next’ – Fighters And Fans React To Valentina Shevchenko Winning Narrow Decision Against Manon Fiorot At UFC 315

    ‘Weili Vs Valentina Next’ – Fighters And Fans React To Valentina Shevchenko Winning Narrow Decision Against Manon Fiorot At UFC 315

    Coming into this fight as the underdog, Valentina Shevchenko had one of the toughest and closest fights of her career. But she ultimately came out on top against Manon Fiorot in the co-main event of UFC 315 to retain the UFC women’s flyweight championship.

    Shevchenko got off to a strong start in the opening frame, being tactical with her striking and connecting solidly with her right hook early, taking advantage of Fiorot trying to be aggressive early. One of those shots connected right on Fiorot’s nose, busting her up. Shevchenko added a takedown before the end of the round.

    Fiorot came out for a better second round. Despite some early struggle, she managed to land a takedown on Shevchenko and controlled the positioning and pace. Shevchenko, however, appeared to still be landing the more effective striking. The third round proved to be just as close, with Fiorot controlling the action in the clinch, landing some key knees and finding her power to land on Shevchenko.

    Shevchenko, of course, would not be deterred. She picked her striking game back up, connecting powerful strikes and landing some notable body kicks. Shevchenko would then cement the round with a takedown and dropping the challenger with a hook in the closing seconds of the fourth.

    After yet another close the fifth round, the fight went to the judges’ hands, with all three judges giving three rounds to Shevchenko, allowing her to retain the title.

    Valentina Shevchenko Edges Out Manon Fiorot, Retains Flyweight Title

    https://twitter.com/ProchazkaSzn/status/1921424641349877961
    https://twitter.com/Geralt31065966/status/1921422919617458425

    This was the first title fight for Shevchenko since re-capturing the UFC women’s flyweight title in the trilogy fight with Alexa Grasso back in September. Shevchenko originally won the title at UFC 231 in December 2018, defending the title seven consecutive times before her upset loss to Grasso at UFC 285.

    This was Fiorot’s first loss since dropping her professional MMA debut back in 2018. Fiorot had won 12 straight and was 7-0 in the UFC, which included wins against Jennifer Maia, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield.

  • ‘Absolute Cinema’ – Fans And Fighters Applaud Retiring Jose Aldo After Decision Loss In Entertaining War With Aiemann Zahabi At UFC 315

    ‘Absolute Cinema’ – Fans And Fighters Applaud Retiring Jose Aldo After Decision Loss In Entertaining War With Aiemann Zahabi At UFC 315

    Jose Aldo’s UFC comeback ends at three fights, but he gets to go out after an entertaining battle with Aiemann Zahabi — albeit one he came up short in controversially — in a featured contest at UFC 315.

    Zahabi was slow to come out of the gate, and Aldo took advantage of that. Aldo worked combinations and brought about the forward pressure, clearly out-pacing, and in some cases overwhelming, Zahabi. Zahabi did have a strong rush at the end of the first round, and he looked to bring that momentum into the second round. The result was a better round, but nothing dominant from either man. The second saw both men have their moments in terms of striking, a back-and-forth battle that could have fallen either way.

    The momentum took major swings in the third round. Aldo connected with a right hand and a knee that dropped Zahabi. Aldo swarmed on a retreating Zahabi, looking to get a finish. Zahabi survived, however, and it appeared that Aldo had gassed himself out. Zahabi stringed punches together, landing a series of shots on the MMA legend. Aldo went for a takedown but got nothing but Zahabi going on top and laying ground-and-pound into him, including some elbows in the fight’s final minute. The elbows busted Aldo open in the final minute of the fight. Zahabi slammed Aldo a couple of times in the closing seconds, but the horn would sound.

    Zahabi won the second and third rounds on all three judges’ scorecards, giving him the unanimous decision nod.

    Jose Aldo Retires Following Loss To Aiemann Zahabi At UFC 315

    Zahabi has now won six straight fights and will aim for another bantamweight contender next, calling out Marlon “Chito” Vera.

    Aldo goes 1-2 in his 2024-25 comeback to the Octagon after his initial retirement. He was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame in 2023.

  • Vitor Belfort Named As Latest Member Of UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    Vitor Belfort Named As Latest Member Of UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    One of the greatest and longest-tenured fighters in the history of MMA, let alone the UFC, will finally get his rightful spot in the UFC Hall of Fame.

    The UFC announced that former UFC light heavyweight champion Vitor Belfort is the latest name to join the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

    Belfort will be a part of the honor ceremonies on June 26, two days prior to UFC 317 and during the UFC’s International Fight Week.

    Vitor Belfort Named To UFC Hall Of Fame 2025 Class

    Belfort was a key figure in the UFC’s earliest days, debuting as a 1-0 fighter at UFC 12 and winning the heavyweight tournament that evening. Belfort would fight four more times in the UFC before jumping to PRIDE. From 2002-2009, Belfort bounced around and competed for a number of promotions including the UFC, PRIDE and Strikeforce.

    Belfort became UFC light heavyweight champion with a win over Randy Couture at UFC 46. He’d drop the title back to Couture in a rematch at UFC 49.

    In 2007, Belfort would rebound in Cage Rage by winning its light heavyweight championship.

    Belfort rejoined the UFC at UFC 103 in September 2009, competing until his retirement fight against Lyoto Macida at UFC 224 in 2018. During this stint, Belfort would challenge Anderson Silva and Chris Weidman for the UFC middleweight championship and Jon Jones for the light heavyweight championship, coming up short all three times.

    Belfort joins a UFC Hall of Fame class that also consists of Amanda Nunes, Robbie Lawler, Craig Piligian, the UFC 236 clash between Kelvin Gastelum and Israel Adesanya and the 2025 Forrest Griffin Community Award winner, Charles Oliveira.

  • ‘Give Her A Title Shot’ – Fans React To Striking Clinic From Natália Silva To Defeat Former Champion At UFC 315

    ‘Give Her A Title Shot’ – Fans React To Striking Clinic From Natália Silva To Defeat Former Champion At UFC 315

    The next challenger for the UFC women’s flyweight championship could very well be Natália Silva, as she took care of business against former champion Alexa Grasso at UFC 315.

    Silva looked to get to a fast start, mixing up her shots and moving around the cage in a speedy fashion. She also took control in the fight when it comes to battering with leg kicks and short combinations. Grasso, meanwhile, seemed to be more patient, focusing on her jabs and combinations. Grasso looked to take advantage of a slip on a kick by Silva, but Silva was able to easily shove her away.

    Silva continued to use her speed toward success in the second round. Her quick hands combined with her footwork frustrated Grasso, as she continued to put on a solid striking display. Grasso had a strong volume output in the closing seconds of the second round, but it got nothing going for her.

    The third round presented nothing different, as all three judges gave 30-27 scores to Silva in a dominant decision victory.

    Natália Silva Outstrikes And Outworks Alexa Grasso In One-Sided Decision Win At UFC 315

    Silva is now 7-0 in the Octagon. Her previous wins have come against the likes of Jéssica Andrade, Viviane Araújo and Jasmine Jasudavicius.

    Grasso has now been unable to win in three straight fights since scoring the upset of Valentina Shevchenko to win the UFC women’s flyweight title. Her previous two fights had been the draw and loss in the second and third bouts, respectively, of Grasso and Shevchenko’s rivalry.

  • ‘Slugfest’ – Benoît Saint Denis Puts On All-Around Display Against Short-Notice Opponent Kyle Prepolec

    ‘Slugfest’ – Benoît Saint Denis Puts On All-Around Display Against Short-Notice Opponent Kyle Prepolec

    Though it wasn’t the originally scheduled opponent for him in Joel Alvarez, Benoît Saint Denis made it a successful night against short-notice opponent Kyle Prepolec, scoring a submission in the opening bout of the UFC 315 pay-per-view.

    Saint Denis scored a takedown almost right away, using his pressure against the fence on Prepolec, who looked to keep a hold of a kimura lock. Saint Denis eventually got to Prepolec’s back and threatened a choke. Prepolec got back to his feet, but Saint Denis quickly returned him to the mat and locked a body triangle back in. Prepolec was able to get to his feet but wasn’t able to shake Saint Denis off of him, just able to hold on to the end of the round.

    Prepolec surprised with a left hand that caught Saint Denis’s attention, opening a mousse under one of Saint Denis’s eyes. Both men connected and quickly resulted in an exchange. Saint Denis loaded up, but Propolec got him in a body lock against the fence. Saint Denis landed hard with elbows and knees in close. Despite a brief move to the other side of the cage, Saint Denis continued to land in the clinch, including a number of hard elbows.

    Saint Denis then scored another takedown and quickly locked up an arm-triangle choke, scoring the second-round submission.

    Benoît Saint Denis Submits Kyle Propolec At UFC 315

    BSD rebounds from a two-fight losing skid, falling short to Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano last year. Prior to those losses, Saint Denis had a five-fight win streak going for him.

    Prepolec sees a three-fight win streak snapped but is still 4-2 in his last six. Prepolec fought in the UFC twice in 2019, losing to Nordine Taleb and Austin Hubbard.

  • VIDEO: Mike Malott Cracks Charles Radtke In Front Of Native Canadian Crowd

    VIDEO: Mike Malott Cracks Charles Radtke In Front Of Native Canadian Crowd

    Feeling he had to defend his home country after comments made by Charles Radtke earlier during UFC 315 media week, Mike Malott performed in a big way, earning the finish of Radtke in their UFC 315 preliminary card featured bout.

    Radtke came out pressing, but Malott found his rhythm early by utilizing crisp boxing combinations and leg kicks. Malott also flashed his power with a head kick and spinning back kick during the round. Though Malott was mostly the aggressor, Radtke had his moments, including a late-round flurry.

    Malott didn’t need long into the second to put things away, however. A strong left hook and combination resulted in Radtke being rocked and dropped. Malott landed some brief ground-and-pound before referee Marc Goddard halted the bout, sealing the win for Malott and sending the Canadian crowd into a frenzy.

    Mike Malott Defends Canada With Second-Round Finish Of Charles Radtke At UFC 315

    Malott, who earned a contract through Dana White’s Contender Series in 2021, is now 5-1 in the Octagon, with his sole loss coming against Neil Magny. Malott defeated Trevin Giles in November in his most recent fight prior to tonight.

    Radtke has now lost two of his last three and falls to 3-2 since his arrival to the Octagon in 2023. He came into this fight off a 51-second knockout of Matthew Semelsberger in November.

  • ‘The Dark Horse Of The Flyweight Division’ – Fans Praise Jasmine Jasudavicius Scoring Statement Submission Win Over Jéssica Andrade At UFC 315

    ‘The Dark Horse Of The Flyweight Division’ – Fans Praise Jasmine Jasudavicius Scoring Statement Submission Win Over Jéssica Andrade At UFC 315

    Jasmine Jasudavicius can certainly say she is one step closer to a title shot after scoring a victory over former strawweight queen Jéssica Andrade in a key women’s flyweight fight during the UFC 315 preliminary card.

    The fight was certainly not a close one. Jasudavicius used her height and reach advantages to connect multiple times on Andrade, overwhelming her with her size and strength. Then, in spite of Andrade’s previous comments of “needing a truck” to take her down, Jasudavicius was able to do so with ease.

    Jasudavicius did not let up control at all once the fight was on the ground. There, she landed some ground-and-pound before locking up a rear-naked choke, scoring a submission only halfway through the opening frame.

    Jasmine Jasudavicius Extends Winning Streak With First-Round Finish Of Jéssica Andrade

    Jasudavicius has now won six straight and seven of her last eight — and she is certain to find herself in the top-10 of the UFC’s women’s 125-pound rankings at the start of next week.

    Andrade has now lost five of her last seven, which includes fights at both 115 and 125. She was flyweight champion for about three-and-a-half months during 2019, defeating Rose Namajunas before dropping it in her first defense to Weili Zhang.

  • ‘Worst Robbery In UFC History’ – Fans In Uproar After Baffling Judges’ Split Scorecard In Controversial Modestas Bukauskas Victory Over Ion Cutelaba

    ‘Worst Robbery In UFC History’ – Fans In Uproar After Baffling Judges’ Split Scorecard In Controversial Modestas Bukauskas Victory Over Ion Cutelaba

    The only way to make a fight with a disappointing amount of activity worse is with baffling judges’ scorecards. And it appears that’s what we got with the judges’ totals in the victory Modestas Bukauskas got over Ion Cutelaba during the preliminary card of UFC 315.

    Cutelaba took control of the fight early with heavy calf kicks, targeting the lead leg of Bukauskas. Though Bukauskas had his moments, Cutelaba controlled the action by delivering more pressure and striking. Cutelaba continued this in round two with several flurries and clinch work, even if some attacks caused him to lose balance. Bukauskas responded with some counters, but his activity came into question.

    Bukauskas had better moments in the third round, stuffing takedowns and landing the more effective shots, as Cutelaba seemed to tire. Bukauskas in particular found success with the right hand.

    Bafflingly, one judge each gave the fight to each fighter with 30-27 scores. Even more baffling, the third judge gave the nod to Bukauskas despite the lack of activity.

    Modestas Bukauskas Bests Ion Cutelaba In Fight With Split 30-27 Scores At UFC 315

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    Bukauskas has now scored victories in seven of his last eight. He’s now 5-1 in the Octagon since his UFC return in 2023.

    Cutelaba falls to 3-2 in his last five fights.

  • VIDEO: Marc-André Barriault Powers His Way To First-Round KO In Front Of Home Crowd

    VIDEO: Marc-André Barriault Powers His Way To First-Round KO In Front Of Home Crowd

    In front of his home province of Quebec, and potentially fighting for his job, Marc-André Barriault delivered in a big way, scoring a powerful first-round knockout of Bruno Silva in the featured bout of the UFC 315 early preliminary card.

    Barriault seemed to get the better of Silva from the get-go, landing a right hand. Silva tried to bring pressure to Barriault, landing a right hand and a knee to the body. Silva had dumped Barriault down after catching a kick, but Barriault got up and pressed Silva into the fence.

    It was there where Barriault landed a couple of solid elbows that rocked Silva and dropped him out cold.

    Marc-André Barriault Elbows Bruno Silva Into Unconsciousness At UFC 315

    Silva was stretchered out of the Octagon as a result of the knockout.

    Barriault snapped a three-fight losing streak with this big victory tonight, having suffered consecutive losses to Chris Curtis, Joe Pyfer and Dustin Stoltzfus in 2024.

    Silva has now lost five straight fights and seven of his last eight. His sole win since 2022 was a first-round finish of Brad Tavares in April 2023.

  • VIDEO: Bekzat Almakhan Becomes First To Finish Two-Time TUF Champion At UFC 315

    VIDEO: Bekzat Almakhan Becomes First To Finish Two-Time TUF Champion At UFC 315

    Bekzat Almakhan got the action started at UFC 315 in a quick way, needing little time to finish off Brad Katona in the first early prelim bout of the night.

    Almakhan got off a few strikes to start things off, feeling out Katona while taking the center of the cage. As Katona goes in about a minute into the fight, however, Almakhan cracked him with an uppercut. That dropped Katona, and Almakhan quickly on top and delivered some ground-and-pound to score a 64-second finish.

    Bekzat Almakhan Stops Brad Katona In 64 Seconds At UFC 315

    No one had finished Katona in his professional MMA career prior to tonight.

    Almakhan scores his first UFC victory tonight. This marked his first fight in about 14 months, after losing to Umar Nurmagomedov in March 2024.

    Katona has now lost three of his last four and is just 2-3 in his second stint with the UFC. Katona is the only two-time winner of The Ultimate Fighter, having won seasons 27 and 31.

  • ‘An Absolute Superstar’ – Fans React To Paul Hughes Starching Bruno Miranda In PFL Belfast Main Event

    ‘An Absolute Superstar’ – Fans React To Paul Hughes Starching Bruno Miranda In PFL Belfast Main Event

    “Big News” is the big news coming out of PFL Europe’s event in Belfast.

    Paul Hughes fulfilled his dream of competing at the SSE Arena in Belfast and made an impact while doing so, finishing Bruno Miranda in less than a minute in the evening’s featured bout.

    Miranda opened the fight with a series of kicks, mainly focusing on the legs of Hughes. But all it took was one counter for the fight to turn things on a dime and end quickly. Hughes caught a kick and landed a left hook that dropped Miranda. Hughes followed up with a barrage of ground-and-pound until the referee stepped in, awarding the fight to Hughes after just 42 seconds.

    Paul Hughes Ends PFL Belfast Main Event In 42 Seconds, Calls Out Usman Nurmagomedov For Rematch

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    Hughes signed with the PFL in 2024, debuting at the Bellator Champions Series event in June 2024, finishing Bobby King. Hughes then scored a major victory over A.J. McKee at the Battle of the Giants card in October before challenging Usman Nurmagomedov for the Bellator lightweight title in the main card of PFL’s Road to Dubai event in January — a fight Hughes lost via a controversial decision.

    Hughes called out Nurmagomedov for a re-match following the win.

    Miranda has now lost three of his last four. Miranda made the semi-finals of the 2023 PFL lightweight season, losing to Olivier Aubin-Mercier.

  • VIDEO: Connor Hughes Sends Sebastien Di Franco To The Shadow Realm With One-Punch KO At PFL Belfast

    VIDEO: Connor Hughes Sends Sebastien Di Franco To The Shadow Realm With One-Punch KO At PFL Belfast

    While it’s Paul Hughes who is competing in the headline slot of PFL Belfast, another Hughes, Connor, may have stolen the show with a brutal finish.

    Hughes scored a second-round knockout of Sebastien Di Franco in a featured bout of the event, which featured the first round of the PFL Europe lightweight tournament.

    Hughes busted up Di Franco’s leg badly in the opening frame with a series of leg kicks. Hughes dominated the opening frame with check hooks, left punches, and working combinations. Di Franco had his own fair success with strikes, but he was unable to handle Hughes’ timing and accuracy.

    Di Franco started to get into a groove in the second round, getting his hands going. But one powerful right hand from Hughes changed all that, flooring Di Franco and knocking him out cold.

    Connor Hughes Puts Sebastien Di Franco To Sleep With Walk-Off KO At PFL Belfast

    Hughes has competed in the previous two seasons of PFL Europe, falling in the opening round of the 2023 tournament to Dylan Tuke (making Hughes’ first pro loss) and losing in last year’s final to two-time champion Jakub Kaszuba.

    Hughes now moves on to the 2025 PFL Europe lightweight tournament semifinals, where he will face Gino van Steenis. The younger brother of Costello van Steenis defeated Decky McAleenan.

    Di Franco has now lost three of his last four.

  • VIDEO: Alex Chizov Sleeps Mark Ewen With Single Left Hand At PFL Belfast

    VIDEO: Alex Chizov Sleeps Mark Ewen With Single Left Hand At PFL Belfast

    The PFL World Tournament has produced a number of upsets in its first-round events already, and now PFL Europe’s 2025 season — with only its lightweight fights at tonight’s PFL Belfast card — is not an exception.

    Alex Chizov did not need long to put away Mark Ewen and secure a semifinal spot in the PFL Europe lightweight bracket.

    After some leg kicks from both men, Chizov started to work the right hand. Ewen did not look like he was into second gear yet when Chizov landed a left hand that dropped Ewen. Chizov only got a follow-up shot or two in before the referee quickly stepped in to halt the action, giving Chizov the win in about a minute-and-a-half.

    Alex Chizov KOs Mark Ewen In 93 Seconds At PFL Belfast

    After defeating Omar Hussein in his 2022 PFL debut, “Pretty Boy” Chizov came into tonight’s bout off back-to-back losses against Acoidan Duque and Daniele Scatizzi.

    Chizov will now face Claudio Pacella, who defeated Gavin Hughes in another first-round fight held at PFL Belfast, in the tournament’s semi-finals later this year.

    Ewen is now 1-2 in PFL Europe and has lost two of his last three after starting his professional MMA career 5-0.

  • Robert Whittaker vs. Reinier De Ridder Booked For UFC Abu Dhabi Main Event This July

    Robert Whittaker vs. Reinier De Ridder Booked For UFC Abu Dhabi Main Event This July

    After pulling off a major finish over the rising Bo Nickal in the co-main event of UFC Des Moines last weekend, Reinier de Ridder now has a major opportunity in front of him.

    De Ridder, the former ONE middleweight and light heavyweight champion, will meet former UFC middleweight champion Robert Whittaker in the headline bout of UFC Abu Dhabi at the Etihad Arena on July 26.

    The UFC confirmed the main event announcement on May 10, hours prior to the start of UFC 315.

    Robert Whittaker, Reinier De Ridder To Clash On July 26 In Abu Dhabi

    This will be Whittaker’s first fight since being submitted by Khamzat Chimaev at UFC 308 in October. Outside of Chimaev, his only losses in the UFC since moving up to 185 have come against champions in Israel Adesanya and Dricus du Plessis. Whittaker is 3-3 in his last six.

    As mentioned, de Ridder is coming off a finish of Bo Nickal, who appeared to be the primed golden goose of the UFC and plenty expected to defeat de Ridder. The former ONE champion is now 3-0 in the UFC, after previously submitting Gerald Meerschaert and Kevin Holland at UFC Vegas 100 and UFC 311, respectively.

  • VIDEO: Eoin Sheridan Brutalizes With Quick KO at PFL Belfast

    VIDEO: Eoin Sheridan Brutalizes With Quick KO at PFL Belfast

    Talk about making a statement in just your second appearance with a promotion – Eoin Sheridan did just that.

    Sheridan didn’t need much for a quick night at the office, scoring a fast-paced knockout of Malichi Edwards during the early card of the PFL Europe event in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

    Sheridan cracked Edwards with a right hand mere seconds into the fight, causing him to go right on the attack. Sheridan fired off flurries on a rocked Edwards, trying to finish things quickly. After failing at a takedown and eating punch after punch, Edwards somehow survived and got back to his feet — even after a takedown from Sheridan.

    Eoin Sheridan Puts Away Malichi Edwards In Less Than Two Minutes at PFL Belfast

    Still, he didn’t look completely recovered. And before the two-minute mark of the fight hit, Sheridan landed another one-two that folded Edwards.

    Sheridan made his professional MMA debut in September 2023, defeating Joey Dakin via doctor’s stoppage. He followed that up with his PFL debut in December, scoring a decision over Brice Belghazi.

    Edwards now falls to 4-2 after starting his MMA career 3-0.

  • UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 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 Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on Saturday, May 10. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6:30PM ET/3:30PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature Belal Muhammad defending the UFC welterweight championship for the first time, as he takes on Jack Della Maddalena.

    Fan favorite Valentina Shevchenko, eight months after reclaiming the UFC women’s flyweight championship, will defend the title against Manon Fiorot.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Jose Aldo taking on Aiemann Zahabi, Alexa Grasso battling Natália Silva and Benoît Saint Denis in action against Kyle Prepolec.

    UFC 315: Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 315 as of May 9 at 7:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (-185) vs. Jack Della Maddalena (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (+114) vs. Manon Fiorot (-135)
    • Featherweight: Jose Aldo (-185) vs. Aiemann Zahabi (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso (+200) vs. Natália Silva (-245)
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis (-1600) vs. Kyle Prepolec (+900)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (-205) vs. Charles Radtke (+170)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade (+235) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (-290)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (+105) vs. Ion Cutelaba (-125)
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling (-310) vs. Ivan Erslan (+250)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault (-166) vs. Bruno Silva (+140)
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos (+124) vs. Lee Jeong-yeong (-148)
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona (+124) vs. Bekzat Almakhan (-148)
  • ‘Let’s Just Move On And Strip Him’ – Fans React To Jon Jones, Nate Diaz Coaching Russia’s Answer To The Ultimate Fighter

    ‘Let’s Just Move On And Strip Him’ – Fans React To Jon Jones, Nate Diaz Coaching Russia’s Answer To The Ultimate Fighter

    As Tom Aspinall (along with most MMA fans around the world) waits for his UFC heavyweight championship unification match, it appears Jon Jones’s next venture — in a surprising move — is outside the Octagon.

    Jones will be heading to Russia alongside another UFC great, Nate Diaz, to serve as coaches for season two of ALF Reality — a Russian program similar in nature to The Ultimate Fighter.

    Jones announced the news on his Instagram page.

    ALF Reality‘s first season also saw two UFC stars serve as coaches, as that season featured former bantamweight title rivals Aljamain Sterling and Petr Yan.

    That said, several MMA fans and pundits gave the news flack, as this project provides no update for a fight with Aspinall — a fight Jones has previously stated he feels he has little obligation to fulfill.

    Jon Jones To Serve As Coach On Reality Show Opposing Nate Diaz

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    Jones and Aspinall’s negotiations have gone on for months now, with Aspinall at one point showing up in the crowd at UFC London in late March, holding up a rubber duck to the camera.

    Jones has fought just twice since the start of 2023 — defeating Ciryl Gane at UFC 285 for the then-vacant heavyweight title and retaining it in a fourth-round finish of Stipe Miocic at UFC 309 in November. Jones’ win over Gane was his first fight in the Octagon since defeating Dominick Reyes to retain the UFC light heavyweight title at UFC 247 in February 2020 for that matter.

    Aspinall became interim UFC heavyweight champion with a 69-second finish of Sergei Pavlovich in the co-main event of UFC 295 in November 2023. That was the originally planned date for Jones vs. Miocic before Jones suffered a torn pec.

    Aspinall retained the interim title with a finish of Curtis Blaydes at UFC 304 last July. If he’s required to defend the interim belt again, he would become just the second man in UFC history (following Renan Barao’s two interim bantamweight title defenses during Dominick Cruz’s injury while champion) to do so.

  • Watch Belal Muhammad, Jack Della Maddalena Face Off At UFC 315 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    Watch Belal Muhammad, Jack Della Maddalena Face Off At UFC 315 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    We’re about 24 hours away from UFC 315, and MMANews is here to bring you the video from the ceremonial weigh-ins for the card!

    UFC 315 takes place on May 10 from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada — the first visit of Montreal for the UFC since UFC 186 10 years ago!

    The event will feature the first welterweight title defense for Belal Muhammad, as he meets the challenge of Jack Della Maddalena. Plus, Valentina Shevchenko makes her first appearance since regaining the UFC women’s flyweight championship, as she defends the gold against Manon Fiorot.

    The legendary Jose Aldo will be in action on this night, too, as he takes on Aiemann Zahabi. Alexa Grasso, who lost the flyweight title to Shevchenko at Noche UFC 2, returns to battle Natália Silva, and French lightweight Benoît Saint Denis does battle against short-notice replacement opponent Kyle Prepolec.

    Ahead of the event, nearly all fighters made weight, with the sole exception being Bruno Silva, who came in a pound heavy over the non-title middleweight limit. Nevertheless, all fights are still in tact.

    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 315 Ceremonial Weigh-In Video

  • UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Full Weigh-In Results

    UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Full Weigh-In Results

    UFC 315 goes down in just over 24 hours’ time, and we’ve got the official weigh-in results for you here at MMANews.

    For the first time in 10 years, the UFC returns to Montreal, bringing the Canadian province of Quebec two title fights and more action, including a couple of different ranked contender battles.

    The main event sees Belal Muhammad make his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship, as he takes on Jack Della Maddalena. In the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko starts her second reign as UFC women’s flyweight champion, as she defends the title against French rising star Manon Fiorot.

    Also on the main card will be the legendary Jose Aldo taking on Aiemann Zahabi, former flyweight champ Alexa Grasso battling Natália Silva and Benoît Saint Denis in action against Kyle Prepolec.

    UFC 315 Weigh-In Video, Results

    UFC 315 takes place Saturday, May 10 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The main card begins at 10 PM ET/7 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6:30 PM ET/3:30 PM PT.

    See above for a replay of the UFC 315 Weigh-In Show, and check out the full results below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (170) vs. Jack Della Maddalena (170) (Backup Fighter: Ian Machado Garry (168))
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (124) vs. Manon Fiorot (125)
    • Bantamweight: Jose Aldo (143) vs. Aiemann Zahabi (142) — fight moved from bantamweight to featherweight
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso (126) vs. Natália Silva (126)
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis (156) vs. Kyle Prepolec (156)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (171) vs. Charles Radtke (171)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade (126) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (124)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (203) vs. Ion Cutelaba (205)
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling (205) vs. Ivan Erslan (205)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault (185) vs. Bruno Silva (187*)
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos (146**) vs. Lee Jeong-yeong (146)
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona (136) vs. Bekzat Almakhan (136)

    *Silva missed weight, fined 20 percent of his purse
    **Santos originally weighed in at 147, made weight on second attempt

  • UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Staff Predictions

    UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Staff Predictions

    For the first time since UFC 186 a decade ago, the UFC has landed in Montreal for UFC 315. 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, May 10. The main card will begin at its usual 10pm ET start time, with preliminary card action kicking off at 6:30pm ET.

    The main event of UFC 315 will see Belal Muhammad look to further make people remember his name with his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship, taking on Jack Della Maddalena. This will be Muhammad’s first fight since capturing the gold with a win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304 last summer. He’s unbeaten in his last 11 fights and has won 14 of his last 16. Standing across the cage from him will be the 28-year-old Della Maddalena, an Australian native who has been on the rise at 170. He was scheduled to face Edwards in the UFC London main event a couple of months ago but was pulled for this title opportunity. This will be JDM’s first fight since knocking out former title challenger Gilbert Burns at UFC 299 last year.

    The co-main event will also be a title bout, featuring one of the most popular female fighters in the world, Valentina Shevchenko, defending the women’s flyweight championship against No. 2 contender Manon Fiorot. After coming up short against Alexa Grasso twice in their trilogy — a loss and a draw — Shevchenko finally got her win at UFC 306: Noche UFC 2 in September, reclaiming the women’s 125-pound title she had lost to Grasso at UFC 285. Fiorot, meanwhile, has not lost after dropping her professional MMA debut, a 12-fight win streak with a perfect 7-0 Octagon record. She enters this title shot off a win over Erin Blanchfield last year.

    The rest of the main card will also be one to look out for, with the legendary Jose Aldo stepping in against rising bantamweight Aiemann Zahabi and a battle of top flyweight contenders between Alexa Grasso, the former champion, and Natália Silva.

    UFC 315: MMA News Staff Predictions

    With UFC 315 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 four cards in 2025.

    1. Thomas Albano (11-7) & Pranav Pandey (11-7)
    2. Ryan Jarrell (10-8)
    3. Aakrit Sharma (7-11)

    And now, let’s take a look at everyone’s picks for UFC 315!

    Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: Jéssica Andrade will be the toughest test that Jasmine Jasudavicius has ever faced. Andrade is a former strawweight champion and has battled some of the toughest women to have ever stepped foot inside the Octagon. She brings knockout power and pressure that can make even the toughest crumbling. That said, Jasudavicius may be getting Andrade at the right time.

    Andrade returned to flyweight in her last outing and lost to Natalia Silva, making it four losses in her last six fights. Jasudavicius, who earned a UFC contract off a Dana White’s Contender Series performance in September 2021, she’s risen through the ranks with a 7-2 Octagon record, including a current four-fight win streak. Add in the size and that Jasudavicius has, combined with wrestling skills that could trouble Andrade, as other wrestlers have, Jasudavicius may have a night here that proves she’s ready to take on the top contenders at 125. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is such an important fight for Jasudaviscius. The Canadian is on a 4 fight win streak and the time to capitalize is now if she hopes to get into title contention one day. Andrade will have a significant height and reach disadvantage, but that’s a common theme for the veteran fighter. Andrade always boasts fight altering power that could be a major factor in this fight. If Jasmine fights intelligently, however, she should be able to win a decision and continue her win streak. I am going to lean towards this fight going the distance and the judges leaning towards the hometown fighter. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Pranav Pandey: While Andrade still manages to rack up wins here and there, it’s clear she’s no longer the force of nature she once was. She’s dropped seven of her last thirteen fights, and that kind of inconsistency speaks volumes at this level. On the flip side, Jasudavicius, despite being three years older is the fresher, more composed fighter in my eyes, and her recent performances back that up.

    The Canadian also enters the bout with a considerable length and size advantage, which could prove to be a real factor — especially if the fight hits the mat. That’s where I think she’ll try to steer the contest. She’s had solid success in grounding opponents and keeping them there, and I wouldn’t be surprised if she uses that blueprint again. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Consensus: 3-0 Jasudavicius

    Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso vs. Natália Silva

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: It’s now been about eight months since we saw Alexa Grasso, losing the UFC women’s flyweight title to Valentina Shevchenko in their trilogy fight. Though she didn’t come out of the rivalry with the gold at the end, the three wars she had with Shevchenko have shown that Grasso is a top name in the division – one that will be hard to top.

    Natália Silva is a perfect 6-0 in the Octagon though, coming into this fight with a 12-fight win streak. She’s displayed great striking and forward pressure could be an issue for someone like Grasso. Having said that, I’m still leaning on the experience of the former champion to help her edge out a tight decision. I really don’t understand the people who are easily writing off Grasso in this one.

    I may not be the biggest fight better, but I agree with Ryan’s advice – avoid this match at all costs in your fight night bets and parlays. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is a real tough one to pick. I will definitely not be adding this fight into a parlay I feel confident about. I can see this fight going either way and I expect both ladies to have their moments throughout the fight. In the end if I have to make a pick, and I do, I’m leaning towards the former champion to land a little bit more volume to get her hand raised and get back into the win column. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Pranav Pandey: This is a tightly contested matchup on paper, and I genuinely torn on who has the edge. Silva is on an impressive run—young, hungry, and firing on all cylinders. She’s a true threat wherever the fight goes, showcasing sharp striking and a slick ground game. The Brazilian is as well-rounded as they come.

    But even so, I still see Alexa Grasso as the crème de la crème of the flyweight division. I think she has the skill set, composure, and experience to answer whatever Silva throws her way. More importantly, after that lopsided loss to Shevchenko, Grasso is coming in with something to prove — and I believe that matters. In my eyes, this will be a competitive battle from start to finish, but I see the former champ edging it out. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Consensus: 3-0 Grasso

    Featherweight: Jose Aldo vs. Aiemann Zahabi

    Images: UFC.com

    Note: This fight was originally scheduled as a bantamweight fight but was changed to featherweight not long after press time.

    Thomas Albano: Jose Aldo’s return to the Octagon, coming out of retirement last year, has been decent thus far. He looked fantastic against Jonathan Martinez, and the Mario Bautista split-decision loss is still filled with plenty of debate over who won. At 38, Jose Aldo, obviously, isn’t the Jose Aldo that ruled over the featherweight scene in the 2000-10s. Yet, he is a living legend who has proven he can still go with the younger names of today.

    Aiemann Zahabi, meanwhile, has been someone to watch for since the start of his current five-fight win streak in 2021. Zahabi took out Pedro Munhoz in his last outing back in November, and he has continued to develop as a boxer. Having said that, Aldo and his experience is probably going to overwhelm Zahabi even in a stand-up battle. And given Zahabi isn’t too far removed from Aldo in terms of age, give me the legend in this one. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Ryan Jarrell: The Canadian is on an impressive win streak and this matchup will be one that would catapult him up the division if he can find a way to pull off the upset. I don’t mean to sound like Aieman Zahabi doesn’t have a chance in this fight, but I would be shocked if he beats Jose Aldo. Zahabi will have the hometown crowd cheering him on and if it goes to a decision, you never know what the judges will do. But give me Jose Aldo to dictate where this fight takes place and look in control throughout the contest. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Pranav Pandey: I genuinely don’t understand why the UFC keeps throwing José Aldo into such high-risk matchups since his return. That said, I still believe he’s still has more than enough in reserve to handle business—especially against someone like Zahabi.

    Zahabi is a sharp striker, no doubt, but he’s far from flawless. He tends to absorb more damage than he should, and rarely leans on his grappling background, which could prove costly against someone as seasoned and precise as Aldo.

    To me, Aldo remains one of the sharpest strikers the sport has ever seen—his combinations are still lightning-fast, and his takedown defense is arguably the best in MMA history. I think he’s going to methodically dismantle Zahabi with calculated precision over the course of three rounds and walk away with a well-earned decision. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Consensus: 3-0 Aldo

    UFC Women’s Flyweight Title: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Manon Fiorot

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: This is a tough one for me if only for the fact that I have watched Manon Fiorot rise her way in the sport – stretching back to her days competing in EFC Africa. Fiorot has been in the mix for some time now in the flyweight title picture. Her wins over Jennifer Maia, Katlyn Chookagian, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield, combined with not having lost since dropping her pro debut, really adds to the run she’s had.

    That said, she’s taking on the legend herself, Valentina Shevchenko. “Bullet” is making her first defense after re-capturing the women’s flyweight gold in her trilogy bout with Alexa Grasso in September, and she’ll make it more than tough to get a win over her. Fiorot will have a slight height advantage, and it feels like she’s someone who could match Shevchenko power-for-power in striking. I’d probably lean to “Bullet” for grappling, but it feels like Fiorot and her body may pose some issues.

    I’ll go with the champ and her years of experience as being one of the best in this sport. That said, anyone who is saying that this fight is easily in the bag for Shevchenko is sorely mistaken. This will be a tough outing – but a win could make an eventual showdown with Weili Zhang (I hope) even more appetizing. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Ryan Jarrell: As long as she is fighting, I will always feel hesitant to pick against Valentina Shevchenko. At her best, she is the best pound for pound female fighter in the world, in my humble opinion. However, this will be a very tough test for the champion. Manon Fiorot is on a 14 fight win streak with big wins over the likes of Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield. Not only is the challenger two years younger, but she will also have a modest height and reach advantage. Seeing how Fiorot has a whopping zero submission victories in her career, it’s safe to say she will not be submitting someone as well rounded as Bullet. If the fight stays on the feet, I just like the championship experience Valentina has to be the difference in this one. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Pranav Pandey: I see Fiorot as a dangerous, technically sound striker with a well-rounded skill set. She leans heavily on her crisp boxing to break opponents down and isn’t afraid to wade into gritty, blood-and-guts territory when the fight gets tough. She’s sharp, durable, and undeniably tough — but this time, she’s stepping in against a different kind of elite technician.

    Even if she’s not quite the unstoppable force she was a few years ago, her striking remains surgically precise and blisteringly quick, and her grappling continues to be criminally underrated. I think “The Beast” brings the kind of challenge that will force Shevchenko to show her full arsenal — and when that happens, I still believe she is superior in every department.

    I made the mistake of underestimating “Bullet” in her trilogy bout against Alexa Grasso. This time, I’m not making that same error. I’m all in on Shevchenko to remind the world why she’s still championship material and retain her title. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Consensus: 3-0 Shevchenko

    UFC Welterweight Title: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: This is such a huge opportunity for a young fighter like Jack Della Maddalena. He’s only been on the UFC scene for a few years, but a huge win streak that’s seen him gone unbeaten since dropping his first two pro MMA fights – combined with wins over Kevin Holland and Gilbert Burns, combined with Shavkat Rakhmonov dealing with injury – now grants JDM a title shot. It’ll be a great experience for JDM, but that’s all it will be.

    As much as he has his win streak and the pair of wins previously mentioned, this still feels a little too much, too soon for the Australian. It probably would have worked better in his favor if he had competed one or two more times (perhaps at least once in his native Australia) before a fight like this. Muhammad may not be the most popular figure in the UFC, but he’s experienced and talented. He wouldn’t be UFC champion without either of those, and that experience and his own winning momentum should win out against Della Maddalena’s.

    Expect this fight to go one of two ways – JDM tries to grapple with Muhammad and pays the price, or Muhammad uses his grappling to counter act any of JDM’s striking offense. It may not be the most popular method, it may not be the most entertaining fight, but it will get the job done. (Prediction: Muhammad)

    Ryan Jarrell: I am a big fan of Jack Della Maddalena. I think he is an exciting fighter to watch and more importantly, a class act and role model outside of the cage. JDM has all the tools to be a champion one day. But that day will not be at UFC 315. The first time title challenger is still only 28 years old, and still somewhat new ish to the UFC. I believe right now is Belal’s time to reign as welterweight king and I except to see a diverse attack put on display by the current champ. If Belal gets in trouble on the feet, he will use his elite grappling attack to mix things up and keep the Australian a step behind throughout the fight. (Prediction: Muhammad)

    Pranav Pandey: I believe this matchup could turn out to be far more thrilling and competitive than many are anticipating. While I see Maddalena as the cleaner and more dangerous striker, I also think he has some clear vulnerabilities that Muhammad can capitalize on. We’ve seen Maddalena give up takedowns in past fights, and I expect the champ to target that weakness with a relentless game plan. I think he’s going to pressure the Aussie with bursts of strikes to close the distance, then chain those into takedown attempts—similar to what he tried to do against Leon Edwards.

    But that’s only half the story. Keeping Maddalena grounded and dominating him on the mat is a puzzle no one has convincingly solved yet. He’s dangerous even off his back—punishing opponents with vicious body shots and sharp, snapping hooks the moment they try to close the distance. And if you ask me, I think “Remember the Name” is in for a taste of that same resistance.

    While Muhammad has shown noticeable improvement in his striking over the years, I still believe he’d be in deep waters on the feet. If he can’t drag Maddalena into a grappling-heavy contest, I see the Aussie putting on a clinic and potentially overwhelming him with precision and power. (Prediction: Della Maddalena)

    Consensus: 2-1 Muhammad


    That’ll do it for our UFC 315 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 315 card below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Manon Fiorot
    • Bantamweight: Jose Aldo vs. Aiemann Zahabi
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso vs. Natália Silva
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis vs. Kyle Prepolec

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott vs. Charles Radtke
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling vs. Ivan Erslan

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault vs. Bruno Silva
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos vs. Lee Jeong-yeong
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona vs. Bekzat Almakhan
  • Ryan Bader Signing With RIZIN, Will Fight On New Year’s Eve

    Ryan Bader Signing With RIZIN, Will Fight On New Year’s Eve

    The next stop for former Bellator heavyweight and light heavyweight champion is now known, as it appears he is signing with Japanese MMA promotion RIZIN.

    Bader appeared at the Rizin: Otoko Matsuri event held at the Tokyo Dome on May 4, announcing plans to take on the winner of the RIZIN Heavyweight Grand Prix tournament. Such a fight would take place at the end of this year at RIZIN’s annual New Year’s Eve card.

    This will be Bader’s first MMA fight since his 21-second TKO loss to Renan Ferreira at the PFL vs. Bellator Champions vs. Champions card in February 2024. Bader officially parted ways with the PFL in March, two months after it was officially announced that the PFL was folding the Bellator brand. The PFL had formally purchased Bellator MMA in November 2023.

    Ryan Bader To Fight In RIZIN On New Year’s Eve

    Bader won the Bellator heayvweight championship by winning the Bellator Heavyweight Grand Prix held from January 2018-January 2019. The tournament saw Bader defeat Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal, Matt Mitrione and Fedor Emelianenko to become champion. Bader became the first Bellator heavyweight champion since Vitaly Minakov was formally stripped of the title in 2016 and became the first double champion in Bellator history.

    Bader defended the heavyweight title against Cheick Kongo, Valentin Moldavsky and Emelianenko before Bellator’s purchase by the PFL.

    Bader was also the light heavyweight champion at one point, winning the title in his Bellator debut at Bellator 180. He’d defend that title against Linton Vassell before losing the title to Vadim Nemkov.

    The eight-man RIZIN Heavyweight Grand Prix began at the May 4 event, which saw Marek Samociuk defeat Daniel James, José Augusto Azevedo best Tsuyoshi Sudario and Mikio Ueda beat Shoma Shibisai. The remaining quarterfinal will take place between Islambek Baktybek Uulu and Alexander Soldatkin.

  • 5 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Cory Sandhagen vs. Deiveson Figueiredo

    5 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Fight Night: Cory Sandhagen vs. Deiveson Figueiredo

    On Saturday, the UFC continued its road trip by traveling to the city of Des Moines, Iowa — a state that the promotion hadn’t visited in over 20 years.

    You want to talk about all the places the UFC hasn’t been to, or isn’t going to, since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic? Try having to wait since The Dark Ages of the UFC. The last UFC event to take place in Iowa was when Cedar Rapids hosted UFC 26 in June 2000. The only other event in Iowa besides that? When the Five Seasons Events Center also hosted UFC 21 about a year earlier.

    The UFC looked to bring a memorable night of action to the state to make up for its prolonged absence, and it looked to do so with a main event coming out of the stellar bantamweight division. UFC Des Moines was headlined by Cory Sandhagen and Deiveson Figueiredo doing battle in a clash of top-5 contenders at 135 pounds.

    Sandhagen has been a widely popular and entertaining fighter in the division since he made his UFC debut at the start of 2018. He’s always been one to compete with the very best, and if you look at his losses entering UFC Des Moines, he’s only ever lost to the elite. That said, he always seems to be one step short of finally capturing even a shot at the bantamweight title. That was seen in his last outing, losing to Umar Nurmagomedov in the main event of UFC Abu Dhabi last August.

    Figueiredo, of course, once dominated the flyweight scene, having reigned as UFC flyweight champion twice while going on an epic quadrilogy with Brandon Moreno. Since joining the bantamweight division at the end of 2023, though, Figgy has had successes here, too. After the division-debuting win over Rob Font, Figueiredo scored a submission of former champion Cody Garbrandt at UFC 300 and a decision over former title challenger Marlon “Chito” Vera at UFC Abu Dhabi. Figgy, however, entered UFC Des Moines off a loss to Petr Yan at UFC Macau.

    While both main event competitors looked to bounce back from losses in a division stacked with talent, another name, Bo Nickal, looked to keep his undefeated record in tact in his biggest test yet, taking on tested veteran and former ONE champion Reinier de Ridder in the UFC Des Moines co-main event. The rest of the card also featured action from the likes of Santiago Ponzinibbio vs. Daniel Rodriguez and the UFC returns of both Jeremy Stephens and Mason Jones — who competed against one another.

    Who delivered in the Hawkeye State? Who didn’t? Let’s go into it together with the hits and misses of UFC Des Moines!

    Hit – Gillian Robertson

    Before the main card action, the UFC Des Moines prelims even featured some action from current noteworthy contenders — a top-15 contenders battle at women’s strawweight between Marina Rodriguez and Gillian Robertson and one at women’s bantamweight (which served as the featured prelim) between Miesha Tate and Yana Santos.

    And of all four of these ladies, Robertson perhaps stood out as not just the most impressive of this bunch, but perhaps the most impressive out of all the prelim fighters.

    Robertson looked to dominate on the ground and did just that with over five minutes of control time out of the seven or so minutes the fight lasted. Robertson pressured and landed big ground shots during the first round. Rodriguez may have went for a submission during the second round, but Robertson got out of it and went back to her vicious assault until the referee waved off the fight.

    It was an appropriate performance for someone nicknamed “The Savage” as she sent Rodriguez into retirement.

    Robertson has been in the UFC since season 26 of The Ultimate Fighter, and she’s always been entertaining to watch. But something has REALLY clicked for her since moving back down to strawweight. Robertson has won six of her last seven and is now 5-1 since her drop to 115, with her sole loss in that stretch coming against Tabatha Ricci — someone she has to be right next to in the top 10 at minimum when the new rankings get released.

    Now this presents some interesting potential top-10 contender battles for Robertson against the likes of Jessica Andrade, Mackenzie Dern, Amanda Ribas or even a Ricci rematch. And if she performs as well against those fighters as she does against Rodriguez, the strawweight division better watch out.

    Hit – Azamat Bekoev

    Azamat Bekoev’s UFC debut was so nice, the kind of performance he had in that fight he had to do twice. After putting on a great showing against Zachary Reese at UFC 311 in January, Bekoev built on that initial strong outing when he took on The Ultimate Fighter season 32 winner Ryan Loder during the preliminary card.

    Loder looked to use his wrestling skills on Bekoev early on, but Bekoev battled back by reversing the position and unleashing his hands. Bekoev rocked Loder and continued to land, hitting Loder with a strong knee and a right hand that dropped Loder before unleashing more ground-and-pound until the fight was stopped.

    Bekoev finished Loder 20 seconds faster than he did Reese.

    The American Top Team product has now won seven straight and eight of his last 10. This included a brief run as LFA middleweight champion before stepping into the Octagon for the first time.

    Bekoev also now has ten first-round finishes to his name. And if he gets an eleventh — which would make him 3-0 in the UFC with three first-round finishes — then Bekoev is going to solidify himself as both someone to keep an eye on and someone who’d need tougher competition.

    Hit – Jeremy Stephens vs. Mason Jones

    While the main and co-main events of UFC Des Moines had attention on them, the broadcast also continuously hyped up the main card’s opener featuring the returns of Jeremy “Lil’ Heathen” Stephens and Mason Jones. Stephens has been a longtime face of the UFC but hadn’t fought in the promotion — or in MMA for that matter — since 2021. And while he has always been an entertaining fighter, he had won in MMA just once in his previous nine. Jones, meanwhile, was looking for a rebound after going just 1-2-1 in his first stint with the promotion.

    And while only one person could come out on top, the two of them delivered an absolute banger.

    Jones looked to get to an early start by unleashing a flurry of punches and leg kicks — but Stephens, the hometown hero and BKFC star, fought fire with fire. While Jones got the better of the exchanges, Stephens still showed off his power and secured a takedown. Jones looked to get off to another hot start in the second, and the result was a round where both men got bloodied and battered before Jones scored a takedown and some ground-and-pound.

    Jones then fought tactically in the third, utilizing his grappling to subdue Stephens’ offense en route to a clear decision victory.

    For Jones, this was exactly the performance he needed to get back on the right track and continue the run of success he had from the four-fight win streak in Cage Warriors he entered with in tonight’s UFC return. And for Stephens, if this was a one-time return, then what a performance it was. If this is the start of one more run, then hopefully it is as entertaining as this fight was.

    Miss – Montel Jackson vs. Daniel Marcos

    For a fight that featured someone ranked No. 15 in their division and someone trying to break into the rankings after hyping himself up, Montel Jackson vs. Daniel Marcos did not live up to expectations.

    In particular, for Marcos to lose his undefeated run in the manner that he did — especially with his previous wins over the likes of Davey Grant and Adrian Yañez — was, honestly, quite embarrassing.

    While Marcos continuously pursued takedowns during the fight, landing three of them, they were quite ineffective, with Jackson easily able to work his way out of them. And Marcos did not seem to do any damage against Jackson. Jackson had scored his own couple of takedowns and was landing the better leg kicks and combinations when there was any trading. He even had a submission attempt at one point.

    Don’t get me wrong — this wasn’t a great performance from Jackson either. It’s not one you put out when trying to move up the ranks. But the thing is — it didn’t need to be to get the win here. He just completely iced Marcos’ game. And while I understand trying to show strength at the end of the fight, I hope Marcos didn’t actually think he was robbed here.

    For Marcos, this needs to be a wake-up call — if he wants to compete with the better fighters in his division, he needs to put on a display that was a lot better than the one we saw in Des Moines.

    Hit – It’s Time For The Reinier De Ridder Slander To Stop

    Reinier de Ridder may have been one of the most disrespected members of the UFC roster when he came to the UFC late last year. He’s been in a situation where if he loses, then the only reason he’s here is just to bury ONE Championship. And in this case, it seemed like he was being positioned as a lamb to slaughter against the UFC’s young golden boy in Bo Nickal.

    Unfortunately for the UFC, this lamb bit and fought back with a solid grappling game and deadly knees.

    I guess those in the MMA community who buried this fight, and maybe even people in the UFC, overlooked the fact that RdR was a judo and jiu-jitsu specialist. They overlooked his pair of silver medals at the European Brazilian jiu-jitsu championships in 2016 and 2017. They overlooked his 13 MMA victories via submission.

    And while Nickal may have been an NCAA champion at Penn State, the former ONE champ-champ’s grappling experience was on full display, becoming the first man to put Nickal on his back in the Octagon. And when they fought in close during the second round, de Ridder was smart enough to notice Nickal’s negative reactions to getting kneed in the body. Nickal ate shot after shot while dealing with that pain, and another knee to the body forced him into ball up as the referee stopped the fight.

    I get that de Ridder’s UFC debut against Gerald Meerschaert wasn’t the best performance. But the fact he submitted him, scored a first-round submission of Kevin Holland and now took out a young insanely hyped prospect in Nickal…it’s time to treat de Ridder as a serious name at middleweight. It’s time to get him a top-10 opponent. Let’s see what de Ridder does against someone like a Marvin Vettori, Jared Cannonier or Roman Dolidze.

    Miss – The Forced Push Of Bo Nickal Bites Him

    Paige VanZant. Darren Till. Sage Northcutt. All three of these names are fighters who are known in the circles of MMA as fighters who were pushed too quickly and their careers suffered for it.

    Now, I’m not going to put Bo Nickal’s name in this circle yet, of course. But if you look at the history of the UFC, there have been multiple — I should even plenty — of cases where the promotion has someone of particular interest. And they push this person in terms of the promotion for their fights and even their placements on the cards. And more often than not, these fighters are not yet ready for such an experience, such opponents, and they end up taking a big defeat.

    This isn’t really to trash Nickal. This is more to say the UFC just doesn’t learn.

    Reinier de Ridder was not the person for Bo Nickal to fight here. I understand Nickal was coming off a win against Paul Craig — a savvy and popular fight veteran. But Craig is 37 and has won just once since mid-2022. RdR is 34, a former ONE champion at middleweight and light heavyweight and an excellent submission specialist who has had years of experience in the sport and a ranked UFC middleweight contender.

    But Nickal was pushed heavily, and his confidence level didn’t help things.

    Nickal is still young. There are losses that can be beneficial. There are losses that are just brief setbacks. This is the first time in his MMA career that the young man is facing adversity. If he can learn from it, this will be a great experience for him in the long run. If he can go back in the gym and work on his defense, work with really experienced veterans, work on his striking, Nickal can come out of this looking like a million bucks and a success story. But this is also dependent on the UFC pacing themselves right with Nickal and not burning him out quickly.

    People in the MMA sphere already were skeptical and critical about things from Nickal’s placement on the UFC 300 main card over other standout talents and his placement as a featured fight at New York’s Madison Square Garden at UFC 309. If the UFC puts him in a position where he isn’t ready again, they may have no one to blame but themselves if Nickal’s career in the Octagon doesn’t pan out.

    Miss – Deiveson Figueiredo’s Injury

    After all the anticipation for this top-5 contenders’ battle, this is not how the result of the Cory Sandhagen vs. Deiveson Figueiredo main event should have gone down.

    It was a fun fight for the time it lasted, don’t get me wrong. But it was disappointing that rather than focus on defending Sandhagen’s striking attack on the ground during the first round, Figgy was more focused on Sandhagen’s legs and trying for a submission.

    Figueiredo took the fight to the second, but his strategies ended up having a nasty result. During one transition on the ground, Figueiredo’s leg bent back to an uncomfortable — and unnatural — position that put him in a world of pain, forcing him to tap from the pain while Sandhagen rained down punches.

    Let’s hope this isn’t going to keep Figueiredo out a while. And whenever he does come back, he still has all the talent in the world to be a viable name at 135. But the former flyweight champ has now dropped two straight for the first time in his career; he had come into this fight off a loss to former bantamweight champ Petr Yan in Macau.

    Hopefully for Figueiredo’s sake, he comes back from this outing to put on a vintage, power-filled display we’ve all seen Figueiredo have before as he looks to get back on a right path toward a bantamweight title shot.

    Hit – Cory Sandhagen: Is He Finally Ready For A Shot?

    Speaking of bantamweight title shots, that’s what Cory Sandhagen is now on the hunt for.

    As mentioned, Sandhagen delivered an all-star performance, landing great strikes on the ground and feet, getting the better in exchanges, and having the knowledge of how to work on the ground.

    The exchanges with Figgy were fun, but Sandhagen was clearly the better fighter tonight — even if the injury didn’t decide the fight.

    Even with Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2 booked for later this year, there are calls for Sandhagen to finally get a title shot some feel he has long deserved. Sandhagen has consistently been a strong performer in the division but has always come up one fight short in one way or another. He lost to recent title challenger Umar Nurmagomedov in his last outing prior to this card, and he came one fight short of challenging for the title in 2020, losing a title eliminator to future champ Aljamain Sterling.

    Obviously the division is stacked with names, and Yan very well could be next in line for a rematch with either Dvalishvili or O’Malley, depending on who comes out on top in the title fight. But what this performance from “The Sandman” shows is that, if anything, he should only be, at most, a fight away from challenging for the gold.

  • Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford Named First TKO Boxing Event, Dana White To Promote

    Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford Named First TKO Boxing Event, Dana White To Promote

    The announcements about Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford continue to pour out, and another one has been made by Turki Alalshikh hours after the fight was officially confirmed.

    The Chairman of the General Entertainment Authority in Saudi Arabia has announced that Canelo vs. Crawford — which will take place on September 12 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas — will be the first TKO boxing event.

    In the announcement on social media, Alalshikh adds that the fight will be promoted by none other than UFC CEO Dana White.

    Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford To Be Held Under TKO Banner, Promoted By Dana White

    This follows the official formation of the yet-to-be-officially-named boxing league in March. The boxing promotion will be headed up by Alalshikh and White, as well as Nick Khan — CEO of the WWE. The UFC and WWE both fall under the TKO conglomerate after a merger featuring the two brands in 2023.

    While White had briefly teased a leap into boxing with the Zuffa Boxing brand during the 2010s — namely around the time of the Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor event — that idea came and went. But White had teased testing the boxing waters once again in recent years.

    The date of the Canelo vs. Crawford fight is one day prior to the Noche UFC 3 card — also known as UFC 320 — which is currently scheduled for September 13 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

    The TKO boxing league, in its initial announcement, teased details that included boxers having access to the UFC’s Performance Institute locations and TKO’s production team handling broadcast and promotion matters for both in-arena experiences and globally. TKO also promoted a structured system of talent development.

  • ‘Cancel The O’Malley Fight’ – Merab Dvalishvili, Petr Yan & Other Fighters And Fans React To Deiveson Figueiredo Suffering Knee Injury In Loss To Cory Sandhagen At UFC Des Moines

    ‘Cancel The O’Malley Fight’ – Merab Dvalishvili, Petr Yan & Other Fighters And Fans React To Deiveson Figueiredo Suffering Knee Injury In Loss To Cory Sandhagen At UFC Des Moines

    It wasn’t the finish most were hoping for, but it was definitely one that Cory Sandhagen can use to add to his momentum.

    Sandhagen scored a finish of former flyweight champion Deiveson Figueiredo in the main event of UFC Des Moines.

    The two had a number of exchanges during the opening frame, but when the fight hit the ground, Sandhagen clearly was the one dominating. While Figueiredo tried to work one of Sandhagen’s legs for a submission, Sandhagen delivered strong punches from the top position.

    Sandhagen followed his dominant first round by continuing to work his striking in the second round. Just under two minutes into the second round, Figueiredo was the one in control as the fight went to the ground. He’d look for an ankle lock when he became the bottom fighter, but Sandhagen easily got away from it.

    Sandhagen then scored a takedown at the halfway mark of the round, scoring some strong shots from up top. Figueiredo looked for a kneebar, but Sandhagen reversed it as he continued to try and do damage working around Figueiredo’s guard and submission attempts. During one transition, as Sandhagen went into top control, Figueiredo’s leg bent awkwardly, causing Figueiredo to fall back and tap out due to injury as Sandhagen delivered strikes.

    Cory Sandhagen Finishes Deiveson Figueiredo In UFC Des Moines Main Event

    Sandhagen has now won four of his last five fights. He came into this contest off his loss to Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC Abu Dhabi in August.

    Figueiredo has now lost two straight fights for the first time in his professional MMA career. He was defeated by former bantamweight champion Petr Yan in the main event of UFC Macau in November, a fight that snapped a three-fight win streak.