Category: MMA

  • Conor McGregor Spotted Kissing Unnamed Woman On Beach

    Conor McGregor Spotted Kissing Unnamed Woman On Beach

    It appears to be one scandal after another in short time for Conor McGregor.

    In a story first broken by The Sun on Sunday, June 13, photos have come out of McGregor spending time and showing love to a woman on the Florida beach — a woman that is not his fiancée, Dee Devlin.

    Photos have been released of McGregor with the unknown dark-haired woman, laughing and cuddling with her, and at one point touching her leg. McGregor had reportedly been on a 15-minute jet ski ride before giving the woman public displays of affection.

    Image: BackGrid

    McGregor also reportedly relished in the attention of other female beach-goers.

    Conor McGregor Seen Kissing Woman, Not Fiancée Dee Devlin, On Beach

    Devlin, McGregor’s fiancée since 2020, with whom he has four children, was reportedly not present on the beach.

    Devlin has been by McGregor’s side since before his rise in the world of MMA — even as McGregor has faced numerous sexual assault complaints. This includes McGregor being found guilty by a jury last November of the December 2018 sexual assault of Nikita Hand in a Dublin hotel room.

    McGregor also faced an accusation from rapper Azealia Banks on Monday, July 14, claiming she received unsolicited nude photos from McGregor.

    McGregor has not be seen in the Octagon since his UFC 264 loss to Dustin Poirier. McGregor, however, has teased a return to the UFC to compete on its White House card next year.

    McGregor was scheduled to face fellow The Ultimate Fighter season 31 coach Michael Chandler at UFC 303, but that bout never came to fruition.

    McGregor, also a part-owner of BKFC, recently had a stare-down with Mike Perry at an event.

  • Azealia Banks Reveals NSFW Pictures Of Conor McGregor –  Private DM’s Leaked

    Azealia Banks Reveals NSFW Pictures Of Conor McGregor – Private DM’s Leaked

    People who were scrolling through social media on the morning of Monday, July 14, were in for a rude awakening, (indirectly) courtesy of Conor McGregor.

    Rapper and songwriter Azealia Banks took to social media to publicly post revealing pictures of the former two-division UFC champion. Banks claimed McGregor sent her unsolicited nude pictures, and she took to social media to trash the Irish fighter.

    “Like, how are you really going to sexually harrass me with the potato farmer **** then threaten me not to tell?” Banks posted in a thread of posts on X (fka Twitter). Honey, ain’t you trying to be the president of Ireland…?”

    Banks is making mention to McGregor’s March announcement, intending to run as an independent in the 2025 Irish presidential election.

    Another post in the series shows McGregor seemingly responding to Banks’ posts in a private message, claiming “Don’t be a rat cos [sic] all rats get caught.”

    Azealia Banks Posts Unsolicited Nude Pictures From Conor McGregor

    Conor McGregor had recently returned to the headlines in the MMA world, teasing a return to the sport following U.S. President Donald Trump and UFC CEO and President Dana White revealing plans for a UFC pay-per-view card at the White House.

    Of course, this is also far from Conor McGregor ‘s first controversy outside of the cage. In November, an Irish jury deemed McGregor was guilty of sexually assaulting a woman, Nikita Hand, in a Dublin hotel in December 2018. McGregor has also been accused of sexual assault and indecent exposure on the French island of Corsica during 2020, though the investigation did not lead to anything due to insufficient evidence.

    McGregor has also been accused of sexually assaulting a woman in a bathroom at the Kaseya Center in Miami during Game 4 of the 2023 NBA Finals. This is the same day in which McGregor was accused of going off script and injuring an individual playing the Miami Heat’s mascot in a skit.

    McGregor has not fought since his UFC 264 loss to Dustin Poirier in their trilogy fight. He was seen at BKFC’s recent event, however, getting into a staredown with Mike Perry.

    Conor McGregor Reportedly Appeals Civil Sexual Assault Verdict
    Image: @thenotoriousmma/Instagram
  • 6 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC Nashville: Derrick Lewis vs. Tallison Teixeira

    6 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC Nashville: Derrick Lewis vs. Tallison Teixeira

    The UFC invaded Nashville this past Saturday, bringing a night of action and plenty of finishes to the Bridgestone Arena.

    This marked the seventh trip to Nashville for the world’s top MMA promotion, and it’s first since 2023 — a card that saw Cory Sandhagen defeat Rob Font in the main event.

    This event’s headline bout, however, came with plenty of heavyweight power, as Derrick Lewis took on the unbeaten Tallison Teixeira. Lewis came into this bout off his finish of Rodrigo Nascimento in May. Teixeira, meanwhile, came into this bout after defeating Justin Tafa in his debut at UFC 312.

    Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, another longtime UFC veteran, looked for a victory in the co-main event against the rising Gabriel Bonfim.

    Who delivered in Nashville? Who didn’t? Let’s dive into it all with the Hits and Misses of UFC Nashville!

    Hit – Highlight-Filled Card

    While there was plenty of skepticism coming into this card for entertainment value, UFC Nashville ended up being one of the more fun Fight Night cards that we have seen from the UFC this year.

    Fatima Kline got the action started right with a head-kick knockout, Mike Davis had a flying knee in his finishing sequence, and Valter Walker pulled off a quick submission — all within the first three fights of the evening. Jake Matthews also had a strong performance that ended in a win via a 69-second submission, giving the prelims four finishes in its six fights.

    The main card also went 4-for-6 for finishes, with Tuco Tokkos and Vitor Petrino getting submission victories and TKOs from Morgan Charrière and Derrick Lewis.

    The main and co-main events had their own downsides that soiled the card a bit (see below), but otherwise one of the best Fight Night cards we’ve seen from the UFC in this year.

    Hit – Valter Walker Wants Your Leg

    It’s one thing to get three of the same kind of finish (KO/TKO over submission) in a row. It’s another thing to do it all in the first round. What Valter Walker has done is a whole other thing — three submissions via leg lock, all in one round.

    Walker managed to pressure Kennedy Nzechukwu early to the fence. In just a few simple motions that took just a few seconds, he got Nzechukwu down before locking up one of his legs in an inverted position to score the tapout in just south of 60 seconds.

    It was an incredible performance for Walker, the brother of UFC light heavyweight Johnny Walker. The former Titan FC heavyweight champ has now won three straight since dropping his UFC debut. And given the shaky status of heavyweight in the promotion, he’s already positioning himself as one to watch out for.

    Hit – Thank You, “Lucky” Lauren

    Lauren Murphy wasn’t lucky in getting a win in her retirement fight against Eduarda Moura, but she showed quite the grit while doing so and deserves a salute on the way out for her career.

    Murphy was controlled by Moura in terms of speed and grappling ability over the course of two rounds. But Murphy nearly got lucky in the third with a surprise guillotine that almost got the submission. Moura survived, however, and Murphy wasn’t able to get the finish, giving Moura the win.

    Murphy, the inaugural Invicta FC bantamweight champion, came into the UFC in 2013, but it was when she dropped to flyweight that she found a rebirth. She went 7-4 in the Octagon at 125, with three of the losses coming in her last four fights — a stretch that began with an unsuccessful challenge of flyweight champ Valentina Shevchenko at UFC 266.

    A salute to you, Lauren Murphy. I hope you find luck in your career outside of the cage.

    Hit – Jake Matthews Coming Into His Own

    Jake Matthews has been with the UFC since 2014, and his next fight will be his 30th in his professional MMA career. Yet, he’s only going to turn 31 next month, and as the heading says, he’s finally coming into his own as a fighter.

    Taking on Chidi Njokuani, Matthews ate some nasty leg kicks from Njokuani before pressuring him, getting to his back, and scoring a choke submission in just over a minute. It was really impressive, going from looking like he’d be in for a long night with those kicks, to snatching control quickly and getting a standout submission.

    Matthews has now won three straight, four of his last five, and five of his last seven. I don’t know what is next for Matthews, but welterweight better watch for him. Perhaps next is a fight with a lower-ranked contender?

    Hit – Steve Garcia Is Contender Ready

    Featherweight, meet your new up-and-coming star.

    Steve Garcia could have been the opportunity for Calvin Kattar to right his ship against a rising name; instead, Garcia used the fight to make it known that he’s a dangerous name coming up in the division. We’ve seen Kattar use his awesome boxing skills, his amazing striking and pressure, but it was Garcia this time who implemented that gameplan near flawlessly.

    Garcia has now won six straight — five of those at featherweight, with three performance bonuses. In mere hours’ time, he will likely have a ranking number next to his name. And it will be fun to see who toward the bottom of the top 10 could be next for him — maybe Josh Emmett or Dan Ige (especially with Kattar having a win over Ige previously)?

    Miss – End Of The UFC Road For Calvin Kattar?

    Calvin Kattar has consistently been in some entertaining fights over the years. But the record states for itself — his success in the Octagon has disappeared.

    The loss to Garcia marks his fifth straight defeat in the UFC, and his sixth loss in the seven-fight stretch he’s had since losing to Max Holloway in January 2021. Without a doubt, Kattar is an excellent striker and a warrior; however, at this point, it’s hard to justify keeping him in the rankings at No. 15. And even worse, some may feel it’s hard to justify him being in the promotion.

    It’s rare to find someone who loses three or four straight get another opportunity in the UFC, let alone five. Keep in mind, he’s now two losses away from tying B.J. Penn for second-most consecutive losses in UFC history.

    His performances in the Octagon lead me to believe Kattar will get another chance. If he does, however, you have to wonder if he’ll be fighting for his roster spot at that point.

    Miss – Gabriel Bonfim gets Undeserved Nod Over Wonderboy

    Unfortunately for UFC Nashville, it was the two eagerly-anticipated for fights, the main event and co-main event, where some of the good feelings of the night got spoiled. And it began with possibly one of the worst robberies of this year, with Gabriel Bonfim getting a controversial decision over Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson.

    Bonfim beat out Thompson’s range and point-based striking methods with a pair of takedowns during the opening round. Bonfim, of course, checked a kick that opened up a bad gash on Thompson’s leg, but “Wonderboy” continued to use it — and nearly finished Bonfim with his kicks.

    Thompson continued to land his kicks in the third, but Bonfim would pressure him to the fence and scored a takedown — but he didn’t do much. Despite a ref’s warning for stalling, however, no separation happened, and two of three judges gave the round to Bonfim, giving him the split decision victory.

    The result is what people expected going into the bout originally, but the MMA community near unanimously seems to be in agreement that “Wonderboy” is robbed. In fact, this fight tells us less about “Wonderboy” and more about concerns regarding Bonfim.

    Sure, Bonfim has had impressive performances, and he’s got more to benefit with a contender ranking than a 42-year-old Thompson. But what does it say when one of your contenders, in the biggest test of his career, nearly lost to a fighter who is near the end of his MMA tenure? It’s not good, and we need a better performance from Bonfim in his next outing to take him seriously as a contender at 170.

    Hit – Vintage Black Beast

    Whatever you felt of the finish to UFC Nashville’s main event, one thing is for certain, “The Black Beast” still has his devastating power even at 40 years of age. And it’s always a pleasure to watch.

    One would think Derrick Lewis would have been in serious trouble after getting hit in the eye with a knuckle from a Tallison Teixeira punch. But an impressive left hook and a flurry of punches later, Lewis got his hand raised.

    Lewis now has won three of his last four. And as someone in the top-10 at heavyweight that Tom Aspinall has not faced, perhaps one more win can give Lewis one last miracle shot at UFC gold.

    Miss – Main & Co-Main Ruined By Poor Officials

    It started with poor judging. As mentioned, many agreed that Bonfim didn’t do enough against Thompson in the final round — and yet somehow, two of the three judges at Octagonside gave 10-9 scores for Bonfim.

    It’s not the first time that we’ve dealt with issues of someone getting an undeserved win, whether in history or just in 2025, and it won’t be the last. For someone like Thompson, however, who could have had one last victory in the Octagon and stopped a rising star’s momentum, this decision meant the world.

    And this brings into question the Unified Rules of MMA. If we’re talking effective striking and grappling, then what is “effective”? How did the judges look at what Bonfim was doing in the third — with the referee warning for inactivity — and call it effective? It’s one thing if Thompson was offering up zero offense in the round; however, Thompson had been doing damage up until Bonfim took him down.

    Also, shame on the referee for not stepping in and separating during a crucial point — the fight’s final minute.

    I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, the Unified Rules and the “10-point must system” the sport has borrowed from boxing does not fit in MMA. The PRIDE scoring system (aka the Global Rules scoring system), as seen in promotions like PRIDE and One Championship, work so much better for the sport.

    And then, on top of it, many are trashing the stoppage Jason Herzog made in the main event of the evening. I’ll say this — if Herzog wanted to stop the fight when Teixeira hit the mat, getting knocked down by the vicious hook from Lewis, perfectly fine. If he wanted to take a point or two away from Teixeira for grabbing the fence to get himself up, that’s fine, too.

    But to play “halfsies,” and wait for Teixeira to get to his feet to make the call he can’t continue, that can’t happen. Either give him the chance to get back in the fight or not — you could have stopped that earlier.

    It’s sad, in 2025, a great night of action is spoiled by terrible decision-making from the people we should trust with power in this sport.

    Miss – No Clear Answers For Heavyweight

    We have a mess at heavyweight. We have the ongoing Jon Jones saga as it relates to Tom Aspinall and the heavyweight title. Aspinall has beaten most of the top 10 — and beaten them in the first round. And the number of fighters in heavyweight division is only double that of the number of ranked heavyweight fighters.

    It’s a bad state of things, and UFC Nashville, in spite of its highlights, have given us no answers.

    Teixeira was only competing in his second UFC bout. And yet with his unbeaten record he had entering UFC Nashville, a win over Lewis would have done him wonders and provided us a potential answer for the division. Lewis still could get a title shot somehow, but is a 40-year-old Derrick Lewis really the answer for a fight with Aspinall (if he gets through his next presumed opponent in Ciryl Gane)?

    Vitor Petrino looked solid, but he’s not ranked right now. And Volkan Walker will most likely just get into the contender spots after this weekend.

    Add into it that there are no heavyweight fights now until UFC Shanghai late next month, and that UFC CEO and President Dana White still feeling Jones vs. Aspinall would be the “dream” main event for the White House card next year, and it looks like it’s still going to be a long, rocky road for heavyweight.

  • ‘Can A Lighter Lewis Defend Aspinall’s Takedowns?’ – Fans & Fighters React To Derrick Lewis Ending Tallison Teixeira’s Undefeated Streak In Under A Minute At UFC Nashville

    ‘Can A Lighter Lewis Defend Aspinall’s Takedowns?’ – Fans & Fighters React To Derrick Lewis Ending Tallison Teixeira’s Undefeated Streak In Under A Minute At UFC Nashville

    “The Black Beast” continues to deliver with highlight performances (which may include removing his fight trunks), needing just 35 seconds to put away Tallison Teixeira in the main event of UFC Nashville.

    A punching exchange seemed to hinder Lewis’ vision almost right away, with a knuckle from Teixeira going into it. Because it came from a punch, however, the referee did not stop the fight.

    Lewis, however, landed a powerful left hook that dropped Teixeira. He then swarmed on Teixeira with follow-up strikes, and despite Teixeira making it to his feet after some struggle, the referee waved the action off, giving “The Black Beast” another knockout win to extend his UFC record.

    Derrick Lewis KOs Tallison Teixeira, Handing Him First Loss, At UFC Nashville

    https://twitter.com/HomelanderMMA/status/1944247140752273514

    Lewis has now won three of his last four fights, which includes finishes of Marcos Rogério de Lima and Rodrigo Nascimento.

    Teixeira suffers the first pro loss of his career. This marked just his second UFC bout, debuting in a performance bonus-earning win over Justin Tafa at UFC 312 in February.

  • ‘Stalling With Wrestling Is Not Scored Highly’ – Fans & Fighters React To Gabriel Bonfim Earning Controversial Judges’ Nod Over Stephen ‘Wonderboy’ Thompson At UFC Nashville

    ‘Stalling With Wrestling Is Not Scored Highly’ – Fans & Fighters React To Gabriel Bonfim Earning Controversial Judges’ Nod Over Stephen ‘Wonderboy’ Thompson At UFC Nashville

    Gabriel Bonfim scored the biggest win of his career in the UFC Nashville co-main event and will most likely find himself in the welterweight rankings. It doesn’t come without controversy, however, as plenty of people felt his opponent, longtime UFC veteran and former welterweight title challenger Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson should have been given the judges’ decision.

    Thompson looked to keep his distance in the early part of the fight, aware of Bonfim’s wrestling while looking to land his traditional striking. Bonfim scored a pair of takedowns halfway through the first, however, locking up a tight choke attempt on Thompson, but the veteran escaped.

    After a bit of a striking battle in the early portion of the second round, Bonfim got to Thompson’s back again and scored another takedown — though it was brief before Thompson returned to the feet. Thompson got to break out of Bonfim’s clinch a minute later and started to find his groove.

    Bonfim would check a kick from Thompson, resulting in a really nasty gash. Thompson did land a head kick, however, stumbling Bonfim and stopping a takedown before the end of the round.

    Bonfim looked to pressure Thompson in the third round, bringing him to the fence during the first minute. Thompson fought out of it and continued to throw with the cut leg. Thompson landed another strong head kick; however, Bonfim scored a pair of takedowns and used his grappling to control the action — or lack of it as the fight was in its concluding stages.

    Gabriel Bonfim Scores Narrow, Controversial Decision Over Stephen Thompson

    https://twitter.com/ElonovMMA/status/1944240435557544345
    https://twitter.com/ElonTrumpDonald/status/1944238075619504305

    Bonfim, a 2022 alumnus of Dana White’s Contender Series, is now 5-1 in the Octagon, including a three-fight win streak now, defeating Ange Loosa and Khaos Williams as well over the last year.

    Thompson has now lost three straight and five of his last six.

  • ‘For Real’ – Fans & Fighters React To Steve Garcia’s Shocking Domination Of Calvin Kattar At UFC Nashville

    ‘For Real’ – Fans & Fighters React To Steve Garcia’s Shocking Domination Of Calvin Kattar At UFC Nashville

    Steve Garcia was known to be a talented fighter, but that talent may now be on another level after pulling off a strong victory over Calvin Kattar at UFC Nashville — guaranteeing him a spot in the featherweight rankings in the coming days.

    Garcia controlled the action from the beginning with a mix of heavy leg kicks, wild combinations, and spinning attacks, overwhelming Kattar and making him crumble under the pressure.

    Garcia continued to dictate the pace in the second, focused on body shots and bloodying Kattar up with his jab. Kattar tried to bring up the intensity with the vintage striking we’ve seen from him, but Garcia consistently got the better of him in every exchange.

    Garcia turned up the aggression still in the third round, rocking Kattar with a left hand and body strikes, not letting up on the gas as he hunted for the finish. Kattar tried to rally back but was blocked again.

    Garcia didn’t get the finish, which would have been his sixth straight KO/TKO, but he did sweep the judges’ scorecards.

    Steve Garcia Scores Decision In All-Around Performance vs. Calvin Kattar At UFC Nashville

    https://twitter.com/CharlieQuinnMMA/status/1944230026121294311

    Garcia has now won six straight, a stretch that began with his featherweight debut in a win over Chase Hooper at UFC Vegas 63 in October 2022.

    Kattar has now lost five straight and six of his last seven — just one win since his loss to Max Holloway in January 2021.

  • Merab Dvalishvili Wins 2025 UFC Fighter Of The Year ESPY Award

    Merab Dvalishvili Wins 2025 UFC Fighter Of The Year ESPY Award

    UFC bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili can add another piece of hardware to his collection.

    Though ESPN’s ESPY Awards ceremony will not be held for four more days, the UFC revealed the nominees and winner of the ESPY Award for UFC Fighter of the Year, with Dvalishvili taking home the honors. The UFC made the announcement during the UFC Nashville broadcast.

    The other nominees were UFC lightweight champion Islam Makhachev, UFC women’s bantamweight champion Kayla Harrison, and UFC middleweight champion Dricus Du Plessis.

    Dvalishvili is the only one of the nominated winners to win in three title fights during the July 1, 2024 – June 20, 2025 timeframe the awards are based on.

    This stretch began with Dvalishvili capturing the UFC bantamweight title from Sean O’Malley at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306 in September. He then retained the title in a comeback decision over Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 and a finish of O’Malley at UFC 316.

    He is expected to face Cory Sandhagen in his next defense of the gold.

    Merab Dvalishvili Wins Fighter Of The Year ESPY Award

    Makhachev retained his lightweight title, defeating Dustin Poirier at UFC 302 and Renato Moicano at UFC 311, before vacating the title to move up to welterweight.

    Harrison defeated Ketlen Veiera at UFC 307 before defeating Julianna Pena at UFC 316 to become women’s bantamweight champion. She is expected to face the returning great Amanda Nunes at a time and place to be determined.

    Du Plessis retained the middleweight title against Israel Adesanya at UFC 305 and Sean Strickland at UFC 312. He will defend the title against Khamzat Chimaev in the main event of UFC 319 next month.

    The UFC commentary team stated new lightweight champion and former featherweight champion Ilia Topuria was not nominated because of the timeframe the awards are based on. His lightweight title win came a week after deadline.

  • ‘Absolutely Pummeled Landwehr’ – Fans & Fighters React To Morgan Charrière Pulling Off Violent Comeback Finish Of Nate Landwehr At UFC Nashville

    ‘Absolutely Pummeled Landwehr’ – Fans & Fighters React To Morgan Charrière Pulling Off Violent Comeback Finish Of Nate Landwehr At UFC Nashville

    Morgan Charrière went into enemy territory and, despite some early trouble, scored a violent finish of hometown hero Nate “The Train” Landwehr at UFC Nashville.

    Charriere got off to a strong start, thanks to the usage of fast leg kicks and sharp, speedy counters. Charriere added in a takedown, controlling the grappling action.

    Landwehr stormed back in a big way, pushing the pace and increasing his output. He tried to bring up the intensity and landed plenty of combinations on Charriere, making the fight more of a slugfest as he took control of the action.

    But Charriere fought fire with fire, connecting on his own flurries at the start of the third round, rocking and dropping Landwehr for a TKO victory.

    Morgan Charrière Stops Nate Landwehr At UFC Nashville

    https://twitter.com/EagleMMA_/status/1944222743383486656

    Charrière is now 3-2 in the Octagon since coming over from Cage Warriors.

    Landwehr has now lost three of his last four.

  • VIDEO: Jake Matthews Locks Up Quick Submission Of Chidi Njokuani At UFC Nashville

    VIDEO: Jake Matthews Locks Up Quick Submission Of Chidi Njokuani At UFC Nashville

    At 30 years old, Jake Matthews really seems to be coming into his own, and that wasn’t more on display than his fast finish of Chidi Njokuani during the UFC Nashville preliminary card.

    Matthews ate some strong leg kicks from Njokuani to start the action before Matthews got the action to the ground.

    Njokuani got to his feet, but it wasn’t long before Matthews, on his back, locked up a choke, scoring the submission.

    Jake Matthews Submits Chidi Njokuani At UFC Nashville

    https://twitter.com/RookieParlays/status/1944190321421955093

    Matthews has now won three straight and four of his last five, with his sole loss in that span coming against now-top-10 ranked Michael Morales.

    Njokuani, the Bellator and UFC veteran, sees a three-fight win streak snapped.

  • ‘Went Out Like A Gangster’ – Fans Salute Lauren Murphy As She Retires Following Loss To Eduarda Moura At UFC Nashville

    ‘Went Out Like A Gangster’ – Fans Salute Lauren Murphy As She Retires Following Loss To Eduarda Moura At UFC Nashville

    After about a decade in the Octagon, Lauren Murphy hangs up the gloves following her loss to Eduarda Moura during the UFC Nashville prelims.

    “I’ve been in the UFC 10 years, [in MMA] for 15,” Murphy said. “I want to thank me for doing all this hard motherf****** work at 41 years old. I’m still in here f****** these girls up.”

    Moura scored a couple of notable shots on Murphy early before a Murphy takedown — only for Moura to get up right away and score one of her own. Moura controlled the action from there and seemed to land speedier, more effective strikes the rest of the way.

    Moura continued to get the better of Murphy in terms of striking in the second round. Murphy was able to land her own fair share as Moura slowed in the second half of the frame; however, Moura was still the quicker fighter with better striking.

    Murphy pulled off a near-fairytale ending out of nowhere in the third round, locking up a guillotine choke that looked tight but failed to get the submission. The fight’s pace slowed from there, though Murphy landed the better strikes up until the final 30 seconds, when Moura started to get some of her gas tank and power back.

    No judge gave Murphy a 10-8 for the near finish, however, as Moura took the cards with three 29-28s.

    Lauren Murphy Retires Following Loss To Eduarda Moura

    Moura is now 3-1 in the UFC since her first-round submission of Janaina Silva on Dana White’s Contender Series in 2023.

    Despite a string of losses early in her UFC tenure, Murphy found her groove in 2019 as a flyweight, ending her UFC tenure 6-3 since then. Murphy lost three of the last four fights in her UFC career, which began with an unsuccessful flyweight title challenge against Valentina Shevchenko at UFC 266.

  • VIDEO: Valter Walker Locks Up Third Straight Heel Hook Submission, Defeating Kennedy Nzechukwu In Less Than A Minute At UFC Nashville

    VIDEO: Valter Walker Locks Up Third Straight Heel Hook Submission, Defeating Kennedy Nzechukwu In Less Than A Minute At UFC Nashville

    Three fights into UFC Nashville’s preliminary card, and we have our third finish in a row — and it’s the third finish via heel hook in a row for Valter Walker.

    Walker, the older brother of light heavyweight Johnny Walker, needed less than a minute to put away Kennedy Nzechukwu.

    Walker brought pressure right away, quickly pressing Nzechukwu to the fence. Walker then scored a takedown and quickly was able to contort one of Nzechukwu’s legs, locking up another heel hook and scoring a submission in just 54 seconds.

    Valter Walker Wins Third Straight Via Heel Hook At UFC Nashville

    In addition to three straight wins, Walker has now won four of his last five. Walker’s three heel hook submission victories over these past 12 months have helped him rebound from dropping his UFC debut against Łukasz Brzeski.

    Nzechukwu had come into this bout 2-0 since moving up to heavyweight, defeating Chris Barnett and Brzeski at UFC 308 and UFC 310, respectively.

  • ‘Still Has Insane Fire Power And Athleticism’ – Fans & Fighters React To Mike Davis Going From Grappling Domination To Flying Knee TKO Of Mitch Ramirez At UFC Nashville

    ‘Still Has Insane Fire Power And Athleticism’ – Fans & Fighters React To Mike Davis Going From Grappling Domination To Flying Knee TKO Of Mitch Ramirez At UFC Nashville

    Talk about quite the all-around performance, Mike Davis lived up to being one of the biggest favorites on the UFC Nashville card, pulling out a second-round finish of Mitch Ramirez during the preliminary card of UFC Nashville.

    Davis took Ramirez down early in the first round, controlling the round from that second. Davis would make his way to Ramirez’s back, threatening multiple choke attempts, though running out of time before he could score the submission.

    Davis’ pace appeared to slow early in the second round, as Ramirez landed a pair of shots that seemed to do damage. The fight became a striking battle from there, and Davis got back control as the action went on. Eventually, Davis landed a flying knee that rocked Ramirez, and follow-up shots got Ramirez to crumble to the mat, ending the fight.

    UFC Nashville: Mike Davis Lands Flying Knee In Finishing Sequence On Mitch Ramirez

    https://twitter.com/Non_Standard114/status/1944171002063143416

    Davis has now won five of his last six and rebounds from a decision loss to Fares Ziam at UFC Saudi Arabia in February.

    Ramirez, who lost to Carlos Prates on Dana White’s Contender Series in 2023, is now 0-2 in the UFC. He was stopped by Thiago Moises in March 2024.

  • VIDEO: Fatima Kline Starts Off UFC Nashville With Impactful Head-Kick KO On 25th Birthday

    VIDEO: Fatima Kline Starts Off UFC Nashville With Impactful Head-Kick KO On 25th Birthday

    Talk about a heck of a way to celebrate turning 25 years old.

    Fatima Kline has appeared to impress the masses in her third Octagon bout, quite literally kicking off the action at UFC Nashville with a bang in her finish of Melissa Martinez.

    Kline used her pressure to control the fight from the get-go, using her reach to land jabs and kicks, focusing on body shots. Kline continued to push the pace, working over Martinez in the clinch with sharp strikes, while Martinez’s power increase only resulted in some strikes landing.

    Fatima Kline Lands Head Kick To KO Melissa Martinez At UFC Nashville

    Kline then ended things dramatically in the third with a head kick that dropped Martinez. Kline landed a couple of follow-up strikes before the referee stepped in and waved things off.

    Kline has now won back-to-back fights, defeating Victoria Dudakova this past January. Kline made her UFC debut last year in a loss to Jasmine Jasudavicius.

    Martinez now falls to 1-2 in the UFC.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Derrick Lewis TKO’s Tallison Teixeira

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Derrick Lewis TKO’s Tallison Teixeira

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, heavyweights Derrick Lewis and Tallison Teixeira clashed. While in the co-main event, Stephen Thompson faced off with Gabriel Bonfim in a welterweight matchup. 

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Derrick Lewis def. Tallison Teixeira via TKO: R1, 0.35  
    • Gabriel Bonfim def. Stephen Thompson via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Steve Garcia def. Calvin Kattar via unanimous decision (30-27×3)  
    • Morgan Charriere def. Nate Landwehr via TKO: R3, 0.27
    • Vitor Petrino def. Austen Lane via submission: R1, 4.16  
    • Tuco Tokkos def. Junior Tafa via submission: R2, 4.25

    Preliminary Card

    • Chris Curtis def. Max Griffin via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29) 
    • Jake Matthews def. Chidi Njokuani via submission: R1, 1.09
    • Eduarda Moura def. Lauren Murphy via unanimous decision (29-28×3)  
    • Valter Walker def. Kennedy Nzechukwu via submission: R1, 0.54
    • Mike Davis def. Mitch Ramirez via TKO: R2, 4.08  

    Fatima Kline def. Melissa Martinez via TKO: R3, 2.36

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Fatima Kline def. Melissa Martinez

    Fatima Kline earned a TKO in the third round.

    Mike Davis def. Mitch Ramirez

    Mike Davis earned a TKO in round two.

    Valter Walker def. Kennedy Nzechukwu

    Valter Walker took less than a minute to submit Kennedy Nzechukwu.

    Jake Matthews def. Chidi Njokuani

    Jake Matthews took just over a minute to submit Chidi Njokuani.

    Main Card Highlights

    Tuco Tokkos def. Junior Tafa

    Tuco Tokkos locked in an arm triangle to get the win in his light heavyweight bout.

    Vitor Petrino def. Austen Lane

    Vitor Petrino submitted Austen Lane in round one of their heavyweight matchup.

    Morgan Charriere def. Nate Landwehr

    Morgan Charriere got it done with a TKO in the third.

    Steve Garcia def. Calvin Kattar

    Steve Garcia got it done on the scorecards in this featherweight matchup.

    Gabriel Bonfim def. Stephen Thompson

    In the co-main event, Gabriel Bonfim got it done with a split decision over Stephen Thompson.

    Derrick Lewis def. Tallison Teixeira

    In the main event, Derrick Lewis took just 35 seconds to TKO Tallison Teixeira.

  • When 2 Splintered UFC Title Lineages Came Together: A Spotlight

    Many know of the lineal MMA heavyweight title path that extended from Randy Couture to Francis Ngannou today but ‘The Natural’ created a separate splintering of the UFC title’s lineage that lead to an unheralded unification bout years ago. Observing the more widely known lineal heavyweight title path, Couture cemented himself as the UFC heavyweight champion within his first four professional MMA bouts before departing the promotion as their reigning titleholder.

    The decorated wrestler would then lose the lineal strap to Enson Inoue when Couture submitted via armbar in the first round of their Vale Tudo Japan bout in October 1998. Inoue would drop the unofficial crown to Mark Kerr in the opening round of the 2000 Pride Grand Prix with the lineal title being passed around throughout that tournament. When the dust settled on the 2000 Pride Grand Prix, Kerr dropped the lineal title to Kazuyuki Fujita who then promptly dropped it to Mark Coleman who won the stacked tournament in the end.

    Couture again leaves as UFC champ and the lineage passes through Japan once more

    The other break within the UFC title’s lineage was driven by Couture yet again and his reclaiming of that organization’s heavyweight crown took place at UFC 28 in November 2000. Randy Couture would not only return to the Ultimate Fighting Championship but again became the UFC heavyweight champion when he finished Kevin Randleman with strikes in the final minute of the third frame. Couture would again leave the promotion as their reigning heavyweight champion and after defeating Tsuyoshi Kosaka under the Rings Japan banner, he would lose this separate lineal distinction to Valentijn Overeem in February 2001.

    Overeem would lose this quasi title to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira who also captured the Rings Japan 2001 tournament title in the process. Following his own lineal title defense at Pride 15 after submitting Gary Goodridge with a first round triangle choke, Pride FC would then book a clash between the 2000 Pride Grand Prix champion and the 2001 Rings Japan tournament champion.

    Two wayward UFC Title lineages coming together in the Pride ring

    The stage was set for these two splintered UFC title championship lineages to finally come together as one and it all transpired at at Pride 16 in September 2001. Coleman has also quasi defend his version of the lineal title when he halted Allan Goes with knees at the seventy nine second mark of their Pride 13 contest. This clash between Coleman and Nogueira was initially set to transpire at Pride 15 in July 2001 before a knee injury Mark Coleman sustained scrapped that planned prizefight.

    When the two finally stepped into the ring a matter of weeks after the fact, it was Nogueira who would consolodate both lineages and fuse them into one. This moment of galvanizing the wayward title lineages came in the form of ‘Big Nog’ snatching a triangle armbar onto ‘The Hammer’ and illiciting a tap at the 6:10 mark of round one with ten minute opening rounds being commonplace under the Pride FC banner.

  • Conor McGregor mocks Mike Perry in tense BKFC face-off

    Conor McGregor came face to face with Mike Perry at a BKFC event yesterday as rumors continue to swirl regarding a possible future fight between the two men.

    As we know, Conor McGregor plays a pretty big role in the operation over at BKFC – or, at least, that’s how it seems. He also isn’t a big fan of Mike Perry, to the point where he even seemed to ‘fire’ him once upon a time. Now, though, ‘Platinum’ is back in BKFC, and it would appear as if they’re teasing the idea of these rivals actually battling it out in the ring.

    Conor McGregor hasn’t been in active competition since breaking his leg against Dustin Poirier four years ago, and it’s not quite clear as to if he’ll ever compete again. If he does, though, this would seem to indicate that Mike Perry is definitely a potential foe for him.

    Conor McGregor teases Mike Perry

    “You’re welcome back because I welcomed you back,” McGregor said, referencing when he claimed Perry was fired from BKFC after losing to Paul. “Oct. 11 is your date, and you’ll dance for me, boy. You’ll dance for the owner, and then we can talk.”

    “Your date is Oct. 11, Michael Perry, the return of ‘Platinum’, and we’ve got [one] hell of an announcement for an opponent for you,” McGregor teased. “One of the baddest men to ever grace the Ultimate Fighting Championship, but when it comes to bare-knuckle, he’s going to throw down with you in front of me for my viewing pleasure, and then I’ll decide if you’re worthy.”

    Quotes via MMA Fighting

  • Daniel Cormier reveals who hit him hardest in his MMA career

    UFC commentator Daniel Cormier has revealed who hit him the hardest throughout the course of his mixed martial arts career.

    It’s safe to say that Daniel Cormier is one of the greatest of all time. In addition to his wrestling credentials, he went on to become a two-weight world champion in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. There aren’t many fighters who can claim to have done that, and DC is within that group.

    He’s also taken on some of the hardest hitters in the history of the game. From Anthony Johnson to Derrick Lewis and beyond, Daniel Cormier has never been afraid to take someone on. He’s never been a guy who shies away from a challenge, which is one of the reasons why he’s so highly thought of.

    In a recent podcast, Daniel Cormier revealed who it was that actually hit him harder than anyone else when he was in the cage.

    Daniel Cormier talks about hardest hitter he’s faced

    “I think you and I could agree with one though, one guy that hit harder than just about everyone. Dan Henderson. Dan Henderson never got to hit me. He never really got to hit me outside of him being on his back and hitting me or in the clinch hitting me a couple of times. I could not believe how much impact he was making from such a short distance. I was like, ‘What is this dude made out of?’”

    Quotes via Bloody Elbow

    God bless Dan Henderson and the violence he brought to this wonderful sport.

  • Jon Jones continues to tease the idea of UFC return for White House event

    Jon Jones continues to tease the idea of UFC return for White House event

    Former UFC fighter Jon Jones continues to tease the idea of a comeback, just a few weeks after announcing his retirement from mixed martial arts.

    One thing we’ve come to learn is that you should expect the unexpected with Jon Jones. He likes to keep the mixed martial arts world on its toes, and he doesn’t really care how he does it. For the longest time he was stringing Tom Aspinall along, not fighting him for the undisputed championship. Then, he retired, and it’s safe to say that a lot of people weren’t happy about that decision.

    For Jon Jones, trolling fans and critics alike is just what he does. He flip flops between one thought process and the other, and after it was announced that the UFC plans on taking an event to the White House, things have only ramped up even further.

    In a recent series of tweets, Jon Jones made it pretty clear that this is a venture he’s interested in pursuing – and you’d have to imagine he’ll be coming back to fight Tom Aspinall.

    Jon Jones teases return at UFC White House event

    “Donald made his announcement on the morning of the Fourth of July, I called the UFC headquarters that very same afternoon. I’ll just leave it at that. America! Now that tickles my pickle.”

    “It would be, for me it’s about the opportunity to represent America at the White House. I don’t care who I fight that night. I found my reason why, that’s what I needed, something that was more than money.”

    “Who knows what the future holds, but the moment I heard Donald Trump‘s announcement, I started training again.”

  • Joshua Van Says Loss Changed Everything: “The Greatest Thing That Ever Happened”

    Joshua Van Says Loss Changed Everything: “The Greatest Thing That Ever Happened”

    UFC flyweight contender Joshua Van has said that his knockout loss to Charles Johnson last year was one of the best things that could’ve happened to him.

    As we know, 23-year-old Joshua Van is the number one contender for the UFC flyweight championship. He looks set to challenge Alexandre Pantoja for the belt in a fight that pits the old guard against the new, with many wondering whether or not Van has what it takes to become one of the youngest UFC champions of all time.

    However, while he may be on a great five-fight win streak, Joshua Van has two losses to his name – both by finish. In the latest of those two defeats, he was knocked out by Charles Johnson last year in what was fairly surprising for those who always knew his full potential.

    In a recent interview, Joshua Van spoke candidly about how losing in such a way actually helped him grow.

    Joshua Van reveals impact of defeat

    “It was just the faith thing. The loss was the greatest thing that ever happened to me, because if not, I would have been out of the world—get a big head and things like that. I got humble real quick. Now, I never want to go back to that type of moment. So, I’m just staying in my lane, doing what coach is telling me to do, so that none of that type of thing will ever happen to me again.”

    Get ready, folks, because a new star is rising.

  • Alexander Volkanovski admits he suffered bad concussion against Islam Makhachev

    Alexander Volkanovski admits he suffered bad concussion against Islam Makhachev

    UFC featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski has spoken candidly about the concussion he suffered in his short notice rematch against Islam Makhachev.

    As we know, Alexander Volkanovski is one of the most beloved fighters in recent memory. He made history as featherweight champion during his first run and now, he has the belt back once again. With that being said, prior to his triumph over Diego Lopes, he suffered nasty knockout losses at the hands of Islam Makhachev and Ilia Topuria.

    While some may think that the Topuria defeat was worse, Alexander Volkanovski himself has revealed that he got a pretty bad concussion off the back of losing the rematch to Makhachev.

    Alexander Volkanovski reveals Islam Makhachev concussion

    “I had a decent concussion from Islam,” Volkanovski said on Demetrious Johnson’s MightyCast. “I feel like I had more of a concussion from the Islam one. Even though I was knocked out longer with Ilia, I had a lot more of the symptoms with the Islam one. … So I didn’t have head contact [training afterward], but then when you’re easing into it, now you’re easing into it, making sure you’re not getting hit. Trying to put yourself in safer positions and you even start camp wrong. I should have had the break.”

    “I can accept the situation and I’ll tell myself to make it work even though it’s probably not going to,” Volkanovski said. “I’m telling you, I went in there [ahead of the Makhachev rematch] going I’m going to be more dangerous now because I’m at 11 days. I literally told myself that. … I’m literally like, ‘This is the most dangerous you’ve seen me.’ I’m not beating him by decision, I have to go, I’m going to have to be more aggressive, I’m going to take more risks, and I literally believed it.”

    Quotes via MMA Fighting

  • Jon Jones Picks Up New Charge In Alleged February Hit-And-Run Incident

    Jon Jones Picks Up New Charge In Alleged February Hit-And-Run Incident

    The February car accident that saw Jon Jones hit with charges on the same day he announced his MMA retirement has now had added charges for Jones onto it.

    Per MMA Fighting, the former UFC heavyweight and light heavyweight champion is now another case from the incident, filed on June 30. This criminal complaint has a duplicate charge of leaving the scene of an accident; however, it also now adds a charge for “Use of Telephone to Terrify, Intimidate, Threaten, Harass, Annoy or Offend.”

    Jones is facing accusations of leaving the scene of a car accident that took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on February 21. A woman in the vehicle who was seen “exhibiting signs of significant intoxication and lacking clothing from the waist down” claimed Jones was the driver of the vehicle she was in; however, he had “subsequently fled the scene on foot.”

    When a police aide communicated on the telephone with Jones — using the woman’s phone after she called him — Jones notably “appeared to be heavily intoxicated and made statements implying his capacity to employ lethal force through third parties.”

    After backup was requested, Officer Andrew Romero spoke with Jones, noting that similar “allusions to violence” were made when trying to communicate with Jones, with Jones reportedly evading questions trying to confirm his identity. Jones later told police that the person on the other end of the call he received had “immediately opened the conversation with unprofessional language,” making Jones question the legitimacy of the person’s status as a police offer.

    Jon Jones Facing Another Criminal Complaint Stemming From February Car Accident

    MMA Fighting notes that Jones’ call records were subpoenaed by police, who found that Jones called the woman involved in the accident 13 times between 2:17 a.m. and 11:34 a.m. the next morning. Police also noted a gap in Jones’ location from 11:51 p.m. to 2:11 a.m., when the accident took place.

    Jones’ attorney, Christopher Dodd, released a statement to Uncrowned on June 23, claiming that “In the thousands of cases I have handled in my career, I have never seen a case as strange and unwarranted as this one.”

    “Jon was not driving that night; he wasn’t in the car,” the statement read. “It appears that an intoxicated woman used a false allegation against Jon to avoid being arrested for DWI, and the police fell for it.

    “It is truly unbelievable that the police would waste this amount of resources on such a case. The only thing I can think of is that the police were targeting Jon for improper purposes. We will get to the bottom of it and make sure that this baseless case is dismissed.”

  • Dana White Confirms Jon Jones Unretiring While Revealing ‘Dream Main Event’ For White House Card

    Dana White Confirms Jon Jones Unretiring While Revealing ‘Dream Main Event’ For White House Card

    When the idea of a UFC event at the White House was first announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, and later confirmed by UFC officials to media, fighters scrambled to get their name into the hat of potentially competing at such an event.

    One of those fighters was Jon Jones, who two weeks earlier had just announced his retirement from the sport of MMA, relinquishing the UFC heavyweight title in the process. This brought about an unclimactic ending to the long standoff of negotiations between he and then-interim heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall, who was promoted to undisputed champion immediately as Jones’ retirement was announced by UFC CEO and President Dana White.

    Now, during his recent appearance on the Full Send Podcast, White confirmed that despite the retirement announcement, Jones is already back.

    “He jumped back in the pool,” White confirmed.

    Dana White Says Jon Jones vs. Tom Aspinall Would Be ‘Dream’ White House Main Event, Suggests Jones And Conor McGregor Could Both Fight On Card

    Among the various questions about what could happen in one year’s time with the White House card — including how it would be set up, what the main event could be, and how it would affect the UFC’s yearly schedule — questions have also arose about what this means for the fate (once again) of a Jon Jones vs. Tom Aspinall matchup.

    Jones vs. Aspinall is one of the fresher matchups available for heavyweight — a UFC division most fans and pundits have widely agreed is one of the weakest, if not the weakest, in the promotion. And while Aspinall vs. Gane is also a fresh matchup, most of the other ranked contenders Aspinall has taken out in the first round in previous outings.

    It seems White agrees that Jones vs. Aspinall is still a possibility — even going as far as to say he could see it being a main event for the White House event.

    “My dream main event right now [for the White House card], would be Aspinall vs. Jones,” White said.

    Conor McGregor, who hasn’t fought since 2021, also has heavily promoted himself as being available for the card, going as far as to make a pitch to White in a DM that has been screenshotted and shared.

    When asked about the possibility of both men competing on the card, White was open to the idea, stating, “It’s possible.”

  • UFC Nashville: Derrick Lewis vs. Tallison Teixeira Weigh-In Results

    UFC Nashville: Derrick Lewis vs. Tallison Teixeira Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Derrick Lewis vs. Tallison Texieira takes place on Saturday, and MMA News is here to bring you the official weigh-in results.

    Held at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee, this the seventh time in UFC history that the Octagon will touch down in Nashville. It most recently hosted a Fight Night card two years ago that saw Cory Sandhagen defeat Rob Font in the main event.

    This time around, however, UFC Nashville will be topped by a heavyweight collision featuring former heavyweight title challenger Derrick Lewis and rising up-and-comer Tallison Teixeira.

    The 40-year-old Lewis has won two of his last three fights and is looking to extend his record for the most knockout wins in UFC history. Teixeira, meanwhile, hopes to continue his climb up a weakened heavyweight scene with the biggest name he’s faced thus far.

    Elsewhere, the likes of Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, Calvin Kattar, Chris Curtis, and Lauren Murphy will all be in action.

    UFC Fight Night: Lewis vs. Teixeira Weigh-In Results

    UFC Fight Night: Lewis vs. Teixeira takes place on Saturday, July 12, at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee. The main card begins at 9 PM ET/6 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6 PM ET/3 PM PT.

    See above for videos from the UFC Nashville weigh-ins and check out the results below.

    Main Card:

    • Heavyweight: Derrick Lewis (261) vs. Tallison Teixeira (259)
    • Welterweight: Stephen Thompson (170.5) vs. Gabriel Bonfim (171)
    • Heavyweight: Vitor Petrino (249) vs. Austen Lane (245)
    • Featherweight: Calvin Kattar (146) vs. Steve Garcia (146)
    • Light Heavyweight: Junior Tafa (206) vs. Tuco Tokkos (206)
    • Featherweight: Nate Landwehr (146) vs. Morgan Charriere (146)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Chris Curtis (170.5) vs. Max Griffin (170.25)
    • Welterweight: Jake Matthews (170.5) vs. Chidi Njokuani (170.5*)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Lauren Murphy (126) vs. Eduarda Moura (126)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Fatima Kline (115.5) vs. Melissa Martinez (116)
    • Heavyweight: Kennedy Nzechukwu (238) vs. Valter Walker (244.5)
    • Lightweight: Mike Davis (156) vs. Mitch Ramirez (155.25)
    • *Njokuani initially missed weight by half a pound; however, he was permitted a second attempt to make weight
  • Dana White Confirms Plans For White House Card, Promises ‘Baddest’ PPV Fight Card Of All Time

    UFC officials have previously told reporters of the seriousness of plans to hold a card at the White House — first teased last week by United States President Donald Trump — during the Semiquincentennial celebrations for the U.S. next year.

    Now, the UFC boss is doubling down on those plans.

    UFC CEO and President Dana White confirmed in a recent appearance on the Full Send Podcast that he and his team have already begun to look at the logistics on how they can make such a card work and make it one of the biggest the UFC has ever produced.

    “We’re still a year away, so the whole UFC landscape will change over the next year,” White said. But, we will absolutely, positively put on the baddest card of all time. This is going to be an exceptional pay-per-view card.”

    Dana White Promises Major Pay-Per-View Card For White House Event In July 2026

    Trump’s announcement brought about several fighters publicly stating their desires to compete on such a card, including Conor McGregor and Jon Jones — with Jones even unretiring in his very next social media post.

    This has brought about questions amongst fans and pundits alike about the aspects for a UFC at the White House. These have included what would be an appropriate main event (and would it be worth sacrificing gate opposed to placing that fight elsewhere), what potential fighters (American or otherwise) could be on the card, if the card would be a pay-per-view or on free TV (or Netflix), how 2026 International Fight Week plans would be affected, and how 25,000 people can fit on the White House grounds.

    White’s conversation has brought about some answers. Firstly, as noted, White suggested the card would be a pay-per-view — though as of July 10, it’s still unclear who the UFC’s U.S. broadcaster, or broadcasters, will be for 2026 and beyond.

    White added that all tickets for the White House card would be compensatory — none for the public.

    “First of all, I don’t know how many people will get in, not to mention that the Secret Service won’t let many people attend. Everyone will need background checks,” White said. “Whoever gets to be there live will have a unique, once-in-a-lifetime experience. While we’re filming, one side of the backdrop will be the White House and the other will be the Washington Monument.

    “I don’t think we’re going to sell tickets; it will all be comp tickets.”

    White added that even though the plans for such a noteworthy, unique event are in motion, he wasn’t aware Trump was going to announce anything when he did. He even added Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter, has been placed in charge of collaborating with White and the UFC production team for the event.

    “That day, we probably texted four or five times that day, and he never told me he was going to announce it. My team already went and walked the White House, we did all the logistics, and we’re putting together the layout for it right now, and will probably pitch it to him in a week or two.”

  • Yoel Romero, Three Other UFC & PFL Alumni Sign With BKFC

    Yoel Romero, Three Other UFC & PFL Alumni Sign With BKFC

    Four former UFC fighters, including a trio of former UFC title challengers, are going from the MMA world to the world of bare-knuckle fighting.

    During the BKFC Champions Summit press conference with Conor McGregor, held at the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas ahead of BKFC 48, McGregor announced the additions of Yoel Romero, Thiago Santos, Derek Brunson, and Aspen Ladd to the BKFC roster.

    Romero and Santos were the particular focuses of the announcement — highlighting their striking power and their veteran statuses.

    BKFC Announces Four Signings, Including Yoel Romero And Thiago Santos

    Romero and Santos, in fact, faced off in MMA just a year-and-a-half ago. The two faced off during the PFL vs. Bellator broadcast, with Romero, who was representing Bellator, winning via a clear unanimous decision.

    Romero has not fought in MMA since the win, while Santos had one more fight, a short-notice loss to eventual 2024 PFL heavyweight champion Denis Goltsov during the regular season.

    Romero — a freestyle wrestling silver medalist at the 2000 Olympics and a former freestyle wrestling World and Pan-American champion — went 16-7 in professional MMA, including a 9-4 UFC record. Romero scored victories over the likes of Lyoto Machida, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, and Chris Weidman, but was unsuccessful in middleweight title challenges of Robert Whittaker and Israel Adesanya.

    Romero then had a five-fight stint in Bellator, going 3-2 — which included the win over Santos and an unsuccessful title shot against then-Bellator light heavyweight champion Vadim Nemkov.

    Santos fought in the UFC for about a decade, but his biggest stretch came when he jumped from middleweight to light heavyweight. Santos would finish Eryk Anders, Jimi Manuwa, and Jan Blachowicz, receiving a title shot against then-champ Jon Jones at UFC 239. Santos would lose in a controversial decision. That would be the start of a downward stretch Santos never recovered from, losing all but one of his fights since the Jones loss.

    After his tenure with the UFC, Santos fought in the PFL, debuting with a loss to Rob Wilkinson — a bout that would be overturned to a no contest.

    Brunson came into the UFC as Strikeforce was being merged with the promotion and slowly being folded. Brunson earned victories over the likes of Lorenz Larkin, Uriah Hall, Lyoto Machida, and Kevin Holland, as well as losses to Souza, Whittaker, Adesanya, Anderson Silva, Jared Cannonier, and Dricus Du Plessis. Brunson fought in MMA once after his UFC days — a win over Ray Cooper III at the 2023 PFL World Championships.

    Ladd debuted in Invicta in 2015 and went unbeaten in five fights before joining the UFC two years later. Ladd won her first three UFC bouts before a loss to Germaine de Randamie. Ladd would struggle with consistent success — and had a near-two-year period of inactivity at one point — before parting ways with the UFC after a 2022 loss to Raquel Pennington.

    Ladd debuted in PFL in November of that year with a win over former Bellator champion Julia Budd. She then competed in the 2023 women’s featherweight season, losing to Olena Kolesnyk but defeating Karolina Sobek. Ladd missed the playoffs but fought in a showcase bout later that year, losing to current UFC women’s bantamweight champion Kayla Harrison.

    Ladd’s last MMA fight came at the Bellator Champions Series event in Paris in May 2024, defeating Ekaterina Shakalova.