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  • Brian Ortega was unconscious for 30 minutes amid rough UFC Shanghai weight cut

    Brian Ortega was unconscious for 30 minutes amid rough UFC Shanghai weight cut

    Many in the MMA world could tell Brian Ortega had a rough weight cut for his last UFC outing but the former multi-time featherweight title challenger has gotten into even more specific detail about the trying ordeal. ‘T-City’ was intially contracted for a clash with Aljamain Sterling at 145 pounds until a last minute shift to a 153 pound catchweight contest inspired by Ortega’s difficulties hitting the featherweight limit for UFC Shanghai.

    Ortega looked like a shell of himself on the scales with many worrying about him in the lead up to his unanimous deicison loss to the former UFC bantamweight champion. In a video address posted to his personal Instagram account, Ortega said [via MMA Junkie],

    “I cut weight on Thursday. We hit the first one – we got down to ’51. Second one, later on I decided to jump the gun on that one at 12, but we cut from midnight all the way to 8 in the morning, cutting weight the entire time. I realized I had 1.7 to go still. I was confused on how my body wasn’t really pouring out the water, why it was just holding it in, but no matter what, we have to get this weight off so we did.”

    Brian Ortega on going unconscious and waking up hospitalized

    Brian Ortega continued to delve into the tumult with his recent weight cutting situation in China as Ortega stated,

    “So we went downstairs, ate something, decided to cut more weight, put the plastics on, sweet sweat. I hit 20 minutes on the bike. Once I got off, I went unconscious. I was unconscious for about 30 minutes. During that time, they were putting ice on me, they took all my clothes off, they left me in boxers. I woke up in the E.R., I ripped everything off, I couldn’t really speak, translate to them.”

    “I was like, if they don’t take everything off, I’m going to take it off myself. We knew we had time limit to get to the weigh-ins, otherwise I could not fight. If you saw the weigh-ins, you obviously know I looked delirious, and just coming off 30 minutes of being unconscious in the tunnel. After that, weighed in. We figured if I didn’t feel good or if something was seriously off, we would call the fight.”

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

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

    The latest season of Dana White’s Contender Series continued with another night of memorable action in Las Vegas.

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

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

    The night started with a banger, as Carol Foro pulled off a victory over Shanelle Dyer. Foro’s fists got going in the opening round, dropping Dyer twice and opening up a bad cut around one of her eyes. Dyer tried to get more volume with her strikes during the second round, but she was knocked down by Foro once again. Dyer picked things up in the third round but was unable to get the finish, as Foro took the decision in an action-packed battle. The fight impressed White so much that he awarded both women a UFC contract.

    Samuel Sanches followed that up with a brutal first-round knockout of Chasen Blair. Blair attempted to bring the pressure to Sanches with power and pressing him up against the fence. After some in close fighting, Sanches landed a hard-hitting boxing combination, which ended with a left hook that slumped Blair out cold against the cage for the victory and the UFC contract.

    Lerryann Douglas would pull off what White considered one of the best knockouts he’s seen in the evening’s co-main event, defeating Cam Teague in under a minute. Douglas did a number on Teague with leg kicks in the opening 25 seconds before connecting on a right hand that wobbled Teague. As Teague scrambled, Douglas nailed him with a left hand that faceplanted him, earning Douglas a UFC contract.

    The heavyweight main event saw another sub-minute finish, as Steven Asplund took care of business against Anthony Guarascio. The two brought out their power right away, with Vasplund quickly dropping Guarascio with an uppercut, followed by some brief ground-and-pound before the referee stopped the match. In less than 20 seconds, Vasplund had a performance worthy of a UFC contract.

    The evening also featured a light heavyweight bout that saw Freddy Vidal score a comeback victory over Felipe Franco. Franco looked to control the action early with grappling, but Vidal made him pay with strikes. On the ground, Vidal landed some strong ground-and-pound to trouble Franco. Franco would turn things around in the second, using his positioning to pin and pressure Vidal while matching him in striking this time around.

    Vidal’s energy appeared drained in the third round and Franco controlled him with his pressuring. The fight would go to the ground, however, and Vidal managed to turn things around, looking for submissions. Vidal would get to the back and under the neck for a choke, and Franco went out, scoring the submission with just 12 seconds remaining.

    While the fight was considered “horrible” by White, combined with Vidal missing weight, the finish and circumstances (Vidal taking the fight on six days’ notice) allowed White and the matchmakers to give him a fight on the final episode of the season to give him another shot at a contract.

    Shanelle Dyer vs. Carol Foro

    Chasen Blair vs. Samuel Sanches

    Felipe Franco vs. Freddy Vidal

    Cam Teague vs. Lerryan Douglas

    Anthony Guarascio vs. Steven Asplund

  • UFC Rankings Report: Nassourdine Imavov Stays No. 2 Middleweight Despite UFC Paris Win, Debuting Former PFL Champion Now Top-10 Heavyweight

    UFC Rankings Report: Nassourdine Imavov Stays No. 2 Middleweight Despite UFC Paris Win, Debuting Former PFL Champion Now Top-10 Heavyweight

    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 Paris, MMA News has you covered with this week’s complete updates.

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

    Women’s Pound-for-Pound: No changes.

    Women’s Strawweight: No changes.

    Women’s Flyweight: Jessica Andrade has been removed from the rankings pool at women’s flyweight. As a result, the following fighters have each moved up one spot in the rankings: Karine Silva (to No. 9), Miranda Maverick (to No. 10), Casey O’Neill (to No. 11), and Wang Cong (to No. 12).

    Luana Carolina enters the rankings at No. 15, while Eduarda Moura moves up two spots to No. 13.

    Maycee Barber moves up to No. 5, swapping places with Jasmine Jasudavicius (now No. 6).

    Women’s Bantamweight: No changes.

    Flyweight: No changes.

    Bantamweight: No changes.

    Featherweight: No changes.

    Lightweight: No changes.

    Welterweight: No changes.

    Middleweight: Following his loss at UFC Paris, Caio Borralho moves down one spot to No. 8, swapping places with Robert Whittaker (now No. 7). Michael “Venom” Page and Jared Cannonier each move up one spot to No. 9 and No. 10, respectively, while Brendan Allen falls two spots to No. 11, placing him in a tie with Roman Dolidze, who also moves up one spot.

    Despite his win, Nassourdine Imavov remains at No. 2.

    Light Heavyweight: Dominick Reyes moves up one spot to No. 7, swapping places with Aleksandar Rakic (now No. 8). Azamat Murzakanov moves up one spot to No. 10, swapping places with Bogdan Guskov (now No. 11).

    Heavyweight: Following his win at UFC Paris, Ante Delija debuts in the UFC rankings at No. 9. The man he beat, Marcin Tybura, falls three spots to No. 10, while Serghei Spivac and Derrick Lewis each move up one spot to No. 7 and No. 8, respectively.

    Tai Tuivasa, Shamil Gaziev, Mick Parkin, Tallison Teixeira, and Valter Walker each all drop one spot to Nos. 11-15, respectively. Rizvan Kuniev falls out of the heavyweight rankings.

    You can view the full updated UFC rankings here.

  • Ex-boxing champ takes on Wanderlei Silva, replaces Vitor Belfort at SFN 2

    Ex-boxing champ takes on Wanderlei Silva, replaces Vitor Belfort at SFN 2

    It did not take long for Wanderlei Silva to get a replacement opponent for Spaten Fight Night 2 after Vitor Belfort had to withdraw from their boxing contest. In Sao Paulo, Brazil on September 27th, Silva will still don the big gloves and throw down under Queensberry Rules but instead of running things back with Belfort, he’ll now be facing a former world champion within the sweet science. Acelino ‘Popo’ Freitas will now throw down with ‘The Axe Murderer’ after MMA Fighting confirmed this following a report from Spaten Fight Night’s official TV broadcast partner, Globo.

    It is unclear if the contest will be an official professional bout or if it will be an exhibition and the sizable weight discrepancy between the two fighters does inform that lack of clarity. Freitas has collected WBO and WBA super featherweight titles as well as cementing himself as a two time WBO lightweight champion. Conversely, Silva was the Pride FC middleweight champion and was a stalwart of the UFC’s light heavyweight division. ‘Popo’ is one of Brazil’s most acclaimed practitioners of the sweet science with 41 wins across 43 bouts with 34 knockout victories.

    Wanderlei Silva vs. Vitor Belfort 2 and the 2026 re-focus

    This contest will mark the boxing debut for Wanderlei Silva who has not competed in combat sports in around seven years. Silva last fought under the Bellator MMA banner against long time rival Quinton’ Rampage’ Jackson where the former was stopped by the latter which tied up their series at two wins apiece.

    Spaten Fight Night has professed a desire to want to re-book the Silva vs. Belfort boxing bout for 2026. The timeline is a bit nebulous because it is tied to Belfort’s medical situation which caused him to withdraw from this bout at month’s end. The former UFC light heavyweight champion revealed on his social media that he had suffered a grade three concussion in his training camp and it is unclear when Belfort can return for this rematch with Silva.

    The two previously threw down almost thirty years ago in the UFC’s first ever card in Brazil where ‘The Phenom’ finished Silva with strikes less than a minute into the bout.

  • Kiefer Crosbie Stuffed in a Cab by the UFC with No Medical Oversight Despite Concussion

    Kiefer Crosbie Stuffed in a Cab by the UFC with No Medical Oversight Despite Concussion

    Kiefer Crosbie not only ended up on the wrong end of a questionable referee’s call after taking an illegal technique but the bad times for Crosbie only snowballed for him in the aftermath of UFC Shanghai. Crosbie lost to Nueraji Taiyilake via TKO in the wake of being hit with an illegal knee which resulted in a point deduction. But Crosbie did also not get the full five minutes of recovery time and many felt like Taiyilake should haven been disqualified outright.

    Expressing what happened to him post-fight the comment section of one of his Instagram posts relating to the recent MMA bout of his, Crosbie said,

    “No doctor checked on me after the fight. No brain scan organized. No concussion test or questions asked how I was doing etc. No medication given even though I have major concussion and whiplash. Just stitched up and f**ked in a taxi and good luck. Some buzz.”

    “Anyone with a f**king braincell can see in this clip I’m distorted from the knee with blood in my eyes and clearly shouldn’t be making decisions that quick. Makes me sick honestly. Welcome to the big leagues.”

    “Ironically enough the knee to the head wasnt even the scummiest thing to happen in that fight. Chinese doctor who glanced at the cut without assessing me at all coincidentally enough aye and rushed back in with no rest from the ref. “Be careful” he says.”

    Kiefer Crosbie’s UFC Shanghai experience and the ex-UFC vet who can relate

    Kiefer Crosbie is not the only UFC veteran who has felt mistreated by the promotion when in the same Instagram post that Crosbie made his comments regarding the tumult he experienced during his last MMA fight, Marc Diakiese said,

    “Happened to me against Joel Alvarez. You’re left standing alone, no one speaking up for you. It cuts deep!”

    The 35-year-old then replied to Diakiese in the same IG comment section as Crosbie quipped,

    “Nobody gives a bollox. It’s a sick one yeah. Put our lives on the line every time and to be treated like a dog is just disgraceful behavior.”

    The UFC serves all oversight related needs for events in areas that don’t have formally established regulatory bodies. This means that Crosbie’s expressed grievances here would fall on the promotion during their recent fighting foray into China and what he expressed happened.

  • Islam Makhachev or Jack Della Maddalena: Who Is The Better Striker? Who Cares, Says UFC Insider

    Islam Makhachev or Jack Della Maddalena: Who Is The Better Striker? Who Cares, Says UFC Insider

    MMA analyst Chael Sonnen isn’t interested in the debate regarding who the better striker is between Islam Makhachev and Jack Della Maddalena.

    At UFC 322 later this year, Jack Della Maddalena will defend his UFC welterweight championship against Islam Makhachev. One of the key components of the fight, in the eyes of many, is the striking game. While we all know Islam has a significant advantage on the ground, JDM is an incredibly precise striker – and that could easily come into play in this fight.

    However, in a recent video, Chael Sonnen laid out an interesting argument regarding why the striking isn’t likely to decide the title clash between Islam Makhachev and Jack Della Maddalena.

    Chael Sonnen’s view on Islam Makhachev vs Jack Della Maddalena debate

    “So, what difference does it make who’s better in the standup?… Would you rather hit harder or be able to be hit harder? With four-ounce gloves on, this whole expression about who’s better is really nothing more than an expression. And it’s not the inability of the takedown, it’s the threat of the takedown that changes your standup. 

    “We have seen some of the best and most decorated kickboxers in the world not only lose in the first round, we’ve seen them knocked out on their feet in the first round. And it’s not because the guy was better at the standup. It’s because the kickboxer was scared about the takedown. And it changed his demeanor. It changed his offense. It changed his defense. It changed his posture.”

    “When’s the last time a fight got decided in the standup? And what difference does it make with four-ounce gloves on? It doesn’t matter who’s got the better feints, it doesn’t matter who’s got the better combinations. You don’t want to have to hit a guy five or six times like you do in the sport of boxing. 

    “You want to be able to hit him one time. And if he can’t take a punch correctly, you’re only going to need to hit him one time. But it’s going to look sloppy. It’s going to look like two bums fighting because the things that work in MMA are completely illegal in the sweet science. And that’s just the truth.”

    “It’s the same as it’s been since ‘93 until now. It’s the guy that decides, are we on our feet or are we on the ground. That is your champion. That is your winner of every fight, every time. He’s better in the stand up—what a dork. What’s that even mean?”

  • Ilia Topuria believes that he’d knock Terence Crawford out in a crossover boxing match

    Ilia Topuria believes that he’d knock Terence Crawford out in a crossover boxing match

    UFC lightweight champion Ilia Topuria has suggested that he would be able to knock Terence Crawford out if the two ever faced each other in a crossover boxing match.

    If there’s one thing that Ilia Topuria isn’t lacking, it’s confidence – and understandably so. In his last three fights, he has been able to knock out Alexander Volkanovski, Max Holloway and Charles Oliveira. Of course, this is mixed martial arts we’re talking about here, and it’s a pretty different sport to professional boxing.

    We all know that crossover boxing involving MMA fighters has become a pretty big deal in recent years, starting off with Conor McGregor’s superfight against Floyd Mayweather. In the present day, Ilia Topuria is seen as the potential successor to Conor in terms of star power, and there are plenty of similarities.

    One of the similarities is that Ilia Topuria believes he can beat one of the all-time boxing greats, as he noted in the following tweet.

    Ilia Topuria backs himself to knock out Terence Crawford

    “I won’t talk about what would happen between me and Crawford in an octagon I’ll talk about what would happen in a ring. I put him to sleep in the first contact !!”

    Yes, this sounds outrageous, but Topuria has the kind of power that can help people believe just about anything that he says. Who knows, maybe at some point in the future we get the chance to see it – but first, Crawford has a meeting with Canelo Alvarez to focus on.

  • Jon Jones is NOT Retired – Looking to Fight at the White House: “Actively training”

    Jon Jones is NOT Retired – Looking to Fight at the White House: “Actively training”

    Jon Jones continues to troll the mixed martial arts world after recently claiming in an interview that he is no longer retired from the sport.

    As we know, wherever Jon Jones goes, controversy seems to follow. He thrives in chaotic environments and after retiring earlier this year, many felt as if it wasn’t going to last. Alas, that hasn’t proven to be the case, with Jon claiming that he wants to fight on next year’s proposed UFC White House card.

    Dana White, meanwhile, isn’t quite as convinced. He’s made it clear that he’s not sure he can trust Jon Jones in a position like that, but given the stakes involved if we do get the chance to see Jon vs Tom Aspinall, you’d have to think that Dana would at least be open to the idea from a business standpoint.

    In a recent interview, Jon Jones was asked about his future, and he had the following to say.

    Jon Jones claims he is no longer retired from MMA

    “I am not retired. I am actively training five days a week, and I’m in the UFC’s drug testing pool.”

    “I don’t really know [about UFC White House], it’s kind of out of my control right now. I’m training for the event, I’ll be ready for the event. That’s my goal, that’s my intention, but ultimately, it’s up to the boss.”

    At this point, it’s hard to know whether he’s coming or going – and that’ll likely continue to be the case.

  • Conor McGregor Running for President is a Decent Gimmick, According to Former Politician and UFC Fighter

    Conor McGregor Running for President is a Decent Gimmick, According to Former Politician and UFC Fighter

    MMA analyst Chael Sonnen has given his thoughts on Conor McGregor continuing to make a push to come President of Ireland.

    As we know, Conor McGregor has been involved in plenty of controversies in the last few years – and that’s us putting it lightly. Now, in the present day, it seems he was one main focus above all others: becoming president back in his home country of Ireland.

    Alas, while Conor McGregor is an ambitious person, pretty much anyone with any knowledge of Ireland’s politicial system has said that it’d be pretty much impossible for him to achieve this goal.

    In a recent video, Chael Sonnen had some interesting views on Conor McGregor’s latest stunt.

    Chael Sonnen discusses Conor McGregor’s presidency ‘character’

    “There’s no politician that you’ve ever seen on TV that is that politician. It’s a performance. There’s nobody on TV that is being themself. Not one single person you’ve ever seen, all the way down to your local weatherman. They’re all playing a character to some degree.”

    “And he says, ‘I will not pass any bill through without sending it back to the people.’ … And there is always a mistake made in business to let people have it their way and to let people have options. There’s a book called The Paradox of Choice and one of the worst things that you can do is ask the consumer what they want… it’s a big mistake in politics. 

    “It’s a big mistake to think that people are paying attention and it’s a big mistake to think that we live in a democracy. … Democracy is a tremendously bad problem because that means if you have 51% of the people, they can control the other 49%. We do not live in a democracy. That is something that you’ve put in your heads. We live in a republic and there’s a massive difference.”

  • Sean Strickland Explains Why Caio Borralho is “An Idiot” Over Weight Cutting

    Sean Strickland Explains Why Caio Borralho is “An Idiot” Over Weight Cutting

    UFC star Sean Strickland has questioned Caio Borralho for opting to cut weight twice ahead of UFC Paris – once to serve as back-up for the UFC 319 main event.

    If there’s one thing we know to be true about Sean Strickland, it’s that he doesn’t hold back when giving his opinion. He is someone who has a lot of interesting views both in and outside of mixed martial arts, and he isn’t afraid to voice them.

    Last weekend, Caio Borralho attempted to earn himself a UFC middleweight title shot – but fell short. He lost to Nassourdine Imavov in what proved to be a fairly one-sided fight at UFC Paris, and Sean Strickland was one of many who was left surprised by the performance that the Brazilian produced.

    In a recent tweet, Sean Strickland had the following to say about Borralho’s outing in the French capital.

    Sean Strickland’s view on Caio Borralho at UFC Paris

    “Caio is my buddy but hes an idiot. He trained with us and was useless.  

    “Me “whats wrong with you”

    “Caio “Im cutting, im an alternate”

    “So you’re giving up 4 weeks of your camp cutting weight twice while having a fight coming up? 

    “Whoever told you to do that, please hit him.”

    “It was so frustrating I wanted to hit him.. I didnt say anything because I wanted to keep his spirits up but he really took some bad advice from someone. That fight wasnt him. It was missing 4 weeks of training cutting weight twice.”

  • Losene Keita Not Cut From UFC Following Cancelation Of UFC Paris Fight With Patricio Pitbull

    Losene Keita Not Cut From UFC Following Cancelation Of UFC Paris Fight With Patricio Pitbull

    Despite rumors and early reports following the cancelation of his scheduled UFC Paris bout due to weight management issues, it appears Losene Keita will remain on the UFC roster.

    During the post-fight press conference for UFC Paris, UFC Senior Vice President of International and Content David Shaw stated that Keita has not been cut by the promotion.

    “I believe [Keita has a future in the UFC],” Shaw said. “Honestly, I don’t know the specifics. I think a few of us were surprised the fight didn’t happen, but in any case, it’s going to be good to have him on the roster.”

    Keita had been scheduled to take part in a fight with Patricio Pitbull following Keita’s signing to the UFC about three weeks ago. Keita, however, missed the non-title featherweight limit by three pounds, causing the bout’s cancelation.

    Losene Keita Has Not Been Cut By The UFC

    Not long after the incident, Pitbull reportedly refuted any apology attempts from Keita, criticizing him for the weight miss and calling him “Fat Panther.”

    Keita made his professional MMA debut in 2015, going on to be a notable presence in Oktagon MMA. In 2022, he’d win the Oktagon interim lightweight title before becoming undisputed champion about four months later. Keita would then interim featherweight gold in 2023 before becoming undisputed featherweight champ before the end of the year, becoming the first champ-champ in Oktagon MMA history.

    Keita would regain the Oktagon lightweight title before the end of his time with the promotion by winning the promotion’s lightweight tournament, defeating Agy Sardari, Predrag Bogdanović, Mateusz Legierski, and Ronald Paradeiser in 2024.

  • 9 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho

    9 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho

    In what has seemingly become a fall tradition, the UFC returned to Paris for a Fight Night event, with this year’s UFC Paris taking place at the Accor Arena on September 6.

    This marks the fourth straight year the UFC has held a September Fight Night event in the City of Lights. With France only just legalizing MMA back in 2020, the UFC has annually made an impact in Paris with entertaining fight cards for the French fanbase. Last year’s UFC Paris card saw Renato Moicano score a doctor’s stoppage victory over Benoit Saint Denis.

    The main event of this year’s UFC Paris saw a major middleweight contenders clash featuring Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho. Imavov entered this bout on a four-fight win streak and with seven wins in his last nine. This marked his first outing since his finish of former middleweight champion Israel Adesanya at UFC Saudi Arabia in February. Borralho entered with wins in all but two of his professional MMA fights, including a perfect 7-0 Octagon record. The Fighting Nerds member entered this fight off a win over Jared Cannonier last year at UFC Vegas 96.

    Saint Denis was involved in this year’s card as well, taking on Mauricio Ruffy in the co-main event. Saint Denis had won six of his last eight, most recently submitting Kyle Prepolec at UFC 315. Ruffy had won seven straight and 3-0 in the UFC entering tonight’s bout, coming in off his epic spinning wheel kick knockout of King Green at UFC 313.

    Who left their mark in Paris? Who could have done a lot better? Let’s find out with the UFC Paris Hits and Misses!

    Hit: Lighting Up The City With Finishes Galore

    In one of the most historical cities in the world, the UFC gave the people of Paris a treat with all of the action that went on at the event. Out of the 13 fights that took place at UFC Paris, 11 ended via a finish. This tied a record set also by UFC Fight Night Syndey in November 2014, UFC 224 in May 2018, and UFC 281 in November 2022.

    This included a preliminary card that went 7-for-7 in finishes. Highlights from the preliminary action featured first-round knockouts from the likes of Rinat Fakhretdinov, Sam Patterson, Kaue Fernandes, Ante Delija, and Oumar Sy. Meanwhile, the main card saw the likes of Axel Sola, Mason Jones, Modestas Bukauskas, and Benoint Saint Denis scoring finishes.

    There are times where UFC Fight Night cards can be a bit of a miss; there may have some trepidation that such could happen after how the preliminary card went. Just look at UFC Shanghai from a couple of weeks ago. But without question, UFC Paris more than delivered (and thank goodness it was a Fight Night that took place outside of the UFC APEX).

    Hit: Paris Presents Lively Atmosphere

    They say that the international UFC crowds are the best ones, and for good reason. But credit where it’s due, the audience present at the Accor Arena was awesome. The crowd was loud from the very first prelim and into the co-main event and main event bouts — where they were loud at the end seeing their hometown fighters come out on top.

    The Paris card has become an annual late summer/early fall tradition that has been truly enjoyable, and I’m glad we have it.

    Hit: Sam Patterson On A First-Round Finish Frenzy

    I don’t know what has gotten into Sam Patterson over the last four fights, but if he has some sort of routine or good-luck charm or superstitious practice, he needs to keep it up. His finish of Trey Waters during the prelims shows just how much momentum that young man has.

    After a slow start from both men, Waters seemed to be getting the upper hand. But Patterson got into a groove with his right hand, and he continuosuly landed it to devastating effects on Waters, snapping his head back repeatedly. Eventually, the referee saw enough, giving Patterson the win in about three minutes.

    Patterson may have lost his UFC debut back at UFC 286 but he’s now racked up four straight first-round finishes. It may be appropriate that his nickname is “The Future”; if Patterson, the Dana White Contender’s Series and Brave CF alumnus, can continue to develop while putting on performances like this, his future might be bright.

    Hit: Ante Delija Has Opportunity In Weak UFC Heavyweight Scene

    It was just a few years ago when Ante Delija became the 2022 PFL heavyweight champion, and after Francis Ngannou was signed by the promotion, some wondered if Delija would get a showdown with Ngannou. While that dream fight of his never came, and Delija ultimately departed the PFL earlier this year, his UFC run is off to as strong of a start as it could be with his first-round stoppage of Marcin Tybura.

    Though Tybura tried to stop the initial right-hand based attack with his grappling, Delija managed to escape Tybura’s grasp and trouble him with his striking. Delija’s attack would be too much for Tybura, who’d fall to the mat to give the former PFL champ a TKO in his UFC debut.

    Tybura came into the fight ranked No. 7 at heavyweight. On one hand, this, combined with Curtis Blaydes’ near-loss to a debuting Rizvan Kuniev earlier this summer (combined with Kuniev entering the rankings on a loss) might be presented as a bad look for the UFC’s heavyweight division. But look at what this can do for it — and what it does for Delija. He’ll be placed just outside of the top five at heavyweight. If he wins another fight or two, then he’ll be already primed for a title shot — and that gives this division another serious name that it desperately needs.

    Miss: Herb Dean – Make It Make Sense

    It feels like something is up every event Herb Dean officiates, and it’s sad. It feels like there have been plenty of fights this year where if he’s referring, his decisions can become the center of attention. That’s not good. And to make this week’s matters worse, this involved not one, but two calls made.

    Dean’s bad night started during the preliminary card, with Kaue Fernandes using a leg-kick attack gameplan to score a finish of Harry Hardwick. Fernandes got Hardwick limping around the Octagon less than two minutes into the fight, and yet Dean, despite seeing Hardwick wobble around, allowed the fight to continue. One particularly bad leg kick saw Hardwick roll around the mat. But Dean waited to see Hardwick unable to stand despite his efforts before calling the fight.

    Then, on the main card, Dean had a blunder during Axel Sola’s win over Rhys McKee. Sola landed a body shot that appeared to send McKee to the mat. McKee appeared to go for a takedown quickly, but Sola stopped that right away with a couple of seconds of ground-and-pound. Though McKee seemed to still be in the fight and defending, Dean stepped in and waved the bout off — much to the protests of McKee and the crowd (and the rest of the MMA community on X).

    For the 3 millionth time, how is it officials (refs, judges, etc.) aren’t obligated to defend their controversial decisions (and quite often get away with them)? It’s a sad state of an affair in this sport.

    Hit: Mason Jones – Call Him Comeback Kid

    How do you follow up winning a wild fight with Jeremy Stephens in your UFC return? Well, Mason Jones’ answer to that question was to nearly get stopped by Bolaji Oki, only to come from behind and score a finish in the next round.

    Oki rocked and dropped Jones twice in the fight’s first 90 seconds, nearly putting him away right then and there. Jones would not be deterred, however, and he took control, attempting to lock up a submission and storming back to take control of the fight. Jones would bring Oki to the mat in the second round and overwhelm him with ground-and-pound en route to a comeback TKO.

    Jones went 1-2 (1 NC) during his first UFC tenure from January 2021 to July 2022. Since getting cut, Jones has now won six straight, winning all four of his fights in Cage Warriors before getting re-signed by the UFC. A firm eye should now be on Jones as he continues to develop and work his way up against more prominent names at lightweight.

    Hit: Modestas Bukauskas Racks Up Wins

    Don’t look now, but Modestas Bukauskas might be a fight or two away from being a ranked light heavyweight after his buzzer-beater knockout of Paul Craig.

    Both men looked to utilize grappling in this matchup, with Bukauskas trying to use the clinch before Craig tried to bring the fight to the mat. Though the fight ended up on the ground, Bukauskas was the one in control. He’d deliver some strong ground-and-pound, including an elbow right at the horn that left Craig unable to get back to his corner and unable to continue.

    Bukauskas’ initial UFC run saw him go just 1-3 before the promotion parted ways with him. Now, he’s got four wins in the Octagon, including three finishes during that span. A number next to his name in the rankings might be coming sooner than some may think.

    Hit: Thank you, Paul Craig

    The 12-year professional MMA career of Paul Craig ended in Paris, as he laid down the gloves in the center of the Octagon following his loss to Modestas Bukauskas.

    Craig started professional MMA in August 2013, winning his first nine bouts. That included his UFC debut in December 2016, defeating Henrique da Silva. Craig would lose four of his next six but proved to be an entertaining, and popular, figure — especially when he competed on UFC cards held in Europe.

    Craig went 5-0-1 between September 2019 and March 2022, scoring four performance bonuses during that time. Craig’s time in the UFC, however, ended with losses in six of eight, facing off against various notable names in today’s UFC light heavyweight division, including Johnny Walker and Caio Borralho, as well as ranked middleweight contender Brendan Allen.

    Craig wasn’t the winningest kind of fighter in the UFC. But were his fights always entertaining and something people kept tabs on? By far. So, shoutout to “Bearjew” and the best to him in his retirement.

    Hit: The Best Benoit Saint Denis Has Ever Looked

    After his outing in Paris last year did not go the way he wanted, Benoit Saint Denis returned to his home country this year for a show in the Octagon that proved to be perhaps the best performance he’s ever had, turning away the rising Mauricio Ruffy in a second-round finish.

    Saint Denis brought pressure right away, mounting Ruffy in just 60 seconds and controlling the action from there, even as Ruffy brought the fight back to the feet for the last 40 seconds of round one. It didn’t take much for BSD to return the action to the mat for round two, where’d he score a victory via rear-naked choke.

    The other time BSD had this strong of a win, you’d probably have to look at his UFC 295 outing, when he knocked out Matt Frevola in just 91 seconds at Madison Square Garden. Now that he has back-to-back finishes under his belt against names who were unranked or lower ranked, maybe BSD’s next bout can come against someone in the lower portion of the top-10 at lightweight.

    Miss: Too Much, Too Quick For Mauricio Ruffy?

    I don’t want to completely wreck on Mauricio Ruffy; as mentioned, Benoit Saint Denis had one of the best performances of his career in the UFC Paris co-main event. But on that same regard, Mauricio Ruffy looked completely outclassed.

    This was only Ruffy’s fourth fight in the Octagon since coming into the UFC off a highlight finish on Dana White’s Contender Series. The finishes have been great and made Ruffy worthy of attention, let alone the fact he’s part of the Fighting Nerds team. But perhaps going from King Green to BSD, who has been in there with the likes of Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano, may have been a little much of a jump.

    Hopefully Ruffy finds another opponent in fairly short time and he can have a rebound performance to take his momentum back up.

    Miss: Nassourdine Imavov And Caio Borralho Just Gave Khamzat Chimaev To Either Anthony Hernandez Or Reinier De Ridder

    Talk about a way to end an exciting UFC Paris card with a letdown — and to come super close to a middleweight title shot, only to just hand it away. Nassourdine Imavov may have gotten the win in his native France over Caio Borralho, but both men may not be getting the middleweight title shot they could have received with an impressive victory.

    The fight didn’t have the biggest amount of output, with Imavov finding success behind his jab and Borralho not bringing out the level of activity we are used to seeing from him. Though Borralho battled back in a strong third-round performance, Imavov’s striking proved to be just too much — though not enough to earn a finish.

    Though Imavov came into the contest ranked No. 2 at middleweight, UFC CEO and President Dana White has hinted at the possibility of Anthony “Fluffy” Hernandez or former two-division ONE champion Reinier de Ridder jumping him if one of them scores a highlight victory in the main event of UFC Vancouver next month. Now with the boring fight Imavov and Borralho put on in Paris, it’d only take a good (read: good, not great) performance from one of those two to score the first crack at Khamzat Chimaev.

  • “The Winner Of RDR/Fluffy Is Getting The Next Title Shot” – Fans & Fighters Debate Middleweight Title Picture After Nassourdine Imavov Dominates Caio Borralho At UFC Paris

    It may not have been the performance to earn him a title shot, but Nassourdine Imavov put on a fairly dominant showing in front of his home crowd, defeating Caio Borralho in the main event of UFC Paris.

    Though the opening round was slow, Imavov pushed the pace on Borralho, overwhelming him early. Borralho, however, would end up with more output than the French fighter by the first round’s end. Imavov continued to work Borralho over with jabs and countershots during the second round, while Borralho had some moments — but definitely not the production we’ve been used to seeing from the Brazilian.

    Borralho finally seemed to get into the fight during the third round, landing more shots and doing damage with them. Notably, however, Imavov had stopped all four takedown attempts from Borralho by this point. Imavov then completely outworked Borralho in the fourth round to put him on the ropes.

    Imavov then dominated the fifth round to nearly sweep the judges’ scorecards and score the victory.

    Nassourdine Imavov Dominates Caio Borralho In Potential Title Eliminator At UFC Paris

    Imavov has now won five straight and he has won eight of his last 10 outings.

    This marked Borralho’s first loss since his second professional MMA bout.

    Whether Imavov receives a title opportunity or not may boil down to the performances of Anthony Hernandez and Reinier de Ridder when they face off in the main event of UFC Vancouver next month.

  • “Fraud Checked” – Fans & Fighters React As Benoit Saint Denis Dominates Mauricio Ruffy En Route To Second-Round Submission At UFC Paris

    “Fraud Checked” – Fans & Fighters React As Benoit Saint Denis Dominates Mauricio Ruffy En Route To Second-Round Submission At UFC Paris

    In front of his home country, Benoit Saint Denis may have scored the biggest victory in his MMA career, finishing the rising Mauricio Ruffy in the UFC Paris co-main event.

    Saint Denis got off to a quick start, pressuring Ruffy and getting him up against the fence. The action moved to the ground, and Saint Denis got into full mount just 60 seconds into the bout. Saint Denis looked to get to Ruffy’s back, but Ruffy shook him off and brought the fight back to the feet. BSD would bring the action back to the ground, keeping Ruffy in his grasp until an accidental low blow, and then controlling the action on the feet in the round’s final 40 seconds.

    BSD remained in firm control, scoring a takedown during the second round before locking in a rear-naked choke and scoring the submission.

    Benoit Saint Denis Submits Mauricio Ruffy At UFC Paris

    Saint Denis has now won two straight and seven of his last nine. This marked his second straight submission win, following his submission of Kyle Prepolec at UFC 315.

    This marks just the second loss of Ruffy’s professional MMA career. He was 3-0 in the UFC entering this fight, coming into tonight off a head-kick knockout of King Green at UFC 313.

  • “An Ultimate Achiever” – Fans & Fighters React As Modestas Bukauskas Sends Paul Craig Into Retirement After Leaving Him Unable To Continue Past First Round At UFC Paris

    “An Ultimate Achiever” – Fans & Fighters React As Modestas Bukauskas Sends Paul Craig Into Retirement After Leaving Him Unable To Continue Past First Round At UFC Paris

    Paul Craig has called it a career after getting stopped by Modestas Bukauskas at UFC Paris.

    Bukauskas looked to target the legs early and tried to use the clinch to his advantage. Craig attempted to bring the fight to his world, the mat, but Bukauskas kept control and looked to position himself for some strong ground-and-pound.

    Bukauskas got that in the closing seconds of the first round, which included a final elbow right before the horn. However, Craig was unable to stand up after the horn and appeared to be out cold, leading to a stoppage at the end of the first round.

    Following the fight, Craig laid his gloves down in the Octagon, confirming his retirement from MMA.

    Modestas Bukauskas Retires Paul Craig With Buzzer-Beater First-Round KO

    Bukauskas has now won four straight and eight wins in his last nine fights.

    Craig’s MMA career ends with a five-fight winless record (0-4-1). Craig made his UFC debut in December 2016 as an 8-0 fighter. He’d start his UFC tenure 3-4, though he’d pick up performance bonuses in those wins. He’d then go 5-0-1 between September 2019 and March 2022.

  • Patricio Pitbull Torches ‘The Fat Panther’ Losene Keita After Major Weight Miss Cancels UFC Paris Fight

    Patricio Pitbull Torches ‘The Fat Panther’ Losene Keita After Major Weight Miss Cancels UFC Paris Fight

    Patricio Pitbull is left fuming as his fight with Losene Keita is cancelled.

    Pitbull was set to face two-division OKTAGON champion Keita on the main card of UFC Paris this weekend at the Accor Arena in France.

    However, at Friday’s official weigh-ins, Keita tipped the scales three pounds over the 146-pound featherweight limit for his UFC debut, leading to the cancellation of his bout with Pitbull, who successfully weighed in at 145 pounds.

    After the fight was scrapped, “Black Panther” took to social media to apologize to fans, admitting that the grueling cut had drained his body to the point where he couldn’t push any further.

    Keita insisted he was determined to keep the fight alive, even offering to forfeit his purse to Pitbull. However, he alleged the former Bellator champion declined the proposal.

    Patricio Pitbull Left Disappointed After Losene Keita Misses Weight For UFC Paris

    During a recent interview with Full Send MMA, Patricio Pitbull didn’t hold back when addressing the cancellation of his UFC Paris bout after Losene Keita missed weight. The featherweight veteran criticized Keita for failing to make the extra effort during the additional time given to cut down and made it clear he wasn’t after his opponent’s purse, he just wanted the chance to compete.

    “I can’t believe that [he didn’t put effort to make weight] so he’s not professional. I am professional,” Pitbull said. “He said in some interviews he’s faster, younger, stronger but he can’t make weight. I have a video he came to me saying that was his fault… I am about 11 or 12 years making championship weight. If the people want to blame somebody, blame the fat panther.”

    Pitbull later took to X, reminding fans that he had accepted the fight with Keita on short notice and voicing his frustration over how it fell apart. The former Bellator champ also set his sights on a quick turnaround, declaring his desire to compete at UFC Rio on October 11 and even calling out Arnold Allen as his preferred opponent.

    Patricio Pitbull last competed at UFC 318 in July, earning a unanimous decision victory over Dan Ige to rebound from a one-sided defeat to Yair Rodriguez in his Octagon debut at UFC 314. The 38-year-old Brazilian now carries a professional record of 37-8, with a 24 of those victories coming by way of finish.

    Patricio Pitbull
    Image: UFC.com
  • “Give Mason Jones That 50K” – Fans & Fighters React To Mason Jones Go From Nearly Getting Stopped To Scoring Impressive TKO Of Bolaji Oki At UFC Paris

    “Give Mason Jones That 50K” – Fans & Fighters React To Mason Jones Go From Nearly Getting Stopped To Scoring Impressive TKO Of Bolaji Oki At UFC Paris

    After looking like it would be a dominant, quick victory for Bolaji Oki at UFC Paris, Mason Jones pulled off one of the most incredible comebacks of the MMA year to score a second-round finish.

    Oki came out strong against Jones, dropping him twice with heavy strikes during the opening frame and nearly finishing with strong ground-and-pound. A headstrong Jones, however, survived the storm and took back momentum, even scoring a near-submission attempt. Then, Jones was in complete control during the second round, troubling Oki with his striking.

    After a slam, Jones managed to work his way into full mount and land elbows and ground-and-pound. Though Oki defended well to start, it became too much and Jones scored the second-round TKO win.

    Mason Jones Comes From Behind To Finish Bolaji Oki At UFC Paris

    https://twitter.com/showmethepod/status/1964424889672040667

    Jones has now won six straight since the end of his first UFC tenure. Jones returned to the UFC in May with a gritty, hard-fought victory over Jeremy Stephen at UFC Des Moines.

    Oki is now 2-2 in the UFC, including his only two losses since dropping his professional MMA debut.

  • “Nah That Stoppage Was Crazy” – Fans & Fighters React To Herb Dean’s Controversial Stoppage As Axel Sola Wins UFC Debut Against Rhys McKee At UFC Paris

    “Nah That Stoppage Was Crazy” – Fans & Fighters React To Herb Dean’s Controversial Stoppage As Axel Sola Wins UFC Debut Against Rhys McKee At UFC Paris

    In what unfortunately seems to become an often occurance during UFC events, referee Herb Dean has come under fire from the MMA community once again following Axel Sola’s third-round finish of Rhys McKee during UFC Paris.

    McKee had moments of success with heavy punches and pressure, but Sola found success throughout the fight thanks to clean left hands and body shots. The finish, however, came in the third round, with Sola seemingly dropping McKee with a body shot. McKee appeared to look for a takedown before Sola’s ground-and-pound. Dean, however, seemed to only give a second or two for McKee to respond before stepping in, giving Sola the win and prompting protests from McKee.

    Dean already faced from scrutiny earlier in the card, accused of not taking better, sooner action when Harry Hardwick was left unable to stand following leg kicks from Kaue Fernandes.

    Herb Dean Under Fire For Axel Sola Third-Round TKO Win Over Rhys McKee At UFC Paris

    https://twitter.com/tDonBomb/status/1964419789285101660

    This marked the UFC debut for Sola, the former ARES FC lightweight champion and BRAVE CF veteran, who improves to 10-0-1.

    McKee has now lost three of his last four.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Nassourdine Imavov Decisions Caio Borralho 

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Nassourdine Imavov Decisions Caio Borralho 

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Accor Arena in Paris, France and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, middleweights Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho clashed. While in the co-main event, Benoit Saint Denis faced off with Mauricio Ruffy in a lightweight matchup.  

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Middleweight bout: Nassourdine Imavov def. Caio Borralho via unanimous decision (50-45, 49-46×2)
    • Lightweight bout: Benoit Saint Denis def. Mauricio Ruffy via submission: R2, 2:56
    • Light heavyweight bout: Modestas Bukauskas def. Paul Craig via KO: R1, 5:00
    • Lightweight bout: Mason Jones def. Bolaji Oki via TKO: R2, 3.18
    • Welterweight bout: Axel Sola def. Rhys McKee via TKO: R3, 2:02
    • Featherweight bout: William Gomis def. Robert Ruchala via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)

    Preliminary Card

    • Light Heavyweight bout: Oumar Sy def. Brendson Ribeiro via TKO: R1, 4:42
    • Heavyweight bout: Ante Delija def. Marcin Tybura via KO: R1: 2:03
    • Lightweight bout: Kaue Fernandes def. Harry Hardwick via TKO: R1, 3:21
    • Welterweight bout: Sam Patterson def. Trey Waters via TKO: R1, 3:01
    • Middleweight bout: Robert Bryczek def. Brad Tavares via TKO: R3, 1:43
    • Welterweight bout: Rinat Fakhretdinov def. Andreas Gustafsson via TKO: R1, 0:54 

    Strawweight bout: Sam Hughes def. Shauna Bannon via submission: R2, 1:58  

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Sam Hughes def. Shauna Bannon

    Rinat Fakhretdinov def. Andreas Gustafsson

    Robert Bryczek def. Brad Tavares

    Sam Patterson def. Trey Waters

    Kaue Fernandes def. Harry Hardwick

    Ante Delija def. Marcin Tybura

    Oumar Sy def. Brendson Ribeiro

    Main Card Highlights

    William Gomis def. Robert Ruchala

    William Gomis got it done with a unanimous decision.

    Axel Sola def. Rhys McKee

    Axel Sola earned a TKO in the third round.

    Mason Jones def. Bolaji Oki

    Mason Jones earned a TKO in round two.

    Modestas Bukauskas def. Paul Craig

    Modestas Bukauskas earned a KO at the end of round one, with Paul Craig announcing his retirement after the fight.

    Benoit Saint Denis def. Mauricio Ruffy

    In the co-main event, Benoit Saint Denis locked in a rear-naked choke to get the win in this lightweight bout.

    Nassourdine Imavov def. Caio Borralho 

    In the main event, Nassourdine Imavov earned a comfortable unanimous decision victory over Caio Borralho.

  • “The Heavyweight Division Needs A Destroyer Like Ante Delija” – Fans & Fighters React To Delija’s UFC Debut, Avenging Previous Loss To Marcin Tybura At UFC Paris

    “The Heavyweight Division Needs A Destroyer Like Ante Delija” – Fans & Fighters React To Delija’s UFC Debut, Avenging Previous Loss To Marcin Tybura At UFC Paris

    Ten years ago, Ante Delija looked to win the M-1 Global heavyweight title in a battle with Marcin Tybura, but a leg injury in the first round of that fight prevented that from happening. Now, the two squared off again in Delija’s UFC debut at UFC Paris, and Delija is the one who came out with his hand raised this time around.

    Delija looked to bring pressure right away, landing on Tybura, but he’d get caught in Tybura’s grasp and placed on the fence. Tybura would look for the takedown, but Delija managed to escape. Tybura started to connect with the right hand, and the fight’s momentum would not change from there.

    A short series of right hands from Delija would rock Tybura and send him to the mat, finishing the fight in an emotional UFC debut performance for the former PFL champion.

    Ante Delija Brutally KOs Marcin Tybura In UFC Debut At UFC Paris

    Delija is a veteran of the PFL, having been a finalist in the 2021 PFL heavyweight season and winning the 2022 PFL heavyweight title. After parting ways with the PFL, with his last fight with the promotion coming in 2024, Delija last fought in April, finishing Yorgan De Castro this past April at FNC 22.

    Tybura is 3-2 in his last five.

  • VIDEO: Kaue Fernandes Makes UFC Paris Opponent Leave Octagon In Wheelchair After Leg Kick TKO

    VIDEO: Kaue Fernandes Makes UFC Paris Opponent Leave Octagon In Wheelchair After Leg Kick TKO

    In one of the rarest circumstances seen in the Octagon, a finish via leg-kick helped Kaue Fernandes get a first-round victory, defeating Harry Hardwick during the UFC Paris preliminary card.

    Leg kicks seemed to be the focus of Fernandes’ attack, and he noticed the damage those kicks were doing. Less than two minutes into the fight, and Hardwick was notably limping around the Octagon as he was trying to move and attack Fernandes to stay in the fight.

    One leg kick in particular sent Hardwick into a roll on the Octagon mat. Referee Herb Dean waited for Hardwick to stand, but he was unable to do so in a timely manner, resulting in Dean calling a TKO.

    In what may have been an Octagon first, Hardwick was seen leaving the Octagon in a wheelchair.

    Kaue Fernandes Scores First-Round Finish With Leg Kicks At UFC Paris

    Fernandes has now won three straight since dropping his UFC debut to Mark Diakiese and five of his last six.

    Hardwick, the former Cage Warriors featherweight champion, sees a nine-fight unbeaten streak snapped here tonight. This marked his UFC debut.

  • “Get This Man A Ranked Opponent” – Fans & Fighters React To Sam Patterson Starching Trey Waters At UFC Paris For Fourth Straight First-Round Finish

    “Get This Man A Ranked Opponent” – Fans & Fighters React To Sam Patterson Starching Trey Waters At UFC Paris For Fourth Straight First-Round Finish

    Sam Patterson is on a roll in the Octagon, putting away Trey Waters during the preliminary card of UFC Paris to score his fourth consecutive Octagon victory via a first-round finish.

    The two fought conservatively to start off the fight, focusing on single shots as each tried to build his momentum. Waters seemed to be getting the better of the pair early, becoming the aggressor early.

    Patterson started to find success with the right hand, however, snapping Waters’ head back a few times. He turned up the heat, landing several right hooks that did damage, hurting Waters. The referee would step in with both men still on their feet, the right hands of Patterson proving to be too much for Waters to handle.

    Sam Patterson Rocks Trey Waters With Right Hands For First-Round Finish At UFC Paris

    Patterson’s four straight first-round finishes have been a rebound from dropping his UFC debut to Yanal Ashmoud at UFC 286. Patterson earned a UFC contract after a submission win over Vinicius Cenci on Dana White’s Contender Series in 2022.

    Waters, the former LFA welterweight champion, loses for the second time in his career, having lost to Gabriel Bonfim on DWCS in 2022. Waters was 2-0 in the UFC entering tonight, scoring decisions over Josh Quinlan and Billy Ray Goff.

  • VIDEO: Rinat Fakhretdinov Makes Quick Work Of Andreas Gustafsson With Fast-Paced Finish At UFC Paris

    VIDEO: Rinat Fakhretdinov Makes Quick Work Of Andreas Gustafsson With Fast-Paced Finish At UFC Paris

    Rinat Fakhretdinov proved to oddsmakers that he shouldn’t have been the underdog in his UFC Paris bout with Andreas Gustafsson, coming away with a quick finish.

    After working Gustafsson over with low kicks and his jab, Fakhretdinov cracked him with a one-two. Fakhretdinov began to pressure and work Gustafsson’s body until getting him to the fence, unleashing his fits as Gustafsson fell to the mat, resulting in a TKO in under a minute.

    Rinat Fakhretdinov Finishes Andreas Gustafsson With A Flurry At UFC Paris

    Fakhretdinov, the former GFC middleweight champion, improves to 24-1-1 in his professional MMA career. His only loss came in his second professional MMA fight, and he now has a 6-0-1 UFC record.

    Fakhretdinov came into this bout off a controversial decision win over Carlos Leal at UFC 308. This was his second UFC KO/TKO victory in under a minute, having done the same to Kevin Lee at UFC Vegas 76.

    Gustafsson sees a four-fight win streak snapped with his defeat.

  • Rizin CEO laughs at ONE Championship’s Chatri Sityodtong, open to future K-1 collab

    Rizin CEO laughs at ONE Championship’s Chatri Sityodtong, open to future K-1 collab

    The CEO of Rizin is willing to entertain the idea of a K-1 HERO’S cross promotional event if the latter can boost their brand among recent restructuring and he also worked in a laugh directed toward ONE Championship’s Chatri Sityodtong. Nobuyuki Sakakibara was asked at a recent Rizin media event by X user @majan_saitou of Dropkick Pro wrestling and martial arts about the recent addition of Genki Sudo to K-1 fold with the distinction of a producer role within that promotion.

    Sudo is a massive figure from the glory days of K-1 with him holding the iconic “we are all one” flag being an emblazoned image in the minds of fans from that era. In July of this year, Sudo took part in the Upper House elction and ran for a seat which did not pan out. Now the massive Japanese combat sports figure has now redirected his focus on prizefighting with a professed aim to book unique and creative K-1 matches going forward.

    In a translated post on X from the aforementioned @majan_saitou when asking the Rizin CEO about Sudo’s inclusion into the K-1 fold, Sakakibara said,

    “It’s different from Chatri [Sityodtong], so welcome [laughs], but who knows about HERO’S now? If the brand gets polished, there might be an inter-promotional event. As a producer, I wonder how much resolve he has to take on.”

    The Rizin and ONE Championship bad blood rooted in disrespect

    Chatri Sityodtong has made himself some enemies in Japan with past comments toward organizations like RISE and Glory being representative of “small promotions” when someone asked about potential co-promotion opportunities with those federations. ONE Championship has also ventured into the Japanese market several times with a looming card in November as the promotion is seemingly trying to stack ONE 173 as deep as possible for their Tokyo-based card.

    The former Pride FC figurehead was asked about multiple instances of Sityodtong being disrespectful to fighters and promoters alike on the Japanese scene and to that, Sakakibara stated,

    “If you want to come to Japan and do business in the Japanese martial arts world, you must properly respect Japan’s martial arts organizations. Whether they are small or large doesn’t matter.”

    In a separate instance, the ONE Championship figurehead made disparaging comments about Shoot Boxing champion Kaito Ono which spoiled a budding cross promotional releationship being built with ONE and Shoot Boxing. As the Rizin CEO offered up his own responses to that particular situation, Sakakibara quipped,

    “An apology has been made, hasn’t it? So I think the situation has shifted a bit… You need to understand that there is Chairman Takeshi Caesar, there is Shoot Boxing (SB), and these are connected to where we are now. Without that understanding, I don’t think you qualify as a promoter to do business in this country.”

    “If you want to apologize, you should step forward and do it in the Japanese way … If you claim to be half-Japanese, you should learn about Japanese etiquette, manners, and how to behave towards seniors, not just as a promoter, but as a human being. If you want to do business in Japan, that’s the most important thing. Other emotional issues are already being addressed with apologies, and it will lead to better rule-making.”

  • Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva 2 boxing battle falls out

    Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva 2 boxing battle falls out

    Vitor Belfort and Wanderlei Silva will no longer be running things back in a boxing contest after the former had to withdraw from the bout. The two combatants were supposed to headline the sophomore Spaten Fight Night event. The first Spaten Fight Night card was headlined by a boxing bout between former UFC rivals Anderson Silva and Chael Sonnen.

    Alas, Belfort will not be competing September 27th in Sao Paulo, Brazil with reports from Brazilian outlet Globo indicating as such with ‘The Phenom’ himself also coming out to touch on pulling out of this sequel clash with ‘The Axe Murderer.’ The former UFC light heavyweight champion posted a video to his Instagram page with Belfort saying that he suffered what was described by medical professionals as a grade 3 concussion when he was training for this Queensberry Rules showdown.

    While Belfort is no longer competing towards the end of the month, Silva will still be donning the big gloves for this event. The promotion is reportedly set to announce a replacement opponent for the former Pride FC champion during one of the most popular programs in South America, Fantastico, with the new opponent for Silva set to be announced on their Sunday broadcast.

    Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva and their history together

    Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva first fought almost thirty years ago during the UFC’s first ever card in Brazil. This took place at UFC 17.5 in 1998 with Belfort storming through Silva 44 seconds into the contest with that barrage of strikes that crumbled the Brazilian berserker finding itself on seemingly innumerable UFC highlight reel packages thereafter.

    There have been attempts to re-book this fight in the 27 years since their initial meeting took place with Belfort also withdrawing from that booking attempt. That transpired at UFC 147 when Vitor Belfort was forced into pulling out from the June 2012 rematch after suffering a broken hand. Rich Franklin would step up to fill that vacancy and ended up besting Silva on points.

    Silva makes his boxing debut here in the coming weeks and while Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva fell out, we will see the story unfurl this weekend when Silva’s replacement opponent for SFN 2 comes to light.