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  • What’s Next After UFC 316? Full Confirmed UFC 317 Main Card For Las Vegas On June 28

    What’s Next After UFC 316? Full Confirmed UFC 317 Main Card For Las Vegas On June 28

    UFC 316 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 317 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    The promotion was in Newark last week, where the Prudential Center played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its sixth numbered event of the year. Of note were headline wins for Merab Dvalishvili and Kayla Harrison, as well as important victories for Joe Pyfer, Mario Bautista and Kevin Holland.

    While the aftermath of the June 7 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the bantamweight title picture to the lightweight and flyweight championship conversations.

    At UFC 317, set for the T-Mobile Arena on June 28, a new UFC lightweight champion will be crowned when former featherweight champion Ilia Topuria faces former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira for the vacant title in the main event. The title will be vacated once the two are in the Octagon, as current champion Islam Makhachev is planning to move up to welterweight to challenge Jack Della Maddalena.

    Topuria himself vacated the featherweight championship earlier this year. He had won the title at UFC 298 in February 2024 and retained the belt with his finish of Max Holloway at UFC 308 before deciding he wanted to move up and capture a title in a second weight class. Oliveira defeated Michael Chandler for the then-vacant lightweight title at UFC 262 and retained it against Dustin Poirier at UFC 269 before losing his title on the scales prior to facing Justin Gaethje at UFC 274. Oliveira most recently defeated Chandler in a rematch at UFC 309.

    Gold will also be on the line in the co-main event, as Alexandre Pantoja defends the UFC flyweight championship against Kai Kara-France. After defeating Brandon Moreno for the title at UFC 291, Pantoja has retained the belt three times, defeating Brandon Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301 and Kai Asakura at UFC 310. Kara-France, meanwhile, has won four of his last six, finishing Erceg in about four minutes at UFC 305.

    Costa, Dariush, Diniz Set The Stage For Title Headliners At UFC 317

    Before Topuria, Oliveira, Pantoja and Kara-France make their way out to the Octagon for the title fights, a number of notable names will take to the Octagon looking to make the most of their position on the major UFC 317 card.

    That includes former title challenger Paulo Costa, who looks to gain some positive momentum against the challenge of rising middleweight contender Roman Kopylov. Costa has lost four of his last five and has only fought four times since unsuccessfully challenging Israel Adesanya for the UFC middleweight championship at UFC 253. He most recently fought at UFC 302 last year, losing to Sean Strickland. Kopylov, meanwhile, has won six of his last seven, most recently scoring a literal last-second, head-kick knockout of Chris Curtis in January.

    Prior to that, Beneil Dariush looks to finally get back in the win column as he takes on recent lightweight title challenger Renato Moicano in a battle of top-10 ranked lightweights. Dariush was once on an eight-fight win streak but will come into this fight off back-to-back losses against Oliveira and Arman Tsarukyan. That loss to Tsarukyan came in December 2023, marking a year-and-a-half away for Dariush. Moicano was on a four-fight win streak entering UFC 311 when he received the opportunity on just one day’s notice to challenge Makhachev for the lightweight title, though ultimately falling short.

    The main card is scheduled to open with a heavyweight clash featuring Jhonata Diniz and Justin Tafa. Since coming into the UFC off of Dana White’s Contender Series, Diniz has defeated Austen Lane and Karl Williams but suffered a TKO loss to Marcin Tybura at UFC 309. After a four-fight unbeaten streak, Tafa will enter this fight off back-to-back losses against Williams and Tallison Teixeira, the latter coming four months ago at UFC 312.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of Jack Hermansson and Vivane Araujo, as well as a flyweight clash between Brandon Royval and Manel Kape all of whom are expected to be featured players on the event’s preliminary card.

    See below for the UFC 317 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

    • Lightweight Championship: Ilia Topuria vs. Charles Oliveira
    • Flyweight Championship: Alexandre Pantoja (C) vs. Kai Kara-France
    • Middleweight: Paulo Costa vs. Roman Kopylov
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Renato Moicano
    • Heavyweight: Jhonata Diniz vs. Justin Tafa

    Preliminary Card (full card and bout order TBA):

    • Flyweight: Brandon Royval vs. Manel Kape
    • Middleweight: Jack Hermansson vs. Gregory Rodrigues
    • Women’s Strawweight: Viviane Araujo vs. Tracy Cortez
  • 7 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2

    7 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 316: Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O’Malley 2

    For the third consecutive year, the UFC brought an early June pay-per-view offering to New Jersey. This year’s card was filled with some entertaining action and names, in addition to scheduled title bouts on the evening.

    The main event of the evening saw Merab Dvalishvili look to defend the UFC bantamweight championship against former champion Sean O’Malley. This was a rematch from their original encounter in the main event of the second Noche UFC event — UFC 306 — at The Sphere in September. Dvalishvili won a clear five-round decision to become the new champion and hand O’Malley just the second loss of his professional MMA career.

    While this was O’Malley’s first fight since losing the title, Dvalishvili retained the title against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 this past January.

    The co-main event also saw bantamweight gold at stake, as Julianna Pena defended her championship against Kayla Harrison.

    Pena returned to the Octagon and won back the championship in controversial fashion against Raquel Pennington at UFC 307 in October. Pena had also reigned as champion for about seven months after her shocking upset over Amanda Nunes at UFC 269 until losing the title back to her at UFC 277. Harrison is a former two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion; since joining the UFC, she has finished Holly Holm and scored a decision over Ketlen Vieira.

    Who pulled off all the stops in New Jersey? Who had a night to forget? Let’s look back with all the hits and misses of UFC 316!

    Hit: Yoo Joo-sang Lands A Picture-Perfect Quick KO For A Picture-Perfect Debut

    “The Korean Zombie” would be proud of “Zombie Jr.”

    The UFC 316 early prelims’ biggest highlight definitely came from Yoo Joo-sang, who delivered a solid knockout of Jeka Saraigh in less than 30 seconds.

    The finish looked something right out of the Jose Aldo vs. Conor McGregor UFC 194 ending. Saraigh attempted to charge forward on Joo-sang, firing off a one-two. Not only was Joo-sang able to keep away from the punches, but he also delivered picture perfect quick left hook. That simple shot was hit so accurately and perfectly timed that it was enough to cause Saraigh to faceplant unconscious to the mat.

    In his post-fight interview, Joo-sang promised to deliver a championship to “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung, who fell short of capturing UFC featherweight gold twice. If Joo-sang’s future performances echo his work in the short time we saw him here, and he continues to develop, maybe one day down the line that will be a possibility.

    Hit: Andreas Gustafsson Puts On Beating In UFC Debut

    If you ever read the name Khaos Williams, you know you just might be in for a solid fight. But it wasn’t Khaos who was bringing the chaos in this prelim fight — it was his opponent, Andreas Gustafsson, who put on the show in his UFC debut.

    Gustafsson set the tone immediately, charging into the clinch and landing knees, overwhelming Williams with constant pressure right from the get-go. Williams defended some of Gustafsson’s shots well, but his volume and pacing was too much.

    That set the tone for the rest of the fight. Gustafsson did damage early in the second and scored multiple takedowns during the round, controlling the fight against the cage and landing several knees and elbows, bloodying Williams up.

    Gustafsson continued the relentless pressure en route to a solid, dominant, one-sided decision win.

    After a strong performance on Dana White’s Contender Series last year, and following it up with this showing, I, for one, will be looking forward to watching Gustafsson’s next fight in the Octagon.

    Hit: Add Another Finish For Azamat Murzakanov

    Azamat Murzakanov has developed a reputation of a finisher, and it was the left hook that was his key to success in putting away Brendson Ribiero during the UFC 316 prelims.

    Some solid left hooks early on already did damage to Ribiero before another one dropped him. Murzakanov then murked his opposition by raining down ground-and-pound from multiple positions until Ribiero reportedly verbally tapped to strikes.

    This improves Murzakanov to 15-0 with 11 finishes and a 5-0 record since joining the UFC from DWCS. This a win streak that also includes knockouts of Tafon Nchukwi, Devin Clark and Alonzo Menifield, as well as a decision over Dustin Jacoby.

    Murzakanov has been ranked No. 12 for a little while now, and regardless on if this fight pushes him into the top-10 or not, it’s definitely time for him to face some top-10 ranked competition at light heavyweight.

    Murzakanov was scheduled to face Volkan Oezdemir a couple of years ago before having to pull out of the fight. Perhaps it’s time we see that one go down now. If not, some of the fighters Murzakanov is sandwiched between will all be facing off soon — with Nikita Krylov scheduled to face Bogdan Guskov in Abu Dhabi this July and Johnny Walker to face Zhang Mingyang in the UFC Shanghai main event in August. Those outcomes could also play roles in determining Murzakanov’s next matchup.

    Hit: Joshua Van Continues His Surge At Flyweight

    Joshua Van has been a name to watch at flyweight since arriving to the UFC a couple of years ago. And it seems he’s fitting more and more into his own, and that couldn’t have been further on display with his last-minute finish of Bruno Silva in the featured UFC 316 prelim.

    Van dropped Silva three times during the fight — which has never been done before in a flyweight UFC bout. Van kept his distance and was able to use his striking from there to overwhelm Silva over the course of the near-full three rounds. Van dropped Silva one time each over the course of the remaining two rounds. And after nearly finishing the fight with ground-and-pound at the end of the second, he managed to put him away in the third.

    Van is now 14-2 in his career and 7-1 in the Octagon, with his sole loss coming against Charles Johnson last year. Van will now be most likely just shy of the top 10 at flyweight, and one of the names in the top 10 — after some more shaking up potentially happens with 125-pound contests set for the rest of the summer — should be Van’s next opponent.

    Hit: Is Kevin Holland A Welterweight Contender For Good?

    There were questions about what Kevin Holland we were going to get entering this fight. Were we going to get the one who is laser focused and puts his power on display? Or were we going to get the one who’s more focused on talking and doesn’t put up as strong of a performance?

    Fortunately for fight fans, we got to see Holland at his best, as he opened the UFC 316 pay-per-view bout with a submission of Vicente Luque.

    https://twitter.com/HelmsMMA/status/1931539272848535819

    After stopping an early takedown attempt from Luque, Holland wobbled him with an elbow, starting a run where Holland’s physical advantages and striking helped to give him an early edge in the fight. Holland then dumped Luque to the ground in the second and managed to submit Luque with a D’Arce choke.

    Holland has now won three of five and is now 2-0 with two performance bonuses since dropping back to 170. Holland admitted in his post-fight interview that he hopes to be at welterweight permanently as opposed to jumping between there and 185. With Luque at No. 14 entering this fight, Holland may find himself back in the welterweight rankings — and we’ll see where things from here for the “Trailblazer.” Holland asked for Colby Covington next — and that might be a fight that could do wonders for him.

    Miss: Patchy Mix Falls Flat, Fails To Live Up To Debut Hype

    Let’s state this for the record: Mario Bautista hasn’t lost in four years and came into this fight ranked No. 10 at bantamweight. He’s has such upward trajectory, and Mix took this fight on about three weeks’ notice. Something does need to be said that Bautista has shown he is ready for higher-ranked competition.

    That, however, doesn’t deter from the fact that Mix looked awful in his Octagon debut.

    It’s always been stated that Mix was one of the greatest talents in MMA that wasn’t signed to the UFC. But you wouldn’t know that based on the way he fought at UFC 316.

    Mix looked flat. He was flat footed, with Bautista controlling the pacing and direction of the action. Bautista was more of the forward fighter, and Mix didn’t seem to get his hands going until it was way too late. Bautista managed to bloody up Mix over the course of three rounds, while Mix had little control, didn’t go for any takedowns, and just looked like the pressure got to him.

    Maybe this is just me overthinking, but Mix’s performance is a bit of a blow to the overall MMA landscape. It allows for the narrative to be pushed that “the UFC is the place to be” and that other organization’s top stars and champions can’t handle those of the UFC. The sad part is, we’ve seen much better from Mix to know he is better than this. And while I don’t want to take anything way from Bautista’s winning ways, the story here is going to be how much of a disappointment Mix was in the Prudential Center this evening — to the point a near-hometown crowd booed him at the end of the fight.

    You only get one UFC debut. Unfortunately, Mix blew it, and blew it big.

    Miss: Be Joe Pyfer? Maybe Not On This Night

    Sometimes we need to be careful when we talk about a fight being boring. A fighter’s ultimate objective is to win at any cost, and that sometimes means using his skillset and tools above putting on a show.

    The thing about Joe Pyfer’s performance in his win against Kelvin Gastelum at UFC 316 is that things completely fell off the rails after the first round.

    Pyfer dropped Gastelum in the fight’s opening seconds and dominated, overwhelming the soon-to-be UFC Hall of Famer with a variety of strikes, including another knockdown, via a head kick, that nearly finished the fight.

    Then, Pyfer went into cruise control from there. He threw single punches at the expense of working combinations. Gastelum’s striking appeared to get stronger as the round went on. Pyfer may have been in control for a time, but Gastelum prevented a takedown attempt of his — and most agree that Gastelum took the third round.

    When Pyfer was awarded his contract on DWCS, Dana White ripped other fighters for not having the killer instinct Pyfer had. Where was that killer instinct tonight? Because, yes, Gastelum is a tough fighter with a tough chin, but Pyfer had several moments early on where he could’ve finished the fight. Where did the Pyfer from round one go?

    For someone who was facing competition to determine if he’s ready for upper-level competition again after a loss to Jack Hermansson, I’m not sure this was it.

    Hit: Kayla Harrison Wins Gold, Amanda Nunes Is Back, The Dream Fight Is On

    When Raquel Pennington defeated Mayra Bueno Silva to become UFC bantamweight champion in January 2024 — months after Amanda Nunes bowed out of MMA, the conversations felt like women’s 135 had hit rock bottom.

    After UFC 316, that may feel like a bit of a memory.

    Days after Pennington’s title win, the UFC signed Kayla Harrison, fresh into a free agency after running out her contract with the PFL, where she was a two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion. There were plenty of questions about how she’d handle the cut down to 135, and while she looked rough in the weight cut for this title fight against Julianna Pena, she showed how dominant she could be.

    Receiving this title shot off a finish of Holly Holm and dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira, Harrison used her significantly larger frame and strength to overwhelm Pena and take her to the floor more than once. After threatening a couple of submissions, Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in judo, locked up a kimura to score the tapout and UFC women’s 135-pound gold.

    It would be enough to talk about how Harrison was fulfilled her destiny in this sport and become a champion in multiple promotions, in more than one weight class at that, but then came the return of “The Lioness.”

    After multiple teases, Nunes confirmed in the Octagon that, despite her impending induction into the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025, she was coming out of retirement. And the plan is that we will get Harrison vs. Nunes next.

    This was a fight fans dreamed of when both were on top in their respective promotions years ago. Now, this fight is about to be reality. And I’m all about it. I don’t know about all of you, but I can’t wait to see when this fight goes down — and I hope these two get a pay-per-view main event billing.

    Hit: Men’s Bantamweight Is Merab Dvalishvili’s World

    Merab Dvalishvili had plenty of hype around him when he won a UFC contract through Dana White’s Lookin’ for a Fight years ago. And while he lost his first two UFC bouts, he has done nothing but win since. And at this point, even the UFC CEO admits it’s uncertain right now if anyone in the men’s 135-pound division can defeat him.

    Dvalishvili proved his first victory over Sean O’Malley was no fluke. Not only did he defeat an O’Malley that dropped all distractions and gimmicks, he finished him.

    Dvalishvili again showed that his wrestling was too much for “The Suga Show” to handle. And as he hunted for a submission in the third round, O’Malley tried to defend by going onto his back — only for Dvalishvili to impressively hold onto a choke and score a North-South choke submission victory.

    This makes it a dominant decision and finish over O’Malley, as well as a comeback decision win over Umar Nurmagomedov at the start of this year. Dvalishvili is an absolute beast in the cage, and tonight’s performance only proves that. Even though it’s rare for him to get finishes, tonight has shown it’s not out of his capabilities.

    Bantamweight is a killer division, and it’ll be exciting to see Dvalishvili vs. Cory Sandhagen if that truly is next. But at this point, we might be living in Dvalishvili’s 135-pound world for quite some time to come.

  • Sean O’Malley’s UFC 316 Loss Has Aljamain Sterling Eyeing Redemption Bout At Featherweight

    Sean O’Malley’s UFC 316 Loss Has Aljamain Sterling Eyeing Redemption Bout At Featherweight

    Aljamain Sterling is open to welcoming Sean O’Malley to the featherweight division for a rematch after watching his former foe submit at UFC 316.

    O’Malley suffered a brutal third-round submission loss in his rematch against Sterling’s close friend, UFC bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili, this past Saturday at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

    Although “Suga” displayed sharper takedown defense and more calculated striking, he was ultimately overwhelmed by Dvalishvili’s relentless onslaught of takedown attempts, which ended with a north-south choke.

    Sean O’Malley captured the bantamweight crown with a TKO victory over Aljamain Sterling at UFC 292 in August 2023, a win many viewed as controversially stopped early by the referee. He then went on to defend his title once against Marlon “Chito” Vera at UFC 299 in March 2024, only to see his reign come to an end against Dvalishvili at UFC 306 in September.

    Image: UFC.com

    Aljamain Sterling Open To Facing Sean O’Malley Again At 145

    Following Sean O’Malley’s defeat to Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 316, a fan on social media called for “Suga” to move up to the featherweight division and proposed a rematch against Aljamain Sterling.

    “Funk Master” warmly embraced the possibility of the showdown, saying he would jump at the chance to avenge his loss to O’Malley with a more polished, focused approach.

    “Let the former champ rest. But I would absolutely LOVE to show him what a healthy version of myself would do. He’s got great skills but I still know that was 50% version of myself,” Aljamain Sterling wrote on X.”

    After relinquishing his 135-pound crown to O’Malley, Sterling made the leap to the featherweight division and marked his debut with a commanding unanimous decision victory over Calvin Kattar at UFC 300 in April 2024.

    “Funk Master” most recently returned to action at UFC 310 in December, where he faced off against the undefeated Movsar Evloev. Despite a valiant effort, Sterling came up short on the judges’ scorecards in a closely contested bout.

  • ‘I Have More Tools In My Pocket’ — Merab Dvalishvili After Submitting Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    ‘I Have More Tools In My Pocket’ — Merab Dvalishvili After Submitting Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    Merab Dvalishvili’s rise shows no signs of slowing down.

    Dvalishvili successfully retained his bantamweight crown with a statement-making win over Sean O’Malley in their rematch, headlining UFC 316 this past Saturday at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

    https://x.com/UFCEurope/status/19315780739100713

    “The Machine” eventually cracked the code on O’Malley’s sharpened wrestling awareness, blending relentless pressure with pinpoint striking to overwhelm the former champion. While O’Malley entered with a more calculated approach, Dvalishvili’s relentless pace and suffocating grappling steadily wore him down.

    After drowning O’Malley in a wave of takedown pressure, Dvalishvili sealed the deal with a punishing north-south choke, earning his second win over “Suga”.

    Petr Yan Slams Sean O'Malley For UFC 316 Submission Loss To Merab Dvalishvili
    Image: @ufc/X

    Dvalishvili’s championship reign began at UFC 306 in September 2024, where he clinched a lopsided unanimous decision win over O’Malley.

    Merab Dvalishvili Highlights Preparation And Growth After UFC 316 Win

    After earning the first submission victory of his UFC career by finishing Sean O’Malley at UFC 316, Merab Dvalishvili reflected on the rematch during his post-fight interview with Joe Rogan.

    “The Machine” acknowledged O’Malley’s noticeable adjustments since their previous clash but emphasized that his own evolution hasn’t slowed—continually sharpening his arsenal and unveiling new weapons with each performance.

    “He was well trained, he was well prepared, and I knew that he was going to make changes because, Hey, every time I lost I made big changes and I learned from it,” Merab Dvalishvili said. “But I’m getting better and better. I wasn’t showing this technique [before] and I have more tools in my pocket I’m still working on, and then little by little I will show. Now it’s my time.”

    With this victory, Dvalishvili stretched his impressive winning streak to 13 consecutive fights. He kicked off his title defenses in dominant fashion against the previously unbeaten Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 in January, where the Georgian secured a commanding unanimous decision to maintain his championship reign.

    “The Machine” boasts a 13-2 UFC record, featuring commanding victories over elite former champions such as Jose Aldo, Henry Cejudo, Petr Yan, and a host of other top-tier contenders.

  • Petr Yan Slams Sean O’Malley For UFC 316 Submission Loss To Merab Dvalishvili: ‘Back In Line, Buddy’

    Petr Yan Slams Sean O’Malley For UFC 316 Submission Loss To Merab Dvalishvili: ‘Back In Line, Buddy’

    Petr Yan believes the UFC’s decision to grant Sean O’Malley an immediate rematch against Merab Dvalishvili had more to do with hype than merit.

    O’Malley challenged reigning bantamweight champion Dvalishvili in the UFC 316 headliner at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, where he ultimately suffered the first submission loss of his professional career.

    “Suga” entered the octagon with a noticeably more measured and tactical approach, showcasing improved takedown defense by stuffing six of Dvalishvili’s first eight attempts. But true to form, the Georgian powerhouse marched forward with trademark relentlessness, blending calculated pressure with crisp, well-timed striking.

    By the third round, “The Machine” had drained O’Malley’s gas tank with an unrelenting barrage of takedown attempts. Sensing the opportunity, Dvalishvili locked in a vicious north-south choke, forcing his opponent to tap and successfully making his second title defense.

    Merab Dvalishvili first claimed the bantamweight title by decisively dethroning Sean O’Malley at UFC 306 last September with a dominant unanimous decision.

    Image: @ufc/X

    Petr Yan Calls Out Sean O’Malley for Getting Ahead Without Earning It

    Petr Yan didn’t hold back on social media following Sean O’Malley’s failed attempt to reclaim the bantamweight title against Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 316. The former champion took aim at his old rival, suggesting that O’Malley was gifted an unearned title shot.

    “This is what happens when you’re handed things you didn’t earn. Back in line, buddy @SugaSeanMMA,” Petr Yan wrote on X.

    The tension between O’Malley and Yan dates back to their razor-thin clash at UFC 280 in October 2022, where “No Mercy” suffered a highly controversial split decision loss — one that continues to stir debate to this day.

    With consecutive losses to Merab Dvalishvili, “Suga” now sits at 10-3 (1 NC) record in the UFC.

    Meanwhile, Yan, currently riding a two-fight win streak, is reportedly slated to face Marcus McGhee at UFC Abu Dhabi on July 26, set to take place at the Etihad Arena on Yas Island, United Arab Emirates. “No Mercy” boasts a 10-4 record inside the Octagon and is aiming to reestablish himself in the title mix.

    Image: @petr_yan/Instagram
  • ‘BIG DECK ENERGY’ — Fans React As Dana White Introduces Pit-Style ‘Bowl’ Ahead of UFC BJJ Debut on June 25

    ‘BIG DECK ENERGY’ — Fans React As Dana White Introduces Pit-Style ‘Bowl’ Ahead of UFC BJJ Debut on June 25

    The UFC is rolling out its latest battleground in the combat sports arena.

    On Friday, the world’s leading MMA promotion officially launched its latest endeavor — UFC BJJ, a dedicated Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu competition platform. The inaugural event, UFC BJJ 1, is set for June 25 during UFC International Fight Week and will feature three championship bouts to crown the first-ever bantamweight, lightweight, and welterweight titleholders.

    While the full lineup of participants remains under wraps for now, one high-profile matchup has been confirmed: multiple-time world champion Mikey Musumeci will face rising talent Rerisson Gabriel for the inaugural 135-pound title.

    Additionally, the newly launched grappling promotion will debut UFC BJJ: Road to the Title, a reality series inspired by The Ultimate Fighter. The eight-episode season, set to premiere on June 16, will feature Musumeci and Gabriel as rival coaches.

    UFC BJJ: Road to the Title
    Image: @ufcbjj/Instagram

    Ahead of its debut, UFC CEO Dana White unveiled the distinctive arena for UFC BJJ—an innovative enclosure dubbed “The Bowl.” Designed with sunken pit-like walls, the structure ensures continuous action by preventing athletes from spilling out of bounds during grappling contests.

    However, the exact dimensions and technical specifications have yet to be revealed.

    Fans Share Diverse Views On UFC BJJ Bowl Enclosure

    The UFC BJJ’s Bowl structure has drawn mixed reactions from combat sports fans. While many praised the innovative design and unique layout of the structure, others criticized it for resembling the setup used in Australian grappling star Craig Jones’ own promotion.

    https:/x.com/alimerry_/status/1931615184658837

    https://twitter.com/BigDeckSports/status/1931586984599814542

    The pit-like design isn’t a fresh concept in combat sports. Karate Combat has long utilized angled pit walls for their striking bouts, and they’ve recently expanded into grappling with their Pit Submission Series.

    Image: UFC.com
  • ‘The Type Of Champion That The UFC Needs’ – Fans & Fighters React To Merab Dvalishvili Putting On Dominant Display Against Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    ‘The Type Of Champion That The UFC Needs’ – Fans & Fighters React To Merab Dvalishvili Putting On Dominant Display Against Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    Merab Dvalishvili has been a grappling beast his whole MMA career, but the one knock on him may have been a lack of finishes.

    That knock can’t be applied to him in his performance at UFC 316, as he submitted Sean O’Malley in the main event to retain the UFC bantamweight championship.

    O’Malley stayed on the outside and tried to keep distance early in the opening round. While O’Malley scored a couple of decent shots early, a pair of slips, led him into Dvalishvili’s grasp. The defending champ scored a pair of takedowns during the round, delivering the same kind of top pressure that troubled O’Malley in their first meeting.

    The second round proved to be much closer, with both men having moments. Dvalishvili continued with his relentless grappling pressure, but O’Malley appeared to land the stronger strikes — and defended most of Dvalishvili’s takedown attempts well enough.

    The third round, however, saw Dvalishvili land a big takedown on O’Malley. No matter O’Malley’s defenses, Dvalishili’s top pressure was too much. Late in the round, Dvalishvili managed to lock up a D’Arce choke, even when O’Malley gets his back to the mat, putting Dvalishvili in the North-South position. The North-South choke scored Dvalishvili the tap to retain the gold.

    Merab Dvalishvili Retains Bantamweight Title Over Sean O’Malley At UFC 316

    This was a rematch from Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306), which saw Dvalishvili score a decision over O’Malley to capture the 135-pound championship.

    This was Dvalishvili’s second bantamweight title defense. He retained the title in comeback decision fashion against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311.

    This was O’Malley’s first fight since losing the title. It’s just his third professional MMA loss and second time being finished — following his loss to Marlon “Chito” Vera five years ago.

  • Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

    Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

    As has been previously speculated and teased, even after the announcement of her impending UFC Hall of Fame induction, “The Lioness” is back.

    During an athlete panel held ahead of UFC 316, former UFC women’s bantamweight and featherweight champion Amanda Nunes announced her intentions to un-retire and challenge for the belt she previously held on two occasions.

    That was confirmed at the event itself. Following Kayla Harrison’s bantamweight title win over Julianna Pena, Harrison called out Nunes to enter the Octagon.

    “That’s the next fight,” Harrison said.

    Nunes, who was in the crowd, was allowed into the Octagon and confirmed her intentions to return and face Harrison.

    Amanda Nunes Returning, Aiming For Third Reign As UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion

    “I’m back,” Nunes said.

    Nunes has had history with both women in the women’s title fight. The lone time since Nunes’ first title win in 2016 that Nunes didn’t rule over 135 was when Pena shocked the world and finished Nunes at UFC 269 to capture the UFC women’s bantamweight championship. Nunes would regain the championship from Pena at UFC 277 but retire before a trilogy fight that Pena greatly desired.

    Meanwhile, Nunes and Harrison has been teased as a potential dream match when Harrison was on top of the PFL’s women’s lightweight division while Nunes was a champ-champ in the UFC.

  • ‘Kayla Harrison vs. Amanda Nunes Is Going To Rule’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kayla Harrison Capturing Bantamweight Title At UFC 316

    ‘Kayla Harrison vs. Amanda Nunes Is Going To Rule’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kayla Harrison Capturing Bantamweight Title At UFC 316

    Kayla Harrison emphatically asserted that she would become UFC women’s bantamweight champion — and she did just that in the co-main event of UFC 316, becoming the champion by scoring a second-round submission of Julianna Pena.

    Harrison came out on the front foot, appearing to control the fight and land the stronger shots in the opening minutes. Harrison managed to lock up Pena and pin her against the fence in less than two minutes before managing to take the defending champion down. Harrison worked her way into half guard, while Pena looked to control posture. Pena looked to land punches from up top, but the challenger’s pressure seemed to be too much.

    Pena landed an up-kick that seemed to do damage, but with Harrison’s knee down, the strike was illegal, and the referee deducted a point from Pena.

    Pena appeared to land respectable shots early in the second round, but she was letting Harrison control the pacing of the fight and letting her come forward. Harrison locked Pena up against the fence again. Pena appeared to do well defending Harrison’s takedown efforts but Harrison managed to get her down halfway through the round. Despite Pena’s efforts to control Harrison’s arms, and to get her legs around Harrison, Harrison managed to bully her to the mat and threatened a neck crank, then an arm-triangle.

    With less than 10 seconds left in the second round, Harrison managed to twist Pena’s arm into a kimura from side control, scoring the tap out and becoming the new champion.

    Kayla Harrison Becomes UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion By Submitting Julianna Pena

    Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medal judoka and two-time PFL champion, jumped to the UFC from the PFL last year. Her title shot came after a finish of former champion Holly Holm at UFC 300 and a dominant decision over Ketlen Vieira at UFC 307.

    This was Pena’s first defense since winning the title at UFC 307 with a controversial decision over Raquel Pennington. Her first reign started at UFC 269 with a major upset over Amanda Nunes. She’d lose the title back to Nunes at UFC 277.

  • ‘Overrated’ – Fans React As Joe Pyfer Earns Lackluster Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    ‘Overrated’ – Fans React As Joe Pyfer Earns Lackluster Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    Joe Pyfer’s continued to rise up the ranks at UFC 316, though perhaps not in the strongest performance as some would have liked against future Hall of Famer Kelvin Gastelum in one of the featured fights of the evening.

    Pyfer came close to finishing the fight twice during the opening round. Very early on, he dropped Gastelum with a right hand before swarming on him. Pyfer went on to dominate the round, landing a strong head kick that rocked Gastelum before dropping him with another right hand.

    Pyfer looked to get back to work in the second round, using his physical advantages as the two hand fought in the first minute. Pyfer landed a strong right hand that appeared to hurt Gastelum, who despite his feints and experience, wasn’t able to do much damage on Pyfer. Gastelum managed to get into a rhythm and find a jab late, landing in close, and especially to the body. Pyfer, meanwhile, appeared to slow down and only threw single punches during the course of the round.

    Both men appeared to have moments in the third round. While Pyfer worked a notable combination early, Gastelum prevented a takedown attempt of his — and Gastelum appeared to land stronger punches late in the round. It wasn’t enough, however, as the judges all scored the fight for Pyfer.

    Joe Pyfer Scores Decision Win Over Kelvin Gastelum At UFC 316

    https://twitter.com/OlivessOmar/status/1931555300651254128

    Pyfer has now won seven of his last eight. This marked his first fight in about a year, having most recently knocked out Marc-Andre Barriault at UFC 303.

    Gastelum has now lost four of his last six, though he came into this bout off a win over Daniel Rodriguez last year.

  • ‘Biggest Fraud Check Of 2025’ – Fans React To Patchy Mix Falling Short In Decision Loss To Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    ‘Biggest Fraud Check Of 2025’ – Fans React To Patchy Mix Falling Short In Decision Loss To Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    There was plenty of hype heading into UFC 316 for the impending debut of former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix, who had been considered one of the best fighters to have not been signed by the UFC.

    Unfortunately, he didn’t fight as such in his first bout in the Octagon, losing handedly to Mario Bautista.

    Mix’s first five minutes were rough — looking like the slower fighter and not doing enough with his footwork. Bautista was able to control the action with his jab, landing a number of shots that resulted in Mix getting busted up on his face. This included one jab that appeared to rock him early, and one shot that did damage right before the horn.

    Mix showed some improvement in the second round, including a solid head kick midway through the round. He found moments, including drawing some blood from Bautista under one of his eyes. Bautista, however, continued to stay busy and work combinations, overwhelming Mix with volume, including a surge in the final minute that did damage.

    Mix looked to come out aggressive to start the third, but Bautista was right there to answer back. Mix couldn’t get a takedown and continued to get tagged by Bautista’s right hand, which opened a cut on Mix’s face. Mix would land a couple of solid shots and a knee late in the round, but it wasn’t enough.

    Patchy Mix Underwhelms In UFC Debut Against Mario Bautista At UFC 316

    https://twitter.com/WhyGarth/status/1931545303452115269

    Bautista has now won eight straight, having come into this fight off wins over Jose Aldo and Ricky Simon.

    Mix is a former Bellator bantamweight champion, having defeated the likes of Raufeon Stots, Magomed Magomedov and Sergio Pettis. Mix’s most recent fight prior to tonight came at the Bellator Champions Series event in Paris in May 2024, edging out Magomedov in a controversial decision to retain the Bellator bantamweight championship.

  • Mark Kerr Announced For UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    Mark Kerr Announced For UFC Hall Of Fame Class Of 2025

    Mark Kerr’s name has been going around the MMA circle of late, thanks in part to the new movie about his life — The Smashing Machine — in addition to his legend status in the sport.

    And now, Kerr gets to be cemented for good in honor of his achievements, as he has been announced as the final member of the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

    The announcement came during the pay-per-view portion of UFC 316, which Kerr was in attendance for.

    Jon Anik added that Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, who plays Kerr in The Smashing Machine, will be present at the Hall of Fame ceremony in Las Vegas on June 26 to personally induct Kerr.

    Mark Kerr Announced As Final Member of 2025 UFC Hall Of Fame Class

    Kerr was a collegiate wrestler at Syracuse, becoming a multiple-time EIWA champion and winning the NCAA national championship at 190 pounds in 1992.

    Kerr was also a multiple-time ADCC champion, winning gold in 1999, 2000 and 2001.

    Kerr made his professional MMA debut in 1997, winning three times in one night to win the heavyweight tournament at World Vale Tudo Championship 3. He then joined the UFC and won the heavyweight tournaments at both UFC 14 and UFC 15.

    Kerr would then join PRIDE in its earliest days and won six straight. He, unfortunately, would then lose six of his next seven, going on a downward skid. Kerr then won a pair of fights before ending his MMA career on five straight losses, including losses to Oleg Taktarov, Jeff Monson and Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal.

    Kerr joins the likes of Amanda Nunes, Vitor Belfort, Robbie Lawler, producer Craig Piligian and the UFC 236 fight between Kelvin Gastelum and Israel Adesanya as the UFC Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

  • ‘Wasn’t On My Bingo Card’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kevin Holland Locking Up Submission Victory Over Vicente Luque

    ‘Wasn’t On My Bingo Card’ – Fans & Fighters React To Kevin Holland Locking Up Submission Victory Over Vicente Luque

    Kevin Holland may very well find himself back in the welterweight rankings after UFC 316, scoring a second-round submission victory over Vicente Luque in the pay-per-view’s opening bout.

    Luque looked for an early takedown before Holland’s strikes forced Luque to abandon it. Holland appeared to wobble Luque during the first couple of minutes with an elbow. Luque responded well, but it resulted in a hematoma behind Luque’s left ear. Both men had their moments during this frame, but Holland’s physical advantages helped give him the edge.

    Holland managed to catch a kick of Luque’s early in the second round, putting him to the mat. It was there where Holland put Luque away by securing a D’Arce choke and scoring the submission.

    Kevin Holland Submits Vicente Luque At UFC 316

    Holland has now won two straight and three of his last five. This was Holland’s second fight back at 170 after scoring a decision win over Gunnar Nelson at UFC London.

    Luque is now 2-2 in his last four and has now lost four of his last six.

  • ‘Could Very Easily See Him Winning A UFC Title’ – Fans & Fighters React To Joshua Van Scoring UFC Flyweight-Record 3 Knockdowns In UFC 316 Victory

    ‘Could Very Easily See Him Winning A UFC Title’ – Fans & Fighters React To Joshua Van Scoring UFC Flyweight-Record 3 Knockdowns In UFC 316 Victory

    Joshua Van continues to make noise and surge up the flyweight rankings, defeating Bruno Silva in a clinic that capped off the UFC 316 preliminary card.

    Van’s crisp striking was on display from the opening frame, overcoming Silva’s leg-kick-based attack by trying to keep distance and using a variety of punches, including a left hook that dropped Silva late in the round.

    Van came out in the second round looking to dictate the pace again, controlling the action with more distance work and use of his jab. Van scored another knockdown in this round with a right hand. Though Silva scored a takedown during the second round, Van got around it and managed to trouble Silva some more with a hook and ground-and-pound before the end of the round.

    Van continued to overwhelm with accurate and powerful striking in the third round. Van dropped Silva with a right hook and some more ground-and-pound put Silva away about four minutes into the final frame.

    Joshua Van Puts Beating On Bruno Gustavo Da Silva At UFC 316

    Van, who improves to 14-2, has now won four straight and 11 of his last 12. This marked his fifth fight in an 11-month span; that span also included a loss to Charles Johnson and wins over Edgar Chairez, Cody Durden and Rei Tsuruya.

    Silva has now lost two straight after a four-fight win streak. He came into this fight off a loss to Manel Kape in December.

  • ‘Murzakanov Is A Hammer’ – Fans & Fighters React To Azamat Murzakanov Starching Brendson Ribiero In Another Strong Finish At UFC 316

    ‘Murzakanov Is A Hammer’ – Fans & Fighters React To Azamat Murzakanov Starching Brendson Ribiero In Another Strong Finish At UFC 316

    Azamat Murzakanov can add another impressive knockout to his performance, needing just over three minutes to put away Brendson Ribiero during the preliminary card of UFC 316.

    Murzakanov looked to take control right from the start with his power. He landed a couple of noteworthy left hooks early, one of which appeared to really hurt Ribiero. Another left hook managed to drop Ribiero. Murzakanov managed to get into mount, raining down ground-and-pound. Ribiero looked to get away but gave up his back, and Murzakanov continued to rain down blows until Ribiero submitted to strikes.

    Azamat Murzakanov Scores Yet Another Finish At UFC 316

    Murzakanov is now 5-0 in the Octagon since coming into the UFC off Dana White’s Contender Series. His was his first fight since his performance bonus-earning knockout of Alonzo Menifield at ABC Abu Dhabi last August.

    Ribiero is now just 2-3 in the UFC since coming into the promotion off his own DWCS appearance.

  • Ben Askren In Critical Condition, Hospitalized For Pneumonia

    Ben Askren In Critical Condition, Hospitalized For Pneumonia

    Note: This is a developing story

    UPDATE: Amy Askren, wife of Ben Askren, has posted an update to Facebook, confirming Ben Askren is unresponsive in the hospital. Amy Askren says that Ben Askren suddenly developed pneumonia.

    Former Bellator and ONE Championship welterweight champion Ben Askren has reportedly been hospitalized and is in critical condition, battling a staph infection.

    Tom Ryan, the head coach of the Ohio State wrestling team, sent out a tweet just before 7pm ET on June 7, asking the wrestling community to send prayers for Askren and his family.

    A couple of hours later, Chael Sonnen would tweet out that Askren is alive and for his family’s request of privacy to be respect. Pat Mineo of The Wrestling Room would follow up with the confirmation that Askren is battling a staph infection.

    Ben Askren Battling Severe Staph Infection, In Critical Condition

    Prior to MMA, Askren was a key collegiate wrestler at the University of Missouri, becoming a three-time Big 12 champion and two-time NCAA Division-I champion. He also won gold at the 2005 Pan American Games in freestyle wrestling.

    Askren was a key figure in Bellator’s early days, winning the season 2 welterweight tournament before defeating Lyman Good at Bellator 33 to become Bellator welterweight champion. He’d defend the title four times before departing Bellator for ONE Championship toward the end of 2013.

    In his first year with ONE, Askren defeated Nobutatsu Suzuki to become ONE welterweight champion. He’d retain that title four times as well before retiring as champion at the end of 2017.

    He’d come out of retirement in 2018 after his contract was traded by ONE to the UFC in exchange for Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson. After controversially defeating Robbie Lawler at UFC 235, Askren was the victim of the fastest KO in UFC history when he was beat by Jorge Masvidal at UFC 239. He’d then be submitted by Demian Maia UFC Singapore before retiring from MMA for good in November 2019.

    Askren then fought Jake Paul in boxing in April 2021, getting stopped in just one round.

  • Francis Ngannou Fires Back After Jon Jones Reignites Superfight Talks

    Francis Ngannou Fires Back After Jon Jones Reignites Superfight Talks

    Francis Ngannou is calling on Jon Jones to finally settle the long-standing debate over who truly wears the crown as the undisputed baddest man in heavyweight MMA.

    The two heavyweight titans have long been linked to a potential showdown that many believe could have been one of the biggest fights in UFC history, ever since Jones moved up to heavyweight and Ngannou held the divisional title.

    Despite numerous efforts from both camps, the highly anticipated superfight never took shape. Frustrated by how he was treated during his reign as UFC heavyweight champion, “The Predator” chose to vacate his belt and sign with the PFL, sidelining the prospects of the the potential bout.

    However, Ngannou’s head coach, Eric Nicksick, recently expressed confidence that the Cameroonian powerhouse would “100 percent” consider a return to the UFC—especially to revitalize a division hampered by the inactivity of reigning champion Jon Jones and the sidelining of interim titleholder Tom Aspinall.

    Image: PFL MMA/YouTube.

    On Friday, “Bones” responded to Nicksick’s remarks on X, expressing his interest in fighting Ngannou if the stars align. He revealed that a potential bout with Ngannou would reignite his competitive fire, unlike a title unification fight against Aspinall.

    “I’m hearing Francis Ngannou is still interested… now we’re talking. That’s a real super fight. A clash of champions, not just hype. He held the UFC belt, I’ve defended mine for over a decade. Two kings from different roads. Not just one legend facing a mouth that’s hot right now, but two real legacies colliding. That’s the kind of fight that actually adds something special to my story. At least from my point of view,” Jon Jones wrote on X.

    Francis Ngannou Responds To Jon Jones Eager To Settle Heavyweight Rivalry

    On Saturday, Francis Ngannou took to X to respond to Jon Jones’ call for a potential showdown, urging “Bones” to secure the green light from the UFC while he focuses on his own commitments in the PFL. “The Predator” emphasized that their long-awaited clash would definitively determine who stands as the unquestioned heavyweight champion of the sport.

    “You take care of the UFC, I’ll take care of the PFL, and we’ll finally find out who’s the KING OF THE HEAVYWEIGHT,” Ngannou wrote on X.

    One of the key reasons the Jones vs. Ngannou showdown remained unrealized was UFC CEO Dana White’s claim that “Bones” demanded an astronomical payday to make the fight happen. White has also made it abundantly clear time and again that he has no interest in working with Ngannou again.

    However, several voices within the MMA community have long championed the idea of a cross-promotional collaboration between the UFC and PFL to finally bring this dream matchup to life. Yet, the chances remain slim, as White has consistently opposed such partnerships.

    Image: @francisngannou/Instagram
  • VIDEO: Yoo Joo-sang Faceplants Jeka Saragih With Conor McGregor-Esque Hook At UFC 316

    VIDEO: Yoo Joo-sang Faceplants Jeka Saragih With Conor McGregor-Esque Hook At UFC 316

    Yoo Joo-sang made an emphatic statement in his UFC debut at UFC 316, scoring the fourth-fastest finish in a debut performance at featherweight.

    Joo-sang needed just 28 seconds to put away Jeka Saraigh during the event’s preliminary card.

    Saragih looked to come after Joo-sang with a one-two. Joo-sang, however, saw it coming and stepped back away from the charge. Joo-sang then connected with a quick left hook that sent Saragih down, crumbling, like a stack of bricks, face first to the mat.

    Yoo Joo-Sang Scores Impressive Sub-30-Second KO In UFC Debut At UFC 316

    Joo-sang, who said he hopes to deliver a UFC title to the man he looks up to, “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung, is now 9-0 in MMA. The former AFC and Heat featherweight champion earned his fifth career finish in this bout tonight — with four of five now coming in the first round.

    Saragih has now lost three of four since entering the Octagon off a pair of 2022 victories on Road to UFC.

  • UFC 316 Results & Highlights: Merab Dvalishvili Submits Sean O’Malley

    UFC 316 Results & Highlights: Merab Dvalishvili Submits Sean O’Malley

    UFC 316 took place tonight from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, Merab Dvalishvili and Sean O’Malley faced off for the bantamweight title. While in the co-main event, Julianna Peña took on Kayla Harrison for the women’s bantamweight belt.

    UFC 316 Results: Main Card 

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili def. Sean O’Malley via submission: R3, 4.42
    • Women’s Bantamweight Championship: Kayla Harrison def. Julianna Pena via submission: R2, 4.55
    • Middleweight: Joe Pyfer def. Kelvin Gastelum via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-27, 30-27)
    • Bantamweight: Mario Bautista def. Patchy Mix via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27×2)
    • Welterweight: Kevin Holland def. Vicente Luque via submission: R2, 1.03

     
    Preliminary Card

    • Flyweight: Joshua Van def. Bruno Gustavo da Silva via TKO: R3, 4.01
    • Light Heavyweight: Azamat Murzakanov def. Brendson Ribeiro via TKO: R1, 3.25  
    • Heavyweight: Waldo Cortes-Acosta def. Serghei Spivac via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)
    • Welterweight: Andreas Gustafsson def. Khaos Williams via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-26×2)

     
    Early Preliminary Card

    • Women’s Flyweight: Wang Cong def. Ariane da Silva via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Featherweight: Yoo Joo-sang def. Jeka Saragih via KO: R1, 0.28
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld def. Yanal Ashmouz via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)

    Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos def. Mark Choinski via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Yoo Joo-sang def. Jeka Saragih

    Making his UFC debut, Yoo Joo-sang took just 28 seconds to KO Jeka Saragih.

    Azamat Murzakanov def. Brendson Ribeiro

    Azamat Murzakanov got the TKO in the first round of this light heavyweight matchup.

    Joshua Van def. Bruno Gustavo

    Joshua Van stopped Bruno Gustavo late in their flyweight bout.

    Main Card Highlights

    Kevin Holland def. Vicente Luque

    Kevin Holland locked in a D’arce choke to get the win in round two.

    Mario Bautista def. Patchy Mix

    Mario Bautista earned the win on the scorecards in this bantamweight fight.

    Joe Pyfer def. Kelvin Gastelum

    Joe Pyfer got the win on the scorecards in this middleweight bout.

    Kayla Harrison def. Julianna Pena

    In the co-main event, Kayla Harrison submitted Julianna Pena with a kimura at the end of round two to claim the women’s bantamweight title.

    Merab Dvalishvili def. Sean O’Malley 

    In the main event, Merab Dvalishvili submitted Sean O’Malley to retain his bantamweight title.

  • “You’ve Got to Go Through Hell to Get to Heaven” Kayla Harrison Finds Peace Beyond Perfection

    “You’ve Got to Go Through Hell to Get to Heaven” Kayla Harrison Finds Peace Beyond Perfection

    Kayla Harrison is able to look back on her past and see it as a road that has well prepared for a potentially cathartic outcome here this weekend. Harrison will do battle for bantamweight gold against defending champion Julianna Pena in the co-main event of UFC 316 on June 7th. The multi time PFL champion and multi-time Olympic gold medalist will look to unseat the multi-time UFC bantamweight champion in what is a massive night for the 135 pound weight classes. Men’s bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili taking on Sean O’Malley in a rematch serves as the PPV closer on the night after Harrison vs. Pena.

    As part of the embedded series heading into UFC 316, Harrison was documented getting reflective about her journey as she heads into her first opportunity at UFC gold as a massive betting favorite. As she let the MMA community into her mindset leading into this championship opportunity, Harrison said, “I’ve spent a lifetime chasing my dreams. You know, I think when I was younger, I definitely competed from a place of fear. I always felt like, in order to be worthy of love, I needed to win and be this perfect thing.”

    Kayla Harrison on falling for judo at six: ‘I believe in love at first sight, that was it for me’

    Kayla Harrison Talks FreedomAhead of UFC 316

    Kayla Harrison no longer pursues flawlessness in her approach to seemingly all things in her life and centers the three F’s in her existence at this point in her journey. As she expounded upon this, Kayla Harrison quipped, “Perfection is unattainable, but I don’t operate from that place anymore. It’s peace. I had a very ugly, nasty road to get to that kind of awakening and to that kind of peace—and everyone does. You’ve got to go through hell to get to heaven, you know?”

    “I have so much more to my life now, and this is what I do, but it’s not who I am. Which gives me a freedom to be—I don’t know—fearless. I just go out there and have fun.”

    Kayla Harrison
    Image:Jeff Bottari/UFC, Zuffa LLC
  • “Even Your Dog Doesn’t Like You”: Julianna Peña and Kayla Harrison Trade Verbal Shots Ahead of UFC 316

    “Even Your Dog Doesn’t Like You”: Julianna Peña and Kayla Harrison Trade Verbal Shots Ahead of UFC 316

    Julianna Peña and Kayla Harrison are just hours away from locking horns with one another at UFC 316 but managed to get in the last few verbal volleys before that cage door shuts behind them. Before the two will do battle for Pena’s 135 pound title, the two went back and forth on the microphone at the final pre-fight press conference before the pugilistic proceedings kick off Saturday night in Newark. Julianna Peña came across as defiant and unbothered by Harrison’s presence, as the reigning bantamweight champion declared:

    “I’m not going to let this girl talk all over me and try to think that she’s going to get into my head. It’s not going to happen.”

    To that, Kayla Harrison, who is aiming to cement her legacy further here with multiple PFL titles and multiple Olympic gold medals to her credit, responded to the sitting champion as Harrison retorted:

    “It would be an honor and a privilege to be the face of women’s MMA. I don’t take it lightly. I consider it a huge responsibility, and Saturday night I’m going to go out there and leave it all in the cage so that I can be a new UFC champion of the world.”

    Julianna Pena, Kayla Harrison

    Julianna Peña and Kayla Harrison’s War of Words

    ‘The Venezuelan Vixen’ Julianna Peña would then fire back at the surging bantamweight contender with a biting comeback that got the canines involved when Peña said:

    “She definitely hasn’t gotten under my skin. I got thick skin—it takes a little more than a Chihuahua barking to get under my skin. But even your Chihuahua doesn’t like you, Kayla. Even your own dang dog doesn’t even like you. The time for talking is almost over, and Saturday night we’re going to find out who’s the face of women’s MMA—and you’re looking at her!”

    Julianna Peña did not stop there as the two time titleholder at 135 pounds would then challenge Kayla Harrison’s fighting style as Peña quipped,

    “How are you going to beat me, Kayla? Are you going to lay on top of me and cook the clock for 25 minutes? Because that is literally your only chance to victory. That’s your only chance to beat me, is lay on top of me for 25 minutes!”

  • “Everything Is Just Better”: Kelvin Gastelum Says Camp for Joe Pyfer Fight Has Been Locked In for Months

    “Everything Is Just Better”: Kelvin Gastelum Says Camp for Joe Pyfer Fight Has Been Locked In for Months

    Kelvin Gastelum feels like he is firing on all cylinders leading into his re-booked bout against Joe Pyfer.

    The two were initially supposed to compete against one another in late-March at a UFC Fight Night offering before Pyfer pulled out due to illness.

    Now in the feature fight of the night on the pay-per-view main card, the two middleweight warriors finally throw down in Newark, New Jersey. At the UFC 316 fight week media day, the promotional stalwart fielded several questions from on-site media members ahead of his fight against Pyfer on Saturday night.

    The TUF season 17 champion

    Kelvin Gastelum said:

    “Oh, absolutely. I’ve been prepared. I’ve known since, I think, October—even November—we’ve been prepping, looking into fighting Joe Pyfer. So it’s been quite a… it’s taken up a lot of my time.”

    “We took a little time off—just a week off, went to Disneyland to kind of reset the mind, reset the body. Then we went right back to work and slowly ramped it back up. I think we did it right. I’m peaking just right again, and we only built off the last camp, so everything is just that much better.”

    Kelvin Gastelum, Joe Pyfer
    Images: UFC.com

    Kelvin Gastelum isn’t thrilled with Pyfer re-booking

    Kelvin Gastelum had a sour taste left in his mouth after Joe Pyfer utter some disparaging words about Mexico. This happened in the wake of Pyfer having tot pull out of his UFC on ESPN 64 fight with Gastelum which was set for Q1 2025 in Mexico City. Pyfer fell ill in Mexico and referred to the country as a ‘s**t hole’ which Gastelum admitted left a sour taste in his mouth. At that same UFC 316 pre-fight media day Gastelum described Pyfer’s comments as not right and felt the comments were a little rude.

    The frustrations ran a bit deeper as Gastelum felt like he had the confluence of monetary loss and losing a tactical advantage due to his familiarity with the Mexican altitude. The former interim UFC middleweight title challenger invested time and money into a camp out there to acclimatize and it obviously put a dent in his bank account to not end up stepping into the octagon against Joe Pyfer.

  • UFC 316 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley, Pena vs. Harrison, And More

    UFC 316 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley, Pena vs. Harrison, And More

    UFC 316 is almost here, and we here at MMANews are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on Saturday, June 7. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6PM ET/3PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature a UFC bantamweight championship rematch between current champion Merab Dvalishvili and former champion Sean O’Malley.

    In the co-main event, Julianna Pena makes her first defense in her second reign as UFC women’s bantamweight champion, taking on former two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion Kayla Harrison.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Kelvin Gastelum facing Joe Pyfer, former Bellator champion Patchy Mix making his Octagon debut against Mario Bautista and Vicente Luque going toe-to-toe with Kevin Holland.

    UFC 316: Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley 2 Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 316 as of June 6 at 8:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Bantamweight Championship: Merab Dvalishvili (-310) vs. Sean O’Malley (+250)
    • Women’s Bantamweight Championship: Julianna Pena (+455) vs. Kayla Harrison (-625)
    • Middleweight: Kelvin Gastelum (+295) vs. Joe Pyfer (-375)
    • Bantamweight: Mario Bautista (+150) vs. Patchy Mix (-180)
    • Welterweight: Vicente Luque (+180) vs. Kevin Holland (-218)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Flyweight: Bruno Gustavo da Silva (+500) vs. Joshua Van (-700)
    • Light Heavyweight: Azamat Murzakanov (-600) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (+440)
    • Heavyweight: Serghei Spivac (-155) vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta (+130)
    • Welterweight: Khaos Williams (-198) vs. Andreas Gustafsson (+164)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane da Silva (+350) vs. Wang Cong (-455)
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih (+400) vs. Yoo Joo-sang (-535)
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld (-470) vs. Yanal Ashmouz (+360)
    • Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos (-170) vs. Mark Choinski (+142)
  • Watch Merab Dvalishvili, Sean O’Malley Face Off At UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    Watch Merab Dvalishvili, Sean O’Malley Face Off At UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    We’re about 24 hours away from UFC 316, and MMANews is here to bring you the video from the ceremonial weigh-ins for the card!

    UFC 316 takes place on June 7 from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

    The main event will see a rematch for the UFC bantamweight championship, as this time it’s Merab Dvalishvili defending the title against Sean O’Malley. Dvalishvili won the championship by defeating O’Malley in the main event of Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306) in September and defended the title against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311. The UFC women’s bantamweight gold will also be at stake in the co-main event, as defending two-time champion Julianna Pena faces the challenge of former two-time PFL champion Kayla Harrison.

    The rest of the main card will also see Kelvin Gastelum taking on Joe Pyfer, former Bellator champion Patchy Mix facing Mario Bautista and Kevin Holland going toe-to-toe with Vicente Luque.

    Only Ariane da Silva missed weight – coming in six pounds over the limit – but all fights are in tact and are a go for tomorrow night!

    The ceremonial weigh-ins present the last opportunity for opponents to face off before they meet inside the Octagon. Check them out below via the UFC’s official YouTube channel!

    UFC 316 Ceremonial Weigh-In Video

  • Sean O’Malley Promises KO: “Come Sunday, No One’s Gonna Care About Merab Dvalishvili ”

    Sean O’Malley Promises KO: “Come Sunday, No One’s Gonna Care About Merab Dvalishvili ”

    Sean O’Malley is back in the UFC spotlight, and he’s not just promising fireworks, he’s practically guaranteeing them. With his trademark bravado, O’Malley has declared that after UFC 316, “no one’s gonna care about Merab Dvalishvili,” at the recent UFC pre-fight press conference. It’s a bold claim, but if anyone’s got the receipts to back up knockout talk, it’s “Sugar” Sean.

    Knockout Machine Sean O’Malley

    Let’s get everyone up to speed. Sean O’Malley’s UFC run has been a highlight reel of stoppages. He’s racked up 12 KO/TKO wins in his pro career, with some of the most memorable coming against big names like Aljamain Sterling (TKO, UFC 292), Raulian Paiva (TKO, UFC 269), Kris Moutinho (TKO, UFC 264), Thomas Almeida (KO, UFC 260), Eddie Wineland (KO, UFC 250), and Jose Alberto Quiñónez (TKO, UFC 248). His style? Precision, timing, and a knack for making opponents look like they’re auditioning for a nap.

    He explained:

    “I truly believe I’m going to knock Merab out. Come Sunday, no one’s going to give a [expletive] about Merab, and that’s just it. Keep talking and you’re going to get more humble. I’m making people humble, and you will see June 7.”

    The US-born Sean O’Malley’s knockout of Sterling was especially notable, he needed less than a minute of the second round to claim the bantamweight belt, cementing his place as one of the division’s most dangerous finishers. But the sugar rush hit a speed bump last September at UFC 306. Merab Dvalishvili, the relentless machine from Georgia, outwrestled O’Malley over five rounds to snatch the bantamweight crown by unanimous decision. Since then, Dvalishvili has defended the title once, while O’Malley has been plotting his return—promising he’s coming in “70 percent better” for the rematch.

    Now, the stakes at UFC 316 couldn’t be higher. O’Malley is the underdog (+220 to +240), looking to reclaim the belt and restore his knockout mystique. Dvalishvili, riding a 12-fight win streak, is favored to grind out another win with his relentless wrestling. But O’Malley’s camp insists he’s healthier and sharper than ever, and if his fists find the target, the belt could flip in an instant. Will Dvalishvili’s wrestling smother the “Sugar” show again, or will O’Malley’s right hand make everyone forget about Merab, just as he promised?

    Merab Dvalishvili proposes a rematch with Sean O'Malley
    Image: @ufc/X