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  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Steve Garcia TKO’s David Onama

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Steve Garcia TKO’s David Onama

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    In the main event, featherweights Steve Garcia and David Onama faced off. While in the co-main event, Waldo Cortes-Acosta met Ante Delija in a heavyweight bout.

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Featherweight Bout: Steve Garcia def. David Onama via TKO: R1, 3.34
    • Heavyweight Bout: Waldo Cortes-Acosta def. Ante Delija via KO: R1, 3.59
    • Welterweight Bout: Jeremiah Wells def. Themba Gorimbo via unanimous decision (29-28×3)
    • Featherweight Bout: Yadier del Valle def. Isaac Dulgarian via submission: R1, 3.41
    • Welterweight Bout: Charles Radtke def. Daniel Frunza via submission: R3, 4.29
    • Catchweight Bout (130 lbs): Allan Nascimento def. Cody Durden via submission: R2, 3.13

    Preliminary Card

    • Light Heavyweight Bout: Billy Elekana def. Kevin Christian via submission: R1, 3.33
    • Bantamweight Bout: Timmy Cuamba def. ChangHo Lee via unanimous decision (29-28×3)
    • Middleweight Bout: Donte Johnson def. Sedriques Dumas via submission: R2, 1.25
    • Bantamweight Bout: Norma Dumont def. Ketlen Vieira via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
    • Strawweight Bout: Alice Ardelean def. Montserrat Conejo via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Welterweight Bout: Seokhyeon Ko def. Phil Rowe via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 30-26)
    • Strawweight Bout: Talita Alencar def. Arianne Carnelossi via submission: R3, 4:36

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Talita Alencar def. Arianne Carnelossi

    Donte Johnson def. Sedriques Dumas

    Billy Elekana def. Kevin Christian

    Main Card Highlights

    Allan Nascimento def. Cody Durden

    Allan Nascimento got it done in round two.

    Charles Radtke def. Daniel Frunza

    Charles Radtke earned victory with a rear-naked choke in round three.

    Yadier del Valle def. Isaac Dulgarian

    Yadier del Valle got it done in the first round.

    https://twitter.com/espnmma/status/1984776266965205443

    Jeremiah Wells def. Themba Gorimbo

    Jeremiah Wells earned a unanimous decision win.

    Waldo Cortes-Acosta def. Ante Delija

    In the co-main event, Waldo Cortes-Acosta overcame an eye poke to KO Ante Delija in the first round.

    Steve Garcia def. David Onama

    In the main event, Steve Garcia earned a TKO in the first round.

  • UFC Vegas 110 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Steve Garcia vs. David Onama Card

    UFC Vegas 110 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Steve Garcia vs. David Onama Card

    UFC Vegas 110 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 UFC APEX in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday, November 1. The main card portion of the event will start at 7PM ET/4PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 4PM ET/1PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature Steve Garcia facing David Onama in a battle of rising featherweights.

    In the co-main event, Waldo Cortes-Acosta looks to rebound from watching a winning streak snapped, as he meets former PFL heavyweight champion Ante Delija.

    The main card will also feature Jeremiah Wells vs. Themba Gorimbo, Isaac Dulgarian vs. Yadier del Valle, Charles Radtke vs. Daniel Frunza, and Allan Nascimento vs. Cody Durden.

    UFC Vegas 110: Steve Garcia vs. David Onama Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC Vegas 110 as of November 1 (Fight day) at 12:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Featherweight: Steve Garcia (-130) vs. David Onama (+110)
    • Heavyweight: Waldo Cortes-Acosta (+105) vs. Ante Delija (-125)
    • Welterweight: Jeremiah Wells (+124) vs. Themba Gorimbo (-148)
    • Featherweight: Isaac Dulgarian (-265) vs. Yadier del Valle (+215)
    • Welterweight: Charles Radtke (-175) vs. Daniel Frunza (+145)
    • Flyweight: Allan Nascimento (-325) vs. Cody Durden (+260)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Light Heavyweight: Billy Elekana (-245) vs. Kevin Christian (+200)
    • Bantamweight: Timothy Cuamba (-108) vs. Lee Chang-ho (-112)
    • Middleweight: Donte Johnson (-345) vs. Sedriques Dumas (+275)
    • Women’s Bantamweight: Ketlen Vieira (+142) vs. Norma Dumont (-170)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Alice Ardelean (-325) vs. Montserrat Ruiz (+260)
    • Welterweight: Phillip Rowe (+154) vs. Ko Seok-hyun (-185)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Talita Alencar (-205) vs. Ariane Carnelossi (+170)
  • Exclusive | “Punches, Kicks, Knees, Elbows”: Samuel Bark Ready to Display Muay Thai at Oktagon 79

    Exclusive | “Punches, Kicks, Knees, Elbows”: Samuel Bark Ready to Display Muay Thai at Oktagon 79

    Swedish MMA fighter Samuel Bark enters his featherweight bout against Mate Sanikidze at Oktagon 79 with clear intentions: a convincing performance that positions him for a title shot while allowing him to showcase the Muay Thai techniques that define his fighting approach.

    Samuel Bark Plans Pressure and Power at Oktagon 79, Eyes Title Shot After Sanikidze Test

    Bark carries a 12-2 record into the contest, sitting at number six in the Oktagon featherweight rankings. The matchup takes place November 1st at Winning Group Arena in Brno, Czech Republic, forming part of the promotion’s milestone 1,000th fight celebration.

    Bark’s fighting background provides context for his competitive approach. The Swedish fighter spent years competing in Thailand’s professional Muay Thai circuit, accumulating over 70 fights before transitioning to MMA. He earned the nickname “Sammon Decker” from his coach Sangtiennoi, who had a trilogy against legendary Dutch striker Ramon Dekker.

    After establishing himself domestically in Sweden through multiple promotions, Bark moved into broader European competition with Cage Warriors and UAE Warriors, where he defeated former UFC fighter Ali Al Qaisi to capture the UAE Warriors featherweight title in May 2024.​

    Following his May 2024 championship victory in Abu Dhabi, Bark returned to action at Allstars Fight Night 10 in June 2025, competing for the AFN belt against Danish fighter Frederik Strauss. The competitive landscape at featherweight in Oktagon remains unsettled, with the champion position currently vacant as of October 2025. Victories against ranked opponents like Sanikidze would solidify Bark’s standing among the division’s elite and strengthen his case for a title fight.​

    On his fighting philosophy against Sanikidze, Bark stated his intent clearly, in an exclusive interview with Tim Wheaton of MMA News, he said:

    “I want to display some Muay Thai, you know how they walk their opponent down with pressure. So like a lot of pressure, a lot of power. Punches, kicks, knees, elbows. I’m not sure. It depends on how much he walks back and runs away, you know.”

    Bark’s professional activity level has been notable throughout his MMA career. Between December 2021 and May 2024, he accumulated 10 professional bouts while working to develop his striking-based approach within the MMA ruleset.

    The Oktagon 79 event itself carries significance beyond this individual featherweight matchup. The show features reigning welterweight champion Ion Surdu defending his title against Andrej Kalašnik in the main event.

    For Bark, victory on November 1st would represent another step toward his stated objectives of securing a title shot within Oktagon. His ability to implement his pressure-based Muay Thai game plan against Sanikidze will determine whether he achieves the statement victory he seeks.

  • Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2 scorecards and headbutt discussed by PFL Dubai victor

    Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2 scorecards and headbutt discussed by PFL Dubai victor

    Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2 had many discussing the judging and refereeing aspects of the contest in the aftermath, with a standout performer from that same PFL Dubai card weighing in.

    Archie Colgan is the referenced mixed martial artist here, and Colgan defeated Jay Jay Wilson by way of a unanimous decision at PFL Dubai on October 3rd in a lightweight bout. 

    When touching on the Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2 fight, and how it seemed like there was a certain level of controversy surrounding the judges’ scorecards. When asked if he has any thoughts on the Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2 scorecards at all, Colgan said [via Bowks Talking Bouts],

    “Not really. I think that, you know, there was a scorecard that said 50-45, meaning that Paul Hughes didn’t win any round.”

    “I don’t see that one. I think he won. In my head, fresh when I was watching the fight right there in front of me, I thought it was like 4-1.”

    “Maybe you could do a 3-2. But I thought Usman won the fight. So yeah, but you know I think the controversy was in somebody saying it was 50-45, that he won no rounds.”

    “Yeah, I disagree with that as well. But I definitely don’t agree with some of the people saying like it was a robbery.”

    “As in you know Usman should have lost. I was like ah no, I thought it was pretty decisive who was winning the fight. But how many rounds you give, like I don’t know.”

    When touching on the instance in the championship clash, where it looked like Usman connected with a headbutt of sorts when a round had ended. Giving his thoughts on that sequence in the bout and commenting on his own curious situation with his appointed referee at PFL Dubai, Colgan stated [via Bowks Talking Bouts],

    “Yeah, I forgot about that. I forgot about that. That was; especially for to [have] no referee intervention between that and being like hey, you know, that was kind of a weird moment.”

    “But I mean that kind of happened all night too. Even in my fight, like me and my opponent kind of got like, in between rounds, second and third round, I think.”

    “Like staring at each other, and the ref shoved me. Like I stumbled backwards.”

    “I was like, “Hey, chill out, man.” So, like, you know, he was on the other spectrum of that where he was doing too much, the other ref didn’t do enough [laughs].”

    “It was just a cluster of emotion” with Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2, says Colgan

    When touching on the different dynamics with assigned referees that can inform how differently his Wilson fight was handled versus how the other assigned ref handled Nurmagomedov vs. Hughes 2, Colgan quipped [via Bowks Talking Bouts],

    “Yeah, I agree. Yeah, I mean, that was a weird situation. I don’t know if it was like; again, I’d have to watch it back and see it.”

    “Because especially if you’re watching it live. It looked more of like a head-to-head. Like you guys are talking s**t to each other, and then like an extra push.”

    “But you know, I assume it was probably more of that than, like just a straight-up headbutt. But I don’t know.”

    “I’d have to see that like on camera because even in person, it looked like it was just a cluster of emotion, really.”

  • UFC Legend: “No one fights for the fighters.” The Commissions and Promoters Have Failed the Athletes

    UFC Legend: “No one fights for the fighters.” The Commissions and Promoters Have Failed the Athletes

    During a recent appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show, UFC veteran Matt Brown delivered a stark assessment of the current state of fighter representation and compensation in mixed martial arts.

    Matt Brown Calls Out Systemic Failure in UFC Fighter Advocacy: No One Fights for Fighters

    Speaking with the passion of someone who has spent 16 years inside the UFC while also learning about the business side of the promotion post-retirement, Brown articulated a fundamental problem plaguing the sport: the complete absence of meaningful advocacy for fighters across every level of combat sports infrastructure.​

    He explained:

    “No one fights for the fighters. The commissions won’t do a single thing for the fighters. That’s literally what their job is for. They’re not there to work for TKO or the UFC. They’re there to work for the fighters. And the politicians have all been bought out. The managers don’t do anything. The media is controlled. There’s no one there for us.”

    Brown’s comments came in the aftermath of his testimony before the California State Athletic Commission regarding the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act, where he stood out among over 90 public commenters for the raw conviction behind his message. The commission voted 6-0 to support the controversial legislation on October 15, 2025, despite overwhelming opposition from MMA fighters and industry observers who viewed the act as a roadmap for applying UFC-style monopolistic practices to boxing.

    The core issue Brown identified extends across multiple institutional failures. He characterized the role of athletic commissions as fundamentally contradictory to their stated purpose. Athletic commissions exist to protect fighters, Brown argued, yet they consistently vote in ways that favor promoters and corporate entities.

    In the case of the Ali Act hearing, the commission’s unanimous support for legislation that MMA fighters believe would harm their sport’s athletes demonstrated this misalignment. Brown stated that commissions “won’t do a single thing for the fighters” despite that being “literally what their job is for” and that they exist “to work for the fighters,” not for TKO or the UFC.

    The financial disparity between the UFC as a multi-billion-dollar enterprise and fighter compensation underscores the urgency of Brown’s advocacy. The UFC generated $1.4 billion in revenue in 2024, surpassing the previous year’s $1.292 billion. Yet fighters receive an estimated 14.5 to 16 percent of total revenue, translating to approximately $200 million distributed among hundreds of athletes competing across the organization.

    This stands in stark contrast to other major sports leagues: the NBA distributes roughly 50 percent of revenue to players, while major league baseball allocates approximately 48 percent. Brown emphasized that despite record-breaking revenues, the UFC’s response involves only minimal increases to discretionary bonuses – amounts he characterized as insignificant relative to the organization’s financial scale.​ He added:

    “Fighting should be about competing and making a living, but the reality is there’s a huge power imbalance. UFC is a multi-billion-dollar business, yet the fighters get 0% of that revenue. They might up the bonuses by 10K or something, but that’s minimal compared to the scale of the business.”

    He contended that politicians involved in regulatory and legislative decisions affecting fighters have been compromised through lobbying and financial influence. This assessment aligns with documented evidence of UFC influence over athletic commissions and regulatory bodies.

    The Nevada State Athletic Commission, which oversees events in the state where the UFC hosts its most significant fights, has historically maintained close relationships with UFC leadership. Lorenzo Fertitta, one of the UFC’s original owners, was appointed to the Nevada commission in 1996, and subsequent UFC executives have maintained strategic relationships with regulatory bodies and political figures.

    Perhaps most cutting was Brown’s assessment of fighter representation structures. He highlighted the failure of managers and agents to advocate on behalf of their clients. According to Brown, attorney Rob Macy, a lawyer working on fighter advocacy initiatives, reached out to multiple managers regarding participation in antitrust litigation, and not a single manager agreed to work with the plaintiffs. This represents a systemic betrayal of fighter interests, as managers’ primary obligation should theoretically be to their clients rather than to their relationship with the promotion.

    Brown suggested that managers consistently prioritize maintaining favorable standing with the UFC over advocating for the fighters they represent, a dynamic that undermines the entire fighter advocacy structure.

    Brown’s frustration ultimately stemmed from a recognition that despite clear evidence of monopolistic market conditions and fighter exploitation, no institutional actor possesses both the power and the motivation to intervene on the fighters’ behalf. The 2024 settlement of the Le v. Zuffa antitrust lawsuit resulted in a $375 million payout to fighters, with Judge Richard Boulware specifically criticizing the UFC’s contract practices and noting the prevalence of class-action waivers that prevented many fighters from participating in the lawsuit.

    Yet even this landmark victory failed to produce structural reforms that would address the underlying power imbalance. The UFC remains the only viable employer for most elite fighters, granting it unilateral control over contract terms, compensation structures, and the ability to suspend or restrict any fighter’s career.

    Photo by Tim Wheaton

    The reality Brown articulated reflects a system where power has concentrated entirely with promoters, where regulatory bodies have become captured by the industries they oversee, where political actors lack adequate incentive to intervene, and where the fighters themselves lack sufficient leverage to enforce their own interests.

    UFC
    Photo By Tim Wheaton
  • Rising UFC Featherweight David Onama Sees Steve Garcia as Gateway to Top 10 Status

    Rising UFC Featherweight David Onama Sees Steve Garcia as Gateway to Top 10 Status

    David Onama enters Saturday’s main event at UFC Fight Night 263 with a clear objective: secure a victory over Steve Garcia and break into the UFC featherweight top 10.

    David Onama Targets Top 10 After Steve Garcia UFC Main Event Win

    Speaking at the pre-fight press conference, Onama articulated how this matchup represents the culmination of his journey and a critical stepping stone toward contention. “A win over Steve Garcia will definitely put me in the top 10 of the division. Getting a win over him, especially in the main event against a tough opponent, will boost me up for sure.”

    The 31-year-old Ugandan fighter’s emphasis on the top 10 positioning shows the significance of this encounter, as both competitors sit just outside that threshold in the UFC rankings heading into November 1st. Garcia, ranked No. 12, carries a six-fight win streak with five of those victories coming by knockout.

    Onama, ranked No. 13, has strung together four consecutive wins, most recently defeating former ranked featherweight Giga Chikadze via unanimous decision in April.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxkCVKlyAjQ

    When asked about his mindset heading into the bout, Onama maintained focus on the immediate task at hand rather than looking ahead. “I’m just focused on Steve Garcia right now. My time will come, like I said. Defeat him, get top 10, but for now, let’s focus on what’s in front of us and then see what’s next.”

    David Onama Credits Factory X for Career Trajectory

    The fighter credits his transformation to Factory X Muay Thai, the Colorado-based camp led by head coach Marc Montoya. When discussing his trajectory, Onama emphasized the collective environment. “The keys to why I’ve been so successful? For sure, it’s the team. I’ve trained at one of the best gyms in the world. Having those people around me, training with them, bettering each other, that’s what it is.”

    Onama trains alongside featherweight contenders Youssef Zalal and Jonathan Martinez, as well as fellow top prospects like Chris Gutierrez.

    The Ugandan fighter first watched Garcia’s career trajectory from a distance before the bout materialized. Onama noted his familiarity with Garcia’s work, particularly his performance against Calvin Kattar in July. “I’ve been watching Steve for a pretty long time, especially since he fought Kattar . When he called me out, I wasn’t surprised because I was actually thinking the same thing, that we could end up fighting in the future.”

    The featherweight division landscape makes this main event particularly consequential. Alexander Volkanovski currently holds the title, while fighters ranked above both Garcia and Onama include Movsar Evloev, Diego Lopes, Yair Rodríguez, Lerone Murphy, Aljamain Sterling, Arnold Allen, and Youssef Zalal. The top 10 represents prestige and also tangible movement toward title contention opportunities.

    Onama characterized the matchup as mutually beneficial for both main event competitors. “It’s a very, very fun matchup between two guys who go for the finish and are exciting fighters.” The fighter’s striking-first approach has defined his recent performances, as he demonstrated against Chikadze by controlling the striking exchanges while maintaining grappling competency. This versatility positions him as a serious threat against Garcia’s knockout-heavy style.

    Victory for either fighter establishes them as a legitimate threat to the established top 10, potentially opening doors to matchups against currently ranked opponents. For Onama specifically, a top 10 finish would align him with his Factory X teammate Zalal, creating a situation where two fighters from the same camp occupy top-15 status.

  • Andrew Tate Named CEO of Misfits Boxing, Set to Face Chase DeMoor in December Title Fight

    Andrew Tate Named CEO of Misfits Boxing, Set to Face Chase DeMoor in December Title Fight

    Misfits Boxing announced a significant leadership change on October 30, 2025, with Andrew Tate taking over as CEO of the influencer boxing promotion. The former athlete will make his professional boxing debut against Misfits heavyweight champion Chase DeMoor on December 20, 2025, at the Coca-Cola Arena in Dubai.

    Andrew Tate CEO of Misfits

    The announcement was made through a promotional video featuring Mams Taylor, co-president of Misfits Boxing, who stated that YouTuber and co-founder KSI has been removed from his CEO position.

    In the announcement video, Tate described his ascension to the role as a planned transition. “Welcome to your new CEO, it wasn’t a hostile takeover, but it was certainly planned, and Mams and I are going to be working together to finally put Misfits where it belongs on the world stage,” he said. “The largest disruptive force in sports entertainment history, so considering that somebody that failed at their obligations to make this organization as big as it should’ve been has been ousted and I’m the new CEO”.

    Tate later explained to Fred Talks Fighting that a tweet posted by KSI three years ago prompted his takeover. “Well, KSI tweeted something that annoyed me about three years ago. So, long story short, I took his company from him,” Tate said, adding that he has never met KSI and hopes he is okay.

    KSI

    KSI responded with fury on social media platform X. “This year people are trying to test me fr. WHAT THE ACTUAL F*** IS GOING ON? This is the dumbest thing I’ve ever seen in my life. Let’s make ANDREW TATE THE CEO OF MISFITS?!? ARE YOU F****** SERIOUS?!?” he wrote. He also criticized Taylor, stating: “Bro has been focused on misfits rather than managing me lol. And you decide to do this s***”.

    Many fans have expressed skepticism about the situation, believing it may be a promotional storyline designed to set up a future fight between KSI and Tate. Multiple social media users described the announcement as a “WWE storyline,” suggesting the conflict is manufactured to generate interest in a potential showdown for the CEO position.

    Misfits Boxing was founded in May 2022 by KSI, Mams Taylor, and boxing promoters Kalle Sauerland and Nisse Sauerland as a partnership with Wasserman Boxing. The promotion organizes events featuring influencers and former combat sports professionals, streaming primarily through DAZN. Since its inception, Misfits has held 22 events, with the most recent featuring former UFC fighters Darren Till and Luke Rockhold.

    Andrew Tate’ Upcoming Boxing Match

    The December 20 bout will mark Tate’s professional boxing debut, as his previous experience has been exclusively in full-contact kickboxing.

    The appointment of Tate as CEO has generated controversy given his ongoing legal issues across multiple countries. He and his brother Tristan face charges in the United Kingdom, Romania, and are under investigation in the United States related to allegations of sexual assault and human trafficking, which both brothers deny.

  • Fabio Wardley Responds to Sports Fans Claiming His Fight Was Stopped Early: “No one gave me a chance.”

    Fabio Wardley Responds to Sports Fans Claiming His Fight Was Stopped Early: “No one gave me a chance.”

    Fabio Wardley recognizes his Joseph Parker win as his biggest moment professionally as an athlete but yet for some, there is still a bit of an asterisk on that moment. Appearing on The Ariel Helwani Show, Wardley discussed several aspects of his win over Parker which saw Wardley cement himself as the new interim WBO heavyweight champion.

    After securing an eleventh round TKO over someone as established as Parker to where a potential fight with Oleksandr Usyk seems well within his grasp, one would think Wardley would purely be celebrating. However there are people out there who have been criticizing the nature of the Parker stoppage as being one that was quite premature.

    After showing his due respect for Fabio Wardley as a fighter, Helwani mentioned he felt the stoppage was quite early but when asking if pundits like himself were being annoying bringing up these thoughts that stoppage was premature in the context of feeling like it was detracting from his win and Wardley said,

    “No, look, thank you. I appreciate it. But no, it doesn’t. It doesn’t upset me. It doesn’t offend me. Everyone’s entitled to their opinion.”

    “That’s no problem for me whatsoever. Again, I just ask that people don’t take away from what actually I achieved on the night because going into that fight, no one even gave me a hope. No one gave me a chance.”

    Fabio Wardley thinks people can say what they want about the stoppage but follow up with due praise

    Fabio Wardley articulated a fairly balanced take where he understands those who felt like the Joseph Parker stoppage came prematurely but also feeling a certain pride in his accomplishment and feeling like that should be acknowledged as such.

    Speaking to Ariel Helwani as he further expounded upon his thoughts from the quote above, Wardley continued,

    “Everyone thought I’d be done for within two, three, four rounds, whichever else. So, it’s fair for everyone to say what they want to say about the stoppage.”

    “but just make sure that’s followed by praising the accomplishment of the achievement. That’s 100% fair.”

  • $1 Million Performance Bonus for UFC Athletes: Former UFC Titleholder Explains Why This Must Happen

    $1 Million Performance Bonus for UFC Athletes: Former UFC Titleholder Explains Why This Must Happen

    UFC needs to offer up bigger financial rewards for exciting fighters, according to a former light heavyweight champion with the promotion.

    This was expressed by Rampage Jackson on a recent episode of the Jaxxon podcast. Jackson as well as TJ Dillashaw and Bobby Green were discussing a lot of the big fallout from the recent UFC 321 show.

    “Imagine how the fights would change if the bonus was a million. Guys would go all out, not just looking to win but looking to entertain, to put on shows that fans remember forever.”

    “It’s about respect for the craft and the risks they take. If the UFC wants to keep the best talent and raise the level of competition, raising the bonuses is the way to do it.”

    “Look, the business side has to catch up with the reality of what these fighters do. They deserve the big bucks.”

    “These bonus payouts could be life-changing, not just for the fighters but for their families. It’s time the UFC steps up and gives them what they deserve.”

    How UFC 321 played into Jackson’s comments above

    UFC 321 resonated with many fans as a bit of an underwhelming affair, even outside of the inauspicious outcome to the Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane main event. A lot of MMA fans do have a certain fixation point on striking-heavy affairs, constituting an exciting fight, which means that the promotion’s alst pay-per-view offering was not seen as a satisfying watch.

    The card actually set the record for most successful takedowns within a singular UFC event, and the Jailton Almeida vs. Alexander Volkov fight seemed to serve as a bit of a microcosm for how many perceived the action from the card.

    Jackson mentioned in the embedded video above that he could see the Ultimate Fighting Championship upping the bonuses, but perhaps to a scale of taking it from 50 K to $100,000. The former UFC light heavyweight titleholder notched multiple performance bonuses during his tenure with the promotion years back.

  • BKFC’s Esteban Rodriguez Hungry for Big Redemptive KO vs. Zac Cavender at 1st BKFC Michigan card

    BKFC’s Esteban Rodriguez Hungry for Big Redemptive KO vs. Zac Cavender at 1st BKFC Michigan card

    This week’s BKFC main event has some redemption related underpinnings as Esteban Rodriguez aims to take out Zac Cavender after Cavender knocked out a long time teammate of Rodriguez’s right in front of him.

    Esteban Rodriguez takes on Zac Cavender at BKFC Fight Night: Michigan on November 1st. Rodriguez appeared on Bare Knuckle Bowker to discuss Cavender stopping training partner and friend Erick Lozano. Zac Cavender secured a brutal first round finish over Lozano at BKFC 74 and when asked if there was any redemptive components associated with getting one back for his teammate/friend, Rodriguez said [via Bare Knuckle Bowker],

    “100%, man. Listen, I was in that corner when that happened. I was cornering [Erick] Lozano. I went to go help him out with that. I was so helpless in that corner right there.”

    “It was like; it’s new to me. You know what I mean, being in somebody’s corner. So it was just a whole different experience. But to see your friend get taken out like that and like me not being able to do anything about it.”

    “I was just like, “Oh, man.” And in a way, I kind of manifested it because then it’s like, “Oh, let me get him, man.” I couldn’t get, you know, coming from where we come from, man.”

    “It’s like, you got to challenge him right there. Oh, you took him out? Now, it’s my turn. How dare you. Like, but it’s just; now like being able to see that. I talked to him in the back. You know what I mean?”

    “Cuz I told him, “You coming for that championship in the 205 division, man, that’s my throne right there.” I was like, “You know, you’re going to have to go through me if you’re going to have to handle those men.””

    “So, we had a little talk in the back and he’s like, “Well, yeah. we’ve seen you on the radar and I definitely know we would put on a hell of a hell of a show, man.””

    “Because he’s been able to put pressure, but he’s never felt a pressure fighter like me before. You know what I mean? So, it’s like when I’m going to be able to get; like since this point forward, I’ve been able to see that, you know, all the competition is coming in the 205 division.”

    “Him getting a knockout like that, you know, especially one of my friends and in front of me. Yeah, I’m like, I got to get [that] back, man.”

    “I got to do something about this. I just can’t let that happen, man. And it’s like it’s just not; I don’t know. Regardless of what it is like just there’s something in me that just can’t let that slide.”

    BKFC throws him to the wolves but Esteban Rodriguez is “still standing, baby”

    When playfully mentioning how this seems like one of those BKFC bouts where you have to make sure you got your drink and your snacks lined up. This because Cavender has back-to-back first round knockouts and Rodriguez has a 3 second KO win in his last outing.

    Responding to that comment referencing this being a ‘don’t blink or you’ll miss it’ kind of outings, Rodriguez stated [via Bare Knuckle Bowker],

    “Back to back to back, bro. I’m telling you, man. These guys, all they say that there’s these fighters that are undefeated and all that. I’ve been thrown to the wolves every single time. They’ve been trying to take me out since the beginning, man, and I’m still standing, baby.”

    “And I’m still going to be standing strong. Once they send their best, man, when they send their best, that’s when they’re going to see me going pulling out the worst. Where it’s just going to be nitty gritty and just taking them out back to back to back to back, baby.”

  • Jon Jones vs. Alex Pereira: “The Fight is Coming in 2026” According to UFC Insider

    Jon Jones vs. Alex Pereira: “The Fight is Coming in 2026” According to UFC Insider

    Jon Jones and Alex Pereira is a fight booking that the two seem quite keen to participate in with a prominent MMA analyst foreseeing that blockbuster bout taking place next year. That individual being referenced is Chael Sonnen who mentioned this during an appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show.

    Touching on the potential of that heavyweight matchup happening and how that plays into the need for clarity with the light heavyweight title picture with Pereira helming over that division, Sonnen said,

    “Pereira and Jones social media talk—the fight is coming in 2026. But Jon Jones is the only fighter not wanting to fight. He took three years off to drink protein shakes, sitting out on suspension.”

    “He jumped back in the pool, can’t decide. If Jon thinks Pereira will sit and do nothing at age 38, it’s not going to solve anything. Jon could call out and fight Pereira in February or March and then do something else.”

    “But instead, Pereira is pointing at heavyweight, and we need to listen to that. If Pereira stays at heavyweight, we need to vacate the belt and move on.”

    Jon Jones takes shot at Tom Aspinall following UFC 321 eye poke

    Jon Jones couldn’t resist getting in a dig at UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall who was poked in the eyes during his recent title defense with Ciryl Gane which led to an anticlimactic no contest at UFC 321. The Jones-Aspinall title unification discourse domianted the media cycle for quite a while with the former eventually retiring and vacating the belt which led then-interim champion Aspinall to become the undisputed champion outright.

    In the wake of the inauspicious ending to the Abu Dhabi-based heavyweight title fight, Jones made reference to the main event outcome when he changed his social media picture of a duck to a duck with an eye patch over it. ‘Bones’ also shared a post that someone put up regaridng the Aspinall vs. Gane clash comparing the time duration where Jones finished Gane, contrasted with how long the Aspinall vs. Gane fight was. Jones would impose text over that post which said ‘never forget who the GOAT is.’

    Jones defeated Gane in a bit over two minutes to claim the then-vacant heavyweight strap in 2023 while Gane-Aspinall was called off a bit over four and a half minutes in.

  • Carlos Ulberg Throws Down The Gauntlet: Alex Pereira Is Next

    Carlos Ulberg Throws Down The Gauntlet: Alex Pereira Is Next

    Carlos Ulberg is riding high after knocking out a former multi time UFC light heavyweight title challenger and feels confident that the 205 pound kingpin Alex Pereira will be next. Ulberg finished Dominick Reyes at UFC Perth and the title challenger queue in that division runs deep with other standouts like Jiri Prochazka close to that opportunity. During an interview with MMA Junkie, Ulberg touched upon his desire to not just fight for the title but with a keenness on it being versus ‘Poatan’.

    Pereira has been putting out messaging lately indicating that he has interest in moving up to heavyweight for a mega fight against Jon Jones at the UFC White House card in June 2026. With the current UFC culture of champions having to vacate their belts if they choose to pursue opportunities at higher weights, this would more than likely lead to Pereira relinquishing the 205 pound strap to seek a fight with ‘Bones’ at heavyweight next Summer.

    Touching on what he wants next and addressing some of the moving parts of this present landscape in his weight division, Ulberg said,

    “You know what? I’d love to fight Alex. I think that’s the big fight. That’s the money fight. That’s an entertaining fight. That’s what the fans would love to see and watch.”

    “I’d hope that he’d stick around the light heavyweight division so I could fight Pereira. That would be amazing. That’d be the fight that I’ve always wanted—to fight Alex.”

    “And you beat someone like Alex, that just means you’re at that top, that top level. So, um… this is putting all the other guys out of the picture, but I want Alex.”

    Carlos Ulberg thinks he has a greater case for an Alex Pereira fight than Jiri Prochazka

    Carlos Ulberg expressly mentioned Alex Pereira as being the money fight in his division and he seems to be holding out some hope that Pereira may want to defend his light heavyweight title at least once during this new reign before seeking heavyweight aspirations thereafter. This was mentioned in the same MMA Junkie interview above with Ulberg making his case for a Pereira fight and throwing cold water on Jiri Prochazka’s campaign.

    Carlos Ulberg’s logic is that Jiri Prochazka is already 0-2 versus Pereira and that it is Ulberg’s time for a championship opportunity. The next few months will surely be quite an intriguing time for the UFC’s light heavyweight division and fans will be certainly locked in to see how all of this plays out.

  • UFC Rankings Report: Mackenzie Dern Enters Women’s Pound-For-Pound Rankings After UFC 321 Title Win

    UFC Rankings Report: Mackenzie Dern Enters Women’s Pound-For-Pound Rankings After UFC 321 Title Win

    The latest action on offer inside the Octagon has seen some climb the UFC rankings toward contention and others fall away.

    And in the aftermath of Saturday’s UFC 321, MMA News has you covered with this week’s complete updates.

    Men’s Pound-For-Pound: No changes.

    Women’s Pound-for-Pound: Following her title win at UFC 321, Mackenzie Dern enters the list at No. 6. The woman she beat, Virna Jandiroba, falls two spots to No. 11.

    Ketlen Vieira joins the list at No. 15, knocking Amanda Lemos out of the pound-for-pound rankings.

    Additionally, Julianna Pena drops two spots to No. 8 and Erin Blanchfield drops one spot to No. 9. Tatiana Suarez, Rose Namajunas, and Yan Xiaonan each fall one spot to No. 12, 13, and 14, respectively.

    Women’s Strawweight: With her title win at UFC 321, Mackenzie Dern moves into the champion slot, while Virna Jandiroba drops from No. 1 to No. 3. Zhang Weili and Tatiana Suarez each fall one spot to No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, while Yan Xiaonan and Amanda Lemos each fall one spot to No. 4 and No. 5, respectively.

    Women’s Flyweight: No changes.

    Women’s Bantamweight: No changes.

    Flyweight: No changes.

    Bantamweight: Following his win at UFC 321, Umar Nurmagomedov moves up two spots to the No. 1 contender position, moving down Sean O’Malley and Petr Yan one spot each to, respectively. No. 2 and No. 3. Despite his loss, Mario Bautista remains at No. 9.

    Featherweight: No changes.

    Lightweight: No changes.

    Welterweight: No changes.

    Middleweight: No changes.

    Light Heavyweight: Following his win at UFC 321, Azamat Murzakanov moves up three spots to No. 7, swapping places with the man he beat, Aleksandar Rakic (now No. 10).

    Additionally, Khalil Rountree Jr. moves up one spot to No. 4, swapping places with Jan Blachowicz (now No. 5).

    Heavyweight: Following his win at UFC 321, Valter Walker moves up one spot to No. 14, swapping places with Tallison Teixeira (now No. 15).

    Additionally, Shamil Gaziev moves up one spot to No. 11, swapping places with Tai Tuivasa (now No. 12).

    You can view the full updated UFC rankings here.

  • Mackenzie Dern Knows the Hard Part is Just Beginning: “It’s even harder to stay at the top”

    Mackenzie Dern Knows the Hard Part is Just Beginning: “It’s even harder to stay at the top”

    Mackenzie Dern is now at the top of the mountain in the UFC but the newly minted titleholder is prepared for the true grind that now awaits her. This was discussed by the 115 pound champion in the UFC 321 post-fight press conference following her win. Dern bested Virna Jandiroba for the second time to claim the vacant strawweight belt in the Abu Dhabi-based co-main event bout.

    It was massive moment for the decorated jiu jitsu player who holds huge championship distinctions in multiple martial arts disciplines now. As she touched on the journey to get here while also realizing that things will get that much more arduous on the road ahead, with video footage provided from MMA Junkie, Dern said,

    “They say it’s hard to get the belt but it’s even harder to stay at the top and defend it. The hard part starts now, but I’m excited for whoever comes next. I think facing new challengers is going to make me evolve so much as a fighter.”

    “Grapplers, strikers, all these people studying me—I have to redo myself every single fight so they can never find the right way to beat me.”​

    Mackenzie Dern mentions fighter she is intrigued to defend her title against

    Mackenzie Dern had not even left the Etihad Arena yet before expressing thoughts on who she thinks her first title defense will be against. Dern prefaced her comments, at the same UFC 321 post-fight press conference embedded above, by saying that she was not sure how much say she gets as the champion now but is eying former champions and former title challengers alike.

    One of these fighters is Tatiana Suarez with Dern indicating she would be intrigued about testing her grappling against someone like Suarez who has such a strong wrestling pedigree.

    Zhang Weili was also mentioned by Dern with a bit of an asterisk saying the new strawweight champion is unsure if the former titleholder in that weight class will return. Weili caused the belt to be vacated in the first place as she moves up in an attempt to claim Valentina Shevchenko’s flyweight belt at UFC 322 next month.

  • Dana White Targets Tom Aspinall in Controversial UFC 321 Ending: “Didn’t want to continue”

    Dana White Targets Tom Aspinall in Controversial UFC 321 Ending: “Didn’t want to continue”

    Dana White seemed uncertain about some aspects regarding how Tom Aspinall’s UFC 321 played out and indicated as such during a presser in the wake of the October 25th fight playing out. Aspinall was poked in the eye by former UFC interim champion Ciryl Gane with the UFC heavyweight championship fight being declared a no contest after the reigning titleholder Aspinall indicated he could not see.

    At the post-fight press conference following the Abu Dhabi-based pay-per-view over the weekend, White did mention how there would likely be a fair bit more intrigue in a rematch as Ciryl Gane entered a pretty noticable underdog. But the French fighter’s effort was more pronounced than many thought and in a way that belied the perceptions of oddsmakers heading in. Touching on the anticlimactic nature of the main event fight and making comments on the current UFC heavyweight champion, White said,

    “He had Tom bloodied up and Tom didn’t want to continue in the fight. Only Tom knows what happened. Could he see, couldn’t he see, could he continue? Only he knows that.”

    Dana White calls re-booking Aspinall vs. Gane as a “total pain in the a**”

    While Dana White mentioned there would be more interest in an Aspinall vs. Gane sequel clash he also wasn’t shy in hiding that it was a frustrating situation for him. Within the same post-fight press conference embedded above, Dana White touched upon his thoughts on the first fight and how he perceives this rematch for the heavyweight title between Aspinall and Gane, White stated [via MMA Mania],

    “I feel the way everybody feels — great showing, shitty ending. After the Jon Jones fight, a lot of people wrote Ciryl Gane off, but he looked damn good tonight.”

    “It looked like we were in for a few rounds, and it was going to be a good fight… I can’t make people fight. You definitely can’t make somebody continue if they feel they’ve been injured.”

    “Yeah. Total pain in the a**, but yes. What makes sense is to do the rematch. Anything can happen, but right here, right now — and being honest, which I never do when talking about fights — the rematch makes sense.”

    “They’re both in shape, other than whatever’s wrong with his eye. Both guys are not injured. [We’ll make it happen] as soon as possible.”

  • What’s Next After UFC 321? Full Confirmed UFC 322 Main Card For New York On November 15

    What’s Next After UFC 321? Full Confirmed UFC 322 Main Card For New York On November 15

    UFC 321 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 322 in New York City.

    The promotion was in Abu Dhabi last week, where the Etihad Arena played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its tenth numbered event of the year. Of note was a no contest between Tom Aspinall and Ciryl Gane, a headline win for Mackenzie Dern, as well as important victories for Umar Nurmagomedov, Alexander Volkov, and Azamat Murzakanov.

    While the aftermath of the October 25 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the heavyweight and women’s strawweight championship title pictures to the welterweight and women’s flyweight championship conversations.

    At UFC 322, which takes place at Madison Square Garden in New York City, on November 15, Jack Della Maddalena will defend the UFC welterweight championship against Islam Makhachev.

    This will be the first defense attempt for Jack Della Maddalena after capturing the UFC welterweight championship with a win over Belal Muhammad at UFC 315 in May. JDM is 18-2, having not tasted defeat since dropping his first two professional MMA bouts in 2016. Prior to the win over Muhammad, JDM had scored a split decision over Kevin Holland and a knockout of Gilbert Burns.

    This will mark Makhachev’s first Octagon bout at 170. He moved up to the welterweight division after vacating the lightweight championship earlier this year. Makhachev, who is 27-1 in his career, defeated Charles Oliveira at UFC 280 to become 155-pound champion and retained the gold against Alexander Volkanovski (twice), Dustin Poirier, and Renato Moicano — setting a new UFC record for most consecutive lightweight title defenses.

    Stakes will also be high in the co-main event, as Valentina Shevchenko defends the UFC women’s flyweight championship against Weili Zhang in a long-awaited superfight. Shevchenko defended the title at UFC 315, defeating Manon Fiorot in a competitive outing. It was the first defense of her second reign as flyweight champion, which began after winning a trilogy bout with Alexa Grasso at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306. Zhang moves up to flyweight after becoming a two-time UFC women’s strawweight champion. Zhang’s second reign saw her successfully defend against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    Brady, Nickal, Edwards Set The Stage For Welterweight Title Headliner At UFC 322

    Before Della Maddalena and Shevchenko make their way out to defend their titles, several names will look to make their own statements on the main card for UFC 322.

    This includes Sean Brady, who will be doing battle with Michael Morales. Brady has won three straight since suffering the first loss of his career against Belal Muhammad. Brady most recently fought at UFC London, submitting former champion Leon Edwards. The rising Morales is 18-0 as a pro, including a 6-0 Octagon record. Morales enters off a pair of first-round finishes against Neil Magny and Gilbert Burns.

    Bo Nickal will also be featured on this card, as he takes on Rodolfo Vieira. This marks Nickal’s first fight since getting stopped by Reinier de Ridder at UFC Des Moines in May — the first loss of Nickal’s MMA career. The former NCAA champion had scored wins over Jamie Pickett, Val Woodburn, Cody Brundage, and Paul Craig prior to the loss. Vieira, a former ADCC and submission grappling world champion, has won three of his last four, entering this fight off a decision over Tresean Gore in August.

    The main card is scheduled to open with former welterweight king Leon Edwards taking on Carlos Prates. Edwards lost the championship to Belal Muhammad at UFC 304 and then was submitted by Sean Brady at UFC London, marking the first time in his career he enters a fight off consecutive losses. Prates enters this fight off a highlight knockout of Geoff Neal at UFC 319 in August.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of Beneil Dariush, Benoit Saint-Denis, Roman Kopylov, Gregory Rodrigues, Erin Blanchfield, and Angela Hill, all of whom are expected to be featured players on the event’s preliminary card.

    See below for the UFC 322 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Weili Zhang
    • Welterweight: Sean Brady vs. Michael Morales
    • Middleweight: Bo Nickal vs. Rodolfo Vieira
    • Welterweight: Leon Edwards vs. Carlos Prates

    Preliminary Card (Order TBA):

    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Benoit Saint-Denis
    • Middleweight: Roman Kopylov vs. Gregory Rodrigues
    • Women’s Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield vs. Tracy Cortez
    • Bantamweight: Malcolm Wellmaker vs. Cody Haddon
    • Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus vs. Gerald Meerschaert
    • Women’s Strawweight: Angela Hill vs. Fatima Kline
    • Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev vs. Eric McConico
  • Tom Aspinall’s Father Probably Should Not Have Mentioned The Move to Boxing, According to Former Champ

    Tom Aspinall’s Father Probably Should Not Have Mentioned The Move to Boxing, According to Former Champ

    Tom Aspinall’s dad intimating that his son wanted to make a future move to the boxing world heading into his latest MMA fight was a bit of a misstep according to a former UFC titleholder. This was expressed on the Pound 4 Pound podcast in the wake of UFC 321 with Aspinall’s UFC heavyweight tile defense ending in a no contest after an errant eye poke from Ciryl Gane caused the bout to be waved off in the opening stanza.

    Henry Cejudo and Kamaru Usman were discussing some of the big fallout from the Abu Dhabi-based pay-per-view from over the weekend with the hosts touching upon an intriguing tid bit that was revealed through fight week by Andy Aspinall. Speaking to RMC Sport Combat, Tom’s father Andy mentioned that the UFC heavyweight champion was coming to the end of his contract and the elder Aspinall was more keen on his son looking for opportunities in the sweet science versus re-signing with the UFC right away.

    Spotlighting that situation with Andy Aspinall and the potential residual effects of those comments, Usman said,

    “His dad was saying about him transferring over to boxing… There’s some things that you probably shouldn’t say publicly, but obviously—dads will be dads—and they’re going to say whatever it is that they want to say.”

    “And his dad was saying, yeah, they don’t—I don’t think they want to resign with the UFC. So that means… he was on a three-fight contract with the UFC to renegotiate. Now he’s down to two because of this fight.”​

    How Tom Aspinall’s lone pro boxing bout went

    Tom Aspinall has previously fought under Queensberry Rules and his closeness with the Fury family benefitted his preparations heading into his lone showdown in the big gloves. It was a quick night of work for the hulking heavyweight as Aspinall would dispatch of Tamas Bajzath with a first round knockout in June 2017.

    The boxing bout mirrored many of Aspinall’s MMA fights as he finished Bajzath in less than ninety seconds after dropping him to the canvas three times before eventually securing the win.

  • Dana White Responds to Eye Poke Controversy: “Who gives a s–.” Following Main Event Cancellation

    UFC President Dana White delivered a controversial response to the eye poke incident that ended UFC 321’s main event, telling reporters “Who gives a s–? What are you going to do?” when asked about the organization’s longstanding eye poke problem.

    ​The highly anticipated heavyweight title defense between champion Tom Aspinall and challenger Ciryl Gane came to an abrupt halt at 4:35 of the first round when Gane accidentally poked both of Aspinall’s eyes. Unable to see properly after the incident, Aspinall could not continue, leading referee Jason Herzog to declare the bout a no-contest.

    ​”I just got poked knuckle deep in the eyeball. What am I supposed to do about it? I can’t see,” Aspinall said in the octagon while addressing the booing crowd. The champion was immediately taken to the hospital following the incident.

    ​Dana White’s Dismissive Response Sparks Controversy

    During the post-fight press conference, White appeared unsympathetic to both the situation and calls for reform. When pressed about potential solutions to prevent eye pokes, he responded: “Who the f– knows? Who gives a s–? What are you going to do? Just happens. Yeah. I mean, no matter what you do with the glove, I mean, they’re going to happen.”

    ​White’s comments drew criticism from fans and media members who viewed his response as dismissive of fighter safety concerns. The UFC president also made controversial remarks suggesting Aspinall may have chosen not to continue, stating “Only Tom knows what happened. Could he see? Couldn’t he see? Could he continue? Only he knows that.”

    ​The Persistent UFC Eye Poke Problem

    Eye pokes have plagued the UFC for years, with research showing the organization has a significantly higher rate of incidents compared to other promotions. A 2022 study by the Association of Ringside Physicians found the UFC’s eye poke rate was 23 incidents in 233 bouts, translating to one eye poke per ten fights. This rate was dramatically higher than Bellator’s rate of 2 incidents in 87 bouts, or one in every 44 fights.

    ​The UFC has had seven fights end in a no-contest due to eye pokes since 2005. Between 2001 and 2020, Nevada State Athletic Commission data showed 369 eye injuries occurred across 2,208 professional MMA fights, with 73 percent of events reporting at least one eye injury.

    ​Notable fighters like Jon Jones have faced repeated accusations of eye poking throughout their careers. Analysis shows Jones has committed at least 33 genuine eye pokes across his UFC career, with 58 instances of fingers in opponents’ eyes. Despite this history, Jones has never received a point deduction specifically for eye pokes.​

    UFC
    Photo By Tim Wheaton

    ​Failed Solutions and Glove Design Issues

    The current UFC glove design has been identified as a contributing factor to the eye poke problem. The gloves naturally extend fighters’ fingers outward, increasing the likelihood of accidental contact with opponents’ eyes.

    ​MMA coach Trevor Wittman developed alternative glove designs through his ONX Sports company that curve fighters’ fingers inward to promote a natural fist position, potentially reducing eye poke incidents. The gloves received widespread praise from fighters and commentators like Joe Rogan, who called them “absolutely superior.”

    ​However, negotiations between Wittman and the UFC broke down when the organization demanded exclusive ownership of the patent. Wittman refused to sell the rights to his design, creating an impasse that has prevented implementation of the improved gloves.

    In 2024 the uFC introduced a new glove design to help lower eye pokes in the sport. However, the organization later threw away the gloves and reverted to the original design. The reasons are still unclear.

    ​Impact on Fighter Safety and Careers

    Eye poke incidents can have severe consequences for fighters. Research shows 57 fighters who sustained eye injuries were recommended for further ophthalmology clearance, with 43 receiving no-contact recommendations ranging from three to five weeks. More serious injuries like retinal damage require longer recovery periods.

    ​In the UFC 321 incident, Aspinall suffered what he described as being “poked knuckle deep” in both eyes. Medical examination revealed both eyes were affected, with his right eye bearing the worst damage. The champion shared images on social media showing the extent of the injury aftermath.

    ​White confirmed that Aspinall and Gane will have an immediate rematch, despite the controversial ending. “Total pain in the a** but yeah,” White said regarding rebooking the fight. The rematch announcement came unusually quickly, as White typically avoids booking fights at post-event press conferences.

  • 6 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC 321: Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane

    6 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC 321: Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane

    The eyes of the combat world were locked in on Abu Dhabi, as UFC 321 and its two title fights went down at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi.

    It was this year’s edition of the UFC’s annual excursion to Abu Dhabi for a late October pay-per-view (albeit with the original one in 2019 happening in September). The UFC was also at the Etihad Arena earlier this year for a Fight Night card that was headlined by Reinier de Ridder defeating Robert Whittaker.

    The main event saw Tom Aspinall defend the UFC heavyweight championship against Ciryl Gane. Aspinall defeated Sergei Pavlovich at UFC 295 to become interim heavyweight champion, and he retained the interim gold against Curtis Blaydes at UFC 304. Aspinall was then promoted to undisputed champion following Jon Jones’ brief retirement in June. Gane, a former interim champion and two-time former title challenger, earned this title shot off a controversial decision over Alexander Volkov at UFC 310.

    The co-main event saw the vacant UFC women’s strawweight title on the line as Virna Jandiroba faced Mackenzie Dern. This was a rematch from UFC 256, where Dern earned a decision win over Jandiroba. Since then, Jandiroba had won six of seven, including five in a row, while Dern entered this fight with three wins in her last five fights.

    Who delivered in Abu Dhabi? Who didn’t? Let’s find out as we go through the hits and misses of UFC 321!

    Miss: Beastboy Far From A Beast

    I know we in the MMA community are entertained by Chris Barnett, and he’s had his victories in the Octagon. But when the heavyweight division is as weak as it is in the UFC, watching a performance like Barnett delivered on this card is not only frustrating; it’s de-motivating.

    Abdelwahab completely dominated this fight, landing multiple takedowns and smothering Barnett with his wrestling. In fact, the best offense that Barnett committed in this fight was his unintentional mooning of the crowd and home audience.

    Barnett has lost three of his last four and is now 2-4 in the UFC. If he gets another opportunity somehow after that, his Octagon tenure is for sure going to be at stake.

    Hit: Another Fight, Another Ankle For Valter Walker

    In a sky full of stormy clouds that is the heavyweight division of the UFC, Valter Walker presents a ray of sunshine. In fact, he was by far the best heavyweight performer of the night, spoiling the UFC debut of Louie Sutherland.

    It only took Walker about a minute to score a takedown on Sutherland. About 30 seconds later, and Walker had secured another first-round heel hook submission win. He becomes the first UFC fighter to have four consecutive victories in such a fashion, and he’s only the second UFC fighter with four heel hook victories in the Octagon period.

    Walker may be toward the lower end of the UFC’s heavyweight rankings, but looking around the division, he might present the biggest threat to Tom Aspinall that isn’t named Ciryl Gane.

    Hit: L’udovit Klein And Mateusz Rebecki Go To War

    L’udovit Klein and Mateusz Rebecki got their flowers for the show they put on at UFC 321, earning the event’s Fight of the Night honors. Klein, however, was the one who came away with his hand raised in a majority decision victory.

    Rebecki tried to bring his power from the get-go, showing some strong striking. But it was Klein who appeared to be in control for the first two rounds, displaying good footwork while being able to land on Rebecki, busting him open at one point. Klein would get busted up himself, however, as Rebecki pressured Klein during the third round. Klein would end up hurting his ankle, and Rebecki would take the fight to the ground, delivering some hard-hitting ground shots that could have ended the fight at any moment.

    One judge scored the bout a draw, but Klein got the nod on the other two cards. Nevertheless, it was a fight that shined the brightest on this day, and both men deserved to take a bow.

    Hit: Quillan Salkilld Sends A Scary KO

    Quillan Salkilld left the entire MMA community’s jaws on the floor with the way he put away Nasrat Haqparast.

    Haqparast attempted to take charge early, coming forward with his left hand while stopping Salkilld’s takedown attempts. But all it took was one perfectly-time head kick early in the first round to drop Haqparast out cold, twitching on the canvas and leaving him unconscious for several minutes.

    Salkilld is now 3-0 in his UFC debut year, and his track record also includes a 19-second finish in his Octagon debut. Salkilld may be one of, if not the, top Octagon rookies for 2025. Here’s hoping his 2026 continues his upward momentum and trajectory.

    Hit: Azamat Murzakanov Is For Real

    One concern people had about Azamat Murzakanov entering his UFC 321 bout with Aleksandar Rakic was that Rakic last three losses had all come against people who had been or went on to become UFC light heavyweight champion. Murzakanov had not faced competition like that before. But like what he did to Rakic, Murzakanov put those concerns to bed.

    Rakic brought pressure early, courtesy of his striking and a pair of takedown attempts. Murzakanov was able to fend off those takedowns, however, before connecting on a right hand that put Rakic away.

    Murzakanov, now 16-0, is surely going to find himself just outside the top five in the UFC’s light heavyweight division. And one of those names in the top five should surely be who Murzakanov faces next.

    Miss: Eliminate The Heavyweight Title Eliminator?

    The question seemed to be who among Alexander Volkov and Jailton Almeida was going to be next in line for the UFC heavyweight championship. Now the questions seem to be “Why bother?” and “Was this all for nothing?”

    Takedowns and grappling was the gameplan for Almeida, and while he dominated with that in the second round. The first round, however, saw Volkov reverse the position and land strong strikes. The striking also was present in the third round especially, and two of the judges felt Volkov’s strikes were more effective than Almeida’s grappling, giving him the win.

    The fight, however, just saw too simple and not exciting. Neither man really displayed any argument that they’d give much a fight to the UFC heavyweight champion. And then to add insult, the main event’s result means Volkov may not get a title shot anytime soon.

    Hit: Umar Nurmagomedov Rebounds, Mario Bautista Shows He Is Legit

    After coming up a round shy of defeating Merab Dvalishvili for the UFC bantamweight championship, Umar Nurmagomedov pulled off a strong performance in a win over Mario Bautista.

    Nurmagomedov’s grappling was the key to his victory, but it didn’t come without Bautista disrupting momentum. In fact, Bautista appeared to have a tight toe hold in on Nurmagomedov during the first round that he had to work his way out of. Bautista also landed a strong knee during the second round, but Nurmagomedov ultimately got a body triangle in on him on the ground and nearly got a choke.

    Nurmagomedov then put things away with more grappling and control in the final round to sweep the judges’ scorecards.

    This is one of those fights where both come away with something — Nurmagomedov made a case for the Dvalishvili vs. Yan 2 winner, and Bautista showed he is a legit exciting contender in a stacked 135-pound division.

    Miss: Virna Jandiroba vs. Mackenzie Dern Fails To Excite

    Din Thomas was recently on the record calling Virna Jandiroba vs. Mackenzie Dern the most “insignificant” title fight in UFC history. And while some may feel his comments weren’t warranted, the fight itself ultimately didn’t feel like it had the excitement.

    Dern and Jandiroba traded control between grappling and striking exchanges. Jandiroba seemed to get off to a strong start with her pressure and takedowns. Dern, however, appeared comfortable from her back and managed to keep things even with the grappling. Dern’s improved striking ultimately helped lead her to the decision victory.

    The fight was competitive but didn’t have the hard-hitting, intense nature you might feel with a title fight. Hopefully for Dern, however, this is the start of a new run that can gain aura over time. And perhaps Tatiana Suarez or Yan Xiaonan can make for an interesting first title defense.

    Hit: Dern Fulfills Destiny

    While the fight wasn’t the greatest title bout in UFC history, I do want to give a tip of the cap to Dern.

    There was plenty of talk about Dern early in her career, as the jiu-jitsu world champion made her UFC debut as a 5-0 fighter off a stint in the LFA. Things started off well for her between 2016 and 2020, but a loss to Marina Rodriguez in late 2021 brought about concern that her momentum had stalled. And this was after already drawing concern early in her career with weight misses.

    But ever since aligning herself with Jason Parillo, Dern’s striking has continued to get better over time. She has turned into a well-rounded fighter, and she has found success to the point where she now has fulfilled a destiny she set for herself. Well done, Mackenzie!

    Miss: A Letdown Ending For A Letdown Of A Division

    So much for the Tom Aspinall era beginning with a bang. It instead begins with a small pop that coincides with the way he was named champion.

    Or should I say that it begins with an eye poke? Because a double eye poke left Aspinall unable to continue, resulting in the first UFC title fight main event on pay-per-view that ends in an immediate no contest (Cormier vs. Jones 2 was overturned to one months after the fact).

    Gane’s striking appeared to be giving him success, even busting up Aspinall around his mouth. Things were looking great for him until the eye pokes, and now all momentum for Aspinall is somehow stalled even further. This will get run back, but it’s a shame that this is how the night ends.

    And after the way this match played out, combined with the other heavyweight fights on the night, Jon Jones is the biggest winner. It stinks to admit — but heavyweight is nothing without him. And with Alex Pereira desiring a move up in weight, perhaps Jones vs. Pereira is on the table again…and maybe for the White House card that Dana White didn’t want Jones on?

  • Jon Jones Tells Alex Pereira He’d Be Honored To Fight Him At UFC White House, Both Rip Tom Aspinall After UFC 321 No Contest

    Jon Jones Tells Alex Pereira He’d Be Honored To Fight Him At UFC White House, Both Rip Tom Aspinall After UFC 321 No Contest

    After the events of UFC 321, you knew Jon Jones was going to make his voice heard. And he did so in a way that was equal parts subtle as it was blatant.

    The UFC 321 heavyweight championship main event featuring Tom Aspinall and Ciryl Gane ended in a no contest after Aspinall was left unable to continue due to a double eye poke. In the hours since, the MMA community has been in debate over if Gane is at fault for the eye pokes or if Aspinall wanted a way out of the fight.

    Jones has given his answer, changing photos on his social media accounts to rubber ducks with eye patches.

    This was a clap back and nod to UFC London earlier this year. There, Aspinall was in the crowd and held up a rubber duck to the camera, implying that Jones was ducking him in the negotiations for an undisputed title fight between the two that ultimately fell through.

    Jon Jones Sends Dig To Tom Aspinall, Wants To Fight Alex Pereira At UFC White House

    Jones wasn’t done, however. A few hours after the end of the card, Jones directed a post on X (formerly Twitter) toward Alex Pereira, putting out the idea of the two facing off at the UFC White House card this coming June.

    “Alex, I’d be down to bring the highest skill level to the White House,” Jones said in the post. “I appreciate the respect you showed, let’s dance.”

    This was in response to Pereira’s own reaction to the UFC 321 conclusion. In an Instagram post, Pereira can be seen shaking his head with a smirk as he walked away from his TV screen.

    The post was captioned with a message toward Jones, asking for the two of them to “make the heavyweight division great again.”

    Both circumstances, however, will have to go through the mind of someone who has been against both. UFC CEO and President Dana White has previously stated that he doesn’t want Jones competing at the UFC White House card and that he doesn’t have an interest in Alex Pereira moving up to heavyweight.

  • “What A Complete Disaster” – Fans & Fighters Left In Disbelief As Eye Poke Ends Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane Heavyweight Title Fight In No Contest At UFC 321

    “What A Complete Disaster” – Fans & Fighters Left In Disbelief As Eye Poke Ends Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane Heavyweight Title Fight In No Contest At UFC 321

    The first UFC heavyweight title fight of the Tom Aspinall era — and his first fight since July 2024 — ends in the most anti-climatic fashion, as an accidental foul resulted in Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane at UFC 321 ending in a no contest.

    This marks the first time in UFC history that a championship main event fight immediately ends in a no contest. It’s the second overall, as the UFC 214 main event between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier became a no contest after Jones failed a drug test.

    Both men came forward, trying to show their striking and gain control of the pace. Gane looked to land quick jabs and managed to work his way out of an Aspinall takedown attempt. Aspinall landed some power shots, but Gane landed his own and was able to bloody him up.

    An eye poke to both eyes, however, left Aspinall unable to see and unable to continue, ending the first in a no contest.

    Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane UFC Heavyweight Title Fight At UFC 321 Ends In No Contest

    Aspinall initially became interim heavyweight champion with a finish of Sergei Pavlovich at UFC 295. He retained that interim title by defeating Curtis Blaydes at UFC 304 and was promoted to undisputed champion on the day of UFC Baku following the (brief) retirement of Jon Jones.

    Gane earned this title shot with his controversial decision win over Alexander Volkov at UFC 310. He is a former interim heavyweight champion, earning that by defeating Derrick Lewis at UFC 265. Gane, however, was unsuccessful in undisputed title fights with Francis Ngannou and Jon Jones, respectively, at UFC 270 and UFC 285.

  • “What A Wild Road It’s Been” – Fans & Fighters React To Mackenzie Dern Claiming Strawweight Gold At UFC 321 With Second Win Over Virna Jandiroba

    “What A Wild Road It’s Been” – Fans & Fighters React To Mackenzie Dern Claiming Strawweight Gold At UFC 321 With Second Win Over Virna Jandiroba

    With Weili Zhang vacating the UFC women’s strawweight championship to challenge Valentina Shevchenko in three weeks, it is now the Mackenzie Dern era at 115. She pulled off a decision win over Virna Jandiroba in the competitive co-main event of UFC 321 to claim the gold.

    The opening round proved to be a close one, with Jandiroba pressuring Dern throughout with grappling. Dern, despite being her jiu-jitsu expertise, managed to land well with her strikes, doing some notable damage. A similar story played out for the second round.

    Dern mixed things up in the third round, pressuring Jandiroba to the fence while adding in her striking. Even from her back, Dern appeared to be doing more despite getting taken down on a number of occasions. Jandiroba controlled most of the fourth round, despite ending it on her back, but Dern’s striking helped her win the fifth round and take a decision victory.

    Two judges scored the bout 48-47, while the third totaled it 49-46.

    Mackenzie Dern Defeats Virna Jandiroba For Vacant Strawweight Title At UFC 321

    https://twitter.com/wmmarz/status/1982182640372322513

    Jandiroba entered this fight on a five-fight win streak, as well as six victories in the seven fights she’s had since her initial meeting with Dern.

    Dern entered this fight with three wins in her last five fights, including a victory over Amanda Lemos in January.

  • “Tried To Prove A Point In Relentlessness” – Fans & Fighters React As Umar Nurmagomedov Fends Off Spirited Effort From Mario Bautista At UFC 321

    “Tried To Prove A Point In Relentlessness” – Fans & Fighters React As Umar Nurmagomedov Fends Off Spirited Effort From Mario Bautista At UFC 321

    Umar Nurmagomedov rebounded from an unsuccessful title shot, scoring a win over Mario Bautista at UFC 321.

    Magomedov caught a body kick attempt from Bautista in the fight’s opening seconds, scoring a takedown with it. Bautista threatened a tight-looking toe hold not long after, but Nurmagomedov worked his way out of it and controlled the rest of the round with his expert-level grappling.

    Bautista landed a perfectly-timed knee in the second round that seemed to do damage, but Nurmagomedov recovered and was able to score another takedown. Nurmagomedov got to the back and threatened a choke with a body triangle, but Bautista was able to get out of it, even getting his own brief trip on Nurmagomedov.

    Nurmagomedov’s grappling and pressure continued to be on point in the third, allowing him to sweep the scorecards for the win.

    Umar Nurmagomedov Defeats Mario Bautista At UFC 321

    https://twitter.com/xJahstin/status/1982168112200839246
    https://twitter.com/xJahstin/status/1982167700546953216

    Nurmagomedov was undefeated before he took on Merab Dvalishvili for the bantamweight title at UFC 311. Nurmagomedov won the first two rounds, but Dvalishvili rebounded in the remaining three.

    Bautista sees an eight-fight win streak get snapped tonight. He came into this bout off decision wins over the likes of Jose Aldo and Patchy Mix.

  • LFA 220: Tanner vs Cyr Live Results

    LFA 220: Tanner vs Cyr Live Results

    LFA 220 takes place on October 25th, 2025 at the Arizona Financial Theatre in Phoenix. Arizona. Local fighter Kasey Tanner looks to punch his ticket to the UFC in a matchup with the skilled Michael Cyr across from him. There will be thirteen total bouts taking place, with ten professional and three amateur fighters. Prelims are scheduled to air on YouTube at 4:30 PM PST/7:30 PM EST, and the main card will air on UFC Fight Pass at 7 PM PST/10 PM EST. All results and news can be found here as the event unfolds. Follow @dskcombatsports on Instagram for highlights and interviews.

    Amateur Prelims

    1. Brayan Mancila (1-0) vs Emmanuel Hill (0-0)Amateur Heavyweight Bout

    Brayan Mancila (2-0) defeats Emmanuel Hill (0-1) :31 into the first round by TKO (ground and pound)

    2: Issouf Doumbia (0-1) vs Quayshan Randelman (2-1) – Amateur Catchweight Bout*

    *Randelman missed weight by 6 lbs

    Quayshan Randelman (3-1) defeats Issouf Doumbia (0-2) :56 into the second round by TKO (ground and pound)

    3: Alex Ortiz (1-0) vs Matthew Chenault (1-1) – Amateur Lightweight Bout*

    *Ortiz missed weight by 2 lbs

    Alex Ortiz (2-0) defeats Matthew Chenault (1-2) 1:30 into the third round by TKO (ground and pound)

    Professional Prelims

    4. Nolan Linebaugh (0-0) vs Will Hughes (0-0) – Professional Bantamweight Bout

    Nolan Linebaugh (1-0) defeats Will Hughes (0-1) by Unanimous Decision

    Nolan Linebaugh made a successful return to the cage after 9 years, when he last competed as an amateur for WFF. He showcased his excellent striking as he outlanded Will Hughes over three exciting rounds.

    5. Delton Kauffman (0-0) vs Caleb Jensen (1-2) – Professional Middleweight Bout

    Delton Kaufmann defeats Caleb Jensen by TKO (ground and pound) 3:08 into the first round

    Delton Kaufmann announced himself to the MMA world with a fantastic first round finish over the more experienced Caleb Jensen. Kaufmann is already an IMMAF Champion, high school state champion in wrestling, and a pan-American champion in BJJ. “The Thaiphoon” will be a name to watch moving forward.

    6. Jarom Woodbury (7-1) vs David Gladfelter (7-4) – Professional Middleweight Bout

    Jarom Woodbury (8-1) defeats David Gladfelter (7-5) by unanimous decision (29-28×3)

    Jarom Woodbury returned to the MMA cage for the first time in 13 years at LFA 220. Displaying incredible grit, he outstruck Gladfelter over three rounds and secured the unanimous decision win, in front of his hometown fans.

    7. Livio Ribeiro (4-0) vs Richard Mahan (3-1) – Professional Flyweight Bout

    Livio Ribeiro (5-0) defeats Richard Mahan by submission (rear naked choke) 2:36 into the first round

    In a matchup of tremendous grapplers, Livio Ribeiro made quick work of the tough Richard Mahan. Taking the back early in the first round, he was patient until the opportunity presented itself. He sunk in the choke halfway through the first round, and the MMA Lab product moved to 5-0 in his young pro career.

    UFC Fight Pass Main Card

    8. Leslie Hernandez (4-3) vs Flor Hernandez 4-3) – Professional Strawweight Bout

    Leslie Hernandez (5-3) defeats Flor Hernandez (4-4) by unanimous decision (30-27×3)

    Leslie Hernandez bounced back from the first losing streak of her career with a fantastic performance vs Flor Hernandez. She utilized her power punches and kicks to overwhelm the Mexican fighter over three rounds. The MMA Lab product will be looking make it back to DWCS, after her loss to Julieta Martinez last year on the show.

    9. Chance Ikei (5-0) vs Jordan Burkholder (6-2) – Professional Flyweight Bout

    Chance Ikei (6-0) defeats Jordan Burkholder (6-3) by submission (rear naked choke) 4:50 into the first round

    Top Arizona prospect Chance Ikei showcased all his skills en route to a first round stoppage against former collegiate wrestler Jordan Burkholder. Using his wrestling, Ikei took the fight to the ground, and utilized his ground and pound to open up the opportunity for the submission. Ikei called for either an LFA title shot or a chance on DWCS in his post fight interview.

    10. Kevin Natividad (9-4) vs Ryan Kuse (7-2) – Professional Bantamweight Bout

    Ryan Kuse (8-2) defeats Kevin Natividad (9-5) by unanimous decision (29-28×3)

    Ryan Kuse showcased excellent striking and takedown defense during a grueling fifteen minute war with UFC veteran Kevin Natividad. Despite getting hurt multiple times, Kuse was able to maintain the pressure and earned the decision victory as the out of town fighter.

    11. Kyle Estrada (14-8) vs Ernesto Ibarra (10-1) – Professional Flyweight Bout*

    *Estrada missed weight by 2 lbs

    Ernesto Ibarra (11-1) defeats Kyle Estrada (14-9) by TKO (knee and punches) 4:01 into the first round

    Ernesto Ibarra fought through early grappling exchanges against veteran Kyle Estrada, until he was able to land a knee against the fence as Estrada was standing. He kept pouring on the damage with punches until the referee stepped in and stopped the fight. Ibarra secured his first win in the LFA with this performance.

    12. Christian Natividad (7-0) vs Jostin Quilca (9-2) – Flyweight Co-main Event

    Christian Natividad defeats Jostin Quilca by TKO (ground and pound) 3:07 into the first round

    Christian Natividad made short work of his opponent Jostin Quilca, finally securing the finish he has been looking for in his last few fights. Natividad moved to 8-0 in his career, and at just 29 years old there is no doubt the UFC is in the near future for the Hawaiian Punch.

    13. Kasey Tanner (8-1) vs Michael Cyr (8-1) – Bantamweight Main Event (3 Rounds)

    Kasey Tanner defeats Michael Cyr by unanimous decision (29-27×3)

    In the main event of LFA 220, Kasey Tanner relied on his fundamentals to defeat the skilled and dangerous Michael Cyr by decision. He survived multiple submission attempts and utilized his wresting to move to 9-1 in his professional career.

    The Legacy Fighting Alliance returns on Friday, November 7th in Brasilia, Brazil with LFA 221: Clark vs Consuli.

  • “A Tough Watch” – Fighters & Fans Debate Alexander Volkov Scoring Split Decision Win Over Jailton Almeida In Disappointing Heavyweight Title Eliminator At UFC 321

    “A Tough Watch” – Fighters & Fans Debate Alexander Volkov Scoring Split Decision Win Over Jailton Almeida In Disappointing Heavyweight Title Eliminator At UFC 321

    Alexander Volkov may be next in line for whoever is the heavyweight champion after UFC 321, coming away with a close, debatable split decision victory over Jailton Almeida.

    Almeida scored a takedown right away in the opening seconds of the fight, getting Volkov to the mat right away and controlling the action. Volkov, however, managed to reverse the position about halfway through the round, getting on top and landing some strong blows on Almeida.

    Almeida got Volkov down in the second round again, but he didn’t seem to do much with it in the first couple of minutes. Volkov got back to his feet as Almeida got to his back, but Almeida dragged him back down and controlled the rest of the frame.

    Almeida’s grappling helped him control the third round as well, but Volkov made the most of damage with his striking — including knees in the first minute of the final round. Two judges felt the same, as he earned a split decision win.

    Alexander Volkov Earns Split Decision Over Jailton Almeida In UFC 321 Title Eliminator

    For Volkov, this win may feel like redemption after being on the losing end of a controversial split decision at UFC 310. That loss came to tonight’s title challenger, Ciryl Gane.

    Almeida is now 2-2 in his last four after a 15-fight winning streak earlier in his career.