Category: MMA

  • Michael ‘Venom’ Page Sounds Off About UFC Fighter Pay

    Michael ‘Venom’ Page Sounds Off About UFC Fighter Pay

    Michael “Venom” Page isn’t holding back. Speaking on The Boys in the Back podcast on Tuesday, the British welterweight contender delivered a pointed critique of the UFC’s fighter pay structure.

    With Zuffa Boxing, Dana White’s boxing venture under the TKO umbrella, reportedly handing Conor Benn a staggering $15 million for a single fight, Page and fellow UFC fighters are left wondering when some of that sun win will shine on the fighters who helped build the Zuffa empire.

    The $15M Elephant in the Room

    Michael Venom Page

    The Benn deal ignited immediate backlash within UFC circles. Longtime boxing journalist Dan Rafael reported that the British welterweight signed a one-fight contract with Zuffa Boxing worth $15 million — a number that would be exceptional even for established UFC stars, let alone a boxer whom Page himself described bluntly:

    “I love Conor Benn, but he’s nowhere near the best in his field.”

    Zuffa Boxing is a joint venture between UFC parent company TKO Group Holdings and the Saudi Arabia-based company Sela, with Dana White serving as its lead promoter.

    Former UFC champion Sean O’Malley echoed Page’s disbelief yesterday, publicly stunned that a fighter he barely recognized could command that kind of money from an organization that regularly pays its own world champions a fraction of that figure.

    ​Eddie Hearn, who lost Benn from Matchroom Boxing, summed up the broader sentiment: “They’re sick as a dog. There’s no loyalty.”

    Page on the UFC’s Paramount “Bonus Bump”

    Dana White had promised fighters would see the financial benefit in the Paramount+ era. What they got: post-fight bonuses were doubled from $50,000 to $100,000, with an additional $25,000 “finish bonus” introduced for fighters who secure a KO or submission but aren’t selected for Performance or Fight of the Night honors.

    Page was not impressed. On the podcast, he made clear the bump doesn’t match the scale of what the company is now pulling in:

    “This is why I wasn’t initially excited about it, because for me, it doesn’t do enough compared to the amount of money they’ve just brought in for themselves. To see how highly [Dana White] values people away from the sport that built his reputation, it’s just upsetting, to be fair. It’s disappointing more than anything. That’s all I’ll say on that.”

    The math is hard to argue with. A $7.7 billion deal generates over $1.1 billion per year for TKO. Doubling a $50K bonus to $100K, handed out to only a handful of fighters per event, represents a rounding error in that context.

    “Champions Shouldn’t Be Broke”

    Page went further, tying the Benn conversation to a long-running grievance in the sport: elite fighters reaching the pinnacle of MMA and still struggling financially.

    “I hate hearing stories of fighters getting to what is the pinnacle of our careers in terms of the UFC and still being broke. That just shouldn’t exist.”

    He pointed directly to the widely discussed case of Francis Ngannou, who was UFC Heavyweight Champion of the World while reportedly borrowing money from former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman just to get by.

    “This is something people have complained about. Francis Ngannou being the heavyweight champion of the world and broke, borrowing money from a friend of his, [Kamaru] Usman. Why was he even in that situation is the question for me.”

    It’s worth noting the UFC recently disbursed $375 million to settle the Le vs. Zuffa antitrust lawsuit, which alleged the company had unlawfully suppressed fighter compensation. A separate antitrust case, Johnson vs. Zuffa, is currently ongoing with similar claims.

    How the Sam Patterson Fight at UFC London Came Together

    UFC Fight Night London

    On a lighter note, Page also addressed how his upcoming bout against Sam Patterson at UFC Fight Night: Evloev vs. Murphy on March 21 at The O2 Arena in London came to be booked — and it wasn’t exactly the matchup he had in mind.

    “I’ve been asking for a lot of different fighters and not really getting responses, and I wasn’t panicking, but I definitely felt more urgency when I was speaking to the UFC. I was like, ‘What’s going on? Who am I going to be fighting?

    We had a few back-and-forths and ended up pushing a ton of names over that we hadn’t really considered before because they weren’t the high-level names. It’s an unusual one, but either way, I’m excited to be back in the cage. I’m glad I didn’t miss the opportunity to fight back in the UK.”

    Page had previously told media that the booking “feels like I upset somebody” at the UFC, given that [despite an impressive four-fight first-round stoppage streak] Patterson is not the high-profile welterweight opponent Page was pursuing after back-to-back middleweight wins over Shara Magomedov and Jared Cannonier.

    Patterson enters the fight at 6’4″ with serious knockout and submission power, and he has previously cited Page as an inspiration.sports.yahoo+1

    The event streams live on Paramount+ on March 21, headlined by the featherweight title eliminator between Movsar Evloev and Lerone Murphy.

  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Josh Hokit Set for UFC 327 in Miami

    Curtis Blaydes vs. Josh Hokit Set for UFC 327 in Miami

    Curtis Blaydes and Josh Hokit will collide in a heavyweight bout at UFC 327 on April 11, 2026, live from Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida. The matchup pits a seasoned veteran against one of the division’s most exciting undefeated prospects.

    Blaydes Looking to Rebuild Title Momentum

    Blaydes (19-5-0, 1 NC) enters the fight looking to re-establish himself in the heavyweight title picture. The 33-year-old Chicago native is a former top-five contender with 13 TKO victories on his record and most recently earned a split-decision win over Rizvan Kuniev at a UFC Fight Night event in June 2025.

    Back-to-back losses to elite competition in recent years have made a convincing performance here essential if “Razor” wants to work his way back into championship contention.

    Hokit Brings a Perfect Record Into the Biggest Fight of His Career

    Hokit (8-0-0) is as clean as they come on paper — eight fights, eight finishes, zero decisions. “The Incredible Hok” has five knockouts and three submissions to his name and is coming off a first-round TKO of Denzel Freeman at UFC 324 in January 2026. Now 2-0 inside the Octagon, Hokit is ready to take the significant step up in competition that a fight with Blaydes represents.

    A win over Blaydes would immediately vault Hokit into the top-15 heavyweight rankings and signal to the division that a new contender has arrived.

    UFC 327 Card So Far

    UFC 327 takes place April 11, 2026, from Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida.

    • UFC Flyweight Championship: Joshua Van (c) vs. Tatsuro Taira
    • UFC Light Heavyweight Championship: Jiri Prochazka (c) vs. Khamzat Chimaev
    • Heavyweight: Curtis Blaydes vs. Hokit
    • Middleweight: Azamat Murzakanov vs. Paulo Costa
    • Welterweight: Kyle Daukaus vs. Vicente Luque
    • Light Heavyweight: Dominick Reyes vs. Johnny Walker
    • Women’s Strawweight: Tatiana Suarez vs. Loopy Godinez
    • Welterweight: Kevin Holland vs. Randy Brown
  • Robert Whittaker to Light Heavyweight, Targets June Debut

    Robert Whittaker to Light Heavyweight, Targets June Debut

    Robert Whittaker is moving to the light heavyweight division, targeting a June debut after consecutive losses to Khamzat Chimaev (UFC 308, October 2024) and Reinier de Ridder (UFC Fight Night: Whittaker vs. De Ridder, July 26, 2025).

    The former UFC middleweight champion (26-9) confirmed the move this week, citing concerns about the impact of weight cutting on his performance.

    In an interview with Submission Radio, Robert Whittaker explained his decision-making process and his timeline for the move to light heavyweight.

    “I had a really good rest after last fight. I took some breaks. I worked on some other things, and it’s given me a moment to really just settle in and work out what I want to do moving forward,” Whittaker told Submission Radio. “I’m locking in now. I’m locking in for June. I want to get in there. I want to fight again. I want to fight in June at 205 most likely.”

    Whittaker believes the weight cut to middleweight affects his camp performance and efficiency in the octagon. He has been considering the move for some time and trained at a heavier weight during his layoff. Whittaker is now targeting a June fight at 205 pounds, with UFC White House emerging as the likely event for his light heavyweight debut.

    Whittaker’s Weight Cut Concerns

    While speaking on a separate podcast appearance in late 2025, Whittaker said he was ‘90% there’ on making the move to light heavyweight, noting that the weight cut to 185 pounds was affecting his camp performance and output — not that he could no longer make the weight.

    Now fully committed to the switch, Whittaker plans to use the next few months transitioning to to 205 pounds without adding excessive muscle mass, hoping to preserve his speed and movement at the higher weight class.

  • UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Kavanagh Preview, How to Watch

    UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Kavanagh Preview, How to Watch

    UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Kavanagh is a 13-fight card from Arena CDMX built around Brandon Moreno’s high‑stakes homecoming main event against short-notice spoiler Lone’er Kavanagh.

    Event overview & how to watch

    • Date: Saturday, February 28, 2026
    • Venue: Arena CDMX, Mexico City, Mexico
    • Start times: Prelims 5 p.m. ET, Main card 8 p.m. ET
    • Streaming: Entire event live on Paramount+ in the U.S. (regional broadcasters vary internationally).

    Main event spotlight: Moreno vs. Kavanagh

    Brandon Moreno returns to Mexico City as the former two‑time UFC flyweight champion and one of the promotion’s most accomplished Mexican stars, now looking to steady the ship after recent setbacks. He was originally slated to face surging contender Asu Almabayev, but a hand injury forced Almabayev out, opening the door for England’s Lone’er Kavanagh to step in on roughly two weeks’ notice.

    Moreno brings a wealth of big‑fight experience, a deep gas tank and a well-rounded game built on volume boxing, scrambling and opportunistic submissions. Kavanagh, 26, is an aggressive striker with real pop, a 9‑1 record and four knockouts, who earned his way in via Dana White’s Contender Series and now finds himself in a massive rankings jump against the division’s No. 6.

    Between Moreno’s pressure and Kavanagh’s willingness to trade, this shapes up as a fast-paced, crowd‑pleasing fight where the former champ must stay disciplined defensively against a hungry underdog swinging free with nothing to lose.

    Main event at a glance

    FighterBrandon MorenoLone’er Kavanagh
    Record23‑9‑2 9‑1 
    StatusFormer 2‑time UFC flyweight champ Rising prospect, short‑notice replacement 
    RankingNo. 6 flyweight No. 15 flyweight 
    Recent resultLoss vs. Tatsuro Taira KO loss vs. Charles Johnson 
    Style snapshotHigh‑volume boxing, creative grappling Power striking, aggressive pace 

    Full card: UFC Mexico City

    Exact bout order can shift during fight week, but the event is scheduled for 13 fights across seven weight classes.

    Main card – 8 p.m. ET, Paramount+

    • Brandon Moreno vs. Lone’er Kavanagh – flyweight main event (5 rounds)
    • Marlon “Chito” Vera vs. David Martinez – bantamweight co‑main event​
    • Daniel Zellhuber vs. Bobby Green – lightweight bout showcasing Mexico’s rising prospect against a savvy veteran​​
    • Edgar Chairez vs. Jafel Filho (or Bunes, depending on final listing) – flyweight action bout​
    • Jesus Santos Aguilar or a similar local favorite vs. TBD – flyweight/ bantamweight slot featuring Mexican talent (keep an eye on late-week updates).

    Preliminary card – 5 p.m. ET, Paramount+
    The prelims lean heavily into regional representation with multiple Mexican and Latin American fighters, paired with international opponents looking to steal momentum. While precise pairings differ slightly by source, expect matchups along the lines of:​

    • Lightweight & featherweight prospects opening the show
    • Women’s flyweight and bantamweight bouts spotlighting emerging talent
    • At least one veteran vs. newcomer pairing to set the tone for the night.​

    Why this card matters

    • Flyweight picture: A Moreno win keeps him in the immediate title conversation; an upset for Kavanagh would instantly throw a new, marketable name into the mix.
    • Mexican market: This is part of UFC’s continued investment in Mexico City as a key market, following prior Arena CDMX shows headlined by Moreno.
    • Depth: With 13 scheduled bouts and several all‑action pairings, the card is designed as a showcase for Mexican and Latin American fighters across divisions, not just the headliner.
  • UFC Rankings Report: February 24, 2026

    UFC Rankings Report: February 24, 2026

    Rankings Updated Following UFC Fight Night: Strickland vs. Hernandez | Toyota Center, Houston, TX — Feb. 21, 2026

    The UFC released its updated divisional rankings Monday following Saturday night’s card in Houston. Below is a complete breakdown of every movement across all divisions.


    Welterweight (Champion: Islam Makhachev)

    • Uroš Medić — ENTERS at No. 12 (NR) | “The Dalmatian” crashes into the rankings with his Round 1 KO of Geoff Neal
    • Colby Covington — UP 1, now No. 13 | Covington ticks up one spot despite not competing in the UFC in quite some time — a notable passive rise driven by others’ results
    • Daniel Rodriguez — DOWN 2, now No. 15 | “D-Rod” slides two places following the ranking reshuffle
    • Geoff Neal — EXITS Top 15 | The Houston native is dropped entirely after being stopped on home soil


    Middleweight (Champion: Khamzat Chimaev)

    • Sean Strickland — HOLDS at No. 3 | Main event TKO win not enough to move the needle for “Tarzan” in a crowded division
    • Brendan Allen — UP 1, now No. 4
    • Israel Adesanya — UP 1, now No. 5
    • Anthony Hernandez — DOWN 2, now No. 6 | Pays the price for the TKO loss in the main event

    Heavyweight (Champion: Tom Aspinall)

    The Spivac win over Ante Delija sent significant ripple effects down the entire division. Derrick Lewis returns to the Top 10.

    • Serghei Spivac — UP 1, now No. 6
    • Rizvan Kuniev — DOWN 1, now No. 7
    • Marcin Tybura — UP 2, now No. 8 (tied)
    • Derrick Lewis — UP 3, now No. 8 (tied)
    • Ante Delija — DOWN 1, now No. 10
    • Tallison Teixeira — UP 1, now No. 11
    • Shamil Gaziev — UP 1, now No. 12
    • Mick Parkin — UP 2, now No. 13
    • Vitor Petrino — ENTERS at No. 15 (NR)

    Women’s Bantamweight (Champion: Kayla Harrison)

    • Joselyne Edwards — UP 3, now No. 11 | The biggest mover of the week following her dominant finish
    • Mayra Bueno Silva — DOWN 1, now No. 12
    • Nora Cornolle — DOWN 1, now No. 13 | Falls following the loss to Edwards
    • Miesha Tate — DOWN 1, now No. 14

    Men’s Flyweight (Champion: Joshua Van)

    • Lone’er Kavanagh — EXITS Top 15 | Drops out entirely ahead of his Feb. 28 main event vs. Brandon Moreno in Mexico City
    • Joseph Morales — ENTERS at No. 15 (NR)

    Featherweight (Champion: Alexander Volkanovski)

    • Melquizael Costa — ENTERS at No. 13 (NR)
    • Kevin Vallejos — DOWN 1, now No. 14

    Women’s Flyweight (Champion: Valentina Shevchenko)

    • Gabriella Fernandes — UP 1, now No. 14
    • JJ Aldrich — DOWN 1, now No. 15

    No Changes

    Lightweight, Light Heavyweight, Men’s Bantamweight, Women’s Strawweight, and both Pound-for-Pound rankings all held steady with no movement following UFC Houston.


    The next UFC event is UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs. Kavanagh on Saturday, February 28, 2026 in Mexico City.

  • Israel Adesanya vs. Joe Pyfer Headlines UFC Fight Night in Seattle on March 28

    Israel Adesanya vs. Joe Pyfer Headlines UFC Fight Night in Seattle on March 28

    The UFC has officially announced a marquee middleweight clash for the Pacific Northwest: Israel Adesanya will face Joe Pyfer in the main event of UFC Fight Night 271: Adesanya vs. Pyfer on Saturday, March 28, at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Washington. The card streams live on Paramount+.

    Adesanya (24-5), the two-time UFC Middleweight Champion, looks to snap a brutal three-fight losing skid and reassert himself among the division’s elite. The Nigerian-New Zealander known as “The Last Stylebender” made history during his first title reign with five consecutive successful defenses, and reclaimed the belt in spectacular fashion with a second-round knockout of Alex Pereira at UFC 287 in April 2023.

    Since then, however, the wheels have come off: he dropped the title to Sean Strickland by unanimous decision at UFC 293, was submitted by Dricus du Plessis in a championship rematch at UFC 305, and was stopped by TKO just 30 seconds into round two by Nassourdine Imavov at a UFC Fight Night in Riyadh in February 2025. A strong performance in Seattle could go a long way toward turning the page on that difficult stretch and putting him back in the title conversation.

    Standing across from him is the surging Joe Pyfer (15-3), one of the most exciting young talents in the 185-pound division. Nicknamed “Bodybagz” for good reason, Pyfer has racked up nine knockout victories and four Performance of the Night bonuses in his UFC tenure, quickly building a reputation as one of middleweight’s most dangerous finishers. Currently ranked No. 15 in the division, a statement win over a legend like Adesanya would be the biggest result of his career and could vault him into the upper tier of the rankings.

    UFC Fight Night 271: Adesanya vs. Pyfer takes place March 28 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle and airs live on Paramount+. The full fight card is expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

    UFC Fight Night Seattle
  • Paul Hughes vs. Jay Jay Wilson Headlines PFL Belfast on April 16

    Paul Hughes vs. Jay Jay Wilson Headlines PFL Belfast on April 16

    Paul “Big News” Hughes (14-3) will headline PFL Belfast on April 16 from the SSE Arena in Northern Ireland, facing New Zealand’s Jay Jay “The Māori Kid” Wilson (11-2) in a lightweight main event, the league announced Monday.

    The bout marks Hughes’ first appearance since losing a unanimous decision to PFL lightweight champion Usman Nurmagomedov at PFL Champions Series 3 in Dubai last October.

    It will be the second consecutive time Hughes has headlined an event at the SSE Arena, having famously stopped Bruno Miranda in 42 seconds at PFL’s debut Belfast card in May 2025.

    Hughes Calls Belfast Return ‘A Redemption Arc’

    Hughes, ranked No. 4 in the PFL lightweight division, is framing the fight as the beginning of a climb back toward a third meeting with Nurmagomedov. The County Derry native says finishing Wilson is a requirement, not just a preference.

    “It’s not good enough to have a good performance, I need to finish you and put myself in the mix again,” Hughes said. “This is the beginning of my redemption arc — it starts with Jay Jay.”

    PFL Belfast Poster

    PFL CEO John Martin confirmed the matchup to ESPN, noting that Hughes specifically requested a return to Belfast. “Hughes is looking to get back on track, and Jay Jay will have an opportunity to play spoiler in Paul’s backyard,” Martin said. “I think that makes for a super fun fight.”

    Wilson Seeking Upset To Boost Title Contention

    Wilson enters as a significant underdog fighting on enemy soil, but the 28-year-old Kiwi has never been stopped across 13 professional bouts. He is coming off a decision loss to undefeated contender Archie Colgan on the same PFL Dubai card where Hughes fell to Nurmagomedov. Prior to that, Wilson withdrew from the PFL lightweight tournament semifinals due to a broken jaw.

    A win over Hughes on his home turf would immediately push Wilson into PFL lightweight title contention. Nurmagomedov most recently defended his title against Alfie Davis at PFL Dubai in February, with Colgan expected to be next in line for a championship shot.

    PFL Belfast Broadcast & Tickets

    PFL Belfast airs live in the United States on ESPN2, the ESPN App, and ESPN Deportes. The main card begins at 7 PM ET, with the preliminary card streaming on the ESPN App (ESPN Unlimited) at 2:30 PM ET. Doors at the SSE Arena open at 7 PM local time, with the main event scheduled after midnight BST.

    Pre-sale tickets are available Tuesday, February 24 at 12 PM GMT, with general sale beginning Wednesday, February 25 at 12 PM GMT via pfl.info/belfast. The full undercard is expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

  • McGregor Accepts ‘No Name’ Opponent, Dana White Responds

    McGregor Accepts ‘No Name’ Opponent, Dana White Responds

    If you take Conor McGregor’s word for it, when he said he’d fight anyone for his UFC return bout, he meant it.

    McGregor was one of several UFC fighters watching along and sharing his thoughts on X (fka Twitter) during the UFC Houston card.

    During that time, McGregor posted about making his UFC return, something that he has teased on and off again, especially since U.S. President Donald Trump’s first announcement about a UFC White House card.

    In a now-deleted post, McGregor told the MMA community that his next opponent might be a “no name” — but he also didn’t care.

    “It’s a no name up next for me possibly, folks,” McGregor posted. “And as you know, I don’t give a f***. I ACCEPT. Send the contract, lads. CONOR MCGREGOR’S DEAL.”

    McGregor would later make a post responding to those saying they were tired of McGregor’s ego.

    “I have no ego whatsoever but sublime confidence earned through decades of hard work!” McGregor posted.

    McGregor has been one of the UFC names who have pushed the heaviest to compete on the UFC White House event, which is scheduled for Sunday, June 14.

    Still, as of press time, no announcement of any UFC White House fights, let alone a McGregor one, has been announced.

    In fact, at the UFC Houston post-fight press conference, when asked about the truth to McGregor’s recent posting about being offered a fight, UFC CEO and President Dana White suggested such a claim was not true.

    “If it was done and he accepted it, I would announce it,” White said.

    Michael Chandler had been teasing a long-awaited fight with McGregor would take place at the White House card, but White nixed that idea last month.

    A fight between McGregor and Chandler had been awaited since the two coached season 31 of The Ultimate Fighter in 2023. The two were booked for the original UFC 303 main event before McGregor withdrew a few weeks before the fight.

    McGregor has not been seen in action since his loss to Dustin Poirier in their trilogy bout that headlined UFC 264 in July 2021.

    White has previously teased that the booking for the White House card is done, with a couple of different main event options.

  • ‘Overthink Nothing’ – Sean Strickland Stops Anthony Hernandez

    ‘Overthink Nothing’ – Sean Strickland Stops Anthony Hernandez

    Sean Strickland wants his middleweight championship back and thinks he’s ready for Khamzat Chimaev, making that statement with a finish of Anthony Hernandez in the main event of UFC Houston.

    Strickland started the fight by working behind the jab, looking to keep Hernandez at bay and prevent any takedown attempts. Strickland landed a strong right hand that caught Hernandez’s attention about halfway through the first. Hernandez, however, battled hard during the second half of the round, landing a couple of strong rights.

    Strickland continued to work a strong jab during the second round, while Hernandez looked to come forward and turn the momentum with his pressure.

    Strickland ended things with a body shot that hurt “Fluffy” during the third, following it up with clinch knees to the body and some ground shots before the referee stopped the action.

    This was Strickland’s first fight since losing his UFC middleweight championship rematch with Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 312 one year ago. Strickland upset Israel Adesanya for the title at UFC 293 before losing to DDP at UFC 297.

    “Fluffy” Hernandez sees an eight-fight win streak snapped at the hands of Strickland. He came into this bout off a dominant submission of Roman Dolidze this past summer.

  • Sean Brady vs. Joaquin Buckley Tops UFC Vegas 116 on April 25

    Sean Brady vs. Joaquin Buckley Tops UFC Vegas 116 on April 25

    Two men looking to break into the upper echelon of the welterweight contender scene will do battle in the main event of UFC Vegas 116, as Sean Brady takes on Joaquin Buckley.

    The UFC confirmed the bout in an announcement during the UFC Houston broadcast.

    Both men are coming in off losses but are still ranked in the top 10 at 170 pounds, and a strong performance could gain the winner a top-five opponent.

    Brady comes into this bout off a loss to Michael Morales at UFC 322 in November. He had won three straight prior to that and was once 15-0 before running into then-future welterweight champion Belal Muhammad.

    Buckley last fought this past June, dropping a decision to the returning former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman at UFC Atlanta. Prior to that, Buckley had won six straight and hadn’t lost since 2022.

    UFC Vegas 116 takes place on April 25 at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada.

  • Renato Moicano vs. Chris Duncan Headlines UFC Vegas 115

    Renato Moicano vs. Chris Duncan Headlines UFC Vegas 115

    A lightweight main event has been booked to headline UFC Vegas 115 on April 4, as former lightweight title challenger Renato Moicano faces Chris Duncan.

    The UFC confirmed the pairing in an announcement during the UFC Houston broadcast.

    What makes this fight particularly interesting is that both men train at American Top Team in Florida. It is unknown which man, if either, will not train at the facility for this bout.

    Moicano is looking to rebound from a pair of losses, losing a short-notice lightweight title bout with Islam Makhachev at UFC 311 and dropping a decision to Beneil Dariush at UFC 317. Moicano is currently ranked No. 10 in the division.

    Moicano was scheduled to face Brian Ortega at UFC 326 in early March, but the bout was scrapped following an injury to Ortega.

    Duncan has won four straight and is 6-1 in the UFC since coming in off a knockout win on Dana White’s Contender Series. He most recently submitted Terrance McKinney at UFC 323 in December.

    UFC Vegas 115 takes place on April 4 from the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada.

  • ‘Just Gained A Lot Of Fans’ – Uros Medic KOs Geoff Neal

    ‘Just Gained A Lot Of Fans’ – Uros Medic KOs Geoff Neal

    Uros Medic has scored the biggest win of his career and has most likely forced his way into the welterweight rankings, scoring a first-round knockout of Geoff Neal in the UFC Houston co-main event.

    Medic eyed an early end to the fight, looking to use his speed to set up power shots. Medic appeared to be getting the better of Neal in the opening minute of the fight.

    Medic landed a brutal combination, cracking Neal with a left hand and dropping him out cold for the win.

    Medic has now won three straight and four of his last five while retaining his 100 percent finish rate.

    Medic called out Leon Edwards for a fight this summer.

    Neal has now lost four of his last five. This is his second straight fight where he was knocked out in brutal fashion, following his loss to Carlos Prates at UFC 319.

  • VIDEO: Melquizael Costa Becomes First To Finish Dan Ige

    VIDEO: Melquizael Costa Becomes First To Finish Dan Ige

    Melquizael Costa extends his win streak and will most likely become a ranked featherweight, putting away Dan Ige at UFC Houston.

    Ige looked to take control of the fight, coming forward with pressure and mixing in a takedown attempt. Costa, however, showed strong work in the clinch to take momentum, adding in some kicks that left their mark on Ige.

    Costa then finished things by landing a spinning kick on the side of Ige’s head, crumbling him and landing follow-up shots to end the fight.

    Costa becomes the first in the UFC to finish Ige.

    After starting his UFC career 1-2, Costa has now won six consecutive fights. He came into this bout off a head kick knockout of Morgan Charriere this past December.

    Ige has now lost four of his last five, and he is 4-8 in his last 12.

  • VIDEO: Jacobe Smith Violently KOs Josiah Harrell at UFC Houston

    Jacobe Smith is making a case of being a rising star in the welterweight division, stamping such with a brutal first-round knockout of Josiah Harrell at UFC Houston.

    Smith controlled the fight from the beginning, landing some solid right hands while stopping the takedown attempts of Harrell. One of those attempts from Harrell resulted in Smith rolling through and getting into top control.

    Once there, Smith rained down blows to knock out Harrell. He then used his post-fight interview to call out Kevin Holland.

    Smith now moves to 12-0 and is 3-0 in the UFC since arriving off a performance on Dana White’s Contender Series. Last year, Smith knocked out Preston Parsons and choked out Niko Price in the Octagon.

    This marked the first loss of Harrell’s MMA career. This marked his UFC debut, coming into this bout off a third-round win over Bekmyrza Dosmatov in LFA last month.

  • VIDEO: Joselyne Edwards Injures, Submits Nora Cornolle After Slam

    VIDEO: Joselyne Edwards Injures, Submits Nora Cornolle After Slam

    A UFC Houston card that seemed to start slow picked up in an eye-opening way during the prelims, courtesy of Joselyne Edwards defeating Nora Cornolle.

    Cornolle controlled the action to take the first round on all three judges’ cards. But the second round, however, saw things change with Cornolle in Edwards’ grasp.

    Near the midway point of the second round, Edwards lifted Cornolle and slammed her to the mat with a big impact. Cornolle seemed to be finished, as Edwards pounded with some follow-up shots.

    Cornolle stood up but still seemed dazed, and Edwards took advantage, scoring a quick takedown and locking in a choke for the submission win.

    The aftermath would see Cornolle on the mat in pain, clutching at the shoulder she landed on in the slam. Cornolle needed assistance in leaving the Octagon.

    This was a rematch from UFC Paris in September 2023, a bout that Cornolle won via decision.

    Edwards has now won four straight. She entered this bout off finishes of Chelsea Chandler and Priscila Cachoeira last year.

    Cornolle has now lost three of her last four. She is 2-3 since the win over Edwards.

  • Sean Strickland Calls UFC Pay Practices “Predatory”

    Sean Strickland Calls UFC Pay Practices “Predatory”

    Sean Strickland shared honest thoughts about pay for fighters in the UFC, criticizing the pay scale as a predatory practice that the fighters have no control over.

    Speaking with Complex, Strickland was asked about the promotion’s decision to increase post-fight bonus awards from $50,000 to $100,000 — plus $25,000 for finishes.

    Strickland explained that while it looks like the UFC fighters are being paid more under the new Paramount deal, that isn’t exactly the case.

    “The UFC is the most, as far as the pay scale, there is no — you compare it to any other sporting event, the UFC is the most f***** up,” Strickland said. “If you compare it to like pay versus athletes versus what they’re making, there is no argument there. It’s not fair, it’s predatory. There is no argument there.

    “Now we’re a bunch of f****** idiots who take our clothes off and go fight for f****** shorten our lives for this. So like, do we deserve better? I don’t f****** know. I’m just telling you that there is no argument here that the UFC is not predatory.”

    It’s more common knowledge these days that the revenue share for UFC fighters is lackluster compared to athletes in other sports leagues. While athletes from leagues like the NBA, NFL, and MLB see around a 45-50 percent share of revenue, the UFC fighters — who have no collective bargaining agreement with the promotion — see only about 13-20 percent.

    That figure comes courtesy of an antitrust lawsuit — Le v. Zuffa — against the UFC that was settled in 2025. Another antitrust lawsuit — Johnson v. Zuffa — regarding the UFC’s business practices is still ongoing.

    Ronda Rousey echoed similar sentiments in a recent interview, claiming TKO’s focus on “cost-effective” fights played into why MVP Promotions, and not the UFC, are hosting her fight with Gina Carano in May. TKO formed in 2023 as part of a business merger between the UFC and WWE.

    Strickland added that it doesn’t matter if fighters do or don’t speak out about the pay issue — because there aren’t any hints of the pay for fighters changing anytime soon. In fact, Strickland stated fighters might be better off working corporate jobs than spending all their time training and competing in the Octagon.

    “…What are they signing guys [for]? 10 and 10? How much is f****** rent in Vegas? It’s like $2,000, $1,600, $1,400?” Strickland said. “So it’s like, once you pay your managers, your taxes, how the f*** you supposed to live on that? ‘Well, you could fight four times a year.’ Okay, so you go 3-1. Like, no, you’ll make more money at f****** Walmart, dude. But it’s what the UFC wants, man. It’s all just f****** corporate.

    “Why do I want to go compete with a Brazilian where he could go make money and live pretty nicely, to where you can’t do that in America? Why would anybody want that? It doesn’t make sense.”

    It’s been noted that Kayla Harrison is the only American UFC undisputed champion, with Justin Gaethje holding an interim title and Max Holloway holding the BMF belt.

    Strickland hinted this might be something we see for good if the pay structure does not undergo a major overhaul.

    “You say no to a fight. Well, guess what? They’re go find some f****** guy in some f****** sandpit and they’ll do it for f****** five and five,” Strickland said. “This is why you’re slowly gonna see the American roster die because it’s outsourced by people…”

    Strickland faces Anthony Hernandez in the main event of UFC Houston.

  • UFC Houston: Strickland vs. Hernandez Results & Highlights

    UFC Houston: Strickland vs. Hernandez Results & Highlights

    UFC Houston results and highlights are updated live as the action unfolds from the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. The UFC is on the road with a Fight Night card for the first time this year. The main event will feature a key middleweight battle between Sean Strickland and Anthony Hernandez. MMANews has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    Sean Strickland vs. Anthony Hernandez – Middleweight Main Event

    This bout marks Strickland’s first since losing a middleweight title rematch to Dricus Du Plessis last year. Strickland defeated Israel Adesanya to win the UFC middleweight title in upset fashion at UFC 293, but he dropped the gold in a close decision against Du Plessis at UFC 297. In the time between the two title fights with DDP, Strickland bested Paulo Costa via split decision at UFC 302.

    After a win on Dana White’s Contender Series was overturned and a 1-2 start to his Octagon tenure, Hernandez enters tonight on an eight-fight win streak. In 2025, “Fluffy” scored a unanimous decision over Brendan Allen and a dominant submission of Roman Dolidze.

    The co-main event will be a welterweight battle between Geoff Neal and Uros Medic. Neal enters this fight with losses in three of his last four. This is his first fight since getting knocked out by Carlos Prates at UFC 319. Medic, meanwhile, has won three of his last four, including first-round finishes of Gilbert Urbina and Muslim Salikhov last year.

    If you can’t watch the action, check here for all the latest results and highlights from UFC Houston!

    How to Watch UFC Houston

    • Date: Saturday, February 21, 2026
    • Venue: Toyota Center, Houston, Texas
    • Streaming: Paramount+ (exclusive)
    • Prelims: 5 PM ET / 2 PM PT
    • Main Card: 8 PM ET / 5 PM PT

    UFC Houston Quick Results

    • Main Event: Sean Strickland vs. Anthony Hernandez — Sean Strickland def. Anthony Hernandez via TKO (Rd. 3, 2:23)
    • Co-Main: Geoff Neal vs. Uros Medic — Uros Medic def. Geoff Neal via KO (Rd. 1, 1:19)
    • Dan Ige vs. Melquizael Costa — Melquizael Costa def. Dan Ige via TKO (Rd. 1, 4:56)
    • Serghei Spivac vs. Ante Delija — Serghei Spivac def. Ante Delija via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x2)
    • Jacobe Smith vs. Josiah Harrell — Jacobe Smith def. Josiah Harrell via KO (Rd. 1, 3:01)
    • Zachary Reese vs. Michel Pereira — Michel Pereira def. Zachary Reese via split decision (29-28 x2, 28-29)

    UFC Houston Results & Highlights

    Preliminary Card (Paramount+, 5 PM ET)

    Women’s Flyweight: Juliana Miller vs. Carli Judice

    Result: Carli Judice def. Juliana Miller via unanimous decision (29-28 x2, 30-27)

    Featherweight: Jordan Leavitt vs. Yadier del Valle

    Result: Jordan Leavitt def. Yadier del Valle via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

    Welterweight: Phil Rowe vs. Jean-Paul Lebosnoyani

    Result: Jean-Paul Lebosnoyani def. Phil Rowe via split decision (29-28 x2, 28-29)

    Welterweight: Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Punahele Soriano

    Result: Punahele Soriano def. Ramiz Brahimaj via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

    Women’s Bantamweight: Nora Cornolle vs. Joselyne Edwards

    Result: Joselyne Edwards def. Nora Cornolle via submission (rear-naked choke)(Rd. 2, 2:44)

    Flyweight: Alden Coria vs. Luis Gurule

    Result: Alden Coria def. Luis Gurule via unanimous decision (30-27 x3)

    Flyweight: Ode Osbourne vs. Alibi Idiris

    Result: Alibi Idiris def. Ode Osbourne via unanimous decision (29-28 x2, 30-27)

    Welterweight: Chidi Njokuani vs. Carlos Leal

    Result: Carlos Leal def. Chidi Njokuani via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28

    Main Card (Paramount+, 8 PM ET)

    Middleweight: Zachary Reese vs. Michel Pereira

    Result: Michel Pereira def. Zachary Reese via split decision (29-28 x2, 28-29)

    Welterweight: Jacobe Smith vs. Josiah Harrell

    Result: Jacobe Smith def. Josiah Harrell via KO (Rd. 1, 3:01)

    Heavyweight: Serghei Spivac vs. Ante Delija

    Result: Serghei Spivac def. Ante Delija via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x2)

    Featherweight: Dan Ige vs. Melquizael Costa

    Result: Melquizael Costa def. Dan Ige via TKO (Rd. 1, 4:56)

    Welterweight: Geoff Neal vs. Uros Medic

    Result: Uros Medic def. Geoff Neal via KO (Rd. 1, 1:19)

    Middleweight: Sean Strickland vs. Anthony Hernandez

    Result: Sean Strickland def. Anthony Hernandez via TKO (Rd. 3, 2:23)

  • Jailton Almeida Signs With ACA After UFC Release

    Jailton Almeida Signs With ACA After UFC Release

    Former UFC heavyweight contender Jailton Almeida has found a new home in ACA’s heavyweight division. The Brazilian standout has signed with the Russian promotion, ACA president Magomed Bibulatov confirmed through Russian outlet Vestnik MMA on Friday.

    Almeida enters ACA with a 22-5 professional record and a reputation as one of the most dangerous grapplers in the sport.

    The 34-year-old was recently released by the UFC despite being ranked in the top 10 at heavyweight, ending a stint in which he went 8-3 inside the Octagon with notable wins over Derrick Lewis, Jairzinho Rozenstruik, and Serghei Spivac.

    The move comes less than two weeks after news broke that the UFC had opted to part ways with Almeida following a unanimous-decision loss to Rizvan Kuniev at UFC Vegas 113, his second consecutive defeat.

    Almeida later issued a public statement promising that he would “be back” and teasing “new challenges” on the horizon. Those challenges now appear to lie in ACA, where Almeida is expected to remain at heavyweight rather than pursue a previously discussed return to light heavyweight.

    With Almeida now joining the roster, ACA adds a globally recognized contender to its heavyweight ranks at a time when international signings have become increasingly important in the free-agent market.

  • UFC Houston Betting Odds: Hernandez Favored Over Strickland

    UFC Houston Betting Odds: Hernandez Favored Over Strickland

    Betting odds for UFC Houston are locked in ahead of tonight’s card, and the books have made their picks clear across the board. These are near-final lines, so don’t expect much movement before the first bell.

    In the main event, Anthony Hernandez is a significant -240 favorite over former middleweight champion Sean Strickland, who comes back at +205. The total is set at 4.5 rounds, with the under (+156) slightly favored, suggesting oddsmakers expect a finish if Hernandez gets his way.

    Anthony Hernandez Reveals His Game Plan for UFC Houston

    Geoff Neal is a -190 favorite against Uros Medic (+165) in their welterweight matchup. The fight has a 1.5-round total, with the over (+140) favored — a reflection of both men’s tendency to get the job done early.

    Melquizael Costa is a -230 chalk over Dan Ige (+195), with the total set at 2.5. The under (+207) is on the board, meaning oddsmakers strongly expect this one to end before the third round.

    Spivac vs. Delija a Near Pick’em

    The closest fight on the card per the odds is Ante Delija vs. Serghei Spivac, where Delija is a slim -120 favorite with Spivac at +100. The 1.5-round total sits at +112/-132, making this one of the more unpredictable bouts of the night.

    Michel Pereira Favored Over Zach Reese

    Michel Pereira opens as a -160 favorite against Zach Reese (+140). The over 1.5 rounds is +105, indicating some uncertainty about whether this one goes the distance — fitting given Pereira’s unpredictable style.

    UFC Houston gets underway tonight. Stay tuned to MMA News for live results and post-fight coverage.

    Data: BetOnline

  • Khamzat Chimaev vs. Jiří Procházka Reportedly Targeted for UFC 327 Main Event

    Khamzat Chimaev vs. Jiří Procházka Reportedly Targeted for UFC 327 Main Event

    UFC middleweight champion Khamzat Chimaev is reportedly being targeted to face former light heavyweight champion Jiří Procházka for the vacant UFC light heavyweight title in the main event of UFC 327 on April 11 at the Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida.

    The rumor was first reported by MMA content creator @realkevink on social media. UFC has not officially confirmed the matchup

    The report suggests Chimaev (15-0) would vacate his middleweight title to pursue a second championship at 205 pounds, bypassing any defense of the belt he won by dominating Dricus du Plessis at UFC 319 in August.

    On his JAXXON Podcast appearance Friday, Chimaev expressed his desire to become a two-division champion. “I want to become double champion,” Chimaev said. “I am not like these guys who try to take their retirement from UFC undefeated. I just want to make big fights.”

    The move to light heavyweight would mark the third weight class of Chimaev’s UFC career after competing at both welterweight and middleweight. Former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman recently suggested on his Pound 4 Pound podcast that Chimaev has simply outgrown 185 pounds, with reports placing his walking weight between 225 and 230 pounds.

    Procházka (32-5-1) has rebuilt momentum in the light heavyweight division with back-to-back stoppage victories over Jamahal Hill at UFC 311 in January 2025 and Khalil Rountree Jr. at UFC 320 in October 2025. The former champion’s only UFC losses have come against Alex Pereira, who is widely expected to vacate the 205-pound title to pursue a heavyweight move.

    Notably, this report conflicts with an earlier rumor from Brazilian outlet MMA Hoje, which targeted Procházka vs. Carlos Ulberg for the vacant light heavyweight title at UFC 327, with Pereira facing Ciryl Gane for interim heavyweight gold at UFC 328. Whether the Chimaev matchup has replaced that plan or represents a competing report remains unclear.

    The UFC 327 card is already taking shape with a confirmed co-main event featuring flyweight champion Joshua Van defending his title against Tatsuro Taira. Additional bouts include Dominick Reyes vs. Johnny Walker, Kevin Holland vs. Randy Brown, and Paulo Costa’s light heavyweight debut against Azamat Murzakanov.

  • Bo Nickal Signals He’s Fighting Colby Covington at UFC White House

    Bo Nickal Signals He’s Fighting Colby Covington at UFC White House

    Bo Nickal appears to have publicly signaled his acceptance of a fight with Colby Covington, posting a message on X Friday evening that strongly implies the two fighters are headed for a collision at the UFC’s historic White House card on June 14.

    “I have a lot of respect for Colby Covington as a competitor and someone who never backs down from a challenge,” Nickal wrote, tagging Covington, the UFC, Dana White, and President Donald Trump. “The Real American way. See you soon.”

    The tweet marks a notable shift in tone from Nickal, who had spent recent weeks aggressively calling out Covington after “Chaos” appeared to pivot toward a matchup with Paddy Pimblett instead. As recently as mid-February, Nickal blasted Covington as a “coward” for seemingly dodging the fight, telling him to “man up and take your beating.”

    Bo Nickal vs Colby Covington

    Bo Nickal, Colby Covington

    The rivalry between the two erupted in January at the RAF 5 press conference, where Covington directed several personal jabs at Nickal, questioning his career trajectory and MMA acumen. After defeating Luke Rockhold at the event, Covington hinted at a move to middleweight — only to later reverse course and declare he preferred to remain at 170 pounds, citing a desire to face a non-American opponent on the patriotic card.

    Nickal, a three-time NCAA Division I wrestling champion currently competing at middleweight, had previously identified Covington as his top target for the event.

    “A matchup with Colby makes a lot of sense, especially considering how the last RAF event unfolded,” Nickal told MMA Fighting earlier this month. “This feels like the fight that needs to happen.”

    The UFC’s White House event — set for the South Lawn on Flag Day, June 14, also President Trump’s 80th birthday, is reported to already be finalized internally. Dana White confirmed last week that the card is complete, though no official bouts have been announced.

    It remains to be seen whether Nickal vs. Covington has been formally booked or whether Friday’s tweet represents Nickal’s public acceptance of an offer currently in the works. Neither the UFC nor Covington’s camp has issued a response as of publication.

  • UFC Winnipeg Fight Night: Burns vs Malott Set for April 18

    UFC Winnipeg Fight Night: Burns vs Malott Set for April 18

    The UFC has officially announced its return to Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, with a welterweight main event pitting Gilbert Burns against Mike Malott.

    The event, a UFC Fight Night card in Winnipeg, takes place on Saturday, April 18 from the Canada Life Centre. The announcement marks the promotion’s first visit to Manitoba since December 2017, when the UFC last held an event in the Canadian province.

    The scoop was first reported by veteran MMA reporter Adam Martin yesterday, and confirmed this afternoon.

    Burns (22-9 MMA, 15-9 UFC) is currently on the longest losing skid of his career at four straight defeats. The 39-year-old former title challenger was most recently stopped by Michael Morales in the first round at UFC Vegas 106 in May 2025. Despite the rough stretch, all four of Burns’ losses have come against ranked opposition in Morales, Sean Brady, Jack Della Maddalena, and Belal Muhammad. “Durinho” hasn’t tasted victory since a decision win over Jorge Masvidal at UFC 287 in April 2023.

    Malott (13-2-1 MMA, 6-1 UFC) enters the bout riding a three-fight winning streak and will be looking to make the most of his first UFC main event opportunity. The Canadian earned a unanimous decision victory over Kevin Holland at a UFC event in Vancouver in October and knocked out Charles Radtke at UFC 315 in May. The 34-year-old earned his UFC contract through Dana White’s Contender Series in 2021, and his only Octagon loss came against Neil Magny.

    The matchup represents a classic crossroads bout. Burns brings elite experience as a former welterweight title challenger and decorated BJJ world champion, while Malott looks to use a victory over a big name to break into the upper tier of the 170-pound division. Headlining in front of a Canadian crowd adds another layer for Malott, who has thrived in previous outings on home soil.

    Additional bouts for the UFC Winnipeg card are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

  • Jailton Almeida Posts Statement After UFC Release

    Jailton Almeida Posts Statement After UFC Release

    Former top-10 UFC heavyweight Jailton Almeida has broken his silence following his surprising release from the promotion on February 12, sharing an optimistic message on Instagram.

    “It’s time to think about new challenges, to chase new dreams,” Almeida wrote. “It’s going to be that way — there’ll be news very soon. I’ll be back on the scene again.”

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DU–GO5gKHn/?igsh=aHQ0NHM4MG8yODAz

    Almeida (22-5) was ranked No. 8 at heavyweight when the UFC cut him following back-to-back decision losses to Alexander Volkov at UFC 321 and Rizvan Kuniev at UFC Vegas 113. He had not exhausted his contract, with the promotion electing to release him early.

    The 34-year-old Brazilian went 8-3 in the UFC with seven finishes in eight wins, including stoppages of Jairzinho Rozenstruik, and Serghei Spivac. However, criticism of his grappling-heavy style had mounted, and UFC CEO Dana White publicly stated after the Volkov loss that he was pleased Almeida didn’t receive the decision.

    Fan speculation has already linked Almeida to PFL, where his elite BJJ credentials and 13 career submission wins could thrive. Based on his message, it appears fans won’t be waiting long for an announcement.

  • Carol Foro Tests Positive for Diuretic, UFC Seattle Debut Cancelled

    Carol Foro Tests Positive for Diuretic, UFC Seattle Debut Cancelled

    Carol Foro has announced she will no longer compete at UFC Fight Night Seattle on March 28 after testing positive for a banned substance in an out-of-competition drug test.

    Foro’s team released a statement on Instagram confirming the positive test, which revealed a type of diuretic in her system earlier this year. The Brazilian had been scheduled to make her UFC debut on the card headlined by Israel Adesanya vs. Joe Pyfer at the Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Washington.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DU9D4dCjxZJ/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

    Foro’s Team Denies Intentional Use

    In their statement, Foro’s camp maintained that she did not take the substance “consciously or intentionally” and raised the possibility that it may have entered her system through a contaminated supplement. Testing is reportedly underway to support their case as they work to clear her name.

    Her planned opponent, Stephanie Luciano, has since been rematched. Per reporter Leo Walker Guimaraes, Luciano is now set to face Alexia Thainara on March 28.

    Foro Earned UFC Contract on Contender Series

    Foro’s cancelled debut is a significant setback following the impression she made last September. The Brazilian earned her UFC contract via Episode 5 of Dana White’s Contender Series Season 9, where both she and opponent Shanelle Dyer (who lost her undefeated record in the contest) were awarded contracts after a standout performance.

    Thainara, who steps in as Foro’s replacement, has also been highlighted as a fighter to watch, making her a strong substitute for the card. Foro’s team will now focus on resolving the anti-doping matter before her UFC career can get underway.

  • Strickland, Hernandez Make Weight for UFC Houston

    Strickland, Hernandez Make Weight for UFC Houston

    Sean Strickland and Anthony “Fluffy” Hernandez have both made weight for their main event bout at UFC Houston, with Strickland admitting the weight cut was harder on him than any fight could be.

    Strickland stepped on the scale first and hit 185lb on the dot — going one pound under the non-title limit in what reads as a statement of intent from the former middleweight champion. Hernandez made use of the extra allowance and came in at 186lb, making the fight officially on for Saturday night.

    Strickland’s Brutal Cut

    The road to the scale was not easy for Strickland, who has been out of action for over a year since losing his title rematch with Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 312 last February. During his absence, his weight ballooned to a reported 230lb — nearly two full weight classes above the 185lb middleweight limit.

    Strickland shared a video on his Instagram story the night before weigh-ins showing the toll the cut was taking. He posted screenshots of an intense two-hour workout that burned 1,214 calories, with his heart rate climbing from a resting 38bpm to highs of 141bpm during the hardest stretches.

    “This is what we really get paid to do,” Strickland told his followers. “Cutting weight is worse than the fight, but we are almost there.”

    It’s not the first time Strickland has struggled with the middleweight limit. Earlier in his career he competed at welterweight, and in 2023 he took a short-notice fight at 204lb after insisting he couldn’t reach 185lb in time. His success at middleweight has kept him in the division, but getting back down after a year at 230lb is a different kind of challenge.

    What’s at Stake Saturday

    Despite the drama surrounding his cut, Strickland arrived at the scale in good shape and ready to go. With Nassourdine Imavov as the current top contender for Khamzat Chimaev’s middleweight title, a statement win for Strickland — the last man to defeat Imavov, back in January 2023 — would put him firmly back in the title picture.

    Hernandez enters on an eight-fight winning streak, including victories over Brendan Allen and Roman Dolidze, and is favored by the oddsmakers heading into Saturday night in Houston.