Category: MMA

  • Michael Johnson vs. Alex Perez Scrapped From UFC 324, Suspicious Bets Reported

    Michael Johnson vs. Alex Perez Scrapped From UFC 324, Suspicious Bets Reported

    The hits keep on coming to UFC 324 — the UFC’s debut event on Paramount — in the hours leading into the fights.

    Hours before they were set to duke it out on the preliminary card, the fight between Michael Johnson and Alex Perez was canceled.

    The UFC announced the news at about 2 pm ET on January 24 — three hours before UFC 324’s start.

    No reason was given by the promotion; however, those in the MMA betting space noted strange activity on the betting lines of this fight.

    Users across social media, including X (fka Twitter) and Reddit, noted a peculiar line change on DraftKings. On Jan. 22, Johnson was listed as a +135 underdog. After money “flooded in” on the 39-year-old, however, both fighters were listed in the sportsbook the next day as a -110 pick ’em play.

    Michael Johnson vs. Alexander Hernandez Off Of UFC 318; Suspicious Betting Activity Reported

    There has been some speculation that Hernandez may be dealing with a hand injury; however, that has not been confirmed by any parties as of press time.

    In November, the UFC came under heavy scrutiny after suspicious betting patterns were detected ahead of the Isaac Dulgarian vs. Yadier Del Valle fight at UFC Vegas 110. After Dulgarian was finished in the first round, Dulgarian was released by the UFC and investigations were launched.

    New York-based MMA promoter and writer Harry Mac made more claims of suspicious betting activity, while Ariel Helwani reported on his show that a number of fighters had been approached about the idea of throwing fights. A number of fighters (joking or not) released statements on social media claiming they had been approached in the past.

    The card will proceed on with 11 bouts. Cameron Smotherman was pulled from his UFC 324 matchup against Ricky Turcious yesterday after collapsing during the ceremonial weigh-ins.

    Johnson has won three straight and four of his last five. He was coming into this scheduled bout off a decision win over Daniel Zellhuber at UFC 318.

    Hernandez has won four straight, most recently scoring a finish of Carlos Diego Ferreira at Noche UFC 3.

  • UFC 324 Results: Gaethje vs Pimblett Live Updates & Highlights

    UFC 324 Results: Gaethje vs Pimblett Live Updates & Highlights

    UFC 324 results and highlights are updated live as the action unfolds from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. This historic card marks the first UFC event streaming exclusively on Paramount+, headlined by Justin Gaethje vs. Paddy Pimblett for the interim lightweight championship. MMANews has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    Gaethje vs Pimblett: Interim Lightweight Title Fight

    Gaethje enters this fight with three wins in his last four. His wins in this stretch include knocking out Dustin Poirier at UFC 291 for the BMF belt and, most recently, defeating Rafael Fiziev at UFC 313.

    Gaethje is a former interim lightweight champion. He defeated Tony Ferguson for that title at UFC 249 in 2020 but fell short in his undisputed title fight with Khabib Nurmagomedov later that year.

    This will be the first UFC championship opportunity for Pimblett, who has been a rising star for the promotion since his Octagon arrival in 2021. The former Cage Warriors featherweight champion has won performance bonuses in five of his seven UFC fights, and he’s a perfect 7-0 in the Octagon so far.

    Pimblett comes into this bout off his highlight finish of Michael Chandler at UFC 314.

    The co-main event will see the return of former bantamweight champion Sean O’Malley, as he takes on Song Yadong.

    O’Malley enters off consecutive losses for the first time in his career. He dropped the bantamweight title to Merab Dvalishvili at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306 and was submitted in the rematch at UFC 316. Yadong, meanwhile, has won three of his last four, including a win over Henry Cejudo last year at UFC Seattle.

    If you can’t watch the action, check here for all the latest results and highlights from UFC 324!

    How to Watch UFC 324

    • Date: Saturday, January 24, 2026
    • Venue: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada
    • Streaming: Paramount+ (exclusive)
    • Prelims: 5:30 PM ET / 2:30 PM PT
    • Late Prelims: 7 PM ET / 4 PM PT
    • Main Card: 9 PM ET / 6 PM PT

    UFC 324 Quick Results

    • Main Event: Justin Gaethje vs. Paddy Pimblett — Gaethje def. Pimblett via unanimous decision
    • Co-Main: Sean O’Malley vs. Song Yadong — O’Malley def. Yadong via unanimous decision
    • Waldo Cortes-Acosta vs. Derrick Lewis — Cortes-Acosta def. Lewis via TKO (Rd. 2, 3:14)
    • Natalia Silva vs. Rose Namajunas — Silva def. Namajunas via unanimous decision
    • Arnold Allen vs. Jean Silva — Silva def. Allen via unanimous decision

    UFC 324 Results & Highlights

    Preliminary Card (Paramount+, 5:30 PM ET)

    Welterweight: Adam Fugitt vs. Ty Miller

    Result: Ty Miller def. Adam Fugitt via TKO (Rd. 1, 4:59)

    Heavyweight: Josh Hokit vs. Denzel Freeman

    Result: Josh Hokit def. Denzel Freeman via TKO (Rd. 1, 4:59)

    Late Preliminary Card (Paramount+, 7 PM ET)

    Flyweight: Alex Perez vs. Charles Johnson

    Result: Alex Perez def. Charles Johnson via TKO (Rd. 1, 3:16)

    Light Heavyweight: Nikita Krylov vs. Modestas Bukauskas

    Result: Nikita Krylov def. Modestas Bukauskas via KO (Rd. 3, 4:57)

    Middleweight: Ateba Gautier vs. Andrey Pulyaev

    Result: Ateba Gautier def. Andrey Pulyaev via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x2)

    Bantamweight: Umar Nurmagomedov vs. Deiveson Figueiredo

    Result: Umar Nurmagomedov def. Deiveson Figueiredo via unanimous decision (30-27 x3)

    Main Card (Paramount+, 9 PM ET)

    Featherweight: Arnold Allen vs. Jean Silva

    Result: Jean Silva def. Arnold Allen via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x2)

    Women’s Flyweight: Natalia Silva vs. Rose Namajunas

    Result: Natalia Silva def. Rose Namajunas via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

    Heavyweight: Waldo Cortes-Acosta vs. Derrick Lewis

    Result: Waldo Cortes-Acosta def. Derrick Lewis via TKO (Rd. 2, 3:14)

    Bantamweight: Sean O’Malley vs. Song Yadong

    Result: Sean O’Malley def. Song Yadong via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

    Interim Lightweight Championship: Justin Gaethje vs. Paddy Pimblett

    Result: Justin Gaethje def. Paddy Pimblett via unanimous decision (48-47, 49-46 x2)

  • Cameron Smotherman Collapses at UFC 324 Weigh-In, Fight Cancelled

    Cameron Smotherman Collapses at UFC 324 Weigh-In, Fight Cancelled

    A scary scene unfolded at the UFC 324 weigh-ins on Friday when bantamweight Cameron Smotherman collapsed face-first on stage moments after stepping off the scale.

    The 28-year-old successfully made weight at 135.5 pounds for his scheduled bout against Ricky Turcios. However, after taking just a few steps toward the exit, Smotherman fell to the floor and appeared to convulse before medical staff rushed to his aid.

    UFC personnel and his teammates carried Smotherman off stage, and he was transported to a local hospital for evaluation. His fight against Turcios has been cancelled, reducing the UFC 324 card to 12 bouts.

    Smotherman Provides Update

    Later on Friday, Smotherman posted a video to social media assuring fans he was doing well. According to his teammate Adrian Yanez, who spoke with Ariel Helwani, Smotherman’s CT scan and X-rays came back clear. He required stitches on his chin from the impact of the fall but is otherwise healthy.

    Interestingly, Smotherman disputed the notion that an extreme weight cut was to blame for the incident. He claimed he didn’t cut very much weight for this fight and came into fight week fairly close to the bantamweight limit. The fighter said he plans to undergo further testing to determine what caused the collapse.

    Smotherman entered UFC 324 looking to snap a two-fight losing streak, having dropped decisions to Serhiy Sidey and Ricky Simón in 2025 after winning his UFC debut against Jake Hadley in October 2024.

    Bisping’s Ill-Timed Commentary Goes Viral

    Adding an unfortunate layer to the incident was UFC Hall of Famer Michael Bisping’s commentary occurring at the exact same moment. While working the TNT Sports broadcast with his back to the stage, Bisping was discussing fighters who miss weight.

    “I never have any sympathy for these guys,” Bisping said just seconds before Smotherman collapsed behind him. “You’ve got one job: Show up, on weight, in shape. You’re a professional fighter. It’s not hard, is it?”

    The clip of Bisping’s comments coinciding with Smotherman’s collapse has since gone viral across social media.

    UFC 324 takes place tonight at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, headlined by the interim lightweight title fight between Justin Gaethje and Paddy Pimblett.

  • UFC Doubles Performance Bonuses to $100K Under Paramount Deal, Adds $25K Finish Incentive

    UFC Doubles Performance Bonuses to $100K Under Paramount Deal, Adds $25K Finish Incentive

    The UFC marked the start of its new broadcast partnership with Paramount by announcing a complete overhaul of its performance bonus system. President and CEO Dana White confirmed the changes ahead of UFC 324 on Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, doubling Fight of the Night and Performance of the Night awards to $100,000 and introducing a new $25,000 bonus for any fighter who scores a knockout or submission.

    The move represents the first significant adjustment to UFC performance bonuses since the promotion standardized payments at $50,000 in 2013. That figure had remained static for over a decade, drawing criticism as inflation eroded its purchasing power by roughly 30 percent. White has occasionally raised bonuses for milestone events, most notably awarding $300,000 per bonus at UFC 300 in April 2024 after fighters Max Holloway and Justin Gaethje lobbied for the increase during a press conference.​

    UFC Doubles Fight-Night Bonuses and Introduces Finish Incentive for Paramount Era

    Under the new structure, the UFC will distribute at least $400,000 in bonuses per event, up from the previous $200,000 baseline. The traditional awards remain: $100,000 each to the two fighters involved in Fight of the Night, and $100,000 apiece to two fighters who earn Performance of the Night. The finish bonus adds another layer, paying $25,000 to any fighter who wins by knockout, technical knockout, or submission but does not receive one of the main awards.

    The timing aligns with the UFC’s new media rights deal with Paramount Skydance Corporation, which will pay an average of $1.1 billion annually through 2031.

    UFC 324 serves as the inaugural event under the Paramount agreement. The card features an interim lightweight title bout between former interim champion Justin Gaethje and rising contender Paddy Pimblett in the main event.

    Fighter compensation has been a persistent point of contention in mixed martial arts. The $50,000 bonus structure introduced in 2013 remained unchanged even as the UFC’s revenue expanded substantially. Adjusted for inflation, a $50,000 bonus in 2013 would need to reach approximately $75,000 today to maintain equivalent purchasing power. Before the 2013 standardization, the UFC distributed variable bonus amounts that often exceeded $50,000, with some events in 2009 and 2011 awarding $70,000, $100,000, or even $160,000 to individual fighters.

    The new finish bonus addresses a longstanding complaint that fighters who delivered exciting knockouts or submissions could be overlooked if four other performances stood out more. By guaranteeing $25,000 to every fighter who scores a finish, the UFC creates an automatic incentive that does not depend on subjective selection by promotion executives.

    The UFC’s standard compensation model includes show money (a guaranteed amount for competing) and a win bonus typically equal to the show money. Fighters also receive tiered payments from the UFC’s uniform deal with Venum.

    White hinted during UFC 300 week that bonuses would rise in the Paramount era but declined to specify amounts until closer to the transition. The doubling of performance bonuses and introduction of the finish incentive mark the most substantial change to the UFC’s reward structure in more than a decade.

  • Justin Gaethje Lashes Out at Staph Question: “What’s Wrong With You?”

    Justin Gaethje Lashes Out at Staph Question: “What’s Wrong With You?”

    In fight week for UFC 324, Justin Gaethje has spent as much time fielding questions about a mark on his neck as about Paddy Pimblett and the interim lightweight belt. After weeks of online speculation that he might be dealing with a staph infection, Gaethje grew visibly irritated when the subject came up again during media duties, snapping at a reporter and insisting his health is nobody else’s business.

    Staph or Ingrown Hair? Justin Gaethje’s Fiery Response Ahead of UFC 324

    The story started earlier in January, when fans studying footage from Gaethje’s YouTube camp series noticed a raised, reddened spot on the side of his neck and a blemish near his lip. Clipped screenshots circulated across X, Reddit, and Instagram, with many users convinced the mark looked like staph or “mat herpes” rather than simple skin irritation. With UFC 324 headlining the promotion’s first Paramount+ era event and billed as a key moment for Gaethje’s final run at UFC gold, talk quickly turned to whether the fight might be at risk.

    Gaethje pushed back on the rumours early and often. On January 6, he posted on social media: “Did you screen shot me eating brisket from my YouTube video to make it look like I have herpes on my lip? my neck is a healing ingrown hair.” In a follow-up message he doubled down: “It’s an ingrown hair on my neck and brisket hanging out of my mouth, Nostradamus.” Man outlets ran pieces repeating his explanation and stressing that there was no official word from doctors that he had staph or that the bout was in jeopardy.

    That did little to settle the debate. As fight week arrived, new photos appeared to show Gaethje with a small bandage or sticker over the same area, feeding more posts claiming he was hiding an active infection and might fail Nevada commission medicals. Some MMA news shows even floated the idea that Arman Tsarukyan could be used as a late replacement if doctors refused to clear Gaethje with an open wound. None of that speculation was confirmed by the UFC or regulators, and the lightweight contender ultimately weighed in successfully, with no announced medical issues and the main event intact.

    Gaethje with a sticker covering his staph infection on the neck
    byu/tylrrbb inufc

    The tension peaked during a UFC 324 fight-week interview with Brazilian outlet Ag. Fight. When a reporter raised the visible neck mark and asked whether it was an injury or infection, Gaethje snapped back, “What’s wrong with you?” before adding, “You’ve ever heard of HIPAA? What’s wrong with you? It means don’t ask me about my body. I won’t ask you about yours.” The clip spread quickly on social media, with many fans pointing out that HIPAA – a U.S. health-privacy law – governs how medical providers handle patient data, not whether an athlete can be asked about a visible issue during media day.

    For now, the only confirmed facts are that Gaethje says the mark is a healing ingrown hair, the Nevada commission has cleared him, and UFC 324’s main event against Pimblett is proceeding as scheduled.

  • Justin Gaethje Vows to “Dog Walk” Paddy Pimblett After Dustin Poirier Comments

    Justin Gaethje made his intentions clear at the UFC 324 pre-fight press conference on Thursday, promising to dominate Paddy Pimblett after the Liverpool fighter criticized Dustin Poirier’s retirement bout performance.

    Justin Gaethje Looks to Dog Walk Paddy Pimblett a UFC 324

    The 37-year-old American took exception to Pimblett’s recent comments about Poirier looking like “dog s***” against Max Holloway at UFC 318 last July. Gaethje defended his former rival during the press event at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, accusing Pimblett of disrespecting one of the sport’s established figures.

    “No, I love it. This guy, I love everything he’s been saying. He definitely sounds overconfident. He’s out here disrespecting legends like Dustin Poirier. I’m going to dog walk this English [expletive] on Saturday. Watch,” Gaethje said.​

    The former interim lightweight champion added that his competitive fire remains at full strength despite approaching what he has described as the final chapter of his career. Gaethje holds a 26-5 professional record and has earned 14 post-fight bonuses during his UFC run.

    “I’m still in it – legends are retired, I ain’t retired yet. I’m still in it. The fire is still as bright and as hot as it’s ever been and I cannot wait to fight this guy. I constantly am building momentum and this is a battle of momentum, and I said I’m going to dog walk this [expletive] if he lasts that long,” Gaethje stated.

    Pimblett attempted to clarify his remarks during the press conference, explaining that Poirier had never spoken positively about him, which justified his honest assessment of the Holloway fight. The 30-year-old stands at 23-3 with seven consecutive UFC victories, including a third-round TKO of Michael Chandler at UFC 314 in April that propelled him into the lightweight top five.

    When Pimblett defended his position, Gaethje quickly responded that the British fighter would fare no better against Holloway.

    The fighters will compete for the interim lightweight title on Saturday, January 24, at T-Mobile Arena after champion Ilia Topuria announced he would not fight in the first quarter of 2026 due to personal circumstances. The winner is expected to face Topuria later this year to unify the championship.

    Gaethje outlined his tactical approach for the matchup, stating he plans to apply sustained pressure to neutralize Pimblett’s reach advantage. “I think I need to fight smart. At the highest level you cannot make mistakes. If you watch all the champions, they’re moving forward. I’m going to move forward and I’m going to be in his chest. I’m going to put my head in his chest. He’s got really long arms – it’s going to be hard to hit me when my head’s in his chest.”

  • “Good Try Though”: Dana White Dismisses Arman Tsarukyan’s Recent Press Tour

    “Good Try Though”: Dana White Dismisses Arman Tsarukyan’s Recent Press Tour

    Dana White brushed off questions about Arman Tsarukyan’s viral media blitz at the UFC 324 pre-fight press conference, even as debate over the lightweight contender’s title snub intensifies. Asked about Tsarukyan’s recent run of podcast and social media appearances.

    White replied, “I haven’t seen it… I don’t know anything about it. Good try though.” Sitting beside him, interim title challenger Paddy Pimblett cut in before White could elaborate, saying Tsarukyan was “trying to be like me, going around eating food,” claiming the Armenian has “no personality” and calling him “a little nit.”

    Dana White Won’t Budge on Arman Tsarukyan Despite High-Profile Media Push

    Tsarukyan has spent the past weeks pushing his name outside the cage, appearing on streams with Adin Ross and other influencers, posting food content, training clips and grappling matches, and using those platforms to hammer Pimblett and the UFC’s matchmaking.

    The tension stems from the promotion’s decision to book Justin Gaethje vs. Pimblett for the interim lightweight title in the UFC 324 main event, while Tsarukyan sits as the division’s No. 1 ranked contender. UFC 324 also opens the promotion’s new broadcast era on Paramount+, raising the commercial stakes around who fights for gold on that stage.

    From the UFC side, the case against Tsarukyan has less to do with wins and losses and more to do with how the past two years have unfolded. After beating Charles Oliveira at UFC 300 in a title eliminator, Tsarukyan was booked to challenge Islam Makhachev for the lightweight belt at UFC 311 but withdrew the day before the event with a back injury suffered during his weight cut. White’s response at the time was blunt: Tsarukyan was “back to the drawing board” and would have to “fight his way back” to a title opportunity. He later weighed in as backup for Ilia Topuria vs. Oliveira at UFC 317 in what was widely read as an attempt to repair that damage.

    Regulators and optics have added to the file. The Nevada State Athletic Commission handed Tsarukyan a nine‑month suspension and a $25,000 fine after he swung at a fan who flipped him off during his walk to the cage at UFC 300, with the ban eligible to be reduced only if he completed an approved public service campaign. In November 2025 he then headbutted Dan Hooker during their ceremonial weigh‑in in Qatar, a move that briefly threatened their main-event bout and drew scrutiny from officials. White has since confirmed that the headbutt “100 percent” factored into the decision to keep Tsarukyan out of the interim title fight at UFC 324.

    Publicly, White insists there is no personal feud. In multiple interviews he has said the UFC does not “dislike” Tsarukyan, stressing, “He’s here. You know what I didn’t do? Didn’t cut him,” while also stating he does not care about the number next to Tsarukyan’s name in the rankings. At the same time, he has hinted at unresolved issues he will not spell out in front of cameras, saying there is “man sh*t” and “behind-the-scenes” business that Tsarukyan “knows” and that he prefers to keep private because the media will chase clicks.

    Tsarukyan has been trying to swing opinion back his way. After Pimblett’s jab at the UFC 324 presser went viral, he fired back on X with a five‑word reply: “Cry me a river bitch @PaddyTheBaddy.” In recent interviews he has also admitted he regrets key moments that helped sour his standing, telling Ariel Helwani he made “real” mistakes with the late UFC 311 withdrawal and the Hooker headbutt, and that those choices still bother him. At the same time, he has argued that Pimblett’s interim shot is driven by business, not merit, saying the UFC wants to make Pimblett a champion while avoiding a matchup where he believes he would stop the Liverpudlian and damage a valuable asset.

  • Dana White Fires Back at Justin Gaethje Over UFC 324 Pay Claims

    Dana White Fires Back at Justin Gaethje Over UFC 324 Pay Claims

    The UFC’s multibillion-dollar Paramount+ deal was supposed to signal a new era of increased fighter compensation. Instead, it sparked a public back-and-forth between UFC President Dana White and main event fighter Justin Gaethje that exposed familiar fault lines around fighter pay just days before the promotion’s landmark UFC 324 event.

    Dana White vs. Justin Gaethje: The Fighter Pay Row Before UFC 324

    Gaethje, who headlines the January 24 card at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas against Paddy Pimblett for the interim lightweight title, told media Wednesday that he would not earn a single dollar more for this fight than he would have without the UFC’s seven-year, $7.7 billion broadcasting agreement with Paramount+. The deal, which averages $1.1 billion annually and doubles the UFC’s previous ESPN contract, eliminates traditional pay-per-view fees and makes all numbered events available to subscribers at no additional cost.

    “To this day, I hear Daniel Cormier saying everybody is going to get paid more on this card,” Gaethje said during the UFC 324 media day. “I’m not getting paid one dollar more than if this deal hadn’t happened”.

    The comments directly contradicted statements from UFC Hall of Famer and commentator Daniel Cormier, who claimed in late December that fighters were already receiving increased compensation under the new structure. Cormier said on his podcast that with pay-per-view revenue no longer a factor, fighters were being offered larger guaranteed purses instead of gambling on PPV points that might not materialize.​

    White responded Thursday on The Pat McAfee Show, disputing Gaethje’s account entirely. The UFC president claimed the promotion had offered Gaethje a new contract with higher pay ahead of UFC 324, but the fighter never responded to the offer.

    “We completely have it dialed in,” White said. “We’ve got really smart kids, and they can get down within single digits on how close it would be to pay them like it was a pay-per-view. Gaethje, without getting into all that stuff, Gaethje was offered more money, and Gaethje never responded. [But] we’re good [with Gaethje]”.

    Fighter Bonuses Remain at $50,000 Despite Revenue Surge

    Gaethje also expressed frustration that his 14 post-fight bonuses throughout his UFC career have totaled less than $1 million. Based on his bonus history, he earned 13 bonuses at the standard $50,000 rate, plus a $300,000 bonus for his Fight of the Night performance against Max Holloway at UFC 300 in April 2024, bringing his total bonus earnings to $950,000.

    “To have 14 bonuses and not equal up to $1 million is not right,” Gaethje said. “It should be a lot more than that”.

    The $50,000 standard bonus has remained unchanged since 2013, despite UFC revenues multiplying fivefold since that time. When adjusted for inflation, the current $50,000 bonus has approximately 30% less purchasing power than when it was first instituted in 2007. White has stated that bonuses will increase under the Paramount deal but has not specified amounts or timelines.

    When given an opportunity to address White’s claims during Thursday’s UFC 324 press conference, Gaethje declined to engage. A reporter asked him to respond to White’s assertion that he had been offered more money but did not reply. Gaethje immediately shut down the question with six words: “I’m here to talk about fighting”.

    The exchange suggested that either a conversation had taken place between Gaethje and UFC management after his media day comments, or the fighter simply wanted to avoid further controversy with White watching from the stage. Fans on social media speculated that Gaethje may have been warned to stop discussing fighter pay publicly.

    While Gaethje criticized his bonus totals, he said he has managed his UFC earnings responsibly by investing in real estate and supporting his family. He purchased a commercial property and a house in Arizona near his parents, which his sister now rents from him.

    “The best thing I did is probably invest in a commercial property,” Gaethje said. “I purchased a house in Arizona that’s like a mile away from my parents, my sister is renting that from me now, and really just being able to help my family. Give them Christmas gifts that I never would’ve been able to give them, take them on vacations that I never would have been able to. That’s the smartest thing I did because you never get that time back with your family”.

    UFC 324 marks the official start of the UFC’s Paramount+ era, with the main card beginning at 9 p.m. ET on Saturday, January 24. Gaethje faces Pimblett for the interim lightweight title, with the winner expected to face undisputed champion Ilia Topuria later in 2026.

  • Paddy Pimblett Defends Interim Title: ‘I Am the Champion’

    Paddy Pimblett Defends Interim Title: ‘I Am the Champion’

    Liverpool fighter Paddy Pimblett believes he will be the legitimate UFC lightweight champion when he faces Justin Gaethje at UFC 324 this Saturday, dismissing criticism about the interim nature of the belt and questioning his opponent’s motivation heading into the contest.

    Speaking with TMZ ahead of the January 24 bout at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Pimblett addressed the distinction between interim and undisputed championships. The fight was created after current champion Ilia Topuria announced he would not compete in the first quarter of 2026 due to personal reasons related to his ongoing divorce proceedings.

    Paddy Pimblett Defends Interim Title Status Ahead of UFC 324

    “I am the UFC’s lightweight champion while the champ’s not there, you know what I mean?” Pimblett said. “Ilia’s not fighting. The division needs to move on and for now I am the champion. I’m the active one, I’m the one who’s going to be fighting; he’s not. So when I win this belt, I am the champ.”

    The 31-year-old, who enters the fight ranked fifth in the lightweight division, also took aim at Gaethje’s attitude toward interim titles. The 37-year-old former interim champion famously threw the belt on the floor after defeating Tony Ferguson at UFC 249 in May 2020, telling Joe Rogan he would “wait for the real one”.

    “I think that’s another thing that goes against Justin,” Pimblett continued. “He’s not really too bothered about an interim title, is he? He threw it on the floor last time he won it. I think the only reason he’s too interested in this one is because he’s getting more money. You get paid more for challenging for the title. I think Justin’s already checked out a little bit, to be honest.”​

    Pimblett brings a seven-fight winning streak in the UFC into the contest, most recently stopping Michael Chandler in the third round at UFC 314 in April 2025. His undefeated run in the promotion has included victories over Tony Ferguson, King Green, and Jordan Leavitt, earning him five Performance of the Night bonuses.

    Gaethje, ranked fourth at lightweight, last competed in March 2025 when he defeated Rafael Fiziev via majority decision at UFC 313. The former World Series of Fighting lightweight champion has lost both of his previous attempts at the undisputed UFC title, falling to Khabib Nurmagomedov at UFC 254 in 2020 and Charles Oliveira at UFC 274 in 2022.

    Topuria has indicated he plans to return to the octagon between April and June to face the winner in a unification bout. The 28-year-old Georgian-Spanish fighter won the lightweight title by knocking out Charles Oliveira at UFC 317 in June 2025 and is dealing with custody matters and what he describes as “false allegations of domestic abuse” during divorce proceedings.

  • Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas has been promised a UFC flyweight title shot with a win at UFC 324, but the prospect of fighting her idol Valentina Shevchenko comes with mixed feelings for the former two-time strawweight champion.​

    Speaking with Ariel Helwani, Namajunas confirmed the UFC has told her a victory over Natalia Silva on January 24, 2026, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas will earn her the next crack at Shevchenko’s flyweight title. The announcement puts significant weight on her main card bout against Silva, who enters the fight riding a 13-fight winning streak and holding a perfect 7-0 record in the UFC.

    Rose Namajunas Faces Complex Emotions Ahead of Potential Valentina Shevchenko Title Fight

    For Namajunas, the path to becoming a two-division champion leads through a fighter she considers the greatest in women’s mixed martial arts.

    “It would be weird,” Namajunas said when asked about facing Shevchenko. “We’re martial artists, so at the end of the day I’m down to do it, but I’d love to have a conversation with her first because she’s somebody that inspired me and I’ve looked up to.”​

    The two fighters have trained together in the past, with sparring footage showing their technical exchanges during camp preparations.

    “She’s literally my favorite female fighter,” Namajunas explained. “It would definitely be conflicting emotions, I would never want to see her lose, but I’d have to go into a fight and try to beat her.”

    Namajunas described the potential matchup as both a dream scenario and an emotional challenge. She ranks Shevchenko alongside Amanda Nunes as the greatest female fighters in MMA history.

    “At the same time, as a martial artist, it would be the ultimate culmination of being able to test myself,” she said. “I feel like she and Amanda Nunes are the greatest female fighters in MMA. So it would be a dream come true, but also like, ‘Oh…’”​​

    The 33-year-old Milwaukee native emphasized that personal animosity plays no role in her approach to competition. “That’s kind of what fighting is, it’s weird,” Namajunas said. “I don’t hate anybody I fight. I’ve fought people I train with, then we train again after. I don’t have to hate anyone to compete with them. I love all of my opponents, even the ones I was rivals with, afterward it’s just water under the bridge.”​

    Namajunas currently holds a 14-7 UFC record and is ranked sixth in the flyweight division. After losing her strawweight title to Carla Esparza in May 2022, she moved up to 125 pounds and has gone 2-2 in the division, with losses to Manon Fiorot and Erin Blanchfield. Her flyweight record includes wins over Amanda Ribas and Miranda Maverick.

    The two-division championship goal has driven Namajunas throughout her flyweight campaign. “Basically, it’s the two-division thing, to just have that as an accomplishment,” she told Helwani. “It be a dream come true and it’s definitely on the list of what I wanted to achieve in MMA.” A victory over Shevchenko would make Namajunas only the second woman in UFC history to hold titles in two divisions, following in the footsteps of Nunes.​

    UFC 324

    Before any of those plans materialize, Namajunas must overcome Silva, who has defeated former champions Jessica Andrade and Alexa Grasso without dropping a round in either fight. Silva was originally slated to face Grasso before the former champion withdrew due to injury in December, opening the door for Namajunas to step in.

    UFC 324 marks the promotion’s first event under its new seven-year broadcast agreement with Paramount+, eliminating the pay-per-view model. The main event features Justin Gaethje defending the interim lightweight title against Paddy Pimblett.

  • Nick Diaz Breaks Silence After Rehab, Hints at Nate Rift

    Nick Diaz Breaks Silence After Rehab, Hints at Nate Rift

    Nick Diaz has spoken out for the first time since completing over a year in a Mexican rehabilitation facility, posting a statement on social media that addressed his recent marriage, criticized members of his inner circle, and hinted at tension with brother Nate Diaz.

    The former Strikeforce welterweight champion posted the message to his Instagram story on January 21, 2026, where he claimed he was kept in treatment against his will and took aim at people he once considered close to him. The statement was deleted shortly after being posted, but not before it spread across combat sports media.

    “To everyone talking about my life and how they want to control me you never will again,” Diaz wrote in the post. “I was locked up for over a year and the ones I thought closest to me kept me there for their own motives.”

    Diaz entered a treatment facility in Mexico in January 2025 following a concerning video that showed him attempting to light grass on fire just days after withdrawing from a scheduled fight against Vicente Luque at UFC 310. The 42-year-old fighter spent more than a year in the structured program, with his recovery coach Jose Garcia providing periodic updates to concerned fans throughout 2025.

    Nick Diaz, Kayla, and Family Dispute

    Central to the statement was Diaz’s defense of his partner Kayla, whom he married in Las Vegas on January 8, 2026, shortly after his release from rehab. The marriage came as a surprise to many, particularly given the contentious history surrounding Kayla’s relationship with Diaz’s family and coaching staff.

    Throughout 2025, competing narratives emerged about Kayla’s role in Diaz’s life. In June 2025, she publicly claimed that Diaz had been drugged and taken to Mexico against his will. Diaz’s longtime coach Cesar Gracie quickly refuted those allegations, stating that “Nick doesn’t have a girlfriend” and accusing Kayla of illegally controlling his social media accounts and squatting at his Stockton residence.

    In his recent statement, Diaz made clear where his loyalty now stands. “My wife Kayla is there for me she always had my back and best interests for me and never held anything over my head for her benefit,” he wrote. Kayla has since changed her Instagram name to “Kayla Diaz,” confirming the marriage.

    The union has created friction within the Diaz family. According to reports from combat sports media outlet Parry Punch, Nick and Nate Diaz are now at odds over the circumstances of Nick’s release from rehab and his decision to marry Kayla rather than continue with a planned stay at a sober living facility in San Diego.

    Criticism of “Old Man” and Inner Circle

    The Stockton fighter directed sharp criticism at what he described as an “old man who keeps claiming to have my best interests and is the spokesman for my family,” though he did not identify the person by name. “Everything he says is bs and I don’t want to hear it anymore from someone trying to hold me down with negativity,” Diaz wrote.

    The reference likely points to either Jose Garcia or Cesar Gracie, both of whom have served as public spokesmen for Diaz throughout his rehab stay. Garcia, who posts under the handle bbjninjarecovery on social media, provided regular updates on Diaz’s condition in 2025, reporting in August that he was “doing exceptionally well” and in November that medical evaluations showed partial recovery from substance use disorders, though MRI results indicated significant scar tissue remained.

    The relationship between Diaz’s coaches has itself been contentious. Gracie previously dismissed Garcia as a “groupie” who holds a grudge, while Garcia accused Gracie of attempting to sabotage Diaz’s training camps and forcing him to fight in poor condition.

    Brewing Feud With Brother Nate

    Perhaps most surprising was Diaz’s public acknowledgment of issues with his younger brother Nate. “For my brother Nate I don’t know what his issue is but you need to cut out the shit talkers in your group to keep it real they are embarrassing to be around,” Nick wrote.

    According to reports from Parry Punch host Jacob Castro, citing unnamed sources, the brothers are feuding over two main issues. Nick is reportedly upset that Nate did not intervene sooner to get him out of the Mexican facility, while Nate is frustrated that Nick left a planned sober living program early to marry Kayla in Las Vegas.

    There is additional tension over the ownership and operation of the Nick Diaz Academy in Stockton. Sources suggest Nick feels Nate took control of the gym and its students during his absence, which has contributed to the rift.

    A team member close to Jake Shields, Diaz’s longtime training partner, offered a different perspective, stating that “Nate is not beefing with Nick” and that the brothers simply have different views on what is best for Nick’s recovery. The source added that brothers naturally disagree and that Nate respects whatever decisions Nick makes about his own life.

    Diaz has reached a one-year sobriety milestone and recently returned to light training at Xtreme Couture in Las Vegas with Jake Shields. Video footage shows the former champion smiling and in good spirits during the training session, a marked improvement from the concerning footage that emerged in November 2024.

    For now, the focus appears to be on his personal life, his marriage to Kayla, and navigating the complicated relationships with family members and coaches who played competing roles during his year-long absence from public view.

  • Arman Tsarukyan Calls UFC 324 Interim Title Fight a ‘Joke’

    Arman Tsarukyan Calls UFC 324 Interim Title Fight a ‘Joke’

    The UFC lightweight division’s top contender has spoken out on being passed over for a title shot. Arman Tsarukyan told Demetrious Johnson’s MightyCast that the interim championship bout between Paddy Pimblett and Justin Gaethje at UFC 324 represents a business decision over merit, one that leaves the true number one contender on the sidelines.​

    “For me it’s a joke that these guys are fighting for the belt when I’m the number one contender,” Tsarukyan said during the January 20 interview. The Armenian fighter currently holds the top ranking at 155 pounds after defeating Dan Hooker via second-round submission in November 2025, cementing his status with a Performance of the Night bonus.

    Arman Tsarukyan Calls Paddy Pimblett vs. Justin Gaethje a “Joke”

    Tsarukyan made no attempt to hide his feelings about the matchup. When asked who he favored between the two fighters, his response was blunt: “I hope it’s Gaethje, because I don’t like Paddy.”

    The disdain runs deeper than simple rivalry. Tsarukyan explained that a Pimblett victory could derail his title aspirations. “It’s going to be hard to fight him because UFC going to push me back for a couple years,” he told Johnson. The two fighters have traded barbs for months, with Pimblett recently questioning Tsarukyan’s resume while the Armenian has criticized the Brit’s path to contention.

    “If it was me versus Paddy right now it would be such a big fight,” Tsarukyan argued, “Both young, both never been knocked out. They’re hungry.”​

    Criticism of Gaethje’s Title Path

    While Tsarukyan hopes Gaethje wins, he questions whether the American deserves the opportunity at all. “Gaethje’s not that interesting – he barely beat Fiziev and they give him a title fight,” the contender said, referencing the controversial majority decision victory over Rafael Fiziev at UFC 286 in March 2023.

    “He’s old. He had his chance. He got knocked out. He lost a lot of times,” Tsarukyan said, likely alluding to Gaethje’s brutal knockout loss to Max Holloway.

    Gaethje holds a 26-5 record with a 9-5 mark inside the Octagon, having lost multiple title bids during his UFC tenure.

    It’s Just Business

    Tsarukyan acknowledged the reality of UFC matchmaking when pressed about his title shot prospects. “Yeah, it’s just business,” he told Johnson when discussing the decision to pass him over. The fighter expressed frustration at being asked to serve as backup despite his ranking, noting he would take the fight on short notice if called upon at 155 pounds.

    “I’ll get my title for sure,” Tsarukyan said. He pulled out of a scheduled championship bout against Makhachev at UFC 311 in January 2025 due to a back injury sustained during his weight cut, which may have factored into the UFC’s decision to move forward without him.

    The Armenian has remained active through grappling competitions and submission wrestling events while waiting for his next UFC booking.

  • Justin Gaethje Questions Pimblett’s Five-Round Experience

    Justin Gaethje Questions Pimblett’s Five-Round Experience

    Justin Gaethje dismissed Paddy Pimblett’s recent verbal challenges and questioned the Liverpool fighter’s readiness for the championship distance as the two prepare to meet for the interim lightweight title at UFC 324 on January 24 in Las Vegas.

    Speaking at Wednesday’s pre-fight press conference, Gaethje remained unfazed by Pimblett’s promise to deliver a beating unlike any the veteran has experienced. The former BMF champion instead pointed to a critical difference between the two fighters heading into their main event clash at T-Mobile Arena.

    “I certainly take nothing from those comments. It’s 25 minutes in time right now; what he’s saying right now does not matter,” Gaethje said. “All it tells me is hopefully he’s going to be overconfident, and the last thing you can do in this sport is have a false confidence. He’d be crazy not to know that I’m one of the most dangerous guys he’s ever fought.”​

    Justin Gaethje Questions Paddy Pimblett’s Five-Round Readiness Ahead of UFC 324

    The 37-year-old emphasized the experience gap when it comes to five-round contests, a format Pimblett has never encountered in the UFC. Gaethje noted he has been scheduled for championship-distance fights at least 20 times throughout his career, including multiple five-round title bouts during his undefeated World Series of Fighting run and seven five-round UFC appearances.

    “I’ve been scheduled for a five-round fight at least 20 times in my career. It’s a different ball game,” Gaethje explained. “I want to take him to the fourth and fifth round. I want to do the same thing I’ve done before – turn his face into minced meat. I’ve done it to higher-caliber fighters, but this guy has a lot of momentum and confidence, and those are some of the most dangerous variables I’ll be facing.”

    Gaethje elaborated on how the extended format changes preparation, particularly for fighters without that experience. “You don’t know what you don’t know. He hasn’t been there,” he continued. “Out of my 26 or 31 fights, I’ve been scheduled for at least 20 five-rounders. It’s different training, different mindset, different tactics. I train at elevation – if I’m tired, I know they’re really tired. He’s going to be exhausted when we get to those rounds.”​​

    The former interim champion referenced his recent three-round battles as evidence of his championship conditioning advantages. “You watch my three-round fights – Michael Chandler, Rafael Fiziev – those were close fights on paper, but if they went to the fourth and fifth round, I would have hurt them very badly,” Gaethje said. “That’s what I’m hoping I can do this Saturday.”​​

    Pimblett, who holds a perfect 7-0 UFC record, has only competed in five-round fights three times during his Cage Warriors tenure, losing two of those contests. The 30-year-old from Liverpool has never been past the third round in his UFC career.

    Despite recognizing Pimblett as a legitimate threat, Gaethje maintained confidence in his ability to expose the durability and conditioning questions that come with championship rounds. “I think he’s really good. This sport is crazy – anything can happen at any moment,” Gaethje acknowledged.

    “All the people that have those opinions, that say the guys he beat were over the hill or past their prime, they’ve never taken the risk that we take. A bunch of cowards that just like to talk. I don’t care what people say about him. I know that he’s dangerous, I know that he’s confident, and those are two huge variables. It’s a constant battle for momentum and I’m going to have to take it early and keep it.”​

    When asked about Pimblett’s claim that “Scousers don’t get knocked out,” Gaethje offered a clinical response that underscored his finishing pedigree of 20 career knockouts. “You don’t have to be a doctor to know that if you have a brain, you can get shut off if I just shake it. I’ll show him – if I can shake his head and make his brain touch his skull, he’s going to go to sleep,” he stated.

    “The only thing that appeals to me right now is knocking a Scouser out and representing America. That’s what I’m here to do… whatever a Scouser is.”

  • Sean O’Malley Apologizes for COVID Mask Stunt at UFC 324

    Sean O’Malley Apologizes for COVID Mask Stunt at UFC 324

    Former UFC bantamweight champion Sean O’Malley addressed the controversy surrounding his COVID-style face mask during an initial staredown with upcoming opponent Song Yadong, while the Chinese fighter remained focused on the fight itself ahead of their co-main event clash at UFC 324 on Saturday, January 24, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

    The incident occurred at the UFC seasonal press conference in December 2025, when O’Malley wore a surgical face mask during the first face-off with Song. The gesture sparked immediate backlash, with many interpreting it as a reference to COVID-19’s origins in China.

    Sean O’Malley Clarifies COVID Mask Incident With Song Yadong Ahead of UFC 324 Showdown

    At Wednesday’s UFC 324 media day, O’Malley issued an apology for the incident. “My intentions were never harmful,” O’Malley stated.

    “It was supposed to be a little silly joke, you know, it was that, and it got taken out of [context]. I apologize if I offended anybody. It was never meant to be disrespectful, just me trying to have a little fun, and it turned into something else”.

    Song responded to the apology during his own media session, acknowledging O’Malley’s penchant for promotional tactics while dismissing any impact on his preparation. “Sean is very good at promotion. He likes to play little mind games, do things at the face-off, talk a lot online,” Song explained.

    “I don’t really care about that. I’m not here to play games with him, I’m here to fight. When the cage door closes, it’s just me and him, and all that talk and all that show doesn’t help him. I won’t let anything he does take me out of my focus”.

    The 28-year-old Chinese fighter elaborated on his perspective regarding the stunt. “I’m fine, but I believe we shouldn’t introduce racism into this sport,” Song remarked at media day. “Let’s keep it about the competition. He already expressed regret. In an interview from China, he apologized to fans. He’s trying to play mind games with me, but I’m not concerned about that. My focus is solely on the fight. I just want to win. I’m concentrated”.

    O’Malley enters UFC 324 on a two-fight losing streak, having lost the bantamweight title to Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 306 in September 2024 and falling short in their rematch at UFC 316 in June 2025. The former champion holds an 18-3 MMA record and 10-3 UFC mark, with his last victory coming against Marlon Vera at UFC 299.

    Song, ranked fifth in the bantamweight division, carries a record of 22-8-1 overall and 11-3-1 in the UFC. The Team Alpha Male fighter most recently defeated former two-division champion Henry Cejudo via technical decision in February 2025, earning the victory when the bout was stopped due to an accidental eye poke while Song was ahead on the scorecards.

    Both fighters view the bout as critical for their championship aspirations. O’Malley believes a victory positions him for a rematch with current bantamweight champion Petr Yan, whom he controversially defeated at UFC 280 in October 2022. Yan reclaimed the title by defeating Dvalishvili at UFC 323 in December 2025, ending “The Machine’s” reign after three successful title defenses.​

    “It’s got to be me versus Petr next, if I go out there and take care of business,” O’Malley declared at media day. “I think I go out there and put on a beautiful performance, [then] me versus Petr at the White House is huge”.

    Song similarly sees the fight as his pathway to title contention. “This fight is crucial for me because a win over Sean would be a major accomplishment,” Song acknowledged. “I’m just one step away from a title shot”.

  • Natalia Silva Vows to Beat Shevchenko ‘In Every Area’

    Natalia Silva Vows to Beat Shevchenko ‘In Every Area’

    Natalia Silva has made her intentions clear heading into Saturday’s UFC 324 fight against Rose Namajunas. The Brazilian contender believes she can defeat flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko in every facet of mixed martial arts, and a victory this weekend would put her in position to prove it.

    Speaking at the UFC 324 pre-fight press conference at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Silva expressed supreme confidence in her ability to dethrone Shevchenko, who reclaimed the flyweight title in September 2024 and has since defended it twice. The 27-year-old from Brazil stated her case with conviction.

    Natalia Silva Eyes Valentina Shevchenko After Rose Namajunas Showdown at UFC 324

    “Valentina definitely is not going to beat me in any area,” Silva said. “I train every day to be champion and it doesn’t matter if the fight is on the feet or on the ground – I am ready to beat her. I work every day in every area possible. If it’s striking, I’m going to beat her. If it’s any sort of grappling, I’m going to beat her and I’m going to be champion. In the name of Jesus, yes – I am training for that and I believe that a victory over Rose already puts a belt on this table within the next 12 months”.​

    Silva’s path to a title shot has already encountered delays. The Team Borracha fighter revealed that she expected to challenge Shevchenko sooner, but the UFC needed the champion to recover from her dominant November victory over Zhang Weili at UFC 322. That five-round shutout saw Shevchenko score 50-45 on all three judges’ scorecards.

    “I wanted to have fought for the title already, but the UFC said Valentina would not be available to fight now and that they needed me to take another fight,” Silva explained. “They offered Rose’s name and we accepted. I believe that if Zhang Weili hadn’t fought Valentina, I would already have fought for the belt. For everything I’ve done in the organization, I think the person who was most ready for this opportunity was me. I believe that, yes. And a win over Rose already credentials me for a title shot. The UFC told me this fight is an eliminator and that the next one will be for the title”.​

    Natalia Silva vs. Rose Namajunas at UFC 324

    Silva stepped into the UFC 324 matchup on short notice after former champion Alexa Grasso withdrew due to injury in early December. The Brazilian had most recently defeated Grasso by unanimous decision at UFC 315 in May 2025, extending her winning streak to 13 fights and maintaining her perfect 7-0 UFC record.

    Namajunas, a former two-time strawweight champion, moved up to flyweight in 2023 and holds a 3-2 record at 125 pounds. The 33-year-old last competed in June when she defeated Miranda Maverick by unanimous decision. The UFC has informed Namajunas that a victory over Silva would earn her a flyweight title shot against Shevchenko, setting up a clash between friends and training partners.

    When discussing Namajunas, Silva acknowledged her opponent’s adaptability but expressed confidence in dictating the pace of their encounter. The Brazilian noted Namajunas recently announced a return to her taekwondo roots in preparation for facing Silva’s striking style.

    “I don’t have much to say about her; I have a lot to say about myself,” Silva stated. “Rose adapts a lot to the style of whoever she’s fighting. The difficult part will be for her to adapt to my game. When I go in there to fight, I will be the one dictating the cards. She said she had to go back to her taekwondo roots because of my style. I never had to ‘go back’ to my roots – I always trained taekwondo. It’s good that she went back, but I don’t think the time she’s had will be enough”.​

    Silva began training taekwondo at age 16. Since her last defeat in December 2017 to Marina Rodriguez, Silva has won 13 consecutive fights.

    Shevchenko, now 37, has not yet announced her next opponent following her victories over Manon Fiorot and Zhang Weili in 2025. The champion holds a 26-4-1 career record and sits at the top of the UFC women’s pound-for-pound rankings.

  • PFL Founder Donn Davis Steps Down as Chairman Amid Executive Exodus

    PFL Founder Donn Davis Steps Down as Chairman Amid Executive Exodus

    Donn Davis, the founder of the Professional Fighters League, announced Wednesday that he is stepping down as chairman of the organization he built from the ground up eight years ago.

    Davis, 63, posted a statement on X reflecting on his tenure and expressing gratitude to employees, investors, fighters, and fans. “I gave you everything I’ve got,” Davis wrote.

    The departure caps a stunning executive shakeup at PFL in January 2026. Former CEO Peter Murray and longtime president Ray Sefo have also parted ways with the promotion in recent weeks. According to MMA journalist Ariel Helwani, PFL has also laid off several long-time employees.

    Davis acquired World Series of Fighting in 2017 and transformed it into PFL, launching in 2018 with its signature season format featuring $1 million championship payouts. Under his leadership, PFL expanded globally, acquired Bellator in November 2023, and signed former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou.

    The timing is notable as PFL’s ESPN broadcast deal is set to expire at the end of 2026. Former Time Warner executive John Martin was brought in as CEO in late 2025 to guide the promotion through this critical period.

    On the same day as Davis’s announcement, PFL revealed new funding from Knighthead Capital Management and 885 Capital, along with a new nine-member Board of Directors.

    PFL’s 2026 season kicks off February 7 in Dubai.

  • Ali Abdelaziz Pitches Conor McGregor vs. Justin Gaethje at UFC White House Event

    Ali Abdelaziz Pitches Conor McGregor vs. Justin Gaethje at UFC White House Event

    Ali Abdelaziz has stirred the pot once again, this time floating the idea of Conor McGregor facing Justin Gaethje at the White House.

    The Dominance MMA manager’s pitch is blunt, referring to McGregor as an “Irish drunk guy” and questioning whether he could handle Gaethje ahead of the UFC’s historic event scheduled for June 14, 2026. The timing is particularly interesting given that Gaethje is set to face Paddy Pimblett for the interim lightweight title at UFC 324 this Saturday, January 24.

    Ali Abdelaziz Calls Conor McGregor ‘Irish Drunk Guy,’ Pitches Justin Gaethje Fight at UFC White House

    Speaking with Submission Radio, Abdelaziz laid out his vision with typical flair. His proposal skips the interim belt discussion entirely, instead focusing on what he describes as a long-overdue grudge match between the Irishman and “The Highlight”.

    “Justin Gaethje versus Conor McGregor. What about that? Do you understand? America’s birthday – bring an Irish drunk guy to the White House, make sure he doesn’t have any drugs on him or cocaine, and fight Justin. Conor’s been running from Justin all his life.”

    According to the manager, McGregor has been avoiding Gaethje throughout his career, turning down the fight “at least five times” over several years. Abdelaziz claims the UFC even advised him to stop mentioning the matchup because McGregor allegedly refuses to fight opponents who criticize him publicly.

    The suggestion comes with particular bite given the White House event’s significance. Set to commemorate America’s 250th anniversary, President Trump announced the date coincides with his 80th birthday, and Dana White has indicated he’s holding back major fights to stack the card.

    The McGregor-Gaethje matchup has long been discussed but never materialized. Their styles suggest an explosive clash. McGregor’s precision striking and southpaw stance theoretically create openings against Gaethje’s aggressive, face-first approach and leg-heavy attack.

    However, the Irishman hasn’t won a lightweight fight since 2016, and both of his recent losses to Dustin Poirier exposed vulnerability to leg kicks, Gaethje’s specialty. The 37-year-old is coming off a broken leg sustained in 2021.

    Gaethje enters UFC 324 on Saturday with everything to prove. The 37-year-old veteran has made it clear this is likely his final run at undisputed gold after previous title shot failures against Khabib Nurmagomedov and Charles Oliveira. His coach, Trevor Wittman, confirmed this won’t be a “retirement fight” and that Gaethje has no intention of continuing without a clear championship path.

    Should he defeat Pimblett and secure the interim belt, Gaethje is expected to face Ilia Topuria later in 2026 for the undisputed lightweight championship. A McGregor fight, while lucrative, would represent a detour from that trajectory unless positioned as a White House spectacle worth the risk.

    For now, Abdelaziz’s proposal remains speculation ahead of a more immediate priority. Saturday’s UFC 324 will determine whether Gaethje even has the interim belt to bargain with.

  • Arman Tsarukyan’s Media Blitz Shows Rankings Matter, but Algorithms Matter More

    Arman Tsarukyan’s Media Blitz Shows Rankings Matter, but Algorithms Matter More

    Arman Tsarukyan got skipped for a title shot he earned. Now he is everywhere. The streaming circuit, grappling events, cooking shows, he is building a brand while the UFC decides what to do with him. This is not a choice anymore. It is the cost of doing business in the modern UFC.

    The numbers tell the story. Tsarukyan beat Dan Hooker in November 2025. He held the number one contender spot. The UFC gave the interim title fight to Justin Gaethje versus Paddy Pimblett for UFC 324 on January 24. The official reason involved Tsarukyan’s past actions, the UFC 311 withdrawal, the Hooker headbutt, the fan incident at UFC 300. Dana White invests in promotional campaigns, and when fighters bail, Dana does not forget.

    Arman Tsarukyan’s Media Tour

    Tsarukyan pivoted. He appeared on Adin Ross‘s stream with MMA Guru on January 10, 2026, hanging out for nearly ten hours with fans. He joined Matan Even‘s show, where a co-host named “Mike Mike” added to the chaos. When Matan pushed buttons, Tsarukyan threatened to slap him.

    Then came the cooking. On January 18, Tsarukyan made a chopped cheese sandwich in Brooklyn, the “Ocky Way“. This is not traditional fighter behavior. Food influencers reach audiences that MMA never touches. Tsarukyan knows he needs those eyes.

    Tsarukyan’s Grappling

    The grappling matches keep him sharp and in the news. He submitted Mehdi Baydulaev at ACBJJ 20 in December 2025. He fought Sharabutdin Magomedov to a draw at Hype FC. He dominated Lance Palmer 10-0 in a wrestling match at RAF 5 on January 10, 2026. These events do not pay UFC money. They pay in relevance.

    The New UFC

    Ariel Helwani called it. On his show, Helwani said Tsarukyan is “becoming the second most popular lightweight in the world behind Ilia”. Helwani pointed out that Dana White follows this stuff closely. The UFC tracks engagement metrics. A viral clip matters more than a win sometimes.

    The promotion’s Paramount+ partnership factors in. The UFC needs Western market appeal for its broadcast debut. Paddy Pimblett brings a built-in audience. Tsarukyan’s wrestling wins, while impressive, stay inside the hardcore bubble. The UFC wants mainstream. Mainstream means memes, streams, and chopped cheese videos.

    Justin Gaethje understood the situation. He admitted Tsarukyan deserved the shot but recognized the UFC’s stance. Gaethje cited the same incidents White did, the withdrawal, the headbutt, the fan fight. These moments cost Tsarukyan trust.

    But this is the new model. Fighters cannot just train and win, that’s just not enough for the UFC anymore. They must create content, build followings, and stay visible across platforms. The UFC has shifted from a sports organization to an entertainment company that happens to feature fighting. Rankings matter, but algorithms matter more.

  • Derrick Lewis Predicts First-Exchange KO Of Waldo Cortes-Acosta At UFC 324

    Derrick Lewis Predicts First-Exchange KO Of Waldo Cortes-Acosta At UFC 324

    Derrick Lewis is making a statement ahead of his heavyweight clash against Waldo Cortes-Acosta at UFC 324 on January 24 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The 40-year-old knockout artist told UFC Embedded that he expects the fight to end quickly, possibly in the first exchange.

    “Expect A Quick Fight”: Derrick Lewis Chases Another KO At UFC 324

    Lewis enters the bout with a 29-12 record and holds the UFC record for most knockouts in history with 16. His most recent performance backs up the confidence, as he demolished previously undefeated Tallison Teixeira in just 35 seconds at UFC Nashville in July 2025. That knockout gave Lewis back-to-back wins for the first time in several years and added to his reputation for explosive power. ‘The Black Beast’ explained:

    “I’m one of the best I’ve felt in a long time in one of my camps. I feel like I’m in great shape right now. I’m in better shape than I was my last fight, so I’m feeling good. What you’re going to expect to see next Saturday is a quick fight. I believe I can really get him out of there in the first exchange. Don’t worry about getting any sleep, because Saturday you will get plenty of sleep. I promise you that.”

    The training camp appears to have made a difference for Lewis. He weighed in at 261 pounds for the Teixeira fight, his lowest weight since 2014. Lewis extended his camp from the typical five weeks to three months, focusing on running six miles every other day to improve conditioning. At 40 years old, he ranks as the eighth-ranked heavyweight but has been in the division long enough to compile 20 UFC heavyweight wins, second only to Andrei Arlovski’s 23.

    Cortes-Acosta presents a different challenge. The fifth-ranked heavyweight from the Dominican Republic holds a 16-2 record and has fought six times in 2025. His activity level is remarkable especially by heavyweight standards. He won five straight fights between March and November 2025 before accepting the Lewis matchup. The 34-year-old stands 6’4″ and has finished four of his nine UFC wins by knockout.

    The matchup pits Lewis’s one-punch power against Cortes-Acosta’s youth and durability. Lewis has built a career on landing single fight-ending shots, often after absorbing damage earlier in fights.

    UFC 324 marks the promotion’s first numbered event under its new Paramount+ deal, replacing the previous pay-per-view model, with Justin Gaethje facing Paddy Pimblett for the interim lightweight title in the main event.

  • Demetrious Johnson Explains Why Paddy Pimblett Can Beat Justin Gaethje at UFC 324

    Demetrious Johnson Explains Why Paddy Pimblett Can Beat Justin Gaethje at UFC 324

    Former UFC flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson has thrown his support behind Paddy Pimblett ahead of the Liverpool fighter’s interim lightweight title clash against Justin Gaethje at UFC 324. Johnson, who holds the UFC record for most consecutive title defenses with 11, believes Pimblett possesses the skills and mental fortitude to handle Gaethje’s pressure striking game when the two meet on January 24 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

    Why Demetrious Johnson Thinks Paddy Pimblett Is Ready For Justin Gaethje

    In a detailed breakdown of Pimblett’s third-round TKO victory over Michael Chandler at UFC 314 in April 2025, Johnson highlighted the Englishman’s ability to stay composed in dangerous positions. The 30-year-old Pimblett dominated a former Bellator champion and UFC title challenger, securing his seventh consecutive UFC victory in what represented the biggest win of his career to date.

    “The one thing that I like about Paddy Pimblett is that when he’s in a dangerous position, he’s going to start attacking submissions to keep the fight going,” ‘Mighty Mouse’ explained in his YouTube breakdown. “He’s done it against multiple opponents, even before the UFC days. You go back and watch him fight in Cage Warriors – he’ll lock up a kimura, he’ll jump for a flying triangle.”

    Johnson pointed to specific moments in the Chandler fight where Pimblett’s submission instincts kept him in control. When Chandler attempted to smother him against the cage, Pimblett threw a flying triangle that changed the dynamic of the exchange. “He does a flying triangle, gets slammed back on his back, then he pushes Michael Chandler down, tries to get the triangle more situated, and when Chandler postures up to defend, he kicks him off and gets up,” Johnson noted.

    Paddy Pimblett’s Scramble Game Has Justin Gaethje Written All Over It, Says ‘Mighty Mouse’

    The distance management Pimblett displayed against Chandler particularly impressed the former champion. Johnson identified what he called “the void” between the two fighters, explaining how Pimblett controlled the middle distance and made it difficult for Chandler to get inside.

    “We have the void right here. Each time Chandler comes into this space to try to start anything, it’s either a jab, a leg kick, the inside kick, or Paddy will blitz him, or he’ll back up throwing combinations,” Johnson said. “So Paddy is basically owning this area, giving Michael a hard time getting to him.”

    Johnson acknowledged that Gaethje presents different challenges than Chandler, particularly with his striking arsenal. The 36-year-old Gaethje has built a reputation as one of the most devastating leg kickers in UFC history, using the technique to compromise opponents’ mobility and set up finishes. “I believe Justin is going to have that jab, that leg kick, and we’ll see how Paddy goes about it on the feet,” Johnson stated.

    Despite the threat Gaethje poses, Johnson praised Pimblett’s fearless approach to fighting. “Paddy doesn’t play dog – Paddy just goes, and he’s not scared to fight. He thrives more when the fight’s going, when the scrambles start, people picking him up, trying to slam him. That’s where he starts to thrive because he’s always in great condition, he’s always doing different submission attacks.”

    Johnson has consistently backed Pimblett’s championship potential, even when others have dismissed the Liverpool native. “I’ve always been chirping about Paddy Pimblett being a world champion just because he’s so dynamic – the way he moves, he’s very diverse with his submissions, he’s not scared to exchange. I don’t know why people overlook him. Look what he just did to Michael Chandler. Nobody’s done that to Michael Chandler in the UFC.”

  • Jorge Masvidal on UFC White House Fight: ‘Once-in-a-Lifetime’ for Son of Immigrants

    Jorge Masvidal on UFC White House Fight: ‘Once-in-a-Lifetime’ for Son of Immigrants

    Jorge Masvidal has made clear why securing a spot on the UFC’s historic White House event means everything to him, describing the opportunity as a once-in-a-lifetime validation of his journey from Miami’s backyards to the nation’s most prestigious address.

    The June 14 card, set to coincide with President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday, represents far more than another fight for the 41-year-old former BMF champion. Masvidal recently told reporters that people constantly ask why he remains obsessed with getting on the card when other marquee events happen regularly.

    Masvidal explained that while fans might see another UFC card at Madison Square Garden or Las Vegas annually, a UFC card at the White House will never happen again. For someone who grew up as the son of immigrants fighting in backyards with Kimbo Slice and other street fighters, the symbolism carries profound weight.

    “People say, ‘Why are you so obsessed with this White House thing?’ Because this doesn’t happen again, man. You might see another UFC card at Madison Square Garden or Vegas every year, but a UFC card at the White House?

    “That’s once-in-a-lifetime shit. I’m a kid from the streets of Miami, son of immigrants, who grew up fighting in backyards with Kimbo and those guys. You put that kid on the White House lawn with gloves on, representing his flag, his family, his people… that’s powerful.”

    Why Jorge Masvidal Will Take Any Fight to Get on the White House Card

    Masvidal‘s father fled Cuba as a teenager on a self-made raft constructed from tractor tires, spending five days at sea before reaching the Virgin Islands and eventually Miami. His Peruvian mother worked multiple jobs starting at 4 a.m., yet the family remained among the poorest on their block. That background fuels his drive to represent on the White House lawn.

    “For me it’s like, man, I’m just some Latin dude from Miami that can fight really good,” Masvidal said in recent interviews. “I’m in the White House showcasing my skills, showing the world that, especially us Latin people, we ain’t just what they make us out to be.”

    Masvidal started his combat career in chaotic backyard brawls. Those informal contests, promoted by the late Kimbo Slice, took place in parking lots and yards around Miami with no medical staff present.

    Now Masvidal envisions himself fighting on the South Lawn with gloves on, representing his flag, family, and community. He sees it as sending a message to every young Latino that they can rise from nothing and perform in front of the president.

    The fighter has confirmed he recently spoke with Trump about getting on the card. During a call when Masvidal was in New York for fights, he quickly pitched his case. Trump responded simply with “Got you, Mas,” though Masvidal says he hasn’t played that card fully yet, saving the favor for when timing matters most.

    Masvidal told reporters his manager Ali Abdelaziz is actively negotiating with UFC President Dana White and executive Hunter Campbell. When asked about his chances of securing a spot against Conor McGregor, Masvidal said things are “not looking bad right now” with dialogue remaining open.

    Masvidal emphasized he would fight anyone at any weight to make the card, though he doesn’t care about the opponent as much as the venue itself. Whether it’s McGregor or another fighter, his priority remains getting on the historic event.

    Looking back, Masvidal describes the trajectory from backyard fighting to potentially competing at the White House as the most polar opposite journey imaginable. He attributes everything to faith, noting it happened not because he’s the smartest or fastest, but through divine intervention.

    White has confirmed the June 14 date and promised what he called “the greatest fight card ever” for the UFC’s first event at the presidential residence. The promotion plans to invest $700,000 just to replace the South Lawn grass, with attendance capped around 4,000 people.

    “For me it’s like, man, I’m just some Latin dude from Miami that can fight really good. I’m in the White House showcasing my skills, showing the world that, especially us Latin people, we ain’t just what they make us out to be. We’re a lot better than what they give us. Now I get to perform my skill set at this place which is responsible for this great nation.”

  • Dustin Poirier Admits He Can’t Pass Drug Test, Embraces ‘Peptide Papi’ Persona

    Dustin Poirier Admits He Can’t Pass Drug Test, Embraces ‘Peptide Papi’ Persona

    Former UFC interim lightweight champion Dustin Poirier is settling into retirement with a new nickname, a new physique, and a fresh perspective on life after combat sports.

    Speaking with Ariel Helwani on Monday, the Louisiana native opened up about his transformation from elite lightweight contender to what he jokingly calls “Peptide Papi.”

    Retired UFC Star Dustin Poirier Embraces Life as “Peptide Papi” After Calling Time on 16-Year Career

    Poirier, who retired in July 2025 following a decision loss to Max Holloway at UFC 318 in New Orleans, has been hitting the weights hard at his home gym, which he has christened “The Silly Goose Fitness Club.” The 36-year-old, who spent most of his career cutting down to 155 pounds, now weighs around 187 pounds and admits he probably couldn’t pass a USADA test.

    “I’m Peptide Papi, man. I don’t think I can pass a drug test,” Poirier told Helwani during the interview. “I’m lifting probably five, six days a week. I built a gym at my house – the Silly Goose Fitness Club, we’re not taking applications.”

    The weight gain is a significant shift for a fighter who struggled with weight cuts throughout his career. Poirier explained that the constant need to make 155 pounds, and 145 pounds prior to his lightweight jump, prevented him from bulking the way he wanted to.

    “I’ve worked out my whole life, but I was always conscious of putting on too much weight, couldn’t eat too many calories, couldn’t lift too heavy, because making 155 was never easy,” Poirier explained. “Now that I don’t have to make weight, I can eat all the carbs and calories I want, I can lift heavy. I’m just trying to see where my body balances out at.”

    In the context of performance enhancement, athletes sometimes use peptides to stimulate muscle growth, increase strength, and speed up recovery from training. These compounds are banned by most sports organizations, including the UFC’s USADA anti-doping program.

    The Lafayette native has been training alongside his friend Kyle at his home gym five to six days per week, embracing the freedom to build muscle without worrying about weight classes or USADA testing. Before his retirement fight, Poirier had joked with ESPN about getting “on steroids” once USADA stopped knocking on his door.

    Dustin Poirier on Sobriety

    While the physical transformation has been visible on social media, Poirier also addressed a more serious aspect of his retirement journey. In November, he posted cryptically about “soul searching” and making changes, later clarifying in the comments that he was committing to sobriety. During his interview with Helwani, Poirier provided context for that decision.

    “I had retired and had so much time on my hands, and I’m always battling something in my mind,” Poirier said. “I’ve always drank alcohol growing up, but it was celebratory – vacation, get-togethers, things like that. Now I’m retired and I’m sitting at home and I can have a drink every day. I don’t have to wake up and run miles, I don’t have to wake up and go to the gym or be somewhere. I just wanted to pull back from drinking.”

    Poirier emphasized that he does not have an alcohol problem but wanted to stay ahead of potential issues. He completed roughly 40 days of sobriety leading up to New Year’s, when he had champagne to celebrate. The former fighter explained that he enjoys bourbon and whiskey but recognized the danger of slipping into daily drinking habits without the structure of training camps.

    “I’m not going to be sober my whole life – for New Year’s I drank champagne – I just wanted to take a step back because that can get ugly quick,” Poirier said. “We’ve seen it before. When your hands are full every day trying to be the best at something and then boom, it’s gone, you’re retired, you have a lot of time on your hands. I just wanted to be smart.”

  • UFC 324: Paddy Pimblett Says Wealthy Gaethje Has Lost His Hunger

    UFC 324: Paddy Pimblett Says Wealthy Gaethje Has Lost His Hunger

    Paddy Pimblett has cast doubt on Justin Gaethje’s hunger for the interim lightweight title ahead of their UFC 324 showdown, suggesting the veteran fighter has lost his competitive edge and is simply chasing one final payday.

    In a recent interview with TMZ Sports, the Liverpool fighter questioned whether Gaethje remains fully committed to the sport, pointing to his financial success as evidence of waning motivation. The comments come just days before the pair meet for the interim 155-pound championship on January 24 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.​​

    Paddy Pimblett Questions Justin Gaethje’s Motivation Ahead of UFC 324 Clash

    “Justin’s got a lot of money now. He’s driving around in a Lamborghini,” Pimblett said. “I think he’s just after one last big payday, but I’m not going to underestimate him. I think everyone underestimates me and I’d never do that to anyone else. The one time I did it, years ago with Jared Gordon, I nearly got beat. So I’ll never do that ever again.”​

    The reference to his controversial unanimous decision victory over Gordon at UFC 282 in December 2022 showed a rare moment of candour from the typically confident 31-year-old. That fight saw all three judges score the bout 29-28 in Pimblett’s favour despite widespread belief that Gordon had done enough to win, with fans booing the decision announcement at T-Mobile Arena.​

    Pimblett also challenged the narrative around Gaethje‘s knockout power, a trademark of the 37-year-old’s career that has produced 20 knockout victories across 26 professional wins.

    “People keep saying about his knockout power and I think I’ve got more knockout power than him,” Pimblett stated. “The last person he knocked out with his hands was James Vick in like 2018 or something – they were still wearing Reebok then.”​​

    “He finishes people with the accumulation of punches, but I don’t think he’s going to be able to hit me that much,” Pimblett added. “I’ll be too fast, too elusive, too good in my range.”​

    The interim title fight was created after current lightweight champion Ilia Topuria announced he would not compete in the first quarter of 2026 due to personal issues.

    Gaethje, ranked fourth in the UFC’s lightweight division, enters the fight having won his last bout against Rafael Fiziev via majority decision in March 2025. Pimblett, ranked fifth, carries a perfect 7-0 UFC record and is coming off a TKO victory over Michael Chandler in April 2025.​

    The fight headlines UFC 324, the first numbered event in the promotion’s landmark partnership with Paramount+. The deal eliminates pay-per-view fees for fans in the United States and Latin America, with all major numbered events and UFC Fight Night cards now available exclusively on the streaming platform.​

    For Pimblett, the opportunity represents the culmination of a journey that began nearly 16 years ago, “I’ve always said that this is going to happen. I’m going to be UFC champion,” he told TMZ. “So for that dream to finally come true on Saturday night, it’s going to be special.”

  • Dan Hooker Explains Why You Don’t Want to Be a Fake like Colby Covington Amongst Paddy Pimblett Feud

    Dan Hooker Explains Why You Don’t Want to Be a Fake like Colby Covington Amongst Paddy Pimblett Feud

    New Zealand lightweight Dan Hooker has drawn a line between authenticity and performance in the UFC, taking aim at Colby Covington’s approach to self-promotion during a recent interview with Sky Sports.

    Dan Hooker: Don’t Be Fake Like Colby Covington

    “People can hate me for being me — I can live with that, that’s all right,” Hooker said. “It’s like, you don’t want to be Colby Covington, where they’re just scared that people won’t like the real them. I’d rather be hated for who I am than loved for something I’m not.”​

    The comments from the 35-year-old veteran shows tensions around Covington’s admitted use of a character to remain relevant in the UFC. Covington revealed in 2019 that the promotion had told his management they would not re-sign him prior to his October 2017 bout against Demian Maia in Brazil. Facing career uncertainty while earning $30,000 to fight the number two welterweight in the world, Covington delivered the infamous post-fight rant that altered his trajectory.​

    After dominating Maia to a unanimous decision, Covington grabbed the microphone and called Brazilians “a bunch of filthy animals” and Brazil “a dump”. The promo went viral, forcing the UFC to reverse course. “That promo goes so viral on the internet, that the UFC’s like, we have to keep him, we have to re-sign him because that promo is so big,” Covington explained on The Candace Owens Show. The moment became the turning point that saved his career.​

    Since adopting the persona, Covington has achieved notable success, including capturing the interim welterweight championship against Rafael dos Anjos at UFC 225 in June 2018. However, observers have noted the toll of maintaining the act. Former UFC lightweight Paul Felder suggested in March 2025 that Covington’s persona appears to be fading.

    Multiple training partners and opponents have reported that Covington presents as reserved and soft-spoken in private settings, contradicting the bombastic character displayed during fight promotions. Even Demian Maia noted that Covington was respectful during their pre-fight interactions, explaining that the aggressive promotion was simply a business tool.

    Covington’s recent career trajectory reflects the challenges Hooker referenced. The former interim champion holds a 17-5 professional record but has won just once in his last four fights. His most recent appearance ended in a third-round TKO loss to Joaquin Buckley at UFC Tampa on December 14, 2024, when a doctor stopped the contest due to a severe cut above Covington’s eye. Buckley dominated the fight, landing 75 of 151 significant strikes compared to Covington’s 37 of 124.​

    Covington currently sits at number 14 in the UFC welterweight rankings. His last victory came against Jorge Masvidal at UFC 272 in March 2022. UFC President Dana White recently questioned Covington’s top-15 ranking during an interview, agreeing with criticism about his placement.​

    Hooker’s career stands in contrast to Covington’s current situation. The number six ranked lightweight brought a three-fight winning streak into his November 22, 2025 main event against Arman Tsarukyan at UFC Qatar. Despite losing via arm-triangle choke submission in the second round, Hooker had compiled victories over Mateusz Gamrot and Jalin Turner in back-to-back split decisions prior to the loss.​​

    The New Zealander returns to action on January 31, 2026, facing number eight ranked Benoit Saint Denis in the co-main event of UFC 325 in Sydney, Australia. With a 24-13 professional record and 14-9 UFC mark, Hooker remains a fixture in the lightweight division’s upper tier.​

    Paddy Pimblett Beef

    Hooker’s comments arrive amid separate controversy involving fellow lightweight Paddy Pimblett. The two engaged in a heated exchange on social media after Pimblett criticized Hooker’s grappling skills during an interview with MMA Guru. Hooker responded by referencing Pimblett’s close friend Ricky, who died by suicide in 2022, writing “RIP Ricky” in a post that sparked backlash.​​

    Pimblett fired back, calling Hooker’s comment “the lowest of the low” for bringing up a personal tragedy. The Liverpool fighter has been an advocate for mental health awareness since his friend’s death and expressed outrage at Hooker using the topic for trash talk.​​

    The exchange occurred as Pimblett prepares for the biggest fight of his career. The number five ranked lightweight faces Justin Gaethje for the interim lightweight championship in the main event of UFC 324 on January 24, 2026 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The bout was created after current champion Ilia Topuria announced he would not compete in the first quarter of 2026 due to personal reasons.​

  • Athlete Who Defeated Jon Jones Asks Whether Or Not ‘Bones’ is the GOAT

    Athlete Who Defeated Jon Jones Asks Whether Or Not ‘Bones’ is the GOAT

    UFC veteran and pro wrestling fixture Matt Riddle has weighed in on the debate surrounding Jon Jones’ status as the greatest fighter of all time, offering both acknowledgment of their shared history and respect for Jones’ accomplishments.​

    Matt Riddle Says Jon Jones is “The Baddest Dude on the Planet” Despite Beating Him in Wrestling

    Speaking with The Schmo backstage at Real American Freestyle’s RAF05 event in Sunrise, Florida, Riddle addressed his past victories over Jones during their high school wrestling days. “I mean, I did beat Jon Jones back in the day. We have some history, but he is, let’s be real, it’s Jon Jones,” Riddle said. “Anybody can say whatever they want. The guy is the baddest dude on the planet.”​

    Riddle, who won the New York State wrestling championship in 2004 while attending Saratoga Springs High School defeated Jones twice in state-level tournaments during their amateur careers. Jones, who competed for Union-Endicott High School, finished third at the 2004 state championships before winning the title in 2005.​

    However, Jones has disputed Riddle’s version of events. In January 2026, the former UFC heavyweight champion responded to Riddle’s claims on Instagram, stating he never actually wrestled Riddle. “I could be the bigger man and let it go, but there’s another side of me that can be extremely petty,” Jones wrote. “The truth is, I never wrestled Matt. I lost in the state semifinals to Jack Sullivan back in 2004.”​

    Despite the disagreement over their wrestling history, Riddle was effusive in his praise of Jones as a mixed martial artist. “And now that he’s heavyweight, let’s be real, he’s gonna kill everybody,” Riddle said. “You might hit a lucky shot, but pound for pound, time for time, minute per minute, Jon Jones is the best fighter in the world.”

    Does Matt Riddle think he could take Jon Jones?

    When asked about a potential rematch under the Real American Freestyle banner, Riddle acknowledged the likely outcome.

    “If they want to book it, they can. Jon Jones is probably going to smoke my ass,” he said. “But at the same time, never say never. That’s what fighters have in their hearts.”​

    Jones, who retired from MMA in June 2025 at age 37, compiled a record of 28-1 with his only loss being a controversial disqualification. He held the UFC light heavyweight championship for 14 years across multiple reigns and captured the heavyweight title in 2023 after defeating Ciryl Gane. Jones recently announced plans to return for a potential fight at a White House event celebrating America’s 250th birthday.​

    Riddle competed in the UFC from 2008 to 2013, posting an 8-3 record before being released after testing positive for marijuana twice. He transitioned to professional wrestling in 2014 and spent several years with WWE before joining Major League Wrestling, where he won the MLW World Heavyweight Championship in January 2025. He lost the title in September 2025.​