Category: UFC

Latest UFC news articles, interviews and more covering the world’s top Mixed Martial Arts promotion.

  • Mackenzie Dern Proudly Carrying The Legacy of Royce Gracie Into Her UFC Title Match

    Mackenzie Dern Proudly Carrying The Legacy of Royce Gracie Into Her UFC Title Match

    UFC star Mackenzie Dern has explained wanting to give back to jiu-jitsu as she prepares to battle for the vacant UFC strawweight championship.

    At UFC 321, Mackenzie Dern will finally get a shot at UFC gold when she battles Virna Jandiroba in the co-main event of the evening. It’s been a long journey to get to this point for Dern, but given how much she’s gone through both in and outside of the cage, it’s hard not to be happy for her.

    Of course, it’s not going to be a walk in the park. Mackenzie Dern knows better than most how tough Jandiroba is, and while she did manage to defeat her back in their first meeting five years ago, both women have changed a great deal in that time.

    Ahead of fight night, Mackenzie Dern spoke openly about wanting to give back to the world of jiu-jitsu in a recent interview.

    Mackenzie Dern wants to give back to jiu-jitsu

    “When I made the transition to MMA 10 years ago, I was doing it just to see if I would like it. I really wanted to represent jiu-jitsu on a bigger platform than just our jiu-jitsu community. The best way to give back to jiu-jitsu was to be able to represent it in MMA, where the Roy Gracie won the very first UFC.”​

    Get ready, folks, because Dern is coming into this one as motivated as she’s ever been – and that should make for a pretty fun title fight.

  • Matchmaking The Winners: DWCS Season 9 Week 10

    Matchmaking The Winners: DWCS Season 9 Week 10

    In one of the best episodes of DWCS we have ever seen, week 10 on Tuesday, October 14th delivered the action and the contracts. 5 new fighters were added to the UFC roster, and here are some potential opponents they could face along with a recap of the nights action.

    Wesley “Party Time” Schultz – 8-2 Middleweight

    Wesley Schultz kicked off the evening with a fantastic submission over fellow ground specialist Mario Mingaj. Mingaj pulled guard against the fence early in the first round, which led to a few grappling exchanges. Schultz took this opportunity to jump on the back of Mingaj, but instead of going for the traditional rear naked choke, he hit the extremely rare Suloev Stretch submission, which attacks the groin muscle of the opponent. This was the first Suloev stretch in DWCS history, earning Schultz the contract on his second attempt on the show.

    Schultz was defeated by Mansur Abdul Malik in his first contender series appearance in 2024, but has bounced back with two impressive submission wins. ‘Party Time’ is very unorthodox on the feet, yet effective with his strikes. On the ground he clearly had a deep bag of tricks, and it would be interesting to see him tested against fellow high level grapplers at 185 lbs.

    Matchup Prediction: Wesley Schultz (8-2) vs Jakob Malkoun (8-3) – February 2026

    Michael “PQD” Oliveira – 9-0 Welterweight

    The 2023 LFA Fighter of the Year and Brazilian paratrooper Michael Oliveira delivered one of the cleanest performances of this season vs Victor Valenzuela. He showed fantastic striking, particularly with his powerful straight punches. After doing incredible damage with two knockdowns, on the third he put Valenzuela away with ground and pound and secured himself a UFC contract.

    Oliveira is extremely polished on the feet, stalking his opponents landing with seemingly effortless power. His grappling is a bit untested, and he tends to lean back and rely on his reach defensively as well. Both of these are very fixable holes of his game, and there is no doubt with the tools he currently has he will have success in the UFC. With a 78.5 inch reach, he has potential to be a true superstar out of Brazil.

    Matchup Prediction: Michael Oliveira (9-0) vs Rhys McKee (14-7-1) – February 2026

    Marwan Rahiki: 7-0 Featherweight

    In perhaps one of the fights of the year, Marwan Rahiki seemingly rose from the dead to deliver a stunning round two KO over Ananias Mulumba. He was seriously hurt on multiple occasions, but showed fantastic heart and resolve, and demonstrated his dangerous striking in the process.

    A diverse array of weapons on the feet and a good spinning back kick are the primary features of Rahiki’s game. He fights with his hands extremely low, hence why he was dropped multiple times in his DWCS fight. He showed decent submission defense on the ground, but what truly impressed was his powerful and accuracy even after taking damage. He is a very exciting fighter, but will need to be much more defensively sound if he wants to succeed in the shark pit that is the UFC featherweight division.

    Matchup prediction: Marwan Rahiki (7-0) vs Steven Nguyen (10-2) – March 2026

    Juan Diaz: 15-1-1 Bantamweight

    In a night filled with incredible performances, Peruvian fighter Juan Diaz stole the show with the first spinning elbow KO in DWCS history. He delivered this knockout to ONE Championship veteran Kwon Won Il, in a back and forth fight that could have gone either way. Diaz landed this devastating strike with just seconds remaining in the second round to secure the win and the contract.

    Diaz is a steady striker, with the propensity to be explosive as shown in his DWCS win. Also owning a brown belt in jiu jitsu, he is adept in multiple areas of MMA. Peru has been a rising region in terms of mixed martial arts talent, and Diaz is an exciting addition to the UFC roster, and in his post fight interview said he hopes to fight in December.

    Matchup prediction: Juan Diaz (15-1-1) vs Cody Haddon (8-1) – February 2026

    Levi Rodrigues Jr.: 6-0 Light Heavyweight

    In the final fight of the evening, powerful Brazilian Levi Rodrigues Jr. delivered a knockout over the returning Freddy Vidal. Vidal attempted to wrestle early, but Rodrigues broke away and delivered some massive punches. After dropping Vidal, he eventually found the finish with ground and pound.

    Rodrigues showed the least of any prospect tonight, simply due to the short nature of his fight. There is not much tape out there available on him, so he remains a relatively question mark despite his impressive power. He will have a chance to find success in a relatively shallow UFC Light Heavyweight division.

    Matchup prediction: Levi Rodrigues Jr. (6-0) vs Iwo Baraniewski (6-0) – February 2026

    All of these matchups are purely predictions and have not been announced nor scheduled as of the writing of this article.

    This writing was 100% human created. Dylan Knostman pledges to never use AI or AI assistance tools to create any writing or other media work. Creativity belongs to humans.

  • Dana White’s Contender Series Season 9, Episode 10 Highlights As 5 Awarded UFC Contracts

    Dana White’s Contender Series Season 9, Episode 10 Highlights As 5 Awarded UFC Contracts

    The latest season of Dana White’s Contender Series concluded with one more highlight-filled night in Las Vegas.

    DWCS began in 2017 and has produced a notable number of fighters currently on the UFC’s roster. Since the show’s inception in 2017, a couple have even gone on to claim UFC championships. Known as “The ultimate job interview,” DWCS features five fights weekly, over the course of 10 weeks, as combatants compete to impress UFC CEO and President Dana White and earn a UFC contract.

    Last year’s edition saw 42 fighters earn a contract with the world’s leading MMA organization across 10 events, slightly down from the 46 handed out in 2023. Episode ten of season nine — the season finale — this week saw five prospects earn the opportunity to taste the Octagon’s bright lights.

    This brings this year’s total of UFC contracts handed out to 46, an increase of four from last season and tying the number handed out in 2023. This season also broke the record for finishes in a season with 36 of this season’s 51 fights ending in a finish, breaking the previous record of 32.

    The action opened up with DWCS veteran Wes Schultz finally getting the win he needed, defeating Mario Mingaj. Schultz seemed to get the better of exchanges with Mingaj before scoring a brief knockdown with a left hand before adding in a takedown. Mingaj tried to get to Schultz’s back, but Schultz got the better in grappling, too. Schultz executed a Suloev Stretch — the first in DWCS history — to get the first-round submission and score a UFC contract on his third opportunity.

    Michael Oliveira continued to bring the heat with a second-round finish of Victor Valenzuela. Oliveira looked to bring pressure early, trying to cut off the cage from Valenzuela with low kicks and his left hand. Valenzuela tried to counter with level changes and leans in his strikes, including a right hand that connected flush. The kickboxing battle continued into the second round, with Oliveira busting up Valenzuela’s face before dropping him with a hard right hand.

    Valenzuela tried to go back to his signature hook, but that only got him knocked down and rocked again. Oliveira continued to land before dropping Valenzuela a third time, which finished the fight and earned Oliveira the contract.

    Marwan Rahiki and Ananias Mulumba then put on a wild affair that saw Rahiki score a KO win. Rahiki seemed to get a strong start with a right hand, looking for spinning attacks. But Mulumba landed a right hand that dropped him, putting him in trouble as Mulumba countered his scrambles and threatened a choke. Rahiki worked his way out of it and got back to his feet. Mulumba took advantage of Rahiki’s hands being down, landing again, but Rahiki landed a combination that dropped Mulumba. Mulumba then reversed and got to the back before Rahiki returned the fight to the feet, only for Mulumba to score another knockdown in this wild opening round.

    Rahiki opened the second round by threatening a ninja choke, and while Mulumba survived that, Rahiki landed a head kick to wobble him before a combination of vicious elbows and an uppercut dropped Mulumba out cold for the exciting, contract-earning win.

    Juan Diaz then brought one of the most exciting finishes of the season in the co-main event, scoring a highlight knockout of Won Il Kwon. Kwon looked to use his speed to his advantage, but Diaz brought forward pressure and connected on several powerful punches during the fight. Diaz also made use of his grappling, pressuring Kwon to the fence and scoring a key takedown during the fight’s second round. Kwon looked to turn things up in that second frame, increasing his boxing output and landing a strong elbow, but Diaz continued to make him eat shots. Diaz took advantage of a leaning Kwan, landing a spinning back elbow that knocked Kwan out cold — the first such knockout in DWCS history — with mere seconds left in the second round to earn the win and a contract.

    The main event saw Freddy Vidal fall short in his second chance opportunity this season, falling to the undefeated Levi Rodrigues Jr. Vidal pressured Rodrigues to the fence early on, trapping him against the fence. Vidal landed a series of short shots and knees to the body as the two battled within close range. Rodrigues clipped Vidal and appeared to rock him as Vidal continued to look for the takedown. Rodrigues would land a solid pair of knees to the head that dropped Vidal, quickly finishing him off to earn the first-round finish and a UFC contract.

    The night also featured Jovan Leka defeating Azamat Nuftillaev. Nuftillaev scored an early takedown and tried to smother Leka with top pressure. In spite of referee Marc Smith giving a pair of warnings for stalling and Leka getting back to his feet, Nuftillaev scored a brief mat return and locked Leka up in a body lock from the back, completing controlling the opening frame. Nuftillaev appeared to gas, however, as Leka easily took him down and took control in round two, landing several punches and elbows upstairs and threatening chokes.

    Leka looked to use his striking, but Nuftillaev caught a kick and dumped Leka to the mat. Leka would endure for a couple of minutes before working his way back to his feet, landing his strikes and getting back in top control after stuffing a Nuftillaev takedown attempt. Despite nearing finishes a couple of times, Leka settled for a decision win, but it was far from enough to earn a UFC deal.

    Mario Mingaj vs Wes Schultz

    Azamat Nuftillaev vs Jovan Leka

    Michael Oliveira vs Victor Valenzuela

    Marwan Rahiki vs Ananias Mulumba

    https://twitter.com/ufc/status/1978271545144258586

    Wonil Kwon vs Juan Diaz

    Freddy Vidal vs Levi Rodrigues Jr.

    https://twitter.com/ufc/status/1978285591956472128

  • Tom Aspinall gets honest about hypothetical showdown with UFC legend

    Tom Aspinall gets honest about hypothetical showdown with UFC legend

    UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall admitted that a hypothetical fight with Daniel Cormier during his prime may not have gone too well for him.

    As we know, Tom Aspinall is the current king of the UFC’s heavyweight division. Next weekend, that’ll really be put to the test when he defends his belt against Ciryl Gane at UFC 321. If he wins, it could open up some interesting possibilities for him, with Jon Jones and Alex Pereira both still being touted as possible opponents for the champ.

    While he’s focusing on the task at hand, Tom Aspinall often gets asked questions about the state of the division as a whole – both past and present. In a recent interview, the Englishman revealed that Daniel Cormier would’ve been a particularly bad match-up for him if he was still active.

    Tom Aspinall discusses hypothetical Daniel Cormier fight

    “Peak ‘DC’ has the worst style for me ever,” Aspinall said of Daniel Cormier on the “ShxtsnGigs Podcast.” “He’s short. I’ve said this to his face as well: short guy who just keeps walking forward, changing levels in between like grappling punches. He can knock you out. He can take you down. He’s got cardio for days. For my style, he’s a nightmare.”

    “I thought about it,” Aspinall said. “He was a beast. Peak ‘DC’ was unreal.”

    Quotes via MMA Junkie

    While Aspinall has often been dubbed the perfect example of the ‘next generation’ of heavyweight, even he can acknowledge the greatness of the one and only Daniel Cormier.

  • Gable Steveson on the Key of Training with Jon Jones: No Ego

    Gable Steveson on the Key of Training with Jon Jones: No Ego

    MMA newcomer Gable Steveson has spoken about the feeling of training with mixed martial arts and UFC legend Jon Jones.

    As we know, Gable Steveson is best known for his incredible success in the world of amateur wrestling. Now, however, following a failed stint in the world of professional wrestling, he’s decided to make his way over to MMA and carve out a brand new legacy for himself.

    Part of his training process has involved working with Jon Jones. Jon’s reputation speaks for itself, and Gable Steveson can certainly learn a lot from a guy like that when it comes to how to improve in the sport.

    In a recent interview, Steveson went into more detail about his plans moving forward – as well as what the vibe has been like with Jones.

    Gable Steveson discusses his MMA development

    “I would love to become a champion, and I know I have what it takes. Right now, do I have what it takes? Most definitely not. But I’m humble enough to say that. There’s no ego on my head that would put me in steps I’m not ready for.”

    “This is just step one of getting ready for something that’s going to be a lot greater than this. And I know that time will come very fast.”

    “It does wonders to my development, you know, but a lot of it is being all ears. You got to be all ears and have the head to be ready to learn and be able to go out there and be with guys like Jon Jones and Greg Jackson and Brandon Gibson.”

    “It’s no egos, it’s no balloon heads, it’s everybody on the same page when it’s time to show up, man. We’re all ready to go and we’re humble enough to be around greatness.”

    “Anytime I get to be with Jon Jones or get to train with him, I’m just honored. If he can step in that corner, we’ll make it as big as possible.”

  • Why Merab Dvalishvili Was Happy To Go To a Decision: He Earned Something More Valuable Than a Finish

    Why Merab Dvalishvili Was Happy To Go To a Decision: He Earned Something More Valuable Than a Finish

    UFC bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili has explained why he didn’t mind too much that he wasn’t able to get the finish over Cory Sandhagen.

    At UFC 320, Merab Dvalishvili successfully defended his UFC bantamweight championship for the third time. He did so against Cory Sandhagen and while elements of the fight were competitive, Merab used both his striking and his superior wrestling to get the better of Sandhagen in Las Vegas.

    Now, as we look ahead to the future, Merab Dvalishvili is ready to get straight back to work when he meets Petr Yan at UFC 323 in a blockbuster rematch. If he wins that, discussions will intensify even further regarding his status as the potential bantamweight GOAT.

    In a recent interview, ‘The Machine’ admitted that he was okay with not finishing Sandhagen, despite that being his intention.

    Merab Dvalishvili discusses not finishing Cory Sandhagen

    “No, actually, it doesn’t bother me that I didn’t finish him, and let me tell you why. After the fight, Cory came up—he was such a cool and respectful guy. During the camp, he was saying some things, joking, and I thought maybe he’s not a nice guy, but after the fight, he was cool, respectful, and I’m glad we went five rounds and no finish, because that would be a bad look for him. 

    “And the second reason—after I heard I broke another record with 20 takedowns, I said, ‘Yeah, take that.’ You know, the finish is good, but now I have highlights—how many takedowns, how many records.”​

  • Jiri Prochazka Reflects on the War with Khalil Rountree: “Each round told a different story”

    Jiri Prochazka Reflects on the War with Khalil Rountree: “Each round told a different story”

    UFC star Jiri Prochazka has taken the time to reflect on his absolute war with Khalil Rountree Jr from UFC 320.

    As we know, Jiri Prochazka is one of the biggest fan favorites in all of mixed martial arts right now. He’s also one of the top contenders in the UFC’s light heavyweight division, and some believe he has earned the right to get in there and compete against champion Alex Pereira for a third time.

    The way he was able to convince the masses of that was by knocking Khalil Rountree Jr out cold in the third round of their epic UFC 320 fight. Jiri Prochazka has a never say die attitude and on that night, it was on full display.

    In a recent interview, Prochazka spoke candidly about how he felt the fight went.

    Jiri Prochazka looks back at Khalil Rountree Jr war

    “I was really happy and grateful for all the good things. It was such a wild fight—I’ve watched it probably a dozen times. Each round told a different story. After the time off and going back to school to sharpen my mind, to come back and get a win like that meant a lot to me. 

    “But I thought I didn’t show what I really worked on. I was better. I was much better. I really worked to show my improvement, how to show something I worked on, like counter timing, working the space between us, and movement. In the end, I had to fall back to the basic hard work and just hunt him down.”

    “I’ve watched the fight about 10 times in a row to keep me awake and do my job. The first round many thought maybe I injured my knee, there was a lot of slipping and sliding. The mat was dry and so soft, kind of jumpy. I hate fighting on that kind of platform. I adjusted by working on my legs and stance to find more stability, and the key was to attack with the jab.”

  • Islam Makhachev Does Not Have What It Takes to Be a Welterweight Champ Due to One Simple Reason, According to Beneil Dariush

    Islam Makhachev Does Not Have What It Takes to Be a Welterweight Champ Due to One Simple Reason, According to Beneil Dariush

    UFC star Islam Makhachev may lose to Jack Della Maddalena due to the size difference, says UFC lightweight contender Beneil Dariush.

    Next month at Madison Square Garden, Islam Makhachev will attempt to become a two-weight world champion. He will do so by going head to head with current champion Jack Della Maddalena, who took the belt off Belal Muhammad. While it was a competitive fight, JDM did an incredible job of overcoming Belal’s wrestling, and the Australian sensation was able to implement his own game plan en route to victory.

    Islam Makhachev, of course, is daring to be great, and he isn’t too concerned about the size difference between him and the man who will be standing across the cage from him. While it’s a big factor in how the fight will go, Islam knows just how dominant he can be both on the feet and on the ground.

    In a recent interview, Beneil Dariush gave his thoughts on how Islam Makhachev will perform at UFC 322 and whether or not he can claim the belt.

    Beneil Dariush questions Islam Makhachev at welterweight

    “I’m going to lean now towards JDM. I just feel like the size will make a difference cardio-wise. JDM has great cardio. Maybe I’m wrong, but now, this is all feel. This is one of those fights where I can’t really give you a clear answer. So I just feel like JDM.”

    Regardless of what happens, you can expect this one to be action-packed and full of drama.

  • Marvin Vettori Saddened To Get Kicked Out of Group Chat with Khamzat Chimaev, Darren Till, and Sean Strickland

    Marvin Vettori Saddened To Get Kicked Out of Group Chat with Khamzat Chimaev, Darren Till, and Sean Strickland

    Marvin Vettori was once in a middleweight super group online with the likes Khamzat Chimaev, Darren Till, and Sean Strickland until ‘The Italian Dream’ got the boot from it. This was situation was touched on by the former UFC middleweight title challenger during an interview with Helen Yee Sports. Vettori was covering several subjects ahead of his looming clash with Brunno Ferreira which is set for UFC 323 on December 6th.

    Part of the reason for his group chat removal seems to be tied somewhat to his recent work at Beneil Dariush‘s Kings MMA Anaheim and prioritizing being in California more than Nevada, as of late, as Vettori said,

    “We even have a group that Sean Strickland did on Instagram, and we were talking all kinds of stuff in that group—Darren Till and Khamzat were in it too. And even right after the fight, I said, ‘Listen, Darren, just stop it. You look horrible holding those pads.’ But he never answered. We used to bully Darren a little bit in that group. Sean kicked me out. It’s so funny. Like, people just sending videos… Sean never told you about it?”

    “It was supposed to be a sparring group, and then they kicked me out since I’m not in Vegas all the time, and I didn’t show up. Khamzat even said it: ‘Oh, I didn’t show up for the sparring that time.’ But I was like, bro, am I going to drive five hours just to spar and then come back… I didn’t plan it. Plus, I got my own stuff going on, and I want to fight this guy, so I’m not going to spar him.”​

    Marvin Vettori receives flak for controversial online remarks

    Marvin Vettori is someone who clearly does not mince words, and this was reflected in relatively recent online comments he made that many saw as antisemitic. In an aggressive retweet that took place on his personal X account, Vettori stated,

    “F* all these people, this s* is getting out of hand, they control everything, f*** these ashkenazi Jews that wants control over the world. Here I said it.”

    Vettori demonstrably does not care who his comments rub the wrong way, and it seems like all kinds of speech is on the table in this Dana White “free speech” era of the UFC.

    Sean Strickland, Khamzat Chimaev & Darren Till, Marvin Vettori
  • Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan, Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van To Headline UFC 323 On December 6

    Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan, Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van To Headline UFC 323 On December 6

    The UFC will close out it’s 2025 pay-per-view schedule, as well as its era of ESPN+ pay-per-views, with UFC 323, which will take place on December 6 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, and feature two title fights.

    In the main event, Merab Dvalishvili will get his wish — an opportunity to become the first UFC champion to successfully defend his title four times in a calendar year. To accomplish this, he will need to get through former champion Petr Yan.

    Dvalishvili and Yan previously met in the main event of UFC Las Vegas in March 2024, with Dvalishvili picking up a unanimous decision win.

    Since then, Dvalishvili defeated Sean O’Malley for the bantamweight title at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306, and he has successfully retained the gold against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311, O’Malley at UFC 316, and, recently, Cory Sandhagen at UFC 320.

    Yan has won three straight, scoring decisions over Song Yadong, Deiveson Figueiredo, and Marcus McGhee. Yan won the bantamweight title with a finish of Jose Aldo at UFC 251 but lost the title on an infamous disqualification loss to Aljamain Sterling. He’d win the interim title by defeating Sandhagen but lost an undisputed title rematch with Sterling.

    UFC 323 To Be Headlined By Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan, Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van

    As spoiled days ago at UFC Rio, the flyweight title will be on the line in the co-main event, as Alexandre Pantoja defends against Joshua Van.

    Since winning the flyweight title from Brandon Moreno at UFC 290, Pantoja has retained the gold against Brandon Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301, Kai Asakura at UFC 310, and Kai Kara-France at UFC 317. Van, who is 8-1 since joining the UFC, has had a major climb up the UFC’s flyweight ranks in 2025. Van defeated Rei Tsuruya at UFC 313, finished Bruno Silva at UFC 316, and won a short-notice war with Royval at UFC 317 to earn the title shot.

    UFC 323 will also feature Moreno in action against Tatsuro Taira, in a bout that could have implications on the challenger of the Pantoja vs. Van winner.

    UFC 323 will also see former flyweight and bantamweight champion Henry Cejudo in action against Payton Talbott and former light heavyweight champion Jan Blachowicz taking on Bogdan Guskov.

    All of the announced fights for UFC 323 so far can be found below:

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan
    • Flyweight Championship: Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van
    • Flyweight: Brandon Moreno vs. Tatsuro Taira
    • Bantamweight: Henry Cejudo vs. Payton Talbott
    • Light Heavyweight: Jan Błachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov
    • Middleweight: Marvin Vettori vs. Brunno Ferreira
    • Women’s Flyweight: Maycee Barber vs. Karine Silva
    • Middleweight: Mansur Abdul-Malik vs. Antonio Trocoli
    • Lightweight: Terrance McKinney vs. Chris Duncan
    • Lightweight: Fares Ziam vs. Nazim Sadykhov
  • Editorial: Harsher Penalties Needed For Weight Misses In MMA

    Editorial: Harsher Penalties Needed For Weight Misses In MMA

    It’s unfortunately not uncommon for an MMA card to feature a fighter who missed weight for their bout. UFC Rio, however, presented us with a truly ridiculous case.

    The opening bout of the evening saw Luan Lacerda taking on Saimon Oliveira — a fighter who missed weight by eight pounds. The bout ended up contested at 144 pounds, making it more like a featherweight contest than a bantamweight one. Oliveira also had to weigh in under a certain amount for the fight to even go on.

    Lacerda won the fight anyway, avoiding the controversial idea of a fighter missing weight on purpose to get an advantage in the fight — as well as fighter pay issues in circumstances such as these. Oliveira, in fact, looked terrible and drained, and his UFC future is probably in doubt.

    ufc mma
    Photo By Tim Wheaton

    But that doesn’t get us away from the debate over how weight misses in MMA should be handled. Oliveira ended up forfeiting 50 percent of his fight purse, which means he didn’t make a lot of money for this loss. Traditionally, commissions penalize MMA fighters 20-30 percent of their purse for such weight misses, so this kind of fine is a good statement.

    Perhaps that could set a precedent for other potential penalties that could be “perfect” solutions for these kinds of issues.

    Percentage Increase For Fines With Each Weight Miss

    This idea is based off of the bigger fines for bigger weight misses in MMA — and the extreme case in the case of Oliveira from UFC Rio.

    Essentially, in this scenario, a second (or later) weight miss after an initial one results in an increased set minimum of fine for the fighter that misses weight. While, as discussed, most circumstances see an MMA fighter get fined a minimum of 20 percent of their fight purse for a weight miss, a second weight miss would mean the fighter’s minimum fine gets increased to 25 percent.

    Let’s use Charles Oliveira as an example. The weight miss for his 2012 bout with Cub Swanson would have resulted in the normal 20 percent purse fine. But his second weight miss, which came against Jeremy Stephens, would see a minimum of a 25 percent purse fine with this rule, and a minimum 30 percent for his weight miss against Myles Jury. That said, an extreme case — such as Oliveira’s 10-pound miss against Ricardo Lamas — could result in a percentage fine that is more than the minimum.

    This rule can also apply to just a certain timespan, such as 12-18 months. In a case like this, Charles Oliveira’s weight miss against Stephens would still just be a 20 percent minimum, since it came two years after the Swanson fight. But the weight miss against Jury would see the bump up in minimum since it came a year later.

    Forcing Fighters To Move Up After Two Weight Misses

    If weight cutting isn’t going to go away in this sport, since MMA fighters and their teams love to have the size advantage in a fight, then perhaps we need to more strictly come down on fighters who can’t keep up on the weight cutting responsibility to maintain such advantages.

    In this circumstance, a second weight miss results in the fighter being mandated to move up in weight class. There are no exceptions. Whether it’s a fighter who is fighting on the undercard, or a fighter who was nearing a title shot in a weight class, a second weight miss means their run in that division is over. They must move up in weight or they will not be permitted a license to fight.

    It sounds harsh. But the intention is to fight back against the harm done to one’s body during a weight cut — and to fight back against a fighter who might willingly miss on purpose (like Yana Santos accused Macy Chiasson of doing recently). The California State Athletic Commission, in fact, has rules in place that can force fighters to move up depending on how much weight they are cutting and rehydrating to, or fight cancelations depending on the extremity of an MMA fighter’s weight miss.

    But with this case, it’s not just fighters and state athletic commissions who have to take responsibility, it would also be on the promotions to be required to follow such measures.

    UFC 322 Card Heats Up With Massive Lightweight Clash On Nov. 15
    Image: UFC/Facebook

    Automatic One-Point Deduction On The Scorecards

    This is perhaps the harshest of all circumstances, but I believe it is one that might be necessary to get improvements moving — and it is the one I most support.

    In this circumstance, a fighter who misses weight is brought to the center of the cage right away and issued a one-point deduction immediately as the fight starts. This means that this fighter can only earn a maximum of nine points for the opening round and essentially must sweep three rounds on two judges’ scorecards to get a decision win. Losing a round would mean a fight that goes to the scorecards sees that fighter only able to earn a draw at best.

    The PFL did something like this when using its regular season-playoff format. A fighter who missed weight lost one point in the standings, and that later saw a change where that fighter was unable to earn any points in the standings. There was also the controversial losing one point implementation in PFL Europe’s tournament format. Regardless of what you think of the PFL’s usage of these created ideas, I think they were getting somewhere with how hard you need to come down on fighters for this circumstance.

    Making weight is a matter of professionalism. And if we can’t get rid of it in MMA, then we have to come down harshly on it for the respect of those fighters who are responsible with their weight cutting and for those MMA fighters who hold making weight in necessary regard.

    Who knows if any of these ideas actually get implemented in the future? But hopefully we as an MMA community can discuss these ideas to bring about necessary change for the sake of the fighters and the sport as a whole.

    UFC
    Photo By Tim Wheaton
  • 6 Hits And 3 Misses Of UFC Rio: Charles Oliveira vs. Mateusz Gamrot

    6 Hits And 3 Misses Of UFC Rio: Charles Oliveira vs. Mateusz Gamrot

    The UFC returned to one of the biggest cities in South America last night, as UFC Rio took place from the Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    This event marked the first time the UFC has touched down in Rio since it hosted UFC 301 in May 2024, an event that saw Alexandre Pantoja hold off Steve Erceg to retain the UFC flyweight title. It was also the first Fight Night card in Rio de Janeiro since March 2015, which saw Demian Maia score a decision win over Ryan LaFlare in the main event.

    This night’s main event featured the popular former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira, as he took on Mateusz Gamrot. Oliveira had traded losses and wins since losing the UFC lightweight title three years ago, and this was his first fight since getting knocked out by Ilia Topuria for the belt at UFC 317 in June. Gamrot took this fight on short notice after Rafael Fiziev fell out due to injury. Gamrot had won four of his last five, most recently scoring a decision over L’udovit Klein at UFC Vegas 107 in May.

    The bantamweight co-main event also featured a former Brazilian UFC champion, as former flyweight champion Deiveson Figueiredo took on Montel Jackson. Figueiredo had lost two straight, and this was Figueiredo’s first fight since getting stopped by recent title challenger Cory Sandhagen at UFC Des Moines in May. Jackson had won six straight, having most recently defeated Daniel Marcos at UFC Des Moines.

    Who showed out in Rio? Who fell short of expectation? Let’s go into it all with the Hits and Misses of UFC Rio!

    Miss: Eight-Pound Weight Difference Is Inexcusable

    I don’t want to take away the credit from Luan Lacerda. He wanted to fight, he wanted the opportunity to earn his win bonus, and he got it. But that doesn’t take away from how inexcusable it was for a fighter, Saimon Oliveira in this case, to miss weight by eight pounds and put the bout’s status in jeopardy until the day of the fight.

    Oliveira’s weight was closer to featherweight than it was to bantamweight. There are some commissions that might have scrapped the fight then and there. And if that was the case, it would have been highway robbery for Lacerda.

    Yes, weight cutting is a dangerous aspect of combat sports that needs to still be addressed. Yes, the pay structure of the sport is something that needs to be addressed. But this kind of weight miss is something that can universally be shamed, and should bring about ideas for not just commissions, but also promotions, to address on how such actions should be penalized more harshly.

    Hit: “Lady GOAT” Bia Mesquita One To Watch

    Bia Mesquita is a legend of jiu-jitsu. And while she may just be an MMA rookie, her run thus far has been impressive, leading to a highly successful UFC debut at UFC Rio.

    Mesquita flat out dominated Irina Alekseeva, taking her down early in the first round and dominating from full mount with ground-and-pound and top pressure. That continued into the second round, where she quickly locked up a rear-naked choke to score the submission win.

    There’s no guarantee that Mesquita becomes the top dog at women’s bantamweight, but she still presents, as one MMA media mentioned on social media, a needed shot in the arm for women’s 135. And maybe one day, whether for a belt or not, we get a fantastic jiu-jitsu vs. judo battle between her and current champion Kayla Harrison.

    Hit: Heavyweight Vitor Petrino

    Vitor Petrino was on an impressive run at light heavyweight before suffering the first two losses of his career last year to Anthony Smith and and Dustin Jacoby. But his victory over Thomas Petersen may have shown that he may have more opportunities of success competing at heavyweight.

    Petrino dropped Petersen during the first round and completely nullified his attempts to wrestle. Petrino’s striking appeared to be on point until he started to fatigue in the later portions of round two. Fortunately for him, he needed mere seconds of round three to land a two-punch combination to drop Petersen out cold for the victory.

    Petrino obviously needs to work on his gas tank, but with how weak heavyweight is right now in the UFC, he might find himself in the rankings of that division sooner than later.

    Hit: Jafel Filho’s Future At Flyweight Bright?

    Known as “The Pastor,” Jafel Filho has put his own kind of blessings on the Octagon. And he did so in emphatic fashion in front of a native crowd at UFC Rio, needing just under one full round to finish Clayton Carpenter.

    Filho wobbled Carpenter early before scoring a takedown, controlling all of the fight with his top-pressure grappling. Filho worked his way to the back and tried to sink in a rear-naked choke. When he couldn’t do that, Filho transitioned successfully into a nasty kimura lock for the win.

    Filho moves to 17-4 as a pro. Though he’s just 3-2 in the UFC, one of his wins has come against Ode’ Osbourne, his DWCS win came against Roybert Echeverria, and his only two Octagon losses have come to Muhammad Mokaev and Allan Nascimento. I’d call that a strong resume, and I wouldn’t mind Filho’s next fight or two coming against lower-ranked flyweights to give him an opportunity to earn a number next to his name.

    Hit: Michael Aswell Jr. Silences Brazil Crowd

    Talk about leaving people speechless. The Brazilian crowd and their support was no match for the talent of Michael Aswell Jr., who quickly put away Lucas Almeida.

    Aswell cracked Almeida in the opening seconds and didn’t let up with striking pressure, going for the win almost immediately. Almeida tried to fight back but ended up seated and slumped against the fence, where Aswell finished him off.

    This was Aswell’s first win after dropping his UFC debut to Bolaji Oki, and he looked quite impressive. Hopefully he gets the chance to compete on UFC 323 — even if he did seem to spoil the confirmation of Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van.

    Miss: Horrid Officiating Yet Again

    Every week there seems to be at least one bad case of bad officiating by a referee involved in the action. And this week, we were “blessed” to have two such instances.

    The first came in Kaan Ofli’s win over Ricardo Ramos that opened up the UFC Rio main card. Ramos pressured Ofli to the fence quickly and appeared to be searching for a tight leg lock. But during those attempts, Ofli used the fence to gain leverage and help himself escape. None of the fence grabs appeared to be warned, let alone noticed, by a veteran referee like Marc Goddard. Ofli would go on to find Ramos’ back and score a rear-naked choke.

    Then came Joel Alvarez’s victory over Vicente Luque. During the opening round, Alvarez connected with a left hand that did damage to Luque’s eye. Luque went down in pain and claimed that he was eye poked. The referee confirmed the shot was a legal blow and appeared to wave the fight off.

    Then, the doctor entered the Octagon. And somehow Luque was given the timeout as though he was actually eye poked. This is all despite the referee’s initial ruling being the correct one — with a fight-pausing/ending sequence actually coming as the result of a legal blow being ruled a TKO. This was made worse by the way when Luque was saying he was done right before the third round, with his corner having to convince him to go out there — which, again, on the ref noticing should have been a TKO ruling.

    Fortunately for Alvarez, he managed to win the fight. But when referees are making mistakes like this, it just continues to flabbergast me how we don’t have real-time corrections and accountability for match officials in this sport.

    Miss: A Bleak Future For Vicente Luque?

    Speaking of Luque vs. Alvarez, man, have things been rough for Vicente Luque.

    This loss now marks his fifth loss in his last seven fights. And while the losses haven’t come to necessarily bad competition, it really is disappointing when you consider that Luque was once in the mix for a potential welterweight title shot just a couple of years ago.

    And this fight may have been Luque’s worst performance yet. If he’s lucky to get another fight, he may have fallen so far that he could fighting for his UFC future. It’s a sad sight to see.

    Hit: Deiveson Figueiredo Finds Victory Again

    It feels weird to say, but Deiveson Figueiredo hadn’t tasted victory in a little over a year when he entered UFC Rio. Fortunately, Figueiredo managed to dig deep and pull off the performance he needed in front of a native crowd to score a decision win.

    Figueiredo scored an early takedown of Jackson and threatened to make it a quick night with multiple submission attempts. The former flyweight champ then controlled the action on the feet and threatened a tight arm-triangle, going on to score a decision win (arguably one that should have been unanimous).

    Figueiredo had come into this bout off losses to Petr Yan and Cory Sandhagen. And now that he’s back in the win column here, perhaps we wait to see how Umar Nurmagomedov vs. Mario Bautista and (if true) Sean O’Malley vs. Song Yadong play out before selecting one of those names as a next opponent for him.

    Hit: Charles Oliveira Sends Brazil Into A Frenzy

    Talk about a needed win. It wasn’t one where Charles Oliveira needed to win to show he was still relevant, but after some struggles following losing the lightweight title on the scales a few years ago, Oliveira must have felt like a God after coming out on top in front of a native crowd.

    Oliveira controlled Mateusz Gamrot with grappling throughout the first round, threatening both an Omoplata and a choke. Oliveira then pressured Gamrot with both striking and grappling during the second round, where he proceeded to end things with a choke.

    This was Oliveira’s first fight since getting knocked out by Ilia Topuria at UFC 317, and Oliveira still has his sights on gold — but not the one you think of. Oliveira sent out the challenge to Max Holloway for a BMF title fight, and it appears Holloway accepted. And if I can speak for plenty of the UFC fans, I think this is a fight we’d love to see happen.

  • “Another One” – Max Holloway, Aljamain Sterling, And Other Fighters And Fans React To Charles Oliveira Dominating Mateusz Gamrot With Grappling, Calling Out Max Holloway

    “Another One” – Max Holloway, Aljamain Sterling, And Other Fighters And Fans React To Charles Oliveira Dominating Mateusz Gamrot With Grappling, Calling Out Max Holloway

    The homecoming of Charles Oliveira is a highly successful one, as he showed off his grappling en route to scoring a victory over Mateusz Gamrot in the main event of UFC Rio.

    Oliveira landed a solid one-two to start, and Gamrot responded with a takedown. Oliveira’s submission game then came into play, threatening an Omoplata and an armbar before an escape by Gamrot. Oliveira then got to Gamrot’s back on a scramble threatening chokes until the end of the round.

    Oliveira and Gamrot then did plenty of exchanging in the second round, with Oliveira trying to back Gamrot up with pressure. A couple of minutes into the second round, Oliveira shot in and lifted Gamrot before getting the fight back on the ground. There, Oliveira locked up a rear-naked choke and submitted Gamrot.

    Following the match, after causing an absolute frenzy in Rio, Oliveira called out Max Holloway for a rematch from their 2015 encounter that Holloway won — this time with the BMF title on the line.

    Charles Oliveira Submits Mateusz Gamrot In UFC Rio Main Event

    This was Oliveira’s first fight since being knocked out by Ilia Topuria in their UFC 317 lightweight title fight. He has consistently traded wins and losses since dropping the lightweight title in 2022.

    Gamrot, who took this fight on short notice, is 4-2 in his last six. He came into this fight off a win over L’udovit Klein at UFC Vegas 107 in May.

  • “Levels To This” – Fans And Fighters React To Deiveson Figueiredo Outworking Montel Jackson To Score First Win In 14 Months At UFC Rio

    Deiveson Figueiredo finally finds himself back in the win column, and he does so in front of a native crowd, as he defeated Montel Jackson in the co-main event of UFC Rio.

    Figueiredo managed to get Jackson down early in the opening round, where he threatened both a guillotine choke and a rear-naked choke before Jackson got back to his feet and got the fight back standing. Figueiredo tagged Jackson in the closing seconds of the first, and he then scored another easy takedowns seconds into the second round.

    The former champion worked his way easily into full mount and threatened an arm-triangle choke at one point. While Jackson escaped and started to get into things with exchanges during the second round, Figueiredo continued to control the action as a whole.

    One judge somehow scored the bout 29-28 for Jackson, but the other scored the fight 29-28 for Figueiredo, giving him the split decision win.

    Deiveson Figueiredo Gets Judges’ Nod Over Montel Jackson At UFC Rio

    https://twitter.com/BDr6136/status/1977178025570812345

    Figueiredo rebounds from a pair of losses to Petr Yan and Cory Sandhagen over the past year. The former two-time flyweight champion had started his bantamweight run with three straight victories.

    Jackson sees a six-fight win streak snapped in this bout. This is his first loss since dropping a decision to Brett Johns in 2020.

  • “Legend” – Fans And Fighters React As Jose Aldo Lays Gloves Down At UFC Rio

    “Legend” – Fans And Fighters React As Jose Aldo Lays Gloves Down At UFC Rio

    Jose Aldo appeared during the main card of UFC Rio, as the UFC granted him the ability to make one more entrance into the Octagon as he laid the gloves down in the center.

    This formalized the retirement of Aldo, who entered the UFC Hall of Fame in 2023 before a three-fight comeback between 2024 and 2025.

    Aldo was joined by his family in the Octagon.

    Jose Aldo Lays Gloves Down In Octagon At UFC Rio To Formalize Retirement

    https://twitter.com/MartialMind1/status/1977155233211191595

    Aldo made his professional MMA debut in 2004, winning his first seven fights in a row. After a loss in 2005, Aldo would go on a longer win streak, collecting 18 consecutive victories between May 2006 and December 2015.

    Aldo defeated Mike Brown at WEC 44 for the WEC featherweight title, going on to defend the belt against Urijah Faber and Manny Gamburyan. Aldo then joined the UFC following the WEC merger, starting out his time in the UFC as the inaugural UFC featherweight champion.

    Aldo defended the UFC title seven consecutive times, defeating the likes of Chad Mendes, Frankie Edgar, and “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung-Jung, before losing the title to Conor McGregor at UFC 196. He’d then defeat Frankie Edgar at UFC 200 for the interim championship before being promoted back to undisputed champion — only to lose the belt to Max Holloway at UFC 212.

    Aldo then dropped to bantamweight and fought Petr Yan for the then-vacant title at UFC 251, getting finished in the fifth round. Aldo’s career seemed to end after a loss to current bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 278.

    In 2023, Aldo fought in a pair of boxing bouts, battling Jeremy Stephens to a draw and scoring a finish of Esteban Gabriel Espindola. Aldo then fought three times for the UFC, defeating Jonathan Martinez before losses to Mario Bautista and Aiemann Zahabi.

  • “Horrible Job By The Ref” – Referee Marc Goddard Blasted For Missing Fence Grabs As Kaan Ofli Goes On To Submit Ricardo Ramos At UFC Rio

    “Horrible Job By The Ref” – Referee Marc Goddard Blasted For Missing Fence Grabs As Kaan Ofli Goes On To Submit Ricardo Ramos At UFC Rio

    Kaan Ofli may have scored the victory at UFC Rio, defeating Ricardo Ramos, but it didn’t come without much controversy following several missed fence grab calls.

    Just seconds into the fight, Ricardo Ramos had Kaan Ofli against the fence, threatening a kneebar. Ofli’s defenses, however, saw him grab the fence multiple times. None of the fence grabs, however, were penalized, or even seemingly noticed, by veteran referee Marc Goddard.

    Ofli would then work his way out of Ramos’ submission attempts before getting to the back in a backpack position. That’s where Ofli managed to lock up a choke to score the tapout, to the boos of the Brazilian crowd that rained down.

    Kaan Ofli Scores Controversial First-Round Submission Of Ricardo Ramos At UFC Rio

    Ofli now scores the first win in his UFC career after losses to Mairon Santos and Muhammad Naimov, the former coming in the finale of The Ultimate Fighter season 32.

    Ramos has now lost four of his last five and is 3-6 in his last nine fights.

  • UFC Rio Fighter Seems To Leak Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van Flyweight Title Fight Confirmation For UFC 323

    UFC Rio Fighter Seems To Leak Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van Flyweight Title Fight Confirmation For UFC 323

    A fight that has long been rumored for UFC 323 appears to now have been confirmed, leaked by, of all people, a fighter who competed on the UFC Rio card.

    During his post-fight interview, Michael Aswell Jr. advocated to compete next on UFC 323, which was recently confirmed for December 6 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Aswell cited a desire to compete on the same card as his teammate, Joshua Van. And that was when Aswell said Van would be challenging Alexandre Pantoja for the flyweight championship on the card.

    Van has been pegged as the next title challenger after his short-notice victory over former title challenger Brandon Royval at UFC 317 in June, and the fight had been rumored to take place in December.

    Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van For Flyweight Title Now Confirmed For UFC 323?

    Van is 15-2 in MMA, including a 8-1 record. Since his knockout loss to Charles Johnson, Van has won five straight, which includes a finish of Bruno Silva at UFC 316, just four weeks before his win over Royval.

    This fight would mark Pantoja’s fifth flyweight title defense attempt. Pantoja, who has won eight straight, defeated Brandon Moreno at UFC 290 for the title. Since then, he’s defended the belt against Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301, Kai Asakura at UFC 310, and Kai Kara-France at UFC 317.

    Aswell, meanwhile, made quick work of Lucas Almeida in the featured prelim of UFC Rio.

    UFC 323 will mark the last pay-per-view event of the UFC’s ESPN era, with the final Fight Night card happening the next week.

  • VIDEO: Michael Aswell Jr. Lays Beatdown In On Lucas Almeida At UFC Rio

    VIDEO: Michael Aswell Jr. Lays Beatdown In On Lucas Almeida At UFC Rio

    Michael Aswell Jr. made things look to easy in the featured preliminary bout of UFC Rio, as the Texas native quickly took out Lucas Almeida.

    Aswell cracked Almeida seconds into the fight with a right hand before laying in some flurries to try and get the quick finish. Almeida tried to fight back, but Aswell continued to lay in with his striking.

    Another right hand slumped Almeida against the fence, where Aswell laid in some more punches before the fight was finally stopped.

    Michael Aswell Jr. Finishes Lucas Almeida In Under A Minute At UFC Rio

    This was Aswell’s first UFC victory after dropping his promotional debut to Bolaji Oki at UFC Vegas 107 in May.

    Almeida has now lost four of five and is just 2-4 in the UFC.

  • VIDEO: Jafel Filho Locks Up Nasty Kimura Lock To Submit Clayton Carpenter At UFC Rio

    VIDEO: Jafel Filho Locks Up Nasty Kimura Lock To Submit Clayton Carpenter At UFC Rio

    Jafel Filho continues to show how dangerous he is on the ground, as he took out Clayton Carpenter during the UFC Rio preliminary card.

    Filho landed a crisp right hand early that seemed to wobble Carpenter, allowing Filho to score the trip and take the back quickly. Filho then locked in a body triangle as he searched for a rear-naked choke.

    Though he was unable to get the choke, Filho transitioned into a kimura attempt, scoring it and getting the submission in the final minute of round one.

    Jafel Filho Submits Clayton Carpenter At UFC Rio

    Filho is now 3-2 in the UFC, rebounding from a May loss to Allan Nascimento. Filho’s only other loss came against Muhammad Mokaev.

    Carpenter is now 2-2 in the UFC and has lost two straight after starting his MMA career 8-0.

  • VIDEO: Vitor Petrino Flattens Thomas Petersen With Jaw-Dropping Faceplant Knockout

    VIDEO: Vitor Petrino Flattens Thomas Petersen With Jaw-Dropping Faceplant Knockout

    Perhaps Vitor Petrino has found a new home for himself at heavyweight, as he capped off his second performance in the weight class with a highlight finish in front of a native crowd at UFC Rio.

    Petersen looked to use his wrestling to his advantage during the opening two rounds. He was, however, repeatedly stuffed and stopped by Petrino, who laid in some damaging strikes. Petrino’s power, in fact, led him to score a knockdown on Petersen during the first round.

    Fatigue would set in for both men as the third round kicked in. Just 26 seconds into the round, however, Petrino caught Petersen coming forward with a strong uppercut and hook, with the combination causing Petersen to faceplant for the KO.

    Petrino then called out Marcin Tybura in his post-fight interview.

    Vitor Petrino Puts Thomas Petersen Out Cold At UFC Rio

    Petrino made his heavyweight debut at UFC Nashville in July, scoring a first-round submission of Austen Lane.

    Petersen is now 2-3 in his last five after starting his MMA career 8-1.

  • “Much-Needed Shot In The Arm” – BJJ Legend Bia Mesquita Sends Statement To Women’s Bantamweight Division With Dominating Finish In UFC Debut At UFC Rio

    “Much-Needed Shot In The Arm” – BJJ Legend Bia Mesquita Sends Statement To Women’s Bantamweight Division With Dominating Finish In UFC Debut At UFC Rio

    Having already accomplished so much in the world of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Bia Mesquita now is set on dominating the MMA world in the same way she dominated Irina Alekseeva in her Octagon debut during the UFC Rio preliminary card.

    After about a minute of feeling out, Alekseeva clipped Mesquita with a punch. But Mesquita kept herself composed and scored a takedown, landing right into full mount. Mesquita landed ground-and-pound for about two-and-a-half minutes, completely controlling and dominating the action, busting Alekseeva up and nearly getting her out of the fight in the first round’s closing seconds.

    Mesquita scored a takedown about a minute into the second round and quickly worked her way into full mount again before locking up a rear-naked choke for the submission win.

    Bia Mesquita, “Lady GOAT,” Thrashes Irina Alekseeva In Impressive UFC Debut At UFC Rio

    Mesquita, known as “The Lady GOAT,” is a multiple-time Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion and a former ADCC champion. She entered tonight 5-0 in her MMA career, including a finish of Sierra Dinwoodie to capture the LFA women’s bantamweight title at LFA 211 in June.

    Alekseeva has now lost four of her last six, including three straight UFC losses. She won her UFC debut over Stephanie Eggar in April 2023 but missed weight.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Charles Oliveira Submits Mateusz Gamrot

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Charles Oliveira Submits Mateusz Gamrot

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    In the main event, former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira faced Mateusz Gamrot. In the co-main event, former flyweight king Deiveson Figueiredo continued his bantamweight campaign against Montel Jackson.

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Lightweight bout: Charles Oliveira def. Mateusz Gamrot via submission: R2, 2.48
    • Bantamweight bout: Deiveson Figueiredo def. Montel Jackson via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Welterweight bout: Joel Alvarez def. Vicente Luque via unanimous decision (30-26×3)
    • Heavyweight bout: Mario Pinto def. Jhonata Diniz via TKO: R2, 4.10
    • Featherweight bout: Kaan Ofli def. Ricardo Ramos via submission: R1, 3.02

    Preliminary Card

    • Featherweight bout: Michael Aswell def. Lucas Almeida via TKO: R1, 1.42
    • Flyweight bout: Jafel Filho def. Clayton Carpenter via submission: R1, 4.42
    • Heavyweight bout: Vitor Petrino def. Thomas Petersen via KO: R3, 0.26
    • Bantamweight bout: Bia Mesquita def. Irina Alekseeva via submission: R2, 2.14
    • Flyweight bout: Lucas Rocha def. Stewart Nicoll via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Strawweight bout: Julia Polastri def. Karolina Kowalkiewicz via TKO: R3, 2.56
    • Catchweight (144 lbs) bout: Luan Lacerda def. Saimon Oliveira via submission: R2, 3.55

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Luan Lacerda def. Saimon Oliveira

    https://twitter.com/ufc/status/1977109204679950553

    Julia Polastri def. Karolina Kowalkiewicz

    Bia Mesquita def. Irina Alekseeva

    Vitor Petrino def. Thomas Petersen

    Jafel Filho def. Clayton Carpenter

    Michael Aswell def. Lucas Almeida

    Main Card Highlights

    Kaan Ofli def. Ricardo Ramos

    Kaan Ofli sunk in a rear-naked choke to get the win in the first round.

    Mario Pinto def. Jhonata Diniz

    Mario Pinto got it done via TKO in round two.

    Joel Alvarez def. Vicente Luque

    Joel Alvarez got it done on the scorecards.

    Deiveson Figueiredo def. Montel Jackson

    In the co-main event, Deiveson Figueiredo earned a split decision win.

    Charles Oliveira def. Mateusz Gamrot

    In the main event, Charles Oliveira submitted Mateusz Gamrot in round two.

  • UFC Rio Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Oliveira vs. Gamrot, Figueiredo vs. Jackson, And More

    UFC Rio Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Oliveira vs. Gamrot, Figueiredo vs. Jackson, And More

    UFC Rio is almost here, and we here at MMA News are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from the Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Saturday, October 11. The main card portion of the event will start at 7PM ET/4PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 4PM ET/1PM PT.

    The main event will see a lightweight battle featuring former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira and Mateusz Gamrot.

    The co-main event will see bantamweight action as former flyweight champion Deiveson Figueiredo faces Montel Jackson.

    The UFC Perth main card will also feature Vicente Luque meeting Joel Alvarez, Jhonata Diniz squaring off with Mario Pinto, Ricardo Ramos taking on Kaan Ofli, and Lucas Almeida going toe-to-toe with Michael Aswell Jr.

    UFC Rio: Oliveira vs. Gamrot Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC Rio as of October 11 (fight day) at 11 am ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Lightweight: Charles Oliveira (-108) vs. Mateusz Gamrot (-112)
    • Bantamweight: Deiveson Figueiredo (+270) vs. Montel Jackson (-340)
    • Welterweight: Vicente Luque (+400) vs. Joel Alvarez (-535)
    • Heavyweight: Jhonata Diniz (-120) vs. Mario Pinto (+100)
    • Featherweight: Ricardo Ramos (-205) vs. Kaan Ofli (+170)
    • Featherweight: Lucas Almeida (+210) vs. Michael Aswell Jr. (-258)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Jafel Filho (-130) vs. Clayton Carpenter (+110)
    • Heavyweight: Vitor Petrino (-290) vs. Thomas Petersen (+235)
    • Women’s Bantamweight: Bia Mesquita (-600) vs. Irina Alekseeva (+440)
    • Flyweight: Lucas Rocha (-115) vs. Stewart Nicoll (-105)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Julia Polastri (-550) vs. Karolina Kowalkiewicz(+410)
    • Bantamweight: Luan Lacerda (-360) vs. Saimon Oliveira (+285)
  • “I believed”: Jiri Prochazka on His Comeback Knockout: “I will find a way every time”

    “I believed”: Jiri Prochazka on His Comeback Knockout: “I will find a way every time”

    UFC light heavyweight star Jiri Prochazka has spoken about his incredible comeback win over Khalil Rountree Jr at UFC 320.

    Last weekend, Jiri Prochazka knocked out Khalil Rountree Jr in the third round of their epic battle at UFC 320. It was clear for many to see that Rountree Jr was winning the fight but against the odds, Jiri rallied in the final round and managed to get Khalil out of there with a nasty knockout win.

    It was the kind of victory that has come to define the career of Jiri Prochazka, and it’s one of the many reasons why he’s such a fan favorite. Now, he’s once again in a position where it’s realistic to consider the possibility of him competing for the UFC light heavyweight championship again.

    In a recent interview, the Czech sensation spoke candidly about what he was thinking heading into the final round.

    Jiri Prochazka on his iconic UFC 320 comeback win

    “I believed. I believed. I really believed and before the third round, my coaches told me, ‘You have to knock him out. You have to knock him out. You have to find a way.’ And that was what I did. So, and I’m really happy that I found, I found a way. And sometimes it gives me time to realize what’s the best tactic for the opponent. But I will find a way every time.”

    Regardless of what’s next for Jiri, there’s no doubt that he’ll go down in history as an absolute legend in mixed martial arts.

  • Deiveson Figueiredo Can’t Lose Under “The Brazilian Sun” in Rio

    Deiveson Figueiredo Can’t Lose Under “The Brazilian Sun” in Rio

    UFC veteran Deiveson Figueiredo has made it crystal clear that he does not plan on losing in front of the Brazilian people tonight.

    Later this evening, Deiveson Figueiredo will go head to head with Montel Jackson as he attempts to get himself back into the mix as a contender in the bantamweight division. While he’s a former UFC flyweight champion, he’s had his fair share of setbacks and injuries in the last few years.

    Now, though, he’s ready to try and get back to the dominant and vicious Deiveson Figueiredo that many of us remember. It certainly isn’t going to be easy, but he’s certainly motivated to go in there and make a statement.

    In a recent interview, Figueiredo had the following to say about competing in his home country at UFC Rio.

    Deiveson Figueiredo refuses to lose in Rio

    “To fight in Rio de Janeiro, there’s no question, it’s an honor. Fighting under the Brazilian sun, with the crowd cheering and shouting our name, you can be sure that’s going to motivate me even more to go in there, put on a show, and come out with the win in the name of Jesus, to bring happiness to all us Brazilians.”

    Deiveson is the kind of fighter who is always willing to put it on the line in the name of victory, and in the name of entertaining the fans – and you can bet that’s exactly what he’s going to do against Montel Jackson who, in his own right, wants this to be the biggest night of his life.