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  • Ilia Topuria: “I Just Came to Collect My Belt – Everyone Knew I’d Finish Oliveira” at UFC 317

    Ilia Topuria: “I Just Came to Collect My Belt – Everyone Knew I’d Finish Oliveira” at UFC 317

    Ilia Topuria entered the octagon at UFC 317 supremely confident and felt like the outcome of his Charles Oliveira fight was almost a formality in a sense. On Saturday, June 28th, Topuria cemented himself among two division champions throughout UFC history when the former featherweight kingpin captured the lightweight belt after a highlight reel knockout of former 155-pound titleholder Charles Oliveira.

    The magnitude of a victory like this, in the International Fight Week headliner no less, is belied by the post-fight demeanour of the Spanish-Georgian mixed martial artist who was surrounded by a team that was assured of this kind of outcome all through the training camp stages. When expounding upon this collective mindset at the post-fight press conference while also giving some insights intom specific moments from his UFC 317 clash, Ilia Topuria said,

    “Everyone around me knew that I would do it. Everyone knew it. I just came to collect my belt. I already wore it in the training sessions. I know how hard I work. I know what I’m able to do in sparring. I know how good I am. I know that no one can match my level of skills inside the octagon. I used to prove it that I’m the best fighter in the world.”

    “I was this close to getting a very dominating position. He did a good scramble there, but I saw in his face that he was hurt and I decided to stand up and finish the fight.”

    Ilia Topuria could get to ‘Jon Jones level’, according to former UFC veteran

    Ilia Topuria already exists in rarefied air, being that he is now on the tier of two-division UFC champions throughout history, but a statement win in a potential first title defense could get him to the level of Jon Jones according to a former UFC welterweight. This was touched on by Matt Brown during an episode of The Fighter vs. The Writer which also features Damon Martin of MMA Fighting. When touching upon his thought processes in this vein, Brown stated [via MMA Fighting],

    “Ilia, to me, is on the verge of we start comparing him to like Jon Jones. To me, if he goes out and beats an Arman [Tsarukyan] or maybe Islam [Makhachev] moves back down or [Ilia] moves up if Islam wins or [he fights Jack] Della Maddalena, we’re starting to talk about Jon Jones level greatness. Start making comparisons, but if he goes out and beats a Paddy [Pimblett], he’ll go back and fight some of the tougher guys after that. Not that Paddy’s not tough, I shouldn’t say that.”

    “But we know he’ll go back and fight some of those tougher matchups after that at some point. I just want to see it now. The guy’s right on the verge. I looked through some of Jones’ resume, and I was comparing some of the three fight runs that he went on, which he went on an undefeated run, but I’m not sure you compare them to this with Ilia. Maybe hindsight is 20/20, but I don’t know it’s as good as this run that Ilia is on.”

  • Jake Paul Calls Out Insurance Industry and Dana White: “It’s a Scam – Ben Askren Deserves Better”

    Jake Paul Calls Out Insurance Industry and Dana White: “It’s a Scam – Ben Askren Deserves Better”

    Jake Paul put the insurance industry on blast, and Dana White by proxy, in showing support for Ben Askren, who is amid a trying health scare. ‘The Problem Child’ shouted out the former ONE Championship and Bellator MMA titleholder during his in-ring address following his win over the weekend against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

    Paul spotlighted a situation that saw Askren in need of a double lung transplant, which Askren has since received per his wife Amy, with the former two time Hodge Trophy winner being denied key coverage from his insurance amid this situation. Donation options had been set up for this Askren situation in lieu of the insurance issues, with Paul also indicating before his Chavez Jr. fight that he wanted to help the Askren family in any way he might be able to.

    When addressing his post-fight spotlighting of Ben Askren at the post-event press conference while also taking shots at the US insurance industry and UFC figurehead Dana White, Paul said,

    “It’s just insane—insurance is a f***in scam, and it’s so sad. Right when you need these companies, they’re not there. It’s f***ed. His insurance denied him to get the double lung transplant, which is also one of the most expensive surgeries, which is why they denied it. It just sucks. It sucks that no one’s doing anything. I was obviously super busy this week, so we’re figuring out the donation now, but none of these people—like Dana [White] or anyone—are stepping in, so I feel like I have to do something. That’s really all it is.”

    Jake Paul and Ben Askren: from rivals to paying tribute

    Jake Paul and Ben Askren do have a competitive history with one another as the two stepped into the ring for one of the more curious boxing attractions of the modern era when they threw down in April 2021. Paul vs Askren took place in Atlanta under the Triller Fight Club banner with the former knocking out the latter in the opening stanza.

    This improved Paul’s pro boxing record at the time to 3-0, with the Askren victory representing his first recorded win over a professional fighter. It seems like this recent gesture of good faith from Paul to Askren has dispelled any idea that there is still animosity between the two.

  • ‘If He Asks For A Fight…He Doesn’t Like His Life’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 6 Recap

    ‘If He Asks For A Fight…He Doesn’t Like His Life’ – The TUF Stuff: The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 Episode 6 Recap

    Welcome, everyone, to the sixth edition of The TUF Stuff!

    Each week, I’ll be guiding you through a recap of this season’s edition of The Ultimate Fighter, providing updates on what happens in each episode — from the drama and storylines out of the Octagon, to the looks into who the competing fighters are, to what goes down inside the cage.

    This season celebrates the 20th anniversary of TUF. That inaugural season from 2005 helped to influence many future MMA fans, media members, and fighters (yours truly included). And now, two more fighters this summer will get the opportunity to call themselves TUF champions when it’s all said and done.

    Last week saw the third flyweight matchup of the season, as Alibi Idiris continued Team Cormier’s winning streak, defeating Team Sonnen’s Furkatbek Yokubov.

    Recap of The Ultimate Fighter Season 33 – Episode 6

    Tonight’s matchup at welterweight will see Team Cormier’s Alex Sanchez taking on Team Sonnen’s Matt Dixon.

    Let’s get into episode six of The Ultimate Fighter!

    TUF House

    Alibi Idiris gifts a Kazakh robe to Furkatbek Yokubov, calling him a respectable opponent he’s always looked to. Yokubov feels some shame in his performance but says he plans to show what more he can do.

    Diego Bianchini appears to be making fun of Team Cormier for not having a jiu-jitsu coach. That doesn’t still well with Rodrigo Sezinando, who starts to exchange words. Sezinando implies that no one cares about Bianchini.

    Sezinando makes a comment about his sole loss in Mexico, and that sets Bianchini off, claiming he was robbed. This results in a yelling match between the two, with Bianchini saying something about Sezinando’s only loss — and the tension continues to boil and boil. Sezinando says “You’re not a bad boy, you’re a playboy.” Bianchini calls Sezinando jealous, and Sezinando says he smells fear on Bianchini.

    “If he asks for a fight with me, he doesn’t like his life, dude,” Sezinando says. “Such a stupid idea.”

    Team Cormier Training Session – Rose Namajunas & Raquel Pennington Join

    Team Cormier introduces former UFC champions Rose Namajunas and Raquel Pennington, who were on seasons 20 and 18, respectively. Season 18 was the first TUF season to feature women — featuring Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate as coaches. Pennington lost to Jessica Rakoczy in the semifinals.

    Namajunas competed on season 20, which introduced the strawweight division to the UFC. Namajunas lost to Carla Esparza in the finals.

    Pennington tells the team to “Get comfortable with the uncomfortable.” Namajunas adds to embrace everything that has gotten the fighters to this point and to have their “go-tos.”

    They lead the team through shadowboxing and other drills.

    Namajunas says TUF came at a perfect point in her life, while Pennington reflects on it being a pivotal part in her career — coming into the UFC at a time when women were first just entering the Octagon.

    Matt Dixon Fight Prep

    Dixon reflects on his appearance on Dana White’s Contender Series as a 9-0 fighter, taking on Orion Cosce. Dixon says he was winning the fight, but a failure to pace himself resulted in gassing out and getting finished. Dixon says the loss took out some of his joy in the sport, but he says that TUF will be what makes up for it.

    Sonnen calls Dixon “dog tough,” and Clayton Hires tells Sonnen that he sees something — a hunger, a spark — in Dixon’s eye. Mason Fowler added he’d “put money” on Dixon in this fight.

    Sonnen feels Dixon will be in control for all of the fight and can reach the finale; however, he has to pace himself in this fight.

    Dixon says he’s going to look to walk Sanchez down and pressure him into knocking Sanchez out.

    “You’re going to see kicks, dynamic footwork, dynamic movement.”

    Dixon says he predicts this fight to be an all-out striking war.

    Team Sonnen Training Session

    Sonnen’s longtime teammate, TUF 3 alumnus Ed Herman, joins to assist the team with their dirty boxing and striking training. He shows the team how to execute ground-and-pound by using the half-guard.

    “Nasty, dirty, kind of grind stuff to break guys down and finish them,” Herman said.

    Dixon calls Herman “brutal” with his ground-and-pound. Echerverria appreciates the opportunity to mix new-school and old-school striking techniques.

    Herman loves the opportunity to teach the next generation of MMA stars.

    Alex Sanchez Backstory

    Sanchez was born in Jalisco. He didn’t have time to train martial arts as a kid because of working from a young age. Sanchez, in fact, worked in the fields in the U.S. at a young age, and he used the money to eventually be able to pay for martial arts training. He shares this experience with Sezinando, who tells him “this is what makes us stronger.”

    Suarez lives in Mexico City and received a grant to train at the UFC Performance Institute there. “It has changed my life, and it’ll change the lives of many more.”

    Matt Dixon Backstory

    Dixon is asked about missing his family and missing (or not) the single life. Dixon introduces his wife and his young daughter, saying they are his greatest success. He adds having a daughter brought about new-found motivation in — something deeper he didn’t know he had.

    We see Dixon’s childhood home. His dad is a preacher, and his mom worked two job, so he admitted he and his two siblings were a little wild. Dixon would have a pair of boxing gloves and boxed with friends while struggling to stay focused in school.

    Dixon trains at the Hurricane Training Center with TUF alumnus Gerald Harris. Harris calls Dixon “the future” and “a great guy.”

    Caleb Benton, his boxing coach, says he’s seen Dixon battle through adversity and has the ability to win the TUF competition. Dixon says winning TUF means everything to him, otherwise he wouldn’t make the sacrifices he’s making.

    Alex Sanchez Fight Prep

    Sanchez describes himself as a striker with his eight KO/TKO wins — and he hasn’t lost since 2020.

    Sanchez feels he’ll be able to handle wherever the fight goes.

    Cormier says the fight is “tough” for him because he feels Sanchez cannot get pressured into the fence. Cormier says Sanchez needs to attack and back Dixon up and stop Dixon’s takedown attempts.

    Cormier says Sanchez has “serious pop in his hand.”

    Sanchez says he won’t be worried if Dixon wants to grapple or strike and feels he is the kind of fighter who can deliver a great knockout, this fight included. In fact, Sanchez calls Dixon “an average fighter” and that it’s Dixon’s turn to lose his dream.

    The Fight: Alex Sanchez vs. Matt Dixon

    —–IF YOU HAVEN’T WATCHED THE EPISODE AND DON’T WANT TO BE SPOILED, THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO TURN AWAY NOW.———

    Dixon weighs in at 171. Sanchez weighs in at 170.5. The fight is on!

    Dana White feels this will be an exciting fight, given that it is striker vs. striker.

    Andreeas Binder says Dixon is aggressive with his striking, and that Sanchez cannot start slow. Jeff Creighton says that Sanchez is tough and strikes heavy, and he says that if Sanchez can move and make Dixon miss, he has a good shot.

    Dixon says he wants to make things entertaining and that he will do “anything” to ensure he wins this fight. Sanchez says he fights for the people who believe in him and to build a legacy, looking to put on a show and represent Mexico well.

    Alex Sanchez vs. Matt Dixon

    Round 1

    Dixon comes forward. Sanchez with a one-two. Solid right hand from Dixon. Dixon fires off some strikes. One-two from Sanchez. Low kick from Sanchez. Dixon with a one-two. Dixon pressuring Sanchez. Sanchez with a low kick. Cormier calls for more calf kicks from Sanchez. Dixon with a left hand. Jabs from Dixon. Clinch now, and Dixon brings Sanchez toward the fence, landing an elbow in the process. One-two from Dixon after the break. Solid left hand from Sanchez.

    Right hand and a left from Dixon. Dixon works his punches. Strong hook from Sanchez. One-two from Sanchez. Body kick from Dixon. Low kick from Sanchez. Body kick from Sanchez. Overhand right from Sanchez. Right hand catches Sanchez clean. Sanchez lands a combination. Right hand from Dixon. Sanchez misses a right hook. Right hand lands for Sanchez. Left hand from Dixon. Another left hand from Dixon.

    Strong left hand DROPS SANCHEZ! Dixon with some follow-up ground-and-pound! The fight is over!

    The losing streak for Team Sonnen is over!

    Cormier is PISSED that Sanchez continuously backed up. “Of course you’re going to get caught.”

    Winner: Matt Dixon via first-round TKO

    Conclusion

    Cormier says that he told Sanchez to press and go forward, but he didn’t do that. Cormier says Sanchez didn’t listen to him and his team.

    Dana White said the fighters did as expected — keep the fight standing. White says Dixon controlled the pace and made Sanchez uncomfortable.

    Sonnen says Dixon landing to the body was what led Sanchez to drop his hands and set up the knockout shot.

    Cormier adds “you can’t run” when being in a fistfight like he and Dixon were in.

    Dixon calls the experience surreal and feels justified in being here and that he is a real threat, getting the job done on the biggest stage.

    Cormier tells Sanchez that his style doesn’t allow him to back up. “DON’T BACK UP!” he yells several times at Sanchez. “When we’re telling you something, listen! Simple concept, don’t back up. You got to f****** fight.”

    Sanchez feels disappointed in how he performed and can’t make excuses, but now he has to shake it off and go from here.

    With all other flyweight fighters having competed in their first-round matchups already, the next fight will see Team Cormier’s Tumelo Manyamala take on Team Sonnen’s Roybert Echerverria.

    The fighters will also get to experience the UFC Fight Pass Invitational next week, and former UFC middleweight champion and TUF: The Smashes winner Robert Whittaker joins Team Sonnen for a training session.

    What will happen next week? Join alongside us then!

    Thanks for joining me for another edition of The TUF Stuff!

  • UFC Rankings Report: Ilia Topuria Becomes New Men’s Pound-For-Pound Best

    UFC Rankings Report: Ilia Topuria Becomes New Men’s Pound-For-Pound Best

    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 317 in Las Vegas, MMA News has you covered with this week’s complete updates.

    Men’s Pound-For-Pound: Ilia Topuria has moved up two spots and is the new No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter. Islam Makhachev moves down one spot to No. 2 and Merab Dvalishvili moves down one spot to No. 3.

    Alexandre Pantoja moves up four spots to No. 5. Magomed Ankalaev moves down to spots to No. 7, while Jack Della Maddalena, Tom Aspinall, and Alex Pereira each move down one spot to, respectively, No. 8, No. 9, and No. 10.

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

    Women’s Strawweight: No changes.

    Women’s Flyweight: Tracy Cortez moves up two spots to No. 8 after defeating Vivane Araujo, who falls two spots to No. 10. Maycee Barber moves down one spot to No. 6, as Jasmine Jasudavicius takes sole possession of No. 5.

    Women’s Bantamweight: No changes.

    Flyweight: With his victory over Brandon Royval, Joshua Van moves up 11 spots to the No. 1 contender position. Royval moves down two spots to No. 3. As a result, a number of people — Amir Albazi, Kai Kara-France, Tatsuro Taira, Manel Kape, Alex Perez, Asu Almabayev, Steve Erceg, Tim Elliott, and Tagir Ulanbekov — move down one spot to, respectively, Nos. 4-12.

    Bruno Silva moves up in the ranks to No. 14, swapping places with Kai Asakura (now No. 15).

    Bantamweight: No changes.

    Featherweight: With Topuria’s capturing of the UFC lightweight championship and officially leaving the division, he leaves the 145-pound rankings. Movsar Evloev moves up two spots to No. 2. Diego Lopes falls one spot to No. 3.

    A number of people move up one spot — Yair Rodriguez (to No. 4), Brian Ortega (to No. 5), Arnold Allen (also to No. 5), Lerone Murphy (No. 7), Aljamain Sterling (No. 8), Josh Emmett (to No. 9), Jean Silva (to No. 10), and Youssef Zalal (to No. 11).

    Dan Ige moves up two spots to No. 12. Calvin Kattar moves up one spot to No. 14, while Giga Chikadze re-joins the featherweight rankings at No. 15.

    Lightweight: With Topuria moving up to lightweight and capturing the championship, a number of fighters move down one spot in the rankings. Islam Makhachev, the now-former champion, moves down to No. 1, while Arman Tsarukyan, Charles Oliveira, Justin Gaethje, Max Holloway, Dustin Poirier, Dan Hooker, and Mateusz Gamrot move down to No. 2-8, respectively.

    Paddy Pimblett falls two spots to No. 10. Rafael Fiziev, Renato Moicano, and Michael Chandler each move down one spot to, respectively, No. 11, No. 12, and No. 13. Grant Dawson falls two spots to No. 15.

    Welterweight: No changes.

    Middleweight: Abus Magomedov falls one spot to No. 15, giving Roman Kopylov sole possession of the No. 14 spot.

    Light Heavyweight: No changes.

    Heavyweight: No changes.

    You can view the full updated UFC rankings here.

  • Joe Rogan on Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou: “That’s the Fight – The Real Fight. And We Lost It”

    Joe Rogan on Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou: “That’s the Fight – The Real Fight. And We Lost It”

    Joe Rogan is lamenting about the loss of the Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou bout amid retirement and contractual dynamics with other promotions. On JRE MMA Show episode 167 while speaking with Cory Sandhagen, Joe Rogan was getting into what contest he truly yearned to see inside of the cage as Rogan said,

    “The real fight would have been Jon Jones versus Francis [Ngannou]. That’s the real fight. If I like clearly, I’m not responsible for making decisions because I would have made a lot of different decisions. I would have been like, ‘Francis, let’s talk, let’s work this out.’ That guy’s a star. Francis is the scariest heavyweight of all time. That guy, as the heavyweight champion, is so marketable. He puts people into orbit. He flatlined Stipe, he flatlined Alistair, he flatlines people. He’s terrifying.”

    Rogan continued, “That’s the heavyweight champion, and for that guy to walk away from the belt and then almost beat Tyson Fury and then get knocked out by Anthony Joshua and then to come back and destroy that dude in PFL—that’s the guy. That’s the fight. It’s a shame when that happens in the sport, dude. It’s the worst. I hate it. I see it happen all the time, and I can’t help but think a lot of it is like, hopefully, it’s just maybe money, business stuff, but I really think that some of it is ego.”

    Joe Rogan on the lost Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou bout

    Joe Rogan has discussed this lost heavyweight dream fight for years now and this was evidenced by him commenting on it during a Joe Rogan Experience episode circa February 2023. Around this period, Rogan expressed a desire to see Ngannou get his blockbuster boxing bout that he desired [which ended up being against Tyson Fury] and to come back to the octagon to face the winner of Jon Jones vs. Ciryl Gane which was then an upcoming bout for the vacant UFC heavyweight title.

    Even beyond the prickly relationship between Ngannou and UFC figurehead Dana White, the heavy handed heavyweight is contractually bound to the PFL for his MMA fighting career and is loyal to PFL per one of Ngannou’s coaches. Around the time of the February 2023 JRE episode, Rogan seemed optimistic that the Cameroon native could return to the octagon while also encouraging Ngannou to not sign an exclusive contract.

  • Alexandre Pantoja Calls Out Joshua Van as “My Toughest Challenger” Sees Himself in the Young Contender

    Alexandre Pantoja Calls Out Joshua Van as “My Toughest Challenger” Sees Himself in the Young Contender

    Alexandre Pantoja related his own journey to the one Joshua Van is embarking on as the former touts the skills of the latter ahead of what would seem like the next flyweight title fight between the two of them. At UFC 317, both Pantoja and Van would emerge with massive victories. Pantoja defended his flyweight strap in the co-main event with a third round rear naked choke victory over Kai Kara-France while Van bested Brandon Royval in a barnburner bout that he won via unanimous decision.

    While taking part in a post-fight interview that saw him address the man he just defeated while now predominantly focusing on the man who would seem to be his next adversary, Pantoja said,

    Joshua Van reminds me of a younger Pantoja. When I was 23, I was working in a restaurant, cleaning dishes. This guy is 23, going to fight for the belt, for the world championship. I think this guy is going to be my toughest challenger. He’s young, he’s hungry, and he doesn’t make wars like I did in the past. I’ve made 35 professional fights—a lot of wars. UFC gives me this new guy.”

    “Everybody wants to see the new generation rematch for me. I want to fight with that guy, too. I want that challenger—a new blood, a new kid, very hungry. I watched a couple of fights from Josh. He’s doing an amazing job. He defends all the takedowns, he beat Bruno in his last fight, he had the opportunity to fight the number one contender, Royval, and did an amazing job.”

    Pantoja continued, “I think that’s my toughest challenge. Monday, I’ll be back in the gym. My coach knows I’m not the champion of the world anymore—I’m the challenger. I know who’s my opponent and I know what I want. I want this belt again.”

    Alexandre Pantoja on the depth of the flyweight class today

    Alexandre Pantoja is a few days away from hitting the two year mark of his flyweight title reign and has the second most defenses in the championship’s history with the Kai Kara-France win putting him at four successful defenses. The only man to have more defenses than him is Demetrious Johnson who Pantoja called out after his UFC 310 win over Kai Asakura.

    The reigning UFC flyweight champion addressed DJ post-UFC 317 and compared the flyweight class when ‘Mighty Mouse’ was champ versus the 125 pound hierarchy today, Alexandre Pantoja stated [via Sherdog],

    “I said before I really want to fight with him [Johnson]. He said he’s retired, he’s not coming back. Maybe it’s not good for him to come back because the flyweight division right now is so different. This high level is different. I respect all the guys opening the doors for us but right now you see, especially in my division, you have the whole world in the same division. Top 10, you have guys from the whole world: Japan. Africa. Brazil. Russia. Australia. New Zealand. That’s so amazing to be part of that.”

  • Holly Holm Demands Real Competition: “I Want to Beat Them When They’re at Their Best”

    Holly Holm spoke about how she maintains her composure and focus amid being trash talked after returning to the win column in her first boxing bout in over a decade. The former UFC bantamweight champion donned the big gloves once again on Saturday night with
    Holm securing a unanimous decision victory over Yolanda Vega. It was an impressive return to form for Holm with the former three weight boxing champion and International Boxing Hall of Fame inductee looking like she hasn’t lost a beat competing under Queensberry Rules.

    The victory took place as part of the Jake Paul vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. event which went down on Saturday, June 28th concurrently with the pugilistic proceedings of UFC 317. When addressing on-site media members in the aftermath of this win, with footage provided by MMA Fighting, ‘The Preacher’s Daughter’ was asked for her thoughts on pre-fight comments from Vega that were oriented to wanting to send Holm into retirement.

    When responding to those comments from her opponent and if the smack talk gave her a bit of extra fuel, Holly Holm said,

    “I use anything as motivation. They could be being too friendly, and I’m like, ‘I’m not your friend.’ They could be talking a bunch of trash, and you’re like, ‘Don’t talk like that.’ It’s just leading up to a fight—you’ll use anything for motivation. So, yeah, it’s motivation, but really my motivation is just in me. I fight for me, and for the support that I have for my team. I want to win.”

    Holly Holm and ‘a sweet victory’ that was twelve years in the making

    Holm continued, “I don’t want to fight somebody who’s not there to win. I don’t want to fight somebody who’s not at their best. I want to beat them when they’re at their best, so I wanted her to come with everything she had. That makes it more of a sweet victory. It doesn’t bother me, it does fuel me, but I want them to come. I don’t want to beat someone at their worst. I want to beat them at their best.”

  • Ilia Topuria’s Destruction Of Charles Oliveira At UFC 317 Leaves Sean O’Malley Grateful For Missed Fight

    Ilia Topuria’s Destruction Of Charles Oliveira At UFC 317 Leaves Sean O’Malley Grateful For Missed Fight

    Sean O’Malley wants no part of Ilia Topuria’s firepower.

    On Saturday night, Topuria turned his dream into reality, finishing Charles Oliveira with a vicious first-round knockout in the UFC 317 headliner to claim the lightweight title and cement his status as a two-division champion.

    “El Matador” handled Oliveira’s early grappling exchanges with composure before steering the fight back into his striking domain. He then uncorked a thunderous right hook that stunned Oliveira, followed by a pinpoint left hand that sealed the deal. The former lightweight champion collapsed to the canvas unconscious, prompting the referee to wave it off at 2:27 of the opening round.

    Before his lightweight triumph, Ilia Topuria had already left a trail of destruction in the featherweight division, first dethroning Alexander Volkanovski to claim the 145-pound title, then cementing his reign with a brutal knockout of Max Holloway in his first defense last year.

    Back when Topuria held the featherweight belt, former bantamweight titleholder O’Malley had campaigned for a champion vs. champion showdown. The bout never materialized, and after witnessing Topuria’s savage finish at UFC 317, “Suga” is more than thankful it stayed that way.

    Image: @ufc/X

    Sean O’Malley Feels Lucky UFC Passed On Ilia Topuria Matchup

    During a live reaction on his YouTube channel, Sean O’Malley had nothing but praise for Ilia Topuria following his stunning finish of Charles Oliveira at UFC 317. Speaking candidly, “Suga” admitted that after witnessing Topuria notch three consecutive knockouts against elite competition, he now feels fortunate the UFC never followed through on his dream matchup with the newly crowned lightweight king.

    “Holy f**k,” O’Malley said. “Islam [Makhachev] vs. Topuria needs to happen. He’s up there with Jon Jones, man. Thank God he didn’t accept my callout. … After I beat ‘Chito’ [Marlon Vera], I called out Ilia and he got scared and ran to 155. No, I’m just kidding, thank God the UFC didn’t make that fight. Knocked out [Alexander Volkanovski], knocked out Max [Holloway], knocked out Charles. Islam next at 170 [pounds]? Holy f**k. Who would even fight Ilia at 155 next? Holy f**k”

  • What’s Next After UFC 317? Full Confirmed UFC 318 Main Card For New Orleans On July 19

    What’s Next After UFC 317? Full Confirmed UFC 318 Main Card For New Orleans On July 19

    UFC 317 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 318 in New Orleans, Louisiana.

    The promotion was in Las Vegas last week, where the T-Mobile Arena played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its sixth numbered event of the year. Of note were headline wins for Ilia Topuria and Alexandre Pantoja, as well as important victories for Joshua Van, Beneil Dariush and Payton Talbott.

    While the aftermath of the June 28 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the lightweight and flyweight championship title pictures to conversation around two BMFs — one of whom steps into the Octagon for the final time.

    In front of his native hometown crowd at UFC 318, set for the Smoothie King Arena on July 19, Dustin Poirier will take to the Octagon one last time, as he faces off with Max Holloway for the BMF belt. It will be the third encounter these two have had, with Poirier up 2-0 in the series and going for the clean sweep. A 4-0, 20-year-old Max Holloway made his UFC debut against Poirier at UFC 143, with Poirier winning via first-round submission. They would rematch seven years later at UFC 236, with Poirier scoring a clean decision to win the interim UFC lightweight championship.

    Poirier, who had been teasing retirement for some time now, will be competing for the first time in over a year, after getting submitted by Islam Makhachev in a lightweight title bout that headlined UFC 302. Poirier is 2-3 since winning his trilogy bout with Conor McGregor, including another failed lightweight title bid against Charles Oliveira at UFC 269. Poirier has fought for the BMF title once before, getting knocked out by Justin Gaethje at UFC 291.

    Holloway, the legendary former featherweight champion, will be competing in his first fight since failing to reclaim the title, getting knocked out by new lightweight champion Ilia Topuria in the main event of UFC 308. While Holloway began his MMA career at lightweight, he dropped to featherweight upon arriving to the UFC. Holloway’s other lightweight bout outside of facing Poirier for the second time came at UFC 300, when Holloway had his legendary knockout of Gaethje to win the BMF title.

    The co-main event will see Patricio Pitbull’s second UFC bout, as he takes on Dan Ige. Pitbull, the legendary former two-division Bellator champion, made his UFC debut at UFC 314 in April, losing a decision against Yair Rodriguez. Ige has lost three of his last five but will enter this fight off a third-round finish of Sean Woodson at UFC 314.

    Gautier, Costa, Johnson Set The Stage For BMF Title Headliner At UFC 318

    Before Poirier and Holloway make their way out for the BMF title fight, several names will look to make their own statements on the main card for UFC 318.

    This includes “The Silent Assassin” Ateba Gautier, who will be facing Robert Valentin. Gautier earned a UFC contract with a second-round finish of Yura Naito on Dana White’s Contender Series in September and scored a first-round knockout of Jose Medina in his UFC debut in March. Gautier will be taking on Robert Valentin, who fell short to Ryan Loder in The Ultimate Fighter season 32 finale and dropped a controversial split decision to Torrez Finney in April.

    Former middleweight title challenger Paulo Costa will also be in action, taking on Roman Kopylov. This fight was scheduled for UFC 317 but was pushed back to this card. Costa has lost four of his last five and has only fought four times since unsuccessfully challenging Israel Adesanya for the UFC middleweight championship at UFC 253. He most recently fought at UFC 302 last year, losing to Sean Strickland. Kopylov has won six of seven, most recently scoring a knockout of Chris Curtis in January.

    The main card is scheduled to open with veteran Michael Johnson taking on Daniel Zellhuber. Johnson has won two straight and four of his last six, most recently scoring a highlight knockout of Ottman Azaitar at UFC Tampa in December. This fight will mark Zellhuber’s first fight since losing to Esteban Ribovics at Noche UFC 2 (UFC 306) in what many people consider to be the best MMA fight of 2024.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of a long-awaited middleweight clash between bitter rivals Marvin Vettori and Brendan Allen, as well as Kevin Holland vs. Daniel Rodriguez, Ikram Aliskerov vs. Brunno Ferreira, and Neil Magny vs. Gunnar Nelson, all of whom are expected to be featured players on the event’s preliminary card.

    See below for the UFC 318 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

    • BMF Championship: Max Holloway vs. Dustin Poirier
    • Featherweight: Dan Ige vs. Patricio Pitbull
    • Middleweight: Ateba Gautier vs. Robert Valentin
    • Middleweight: Paulo Costa vs. Roman Kopylov
    • Lightweight: Michael Johnson vs. Daniel Zellhuber

    Preliminary Card (full card and bout order TBA):

    • Middleweight: Marvin Vettori vs. Brendan Allen
    • Welterweight: Kevin Holland vs. Daniel Rodriguez
    • Bantamweight: Kyler Phillips vs. Vinicius Oliveira
    • Middleweight: Ikram Aliskerov vs. Brunno Ferreira
    • Welterweight: Neil Magny vs. Gunnar Nelson
    • Heavyweight: Ryan Spann vs. Lukasz Brzeski
    • Light Heavyweight: Jimmy Crute vs. Marcin Prachnio
    • Welterweight: Adam Fugitt vs. Islam Dulatov
    • Women’s Flyweight: Carli Judice vs. Nicolle Caliari
    • Welterweight: Francisco Prado vs. Nikolay Veretennikov
  • Sean Strickland Punches Fighter After Being Taunted During Tuff-N-Uff Event

    Sean Strickland Punches Fighter After Being Taunted During Tuff-N-Uff Event

    Sean Strickland got into a cage and threw, and he wasn’t even at a UFC event — he wasn’t even in a match at all.

    Strickland, along with Chris Curtis, was in the corner for a teammate’s fight at Tuff-N-Uff 145 on June 29, held at The Theatre at The Sahara in Las Vegas, Nevada. The teammate, Miles Hunsinger, was in action in a middleweight contest against Luis Hernandez.

    Less than a minute into the second round of the fight, Hernandez had Hunsinger caught in a standing guillotine, scoring the submission. Following the win, Hernandez appeared to make vulgar taunts in the direction of Curtis and Strickland.

    Strickland, not one to let jeers at him fly by, entered the cage with Curtis. While Curtis tried to speak to Hernandez, Strickland punched the Tuff-N-Uff fighter, resulting in officials having to intervene to break up the pair. Hernandez and Curtis did exchange some words before Curtis and Strickland exited the cage.

    Sean Strickland Punches Taunting Fighter At Tuff-N-Uff Event

    It is unknown what action, if any, the Nevada State Athletic Commission will take against Strickland, or anyone else involved in the incident at the Tuff-N-Uff event.

    The UFC and Tuff-N-Uff both have yet to release statements on the incident as of 9pm ET on June 29.

    This is far from Strickland’s first controversy outside of the Octagon. Strickland has also been under fire for batterings of content creators, including Nick Nayersina and Sneako. He has also come under heavy fire in the past for sexist and homophobic comments, as well as verbal attacks on media.

    Strickland was last in action in February, losing a UFC middleweight title rematch to Dricus Du Plessis.

    Hernandez improved to 6-0 with the win, while Hunsinger fell to 7-2.

  • 6 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 317: Ilia Topuria vs. Charles Oliveira

    6 Hits & 2 Misses From UFC 317: Ilia Topuria vs. Charles Oliveira

    UFC International Fight Week usually brings alongside it a card with a highly-anticipated championship showdown, and that’s what we got with this year’s edition, UFC 317.

    The main event saw the vacant UFC lightweight championship on the line as Ilia Topuria took on Charles Oliveira. Topuria won the featherweight title at UFC 298 last year and defended it at UFC 308 against Max Holloway, but he chose to vacate the title in order to move up to 155. Oliveira, meanwhile, initially won the lightweight title at UFC 262 and made one successful defense against Dustin Poirier at UFC 269.

    Gold was also on the line in the co-main event, as UFC flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja put the belt on the line against Kai Kara-France. Pantoja won the strap originally at UFC 290, defeating Brandon Moreno, and he retained the belt against Brandon Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301 and Kai Asakura at UFC 310. Kara-France came into this title shot off a highlight knockout of Erceg at UFC 305.

    Who delivered in Las Vegas? Who fell flat? Let’s look back at the night of action together with the hits and misses of UFC 317!

    Hit – Entertaining Prelims With Plenty Of Finishes

    The preliminary card set the tone for the evening early, as there were several fighters who put up strong performances to start the card off with a bang.

    Terrance McKinney did such to kick off the televised portion of the prelims, quickly locking Viacheslav Borshchev in a guillotine choke and submitting him in just 55 seconds. Not to be outdone, Jose Miguel Delgado landed a one-two on Hyder Amil, followed by a devastating knee that dropped and finished him.

    Jacobe Smith, the heaviest odds favorite for a fight in UFC history, put away Niko Price, while Jhonata Diniz scored a decision win over Alvin Hines in the evening’s lone heavyweight bout.

    Tracy Cortez got a key victory over Viviane Araujo that should elevate her into the top-10 of the women’s flyweight rankings.

    And then came the final prelim fight of the evening…

    Hit – Gregory ‘Robocop’ Rodrigues Goes Viral With KO Of The Year Candidate

    In one of the most devastating knockouts the UFC has ever seen, Gregory Rodrigues landed a left hook that dropped Jack Hermansson to the mat, out cold. Hermansson was out for several minutes, bringing back memories in this writer to when Alistair Overeem was knocked out by Francis Ngannou at UFC 217.

    It ended up being one of the top moments of the evening, and social media immediately blew up the moment the finish happened.

    “Robocop” has been known for his finishes, scoring knockouts now in 11 of his 17 victories in professional MMA. He’s been a consistent presence in the middleweight division and has now won four of his last five fights. This win allows him to rebound from a loss he suffered against former title challenger Jared Cannonier in February.

    This was the kind of finish that says we shouldn’t be looking away from “Robocop” out of receiving notable opportunities, and a fight against a top-15 contender at 185 should be next for him.

    Having said all that…

    Miss – The Debated Follow-Up Shot, Herb Dean’s Slow Response

    The left hand was not the last shot of the fight. A couple of seconds after landing the left, Rodrigues followed up with a hammerfist to the face before referee Herb Dean could step in to officially stop the fight.

    It was a punch that was not necessary, as Hermansson was out the minute the back of his head landed on the mat. And while one media member felt it brought back memories to when Dan Henderson landed such a follow-up shot on Michael Bisping at UFC 100, the follow-up shot became a huge contention point on social media.

    In fact, plenty of people on social media said they lost respect for the moment — and Rodrigues — because of the “unnecessary” shot.

    Where does the blame lay? Some say it falls on Rodrigues, as the fighter should have been able to tell Hermansson was out cold — especially given that the follow-up came seconds after the shot, not necessarily right away.

    When asked about the moment in a post-fight press conference, Rodrigues implied that he was only fighting until the referee told him to stop. And in his defense, that is something fighters are told to do.

    And in his defense, unfortunately, this is not the first time we’ve seen a controversial finish involving compromised fighter safety and Herb Dean. Joe Rogan pointed out on commentary that Dean was out of position; however, there is a thing called using your voice. Imagine Dean has projected his voice and yelled “Stop!” At the very least, it would have cleared him from potential fault in this mess.

    Fortunately, Hermansson was okay. Fortunately, “Robocop” still has his career-defining moment that will get him another big opportunity down the line. But this controversy isn’t going to go away for a while as the MMA world debates who is more at fault and we have another concern about the responsibilities of fighters and referees when it comes to protecting the athletes.

    Hit – Payton Talbott Rebounds In Big Way

    At UFC 311 in January, plenty expected Payton Talbott to make easy work of Raoni Barcelos and continue the strong start to his Octagon career. But everyone was shocked when Talbott was completely worked over in that fight en route to a dominating decision loss.

    At UFC 317, Talbott righted his personal ship by scoring a statement decision win over Felipe Lima to kick off the main card action.

    Talbott looked completely improved in all aspects of his game. Talbott stuffed multiple takedown attempts from Lima and was able to show great strides in his wrestling, adding in some pretty strong ground-and-pound while he had top control at points. Lima had success with his hands but continued to push, and fail, with his takedown efforts.

    The loss in January must have done something for Talbott, as he looked better than he did before in this outing. Hopefully he continues to look better in his next matchup.

    Miss – “Money” Moicano Tastes Defeat, Beneil Dariush Unimpressive

    For a bout between two notable names at lightweight, things could have gone better for both men, as Beneil Dariush defeated Renato Moicano.

    Moicano seemed to control things early on, going from getting his leg damaged by Dariush’s low kicks, to marking him up with his hands and dropping Dariush with a clean right.

    But Dariush came out aggressive in the second, taking control of strong wrestling and working him over with ground pressure and strikes from the top position. Dariush employed this focused over the course of the second and third round, draining Moicano as Dariush cruised to a decision victory.

    For Moicano, this is pretty unfortunate. After taking a title fight opportunity on just one day’s notice, he now has back-to-back losses after losing to Dariush. His next fight will probably come against a lower-ranked or unranked lightweight name, and a loss there could drop him out of the rankings completely.

    For Dariush, there’s no question he should feel good about this win. It rebounds him from a pair of losses to Charles Oliveira and Arman Tsarukyan and shows he’s still a name in a crowded lightweight contender scene. Considering the trouble he was in, however, Dariush didn’t demonstrate enough to be considered a serious threat to the new champion, however. Against someone like a Max Holloway, Mateusz Gamrot, or Dan Hooker, for instance, Dariush could find himself in some deep trouble.

    Hit – Joshua Van’s Meteoric Rise As He And Brandon Royval Throw Down In One Of The Best Flyweight Fights

    Though he wasn’t competing in one of the evening’s title fights, Joshua Van should be considered the Fighter of the Month for June 2025. After putting on a beating of Bruno Silva at UFC 316, Van, days later, agreed to step in on short notice in just a few weeks’ time to take on No. 1 ranked flyweight contender and former title challenger Brandon Royval.

    The result was one of the greatest performances displayed in one of the most entertaining, exciting wars the UFC Octagon has ever witnessed — let alone within the flyweight division.

    Royval looked to put the pressure on Van early, throwing a lot in volume to try and keep Van at bay. But while Royval had the quantity, Van had the quality, landing effectively whenever he did throw. Then, Van picked up his intensity in the second round, and things turned into a true bloody slugfest, with both fighters having their moments throughout the second and third rounds.

    With the fight potentially falling either way in its closing seconds, and both fighters putting on personal bests for striking, Van dropped Royval, though he was unable to score the finish before the horn. Van earned the decision, and the two eared the Fight of the Night bonus (even Royval got his win bonus).

    Just weeks ago, Joshua Van was on the lower end of the flyweight ranks as he continued to work his way up. Now, not only did he put on a superhero effort to take a fight on short notice and get involved in a war, he won that war and will now be next in line to challenge for the flyweight title.

    Hit – Alexandre Pantoja: Greatness In Real Time

    Alexandre Pantoja already looked like an all-star fighter at International Fight Week a couple of years ago when he dethroned Brandon Moreno to win the UFC flyweight championship. But the man continues to get better with each fight, and that continued as he defeated Kai Kara-France in the co-main event of UFC 317 to retain the championship.

    It wasn’t even a close fight, as Pantoja scored a takedown in the opening minute and didn’t let up, controlling KKF for over four of the round’s five minutes, at one point threatening a choke. Pantoja continued to control the fight’s pace, scoring another pair of takedowns before locking up a rear-naked choke in the third round to score the submission.

    Pantoja has now defended the flyweight title on four occasions. And he has continued to make strides while making defenses, and that has been notably on display in consecutive title defenses now (see his defense against Kai Asakura from UFC 310 in December as well).

    Pantoja will now be taking on Joshua Van next. This should be an exciting showdown, and a win should further the argument that Pantoja is one of the UFC’s best champions — and perhaps should have a much higher spot in the men’s pound-for-pound rankings (if he shouldn’t already).

    Hit – Ilia Topuria Already Building His Legacy

    A 9-0 record in the UFC now, with seven of those victories coming via a finish. An undefeated fighter. Jaw-dropping wins over Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway to win and retain, respectively, the UFC featherweight championship.

    And now, more history for Ilia Topuria, as he becomes the first undefeated fighter, and 10th UFC fighter overall, to win a UFC title in a second weight division. And he did so in more highlight fashion.

    Topuria and Charles Oliveira both land strong strikes early before Oliveira attempted to take control with his expert-level grappling. Topuria, however, countered a takedown attempt and ended up on top. Oliveira tried to threaten a leg lock, but Topuria got out of it. Then, on the feet, Topuria landed a devastating one-two that dropped Oliveira out cold — becoming the first fighter since Cub Swanson all the way back in 2012 to score a first-round knockout of “Do Bronx.”

    With Spain and Georgia both behind him, and him continuing to make history after history, moment after moment, the world is Ilia Topuria’s oyster.

  • ‘A Disgrace To The Sport’ – Fans & Fighters Mock, Trash Jake Paul Victory Over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

    ‘A Disgrace To The Sport’ – Fans & Fighters Mock, Trash Jake Paul Victory Over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

    In what many people will justifiably consider to be a farce of a fight, Jake Paul scored a win in his return to the boxing ring, defeating Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in their bout at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.

    Paul was the only one doing any activity in the opening pair of rounds, laying in jabs and working combinations to force Chavez Jr. back, while the disgraced son of the legendary boxer failed to respond. Chavez finally did land something in the third round…one left hand.

    Chavez Jr. picked up the pace for real during the fourth round, but his work still paled in comparison to the YouTuber-turned-boxer. Chavez Jr. had another burst of offensive in the sixth round, making things a little more competitive, but the fight was all Paul by this point.

    After two more dominating rounds from Paul, Chavez Jr., if perhaps out of realizing he was done 8-0 in terms of rounds, put up a solid round of offense. Chavez Jr. continued to produce and had a fight-ending battle with Paul, but it wasn’t enough.

    Jake Paul Scores Win Over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. In Widely-Criticized Boxing Bout

    https://twitter.com/BroncoAdames/status/1939182337700319276

    This was Paul’s first fight in the boxing ring since his infamous victory over Mike Tyson in November.

    Chavez Jr. last fought a year ago, scoring a six-round decision win over former UFC fighter Uriah Hall. It was Chavez Jr.’s first boxing match in three years.

  • ‘This Path To Greatness Is Bigger Than Conor McGregor’ – Fighters & Fans React To Ilia Topuria Knocking Out Charles Oliveira For Lightweight Title At UFC 317

    ‘This Path To Greatness Is Bigger Than Conor McGregor’ – Fighters & Fans React To Ilia Topuria Knocking Out Charles Oliveira For Lightweight Title At UFC 317

    Former UFC featherweight champion Ilia Topuria has become the 10th fighter in UFC history — and the first undefeated fighter in UFC history — to win a championship in a second weight class, scoring a first-round knockout of Charles Oliveira to win the UFC lightweight championship.

    The title was vacated after Islam Makhachev announced plans to move up to welterweight to challenge new champion Jack Della Maddalena.

    The two came out swinging early, with Topuria opening a cut around one of Oliveira’s eyes and Oliveira landing a strong right hand. Oliveira then pressed Topuria against the fence and went for a takedown — but Topuria countered and ended up on top. Topuria got into side control, but Oliveira threatened a leg lock temporarily before the fight retuned to the feet.

    And it was there where Topuria landed a one-two that dropped Oliveira and knocked him out cold to become the new champion.

    Following the fight, Topuria had a confrontation in the Octagon with Paddy Pimblett, who shoved Topuria before security separated the two.

    Ilia Topuria Becomes New Lightweight Champion With First-Round KO Of Charles Oliveira At UFC 317

    Topuria won the UFC featherweight championship at UFC 298 last year with a knockout of Alexander Volkanovski. He then became the first man to knock out Max Holloway at UFC 308 before jumping up in weight.

    Oliveira is now 3-3 in the six fights he’s had since losing the UFC lightweight title on the scales in 2022. He won the belt originally by defeating Michael Chandler at UFC 262 and retained against Dustin Poirier at UFC 269.

  • ‘Flawless Performance’ – Fighters & Fans React To Alexandre Pantoja Dominating Kai Kara-France, To Face Joshua Van Next

    ‘Flawless Performance’ – Fighters & Fans React To Alexandre Pantoja Dominating Kai Kara-France, To Face Joshua Van Next

    Alexandre Pantoja appears to continue to evolve as a fighter even while on top of his division, defeating Kai Kara-France in one-sided fashion to retain the UFC flyweight championship in the co-main event of UFC 317.

    Pantoja worked Kara-France into swinging early, which Pantoja took advantage of by level changing and scoring a takedown. After working his way to Kara-France’s back and threatening a choke, Pantoja continued to control the action from up top, threatening an arm-triangle choke at another point during the opening frame. Pantoja, who had over four minutes of control time during the round, got to the back and threatened another choke before the end of the round.

    Pantoja continued to get the better of Kara-France in the second round, scoring another takedown and controlling the pace throughout. It was a bit notable, however, that Pantoja’s pace seemed to slow as the round got closer to the end. Pantoja charged at Kara-France again in the third, clinching up and getting to KKF’s back after another takedown.

    Pantoja then worked his way into locking up a rear-naked choke, scoring the third-round submission win and retaining the title.

    Alexandre Pantoja Submits Kai Kara-France To Keep Flyweight Gold At UFC 317

    https://twitter.com/TheAnswerMMA/status/1939178631823003829

    Pantoja won the championship by defeating Brandon Moreno at UFC 290 two years ago. Prior to tonight, he had retained the belt against Brandon Royval at UFC 296, Steve Erceg at UFC 301, and Kai Asakura at UFC 310.

    Kara-France earned the title shot tonight with a knockout of Erceg at UFC 305.

  • ‘High Level Fighting’ – Fighters & Fans React To Joshua Van Dropping, Defeating Brandon Royval In Bloody Fight Of The Year Slugfest At UFC 317

    ‘High Level Fighting’ – Fighters & Fans React To Joshua Van Dropping, Defeating Brandon Royval In Bloody Fight Of The Year Slugfest At UFC 317

    Just three weeks ago at UFC 316, Joshua Van scored a dominant finish of Bruno Silva — and then was quickly asked days later to fill in for Manel Kape against No. 1 contender and former title challenger Brandon Royval at UFC 317.

    And now, after one of the most action-packed, memorable, and most entertaining fights the UFC flyweight division has ever seen — let alone a Fight of the Year nominee — Van defeated Royval via decision — and now has solidified himself as a top name in the UFC at 125.

    Royval brought the pressure early to start the fight, landing several leg kicks and working his jab. Van did land a small series of single punches, and all brought notable power. Royval continued to throw, though not much landed, as it seemed to be more about keeping distance and preventing Van from landing much. Van’s output in the first was significantly less, but when he did throw, it landed most of the time.

    Royval looked to implement some dirty boxing and make things more of a brawl in the second, staying busy with volume. This included a straight left that solidly landed. Van, however, continued to connect. A one-two from Royval backed Van up, but Van answered back with his own combination. Royval would bring the pressure, but Van would continue to answer, resulting in a memorable back-and-forth striking war over the course of these five minutes.

    The third round showcased the war that these two displayed — with both men landing personal bests for significant strikes. As one brought pressure and landed well, the other responded the same. But Van dropped Royval in the closing seconds, and while he wasn’t able to get the finish, it was enough to give him the win in a bloody battle.

    Joshua Van Edges Out Brandon Royval In War At UFC 317

    Van has now won five straight and is 8-1 in the Octagon.

    Royval has won five of seven, with his only losses in this stretch now coming against Van and UFC flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja. Royval came into tonight’s bout off wins over Brandon Moreno and Tatsuro Taira.

  • ‘Chin Very Well Could Be Shot’ – Fans & Fighters Debate Beneil Dariush’s Future After Going From Knocked Down To Decision Win Over Renato Moicano At UFC 317

    ‘Chin Very Well Could Be Shot’ – Fans & Fighters Debate Beneil Dariush’s Future After Going From Knocked Down To Decision Win Over Renato Moicano At UFC 317

    In his first fight in just over 18 months, Beneil Dariush put on a strong showing in the Octagon, scoring a unanimous decision win over Renato Moicano at UFC 317.

    After some feeling of each other’s power, Dariush focused on a kick-based offense, while Moicano looked to use his reach advantage and use the power in his hands. Dariush got Moicano off balance and appeared to do damage with one of his leg kicks. Moicano, however, did tag Dariush a couple of times, resulting in some swelling around one of his eyes. The two would exchange, with both men having their moments, before Moicano knocked Dariush down with a right hand. Dariush would scramble as Moicano got to Dariush’s back. Dariush got to his feet, but Moicano landed some more shots as Dariush recovered right as the round ended.

    Dariush landed a strong left hand early, and Moicano responded by attempting to wrestle. Dariush got to Moicano’s back on more than one occasion, using his wrestling to nullify Moicano’s offense and waste his energy. In the clinch, Dariush got the better of Moicano again before dumping him back to the mat. Dariush controlled the rest of the round from the top position, adding in some ground-and-pound before the horn.

    Dariush got the action back to the ground in the third, but Moicano reversed it and tried to get to Dariush’s back — only for Dariush to get free. Moicano clinched Dariush up briefly before a striking battle during the third, with Dariush seemingly getting the upper hand before scoring another takedown and pressuring Moicano until Moicano gets back to his feet with 90 seconds to go.

    A drained Moicano could do nothing, however, as Dariush cruised to a decision win.

    Beneil Dariush Uses Takedowns, Grappling To Score Win Over Renato Moicano At UFC 317

    https://twitter.com/dillondanis/status/1939160435808194578

    This is Dariush’s first win in three years, having suffered defeats to Charles Oliveira and Arman Tsarukyan in 2023 and not competing in 2024.

    Moicano has now lost back-to-back fights for the first time since 2019. He was defeated by Islam Makhachev in a last-minute lightweight title bout at UFC 311.

  • ‘Just Reminded Everyone That He’s The Real Deal’ – Fighters & Fans React To Payton Talbott’s Strong Rebound Showing In Win Over Felipe Lima At UFC 317

    ‘Just Reminded Everyone That He’s The Real Deal’ – Fighters & Fans React To Payton Talbott’s Strong Rebound Showing In Win Over Felipe Lima At UFC 317

    After suffering his first loss in shocking fashion this past January, Payton Talbott showed an improved game in all areas and is now back in the win column, defeating Felipe Lima to open up the main pay-per-view card for UFC 317.

    Talbott looked to bring the pressure early, but Lima answered by touching him up in the opening stages. Lima then looked to get Talbott against the fence and ended up in a clinch battle before securing a pair of takedowns on Talbott. On the second, however, Talbott rolled through and ended up on a top, landing some strong ground-and-pound before Lima got back to his feet. Back on the ground, Lima got to Talbott’s back, though Talbott was able to get back to his feet.

    Lima landed a solid combination early in the second round before pursuing another takedown. Talbott countered it, however, and ended up on top again, getting the edge in striking both on the ground and on the feet. Talbott stuffed another takedown in the middle of the round, landing some noteworthy ground-and-pound before letting Lima back up. Lima would get a second takedown of the fight in the round’s final minute and got to the back. He rode the back clinch too high, however, and Talbott shook Lima off and mounted him before the second round’s end.

    Lima looked to put his power on display in the third, catching Talbott with some of his strikes. Talbott looked to walk him down, but Lima would score one more takedown. He’d try to hold Talbott there, but Talbott was able to return to his feet and get out of his grasp. Talbott got the upper hand with strikes again before stopping another takedown attempt and working his way into mount. Lima tried to escape out the back, though Talbott continued to land ground-and-pound, hurting Lima with a right hand in the closing seconds.

    Talbott won the fight 29-28 on all three judges’ scorecards.

    Payton Talbott Shows Improvements In Decision Win Over Felipe Lima

    https://twitter.com/WhyGarth/status/1939149739678663076

    Talbott, who made his UFC debut in late 2023 after an appearance on Dana White’s Contender Series, scored wins over Nick Aguirre, Cameron Saaiman, and Yanis Ghemmouri before a loss to Raoni Barcelos at UFC 311.

    This is Lima’s first loss since dropping his professional MMA debut in 2015, snapping a 14-fight win streak. Lima had won his first two UFC fights last year, submitting Muhammad Naimov and scoring a decision over Miles Johns.

  • ‘Robocop Just Killed A Man’ – Fighters & Fans React To Gregory Rodrigues Sleeping Jack Hermansson In Devastating Fashion & Herb Dean’s Lateness

    ‘Robocop Just Killed A Man’ – Fighters & Fans React To Gregory Rodrigues Sleeping Jack Hermansson In Devastating Fashion & Herb Dean’s Lateness

    In one of the most devastating knockouts in the history of the UFC, Gregory Rodrigues put out the lights of Jack Hermansson, scoring the first-round finish in the featured prelim bout of UFC 317.

    Hermansson got on the attack early, working low kicks and combinations as he placed a small cut on Rodrigues. Rodrigues looked to pressure back, however, and showed his power in his punches.

    The fight ended in dramatic fashion as “Robocop” landed a devastating left hand that dropped Hermansson right to the mat, putting him out cold. Rodrigues followed it up with another strong hammerfist before referee Herb Dean could jump in to stop the action.

    https://twitter.com/TakeruCigarra/status/1939137042732195878

    Gregory Rodrigues Puts Jack Hermansson Out Cold At UFC 317

    https://twitter.com/WhyGarth/status/1939137888983413097

    Rodrigues has now won four of his last five and six of his last eight, rebounding from his February loss to Jared Cannonier.

    This was Hermansson’s first fight since defeating Joe Pyfer in February 2024.

  • Charles Oliveira On Mental Fortitude Ahead Of UFC 317: ‘Life Hit Me Harder Than Any Opponent Ever Could’

    Charles Oliveira is heading into UFC 317 radiating self-assurance.

    Oliveira is set to clash with former featherweight champion Ilia Topuria for the vacant lightweight title in the highly anticipated main event of UFC 317, taking place Saturday night at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    The former UFC lightweight champion holds records for the most finishes (20), submissions (16), and performance bonuses (20) in promotional history. Yet despite his accolades, he enters UFC 317 as a significant betting underdog. Still, the stats and the doubt seem to have no impact on Charles Oliveira’s unwavering confidence or championship mindset.

    Image: @charlesdobronxs/Instagram

    Charles Oliveira Expresses Faith In His Skills Ahead Of UFC 317

    During a media scrum ahead of his UFC 317 title clash with Ilia Topuria, Charles Oliveira opened up about his mental resilience heading into the high-stakes showdown. “Do Bronx” made it clear that, even in the face of adversity and lingering doubt from critics, he’s on a mission to prove his hunger burns as strong as ever and that he’s still fully capable of reclaiming UFC gold.

    “I haven’t been worried about my opponent for a long time.” Oliveira said. “I’m focused on what I can bring to the cage. I want to be free, prepared, thirsty, aggressive, and daring. That’s how I feel. When I go in there, I feel dangerous, I feel daring, I can take the game up and always be aggressive… No one will ever hit me harder than life has hit me. So what these guys say, what they think, it doesn’t matter to me.”

    The 35-year-old Brazilian last stepped into the Octagon at UFC 309 this past November, where he delivered a commanding unanimous decision victory in a rematch against Michael Chandler. “Do Bronx” currently holds a UFC record of 23-10 (1 NC) and has suffered just two defeats in his last 15 outings.

  • VIDEO: Jose Miguel Delgado Flattens Hyder Amil With Shattering Knee At UFC 317

    VIDEO: Jose Miguel Delgado Flattens Hyder Amil With Shattering Knee At UFC 317

    For the second time in the televised UFC 317 prelims, we see a fast finish, as Jose Miguel Delgado needed less than 30 seconds to score a big knockout of Hyder Amil.

    Delgado looked to take the fight to the ground, but Amil countered it and was the one who got the fight to the ground. That was brief, as the pair made their way back to the feet.

    After a pair of hooks, Delgado came through the middle with a strong knee that dropped Amil, leading to the referee halting the action and giving Delgado the quick win.

    Jose Miguel Delgado Knees His Way To First-Minute KO Of Hyder Amil

    https://twitter.com/TakeruCigarra/status/1939129609368289711

    Delgado is now 2-for-2 on first-round finishes in the UFC, entering the promotion off a finish of Ernie Juarez on Dana White’s Contender Series last year. Delgado knocked out Connor Matthews in about three minutes in his UFC debut this past February.

    This marks the first loss in the professional MMA career of Amil. He entered tonight 3-0 in the Octagon after his 2023 appearance on DWCS.

  • ‘A Damn Savage’ – Fans & Fighters React As Terrence McKinney Quickly Puts Away Viacheslav Borschev With Submission At UFC 317

    ‘A Damn Savage’ – Fans & Fighters React As Terrence McKinney Quickly Puts Away Viacheslav Borschev With Submission At UFC 317

    The momentum Terrence McKinney has gained continue to push through UFC 317, as he scored a fast victory during the preliminary card over Viacheslav Borschev.

    Borschev looked to come forward on McKinney in the opening stages of the fight, but that resulted in McKinney locking him up in a tight guillotine choke. To Borschev’s credit, he stayed in the fight and hung on, but the submission quickly tightened — especially as McKinney managed to make it a mounted one.

    Borschev tapped 55 seconds into the fight, giving McKinney a quick win via submission.

    Terrence McKinney Submits Viacheslav Borschev In Under A Minute At UFC 317

    https://twitter.com/ElonovMMA/status/1939116718150017097

    McKinney has now won four of his last five fights, and all of his victories have come via a finish.

    “Slava Claus” has now lost three of his last four and is 1-3-1 in his last five.

  • Jake Paul Dismisses Allegations Of Rigged Fight With Mike Tyson: ‘People Just Can’t Hit Me – I’m Too Fast’

    Jake Paul isn’t entertaining any of the controversy surrounding his bout with Mike Tyson.

    Paul cruised to a dominant unanimous decision victory over heavyweight icon Tyson this past November, in an event that shattered viewership records and further cemented the YouTuber-turned-boxer’s status as a mainstream attraction. However, Tyson’s underwhelming performance raised eyebrows, with critics questioning the legitimacy of the contest.

    In the aftermath of the bout, accusations of a staged outcome quickly gained traction online, with a phony leaked script circulating widely and fueling further controversy. Though the script was swiftly debunked, speculation over the fight’s legitimacy has lingered.

    In response, Jake Paul and his team at Most Valuable Promotions issued a formal statement denying any wrongdoing. Yet, despite their efforts to set the record straight, whispers of doubt continue to shadow the event.

    Image: @jakepaul/Instagram

    Jake Paul Shuts Down Mike Tyson Fight Conspiracy

    During a recent appearance on the JAXXON Podcast, Jake Paul addressed the swirling speculation that his bout with Mike Tyson was fixed. “The Problem Child” brushed off the criticism, suggesting that skeptics simply refuse to acknowledge his evolving skill set.

    He emphasized that questions about the fight’s legitimacy stem from denial rather than evidence, and firmly stated that a legend like Tyson would never agree to a scripted showdown.

    “Listen, this is what people say about everything,” Jake Paul said. “It’s complete bullsh*t. Mike Tyson would never do that. People just can’t hit me, that’s the thing. I’m too fast. They’re not gonna overextend themselves when they feel my power coming. Did I get hit once in the face today with a former world champion and a guy who fought for a world title?”

    Jake Paul is set to make his 13th appearance in the squared circle tonight, taking on former WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in a cruiserweight showdown at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.

    “The Problem Child” enters the bout riding a five-fight win streak and carrying an 11-1 record. His only setback came in February 2023, when he dropped a razor-thin split decision to Tommy Fury.

    Image: @mostvaluablepromotions/Instagram

  • UFC 317 Results & Highlights: Ilia Topuria KO’s Charles Oliveira

    UFC 317 Results & Highlights: Ilia Topuria KO’s Charles Oliveira

    UFC 317 took place tonight from the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, Ilia Topuria and Charles Oliveira faced off for the lightweight title. While in the co-main event, Alexandre Pantolja looked to defend his flyweight belt against Kai Kara-France. 

    UFC 317 Results: Main Card

    • Lightweight Championship: Ilia Topuria def. Charles Oliveira via KO: R1, 2.27
    • Flyweight Championship: Alexandre Pantoja def. Kai Kara-France via submission: R3, 1.55
    • Flyweight: Joshua Van def. Brandon Royval via unanimous decision (29-28×2, 30-27)
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush def. Renato Moicano via unanimous decision (29-28×3)
    • Bantamweight: Payton Talbott def. Felipe Lima via unanimous decision (29-28×3)

    Preliminary Card

    • Middleweight: Gregory Rodrigues def. Jack Hermansson via KO: R1, 4.21
    • Featherweight: Jose Miguel Delgado def. Hyder Amil via KO: R1, 0.26  
    • Women’s Flyweight: Tracy Cortez def. Viviane Araujo via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Lightweight: Terrance McKinney def. Viacheslav Borshchev via submission: R1, 0.55

    Early Preliminary Card

    • Welterweight: Jacobe Smith def. Niko Price via submission: R2, 4.03

    Heavyweight: Jhonata Diniz def. Alvin Hines via unanimous decision (29-28×3)

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Jacobe Smith def. Niko Price

    Jacobe Smith got the first finish of UFC 317 with a submission of Niko Price in the second round.

    Terrance McKinney def. Viacheslav Borshchev

    Terrance McKinney took less than a minute to get the submission in this lightweight matchup.

    Jose Miguel Delgado def. Hyder Amil

    Jose Miguel Delgado took just 26 seconds to KO Hyder Amil.

    Gregory Rodrigues def. Jack Hermansson

    Gregory Rodrigues got the finish in round one.

    Main Card Highlights

    Payton Talbott got it done on the scorecards.

    Beneil Dariush def. Renato Moicano

    Beneil Dariush earned a unanimous decision against Renato Moicano.

    Joshua Van def. Brandon Royval

    Joshua Van got it done on the scorecards.

    Alexandre Pantoja def. Kai Kara-France

    In the co-main event, Alexandre Pantoja defended his flyweight title with a submission in round three.

    Ilia Topuria def. Charles Oliveira

    In the main event, Ilia Topuria captured the vacant lightweight with a huge first-round KO of Charles Oliveira.

  • UFC 317 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Topuria vs. Oliveira, Pantoja vs. Kara-France, And More

    UFC 317 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Topuria vs. Oliveira, Pantoja vs. Kara-France, And More

    UFC 317 is almost here, and we here at MMANews are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday, June 28. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 7PM ET/4PM PT (moved back from the original 6:30PM ET start time due to Ewert vs. McVey falling off).

    The headline attraction for the event will feature the vacant UFC lightweight championship on the line, as Ilia Topuria faces Charles Oliveira.

    In the co-main event, Alexandre Pantoja will defend the UFC flyweight championship against Kai Kara-France.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Brandon Royval facing Joshua Van, a lightweight contenders clash between Beneil Dariush and Renato Moicano, and a bantamweight battle between Payton Talbott and Felipe Lima.

    UFC 317: Topuria vs. Oliveira Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 317 as of June 28 (fight day) at 12pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Lightweight Championship: Ilia Topuria (-425) vs. Charles Oliveira (+330)
    • Flyweight Championship: Alexandre Pantoja (-230) vs. Kai Kara-France (+190)
    • Flyweight: Brandon Royval (+110) vs. Joshua Van (-130)
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush (-115) vs. Renato Moicano (-105)
    • Bantamweight: Payton Talbott (+140) vs. Felipe Lima (-166)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Jack Hermansson (+180) vs. Gregory Rodrigues (-218)
    • Featherweight: Hyder Amil (+120) vs. Jose Delgado (-142)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Viviane Araujo (+170) vs. Tracy Cortez (-205)
    • Lightweight: Terrance McKinney (-155) vs. Viacheslav Borshchev (+130)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Niko Price (+1200) vs. Jacobe Smith (-2400)
    • Heavyweight: Jhonata Diniz (-485) vs. Alvin Hines (+370)
  • ‘Never Looked Better’ – Fans React As Fabian Edwards Puts On Solid Performance To Earn PFL World Tournament Finals Spot In PFL Chicago Main Event

    ‘Never Looked Better’ – Fans React As Fabian Edwards Puts On Solid Performance To Earn PFL World Tournament Finals Spot In PFL Chicago Main Event

    Fabian Edwards is going to have another crack at becoming a champion in MMA like his brother, as he’s now one fight away from the middleweight PFL World Tournament title after defeating Joshua Silveira in the PFL Chicago main event.

    After a strong leg kick trading battle to start, Edwards began to find a rhythm, mixing up combinations and leg kicks. Silveira, however, got Edwards off balance with one of his leg kicks and pressed the action in the clinch.

    Edwards, however, became more of the presser with his striking during the second round, working the body. Silveira got another clinch, but he was hurt by a big knee. Edwards was able to get the fight to the ground and control the action from there, landing strong strikes, including elbows.

    Edwards continued to bring the pressure before wobbling Silveira with a left hand during the final round. Edwards continue to completely outwork Silveira both on the feet and ground en route to a decision victory.

    Fabian Edwards Outclasses Joshua Silveira To Reach Middleweight PFL World Tournament Final

    https://twitter.com/freysavage/status/1938825787152482668

    Edwards has now won six of his last eight. He reached tonight’s semifinals with a finish of former PFL light heavyweight champion Impa Kasanganay in April.

    Silveira, a former PFL light heavyweight finalist, earned this semifinal spot with a decision win over Mike Shipman in April.