Tag: Kayla Harrison

  • Kayla Harrison Fires Back at Ronda Rousey: ‘I’m Chasing Greatness, You’re Chasing Money’

    Kayla Harrison Fires Back at Ronda Rousey: ‘I’m Chasing Greatness, You’re Chasing Money’

    Kayla Harrison has drawn a sharp line between herself and Ronda Rousey, and she did not soften the contrast when she delivered it.

    Speaking on the UFC Vegas 116 pre-fight show, Harrison responded to Rousey’s recent public attacks and framed their current situations as representing two fundamentally different approaches to a combat sports career.

    “I think that the part that bothers me most about Ronda is at one point she was a real athlete,” Harrison said. “She was training for the Olympics. She’s an Olympic bronze medalist. She became a UFC champion. She was really trying to chase greatness.”

    Harrison acknowledged Rousey’s historical significance to women’s MMA without hesitation before turning to where she believes the two part ways.

    “I will never take away the fact that Ronda is probably the most important female fighter. If it weren’t for her, for sure I wouldn’t be where I’m at. I wouldn’t have a job. But this fight is not the greatest fight of all time. It’s between someone who hasn’t fought in 10 years and is coming off two knockout losses and another woman, again another legend, another pioneer, but hasn’t fought in 17 years and is in her 40s. Don’t call it the greatest fight of all time. I’m chasing greatness. You’re chasing money. We’re different.”

    The feud between the two women began when Harrison called Rousey a liar over a training story from their judo days. Rousey responded by repeatedly calling Harrison a derogatory name while promoting her May 16 Netflix comeback against Gina Carano and claiming the event would outperform anything Harrison has accomplished. Harrison offered an alternative explanation for Rousey’s hostility.

    “I think that it would be really hard, I can’t imagine what it would be like for someone to come in and beat everything I’ve ever done. That would be hard. I get it. Imagine hating me and I’m just over here in my backyard feeding chickens. It’s got to be rough.”

    Harrison is currently recovering from neck surgery that postponed her planned title defense against Amanda Nunes at UFC 324 in January. She is expected to return before the end of 2026, with that matchup still waiting to be made.

  • Kayla Harrison Confirms Emergency Neck Surgery Forced UFC 324 Withdrawal

    Kayla Harrison Confirms Emergency Neck Surgery Forced UFC 324 Withdrawal

    Kayla Harrison has revealed that emergency neck surgery forced her withdrawal from UFC 324, postponing her highly anticipated bantamweight title defense against Amanda Nunes.

    The two-time Olympic judo gold medalist shared an emotional video from her hospital bed in New York City, appearing in a neck brace following surgery to repair herniated discs. Harrison called the situation “a tough one,” confirming she is now on “day one” of her recovery and comeback.

    Fighting back tears, Harrison repeatedly apologized to Nunes, the UFC, and fans for the late withdrawal from the January 24 event.

    “I’ll be back soon,” Harrison promised.

    The champion also spoke about her faith during the difficult moment, saying she wants to honor God “in the good and the bad” and hopes her story can be used “in a powerful way.”

    Harrison thanked her surgeon Dr. Kim, UFC medical staff, her coaches and teammates at American Top Team, and her mother for caring for her children during her recovery.

    The UFC has not announced a new date for Harrison vs. Nunes, though the superfight between the reigning champion and the promotion’s most decorated women’s fighter is expected to be rescheduled once Harrison completes her rehabilitation.

  • Kayla Harrison Withdraws from UFC 324 Title Defense Against Amanda Nunes

    Kayla Harrison Withdraws from UFC 324 Title Defense Against Amanda Nunes

    Kayla Harrison has been forced to withdraw from her highly anticipated title defense against Amanda Nunes, originally scheduled for next week’s UFC 324 event in Las Vegas.

    According to a report from The Eagle Tribune, Harrison underwent surgery this week to repair herniated discs in her neck. The injury reportedly made it impossible for the reigning champion to continue her fight camp or compete as planned.

    The UFC has not yet issued an official statement regarding Harrison’s withdrawal or offered details on whether the fight with Nunes will be rescheduled for a later date.

    UFC 324 was set to mark one of the promotion’s most anticipated matchups of the year, pitting two Olympic-level competitors against each other in a blockbuster main event. With Harrison sidelined, it remains unclear if the organization will look to find a replacement opponent for Nunes or postpone the bout entirely.

    More details are expected to follow as the UFC finalizes its updated plans for the Las Vegas card.

  • Amanda Nunes Recalls Dominating Kayla Harrison in Sparring Sessions

    Amanda Nunes Recalls Dominating Kayla Harrison in Sparring Sessions

    Amanda Nunes has recalled the early sparring sessions with Kayla Harrison at American Top Team, revealing that her technical precision dominated those training encounters.

    Speaking on the Paramount UFC Crew ahead of their UFC 324 title fight on January 24, Nunes discussed her striking philosophy and how it played out against the two-time Olympic gold medalist.

    “I’m very precise with my punches, my kicks. I know the right time and everything. So yeah, probably was a bad day for her or I don’t know,” Nunes said when asked about their gym sessions.

    Nunes credited her mother for instilling the striking fundamentals that have made her one of the most dangerous finishers in UFC history.

    “My mother was a big thing in my whole life and then she’s like taught me so many things and she was in my uncle’s corner when my uncle used to fight. So she like taught me a bunch of things. She these days like tell me some strategy, some things and it’s pretty cool,” Nunes explained.

    Despite the apparent dominance in training, Nunes acknowledged Harrison as a legitimate threat and predicted she would eventually reach the UFC.

    “I knew right away when she started calling me out and then talk about I knew because it’s not a lot of people out there, you know, she’s an athlete, she’s a good fighter, you know, and it’s not a lot of people that can keep it up with her. I knew she would make her way to the UFC,” Nunes said.

    The bantamweight champion Harrison will defend her title against the returning Nunes in the co-main event of UFC 324.

  • Amanda Nunes Details Her UFC Comeback: Destiny, Betrayal, Chasing History

    Amanda Nunes Details Her UFC Comeback: Destiny, Betrayal, Chasing History

    Amanda Nunes has revealed the full story behind her return to the UFC, detailing how she struggled to stay retired, the gym split that turned former coaches into opponents, and her drive to make history as a three-time champion.

    Speaking on the Paramount UFC Crew ahead of her bantamweight title fight against Kayla Harrison at UFC 324 on January 24, Nunes opened up about the internal battle she faced during her brief retirement.

    “One year passed by and I was kind of like looking at Nina around the house and say like, ‘Nina, I can’t stay away though. I can’t I’m trying so hard in one year,’” Nunes admitted about conversations with her wife Nina Ansaroff.

    The timing of Harrison signing with the UFC aligned perfectly with Nunes’ growing desire to compete again. The Brazilian legend felt it was destiny bringing them together for this showdown.

    “When that thought started like be more strong and Kayla signed with the UFC they say like this is just meant to be you know so everything’s coming together,” Nunes explained.

    Nunes also expressed concern about the state of the bantamweight division during her absence, feeling obligated to return and restore its prestige.

    “I always like nobody’s going to do anything with my division so I got to go in there and then you know what I mean make this great again. Then Kayla sign like even better though so make everything perfect.”

    The American Top Team Split

    The comeback has also been fueled by an awkward situation that developed at American Top Team, where Harrison called her out while still training at the same gym.

    “If you calling me out, if you want to fight me, you’re not supposed to be here training with my coach in the same mat in the same gym,” Nunes stated. “If I’m gonna face you, you’re gonna be out of here.”

    The tension began when Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in judo, joined ATT and initially sought to be Nunes’ training partner. However, once Harrison started publicly calling out the former champion, Nunes felt the dynamic crossed a line.

    “When she started really talk about me, calling me out and at the same time is being the gym and try to be my training partner. I started get like a little bit even more photo from her because this is the challenge that I like,” Nunes revealed.

    The situation has evolved further, with Nunes now facing her former coaches who have aligned with Harrison. Rather than viewing this as a disadvantage, Nunes embraces the adversity.

    “The attachment that I used to have with the gym, with the coach, people that’s always around me is doesn’t have anymore. They all is against me. So I look at them as my opponent too. I like to feel the challenge that this bring to me,” she said.

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by Kayla Harrison (@kaylaharrisonofficial)

    Targeting History

    Beyond the personal stakes, Nunes is motivated by adding an unprecedented chapter to her legacy. The former two-division champion revealed that her trophy wall at home drives her forward.

    “When I see the wall in my house, I just make like a very special wall for everything that I all my trophies and everything that I got in my whole career,” Nunes said.

    “And then when I wake up and it looks that that wall for me is enough. Now it’s going to be even more like something more that people never see before. I’m gonna become a champ again. So this is going to be in the history like in the top in the history.”

    A victory over Harrison would make Nunes only the second fighter in UFC history to win a title three separate times, joining Randy Couture in that exclusive club. The Brazilian legend dominated women’s MMA during her initial run, holding championships in both the bantamweight and featherweight divisions simultaneously.

    Nunes acknowledged that she wants more recognition in overall GOAT conversations that typically focus on male fighters like Jon Jones, Georges St-Pierre, and Anderson Silva. However, she maintains that external validation is not her primary motivation.

    “It doesn’t bother me honestly because this is what I like to do. I like fight. I do this for myself because I love this sport,” Nunes explained.

    UFC 324 marks the first major card of the Paramount Plus era, with Nunes vs. Harrison serving as the co-main event behind Justin Gaethje vs. Paddy Pimblett for the interim lightweight title.

  • Kayla Harrison’s Real Goal for UFC 324: Inspiring ‘Thousands of Little Girls’

    Kayla Harrison’s Real Goal for UFC 324: Inspiring ‘Thousands of Little Girls’

    UFC women’s bantamweight champion Kayla Harrison has revealed her ultimate goal heading into the biggest fight of her career isn’t personal glory—it’s inspiring thousands of young girls to pursue martial arts.

    Speaking with Daniel Cormier on the Paramount UFC Crew ahead of her UFC 324 title defense against Amanda Nunes on January 24, Harrison outlined a vision for her legacy that extends far beyond her own accomplishments.

    “On January 24th, Amanda and I are going to have a ridiculous amount of new eyes on the sport and we’re having potentially the greatest fight in women’s MMA history,” Harrison said. “The goal is for thousands of little girls to watch that and I become the greatest and maybe I’m the greatest for a day, maybe I’m the greatest for a week.”

    How Kayla Harrison Will Define Success

    The two-time Olympic gold medalist emphasized that her true measure of success lies in what comes after her fighting career concludes.

    “There are thousands of little girls who watch that and they start doing judo and they start doing wrestling and they start doing Muay Thai and then they grow up,” Harrison continued. “Not only do they stand on my shoulders, they just surpass everything I could have ever imagined for myself. They’re not a two-time Olympic champion, they’re a three-time Olympic champion. They’re a 10 time MMA world champ.”

    Harrison acknowledged she doesn’t fit the typical mold of a combat sports superstar but has embraced her authentic identity.

    “I’m not like the flashiest. I’m not like a knockout artist. I’m not the craziest on the mic, but I’m unapologetically myself.”

    The Ohio native summarized her philosophy with a simple but powerful statement about her purpose.

    “The goal is never for me to be the greatest of all time for all time,” Harrison explained. “That’s the goal is to leave this world better than I found it. In my little pocket of it.”

    Harrison’s perspective has been shaped by her own journey through adversity. Having been on the mat since age six and doing two-a-day training sessions since age 12, she understands the power of having role models to look up to.

    “To give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift,” Harrison said. “I just want to go out here every day and squeeze as much life out of the day as I can every day.”

  • Kayla Harrison Reveals Humbling Sparring Session with Amanda Nunes

    Kayla Harrison Reveals Humbling Sparring Session with Amanda Nunes

    UFC women’s bantamweight champion Kayla Harrison has revealed the exact moment she knew Amanda Nunes was the fighter to measure herself against, recalling a humbling sparring session during her second day at American Top Team.

    Speaking with Daniel Cormier on the Paramount UFC Crew ahead of their historic showdown at UFC 324 on January 24, Harrison opened up about her first encounter with the woman widely considered the greatest female fighter of all time.

    “I trained at a bunch of different gyms. I went to American Top Team. I sparred Amanda my second day there. I had never had a fight before,” Harrison recalled.

    “And I was like, ‘Oh like I got to move here. This girl.’ Like I had never been bested like that. With a woman, you know? Like sure, maybe guys like get the better of me, but like I was like, ‘Oh, no. This is the place to be.’”

    Training With Amanda Nunes Not What Kayla Harrison Expected

    The two-time Olympic gold medalist explained that she immediately recognized the level Nunes operated at and committed to training alongside her. However, Harrison admitted the training relationship she envisioned never quite materialized.

    “Not as much as I had pictured if I’m being honest,” Harrison said of their gym dynamic. “There wasn’t the training bond that I had pictured in my head. And I think that that’s just different in MMA than it is in Judo. In Judo you have kind of a training partner. I wanted to be that for Amanda.”

    Harrison referenced the traditional Japanese concept of kohai-senpai, explaining she had been ready to adopt a respectful subordinate role. “I was ready to come in and be her kohai. Where do you need me? Where do you want me? But it’s I don’t think it’s quite the same in MMA.”

    Despite the gym dynamic not developing as hoped, Harrison said her admiration for Nunes has never wavered.

    “It was never like I wanted to challenge her or defeat her in a ‘I’m going to prove I’m better than you,’” she explained. “It was just like a place of honor in my mind. You’re the greatest. I want to someday be what you are.”

    Now, eight years after that first sparring session, Harrison finally gets her chance to test herself against the woman who inspired her MMA journey.

    “This has been eight years in the making. I think that it’s a testament to my coaches, to my training, my work ethic,” Harrison said. “People would be surprised where you can get with a little bit of stubbornness and determination.”

  • “I’m overwhelmed,” Kayla Harrison Reveals Life as a UFC champion, “Throw my phone”

    “I’m overwhelmed,” Kayla Harrison Reveals Life as a UFC champion, “Throw my phone”

    Kayla Harrison is no stranger to high pressure situations but what comes along with being a UFC champion has proven to be quite intensive according to the decorated martial artist. Speaking to Danny Segura of MMA Junkie, Harrison spoke about what life has been like as the UFC bantamweight champion after finishing Julianna Pena at UFC 316 in June.

    Kayla Harrison has captured PFL championships as well as a pair of Olympic gold medals in Judo prior to this UFC title winning effort. But the latter accomplishment is a different kettle of fish in terms of the residual attention that she has been getting as a result of accomplishing that.

    Expounding upon what life has been like since cementing herself as a titleholder in the UFC, Harrison said,

    “It’s been different. I will say that. One of the things I’ve been super blessed to have had success in other areas and arenas of my life. So, I kind of had an idea, but winning Olympic gold medal in judo in the United States is like, I don’t know, like 12 people who saw it.”

    “So having this kind of success on such a huge platform nationally and globally has been… I’m overwhelmed and I feel like I’ve got a good head on my shoulders but I’m still in a bad way… I have 170 some unread text messages and I’m so overwhelmed by it that I’ll answer 10 and then throw my phone and be like, ‘Alright, I got to get away from it. It’s just more. There’s more.’ Which is great, beautiful, fantastic.”

    Kayla Harrison “living out my dream” “I’m still just Kayla”

    All of that being said, there is still a groundedness in how the accomplished combat athlete lives her life as Kayla Harrison continued to say,

    “Like I’m literally living out my dream and I have to stop and remember to be present, smell the roses, and realize that maybe to other people things have changed but nothing has changed for me. I’m not done and I’m still just Kayla. I’m still a mom.”

  • Amanda Nunes Ready to Recapture Her Title from Kayla Harrison: “I’m going to get my belt back”

    Amanda Nunes Ready to Recapture Her Title from Kayla Harrison: “I’m going to get my belt back”

    UFC legend Amanda Nunes has made it crystal clear that she plans on taking back her belt from Kayla Harrison when they eventually square off.

    Everyone knows that Amanda Nunes is one of the greatest female fighters of all time. Now, after a few years away from the cage, she’s set to return and challenge Kayla Harrison for the UFC women’s bantamweight championship. It’s a fight that everyone has been wanting to see for a long time, and as we look ahead to the immediate future, it’s probably one of the biggest fights that can be made in the UFC.

    The two have been fairly respectful to one another but at the same time, Amanda Nunes has already said she wasn’t overly impressed by Harrison’s win over Julianna Pena – laying the groundwork for what looks set to be a really fun encounter.

    In a recent interview, Amanda Nunes went into a bit more detail about what she wants to achieve with this next run.

    Amanda Nunes wants the belt back

    ā€œThe next thing is ā€œand newā€. I’m gonna hear it once again. Isn’t that crazy, if you guys think about that? Honest. I’m gonna get my belt back, and you’re gonna view me again, and I’m gonna tell you. Remember I told you, I’m getting my belt back. So, I’m gonna do that.ā€

    ā€œHoping it’s this year for sure. I’m gonna talk to Dana to see, I’m ready to go. I’m healthy, I’m training. I’m ready to go.ā€

    ā€œBrazil, in my city, in Vegas, whatever. I want my belt back.ā€

    Quote via BJPENN.com

  • Kayla Harrison is praised by teammate Dakota Ditcheva after UFC 316 title triumph

    Kayla Harrison is praised by teammate Dakota Ditcheva after UFC 316 title triumph

    PFL star Dakota Ditcheva has praised teammate Kayla Harrison for both her work ethic and the way in which she was able to defeat Julianna Pena to capture the UFC women’s bantamweight championship.

    Kayla Harrison is one of the greatest female fighters of all time and that much goes without saying. In addition to her remarkable Olympic success, she’s also had a phenomenal career in mixed martial arts – and some would argue she’s still got a lot left in the tank.

    As she prepares to battle Amanda Nunes in a superfight at some point in the future, Kayla Harrison has been receiving a great deal of praise from the MMA community for what she’s accomplished over the years. That includes Dakota Ditcheva, one of PFL’s biggest stars, who had the following to say about her teammate recently.

    Dakota Ditcheva praises Kayla Harrison’s success

    ā€œYeah, it’s crazy. I’ve actually got goosebumps when you think about it,ā€ Ditcheva told MMA Fighting. ā€œLike her journey through MMA, or just through martial arts sport has been crazy.

    ā€œAfter she won out there was loads of things online, I was just reading it all because, for me, a journey like that — Olympic gold medalist, comes to PFL, cleans everyone out there. Goes to UFC, cleans everyone out there. Within two or three fights, she’s got the UFC belt. That journey that she’s been on is absolutely crazy.ā€

    ā€œThe weight cuts, the dedication she’s got to training, when she’s saying in these interviews, she’s not missed a day running or biking, that girl is in the gym every morning, every afternoon, and between them sessions, she’s walking, she’s running,ā€ Ditcheva explained. ā€œShe’s the hardest worker in that gym.

    ā€œSo to have someone like that around us and set such an example like that for us girls in the gym is like second to none. That’s why we’re the best, best gym in the world because we’ve got examples like that around us. How can we not be inspired and want to keep working hard when we see people like Kayla Harrison doing that?ā€

    Quotes via MMA Fighting

  • Kayla Harrison Silences Critics with UFC Gold: ā€˜It Feels Pretty Damn Good – Shut The Hell Up’

    UFC star Kayla Harrison has opened up on how it feels to have shut up her critics once and for all after she captured the UFC women’s bantamweight championship.

    In the co-main event of UFC 316, Kayla Harrison finally reached the top of the mountain in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. She was able to submit and defeat Julianna Pena, capturing the bantamweight crown in the process. Now, she’s gearing up for an even bigger challenge as she prepares to welcome Amanda Nunes back to the promotion.

    It’s set to be a battle of epic proportions, but of course, Kayla Harrison has earned the right to take some time off and bask in the glory of her recent triumph. It’s especially important for her to do so after people doubted her abilities for so many years, suggesting she wasn’t fighting the best of the best in the PFL.

    In a recent interview, Kayla Harrison was more than happy to send a message to those who tried to put her down.

    Kayla Harrison’s message to her critics

    ā€œIt feels pretty damn good. I’m not going to lie. It’s not even that—now, everybody can just shut the hell up. You know, I did it.ā€

    Soon, it’ll be time for Kayla Harrison to re-group and focus on the biggest fight of her life. While this could potentially be an entirely new version of Amanda Nunes that she’ll be facing, she can’t afford to be complacent – especially given how many eyes are going to be in this superfight.

  • Kayla Harrison Opens Up About Why Her Son Didn’t Care About Her UFC Championship

    Kayla Harrison Opens Up About Why Her Son Didn’t Care About Her UFC Championship

    Kayla Harrison drew an excited reaction from one of her kids after winning UFC gold but the sentiment was not widespread throughout the Harrison household. The reigning UFC bantamweight champion spoke with assembled media at the 2025 UFC Hall of Fame red carpet and covered several subjects in the wake of unseating Julianna Pena a few weeks ago via second round submission at UFC 316.

    As the multi-time Olympic gold medalist in judo discussed how her kids reacted to the moment where she won UFC hardware, Harrison said,

    “My daughter was excited. My son doesn’t really care. He’s six, so he’s just like, ‘Oh, mom’s home. What did you bring me from New Jersey?’ And I’m like, ‘I brought you a belt.’ And he’s like, ‘No, no, I mean like candy, chocolate, like, what do we got?’ Both my kids do judo right now. I teach them judo. My daughter has especially shown a big interest in it.”

    “She’s very fierce. She’s very fearless. It makes me a little bit emotional to think about because she hasn’t had the easiest road and there’s been a lot of uncertainty in her life. Just to see her thriving and blossoming into the young woman she’s becoming is—yeah, it’s greater than any belt.”

    Kayla Harrison not keen on potential champ vs. champ fight at the White House

    Kayla Harrison is preparing to fight the women’s MMA GOAT Amanda Nunes for an as-of-yet unconfirmed date and location but there is a certain MMA fighter that she is not looking to get locked in the cage with. US president Donald Trump mentioned his desire to want to host UFC fights at the White House next year and a fan had quite the curious suggestion for Harrison.

    On a graphic that Harrison posted of herself holding the UFC gold with surrounding images of the American flag and several eagles, a fan claimed that he was speaking for all UFC fans by saying they want to see the women’s bantamweight titleholder take on the UFC men’s bantamweight champion Merab Dvalishvili at the White House in 2026. Harrison’s response was fairly succinct and clear as she stated [via Bloody Elbow],

    “I ain’t ready for that smoke sweetie”

  • “We’re Not Done Yet” – Kayla Harrison’s Dream Realized, But Is This Just the Beginning?

    “We’re Not Done Yet” – Kayla Harrison’s Dream Realized, But Is This Just the Beginning?

    Kayla Harrison may have climbed to the top of the mountain, but she plans on going even higher.

    The two-time Olympic gold medalist delivered one of the most dominant performances of her mixed martial arts career at UFC 316, handily defeating Julianna Pena via a second-round submission to claim the women’s bantamweight championship.

    It’s a goal that Harrison has been dreaming of since day one. But now the question is, what comes next?

    ā€œI was ready right then! I want to fight for the title,” Harrison told MMA Junkie while attending the UFC Hall of Fame ceremony in Las Vegas last month. “I want this, that, and the other… all in God’s time, God’s plan. But I think when you visualize something and you have a dream from the first day I started MMA, this was the dream. And so once it happened, I was like, ‘Oh, wait. We’re done? Like, we did it, but we’re not done yet.’ā€

    As they say, a champion only becomes a champion once they’ve defended their title.

    Kayla Harrison Tells Amanda Nunes to ‘Send Location’

    Harrison has not yet booked a date for her first defense, but it’s safe to say that the woman standing across from her inside the Octagon will be none other than former champ-champ Amanda Nunes. ‘The Lioness’ stepped inside the Octagon immediately following Harrison’s win at UFC 316, going face-to-face with the new bantamweight queen and setting the stage for one of the biggest fights in MMA history, regardless of gender.

    ā€œObviously, Amanda’s next,” Harrison said. “We spoke to her at the Hall of Fame yesterday. She says Q4. But she’s not in the drug testing pool yet, so she might not be able to fight till Q1 of next year.

    ā€œI’m sure they’re talking to Ali and letting him know about everything. That’s why I pay him the big bucks—so I don’t have to think about stuff like that. I just show up, train, work hard, stay ready. Send a location, I’ll be ready.ā€

  • Kayla Harrison: ā€˜Send a Location’ Is the Amanda Nunes Fight Closer Than We Think?

    Kayla Harrison: ā€˜Send a Location’ Is the Amanda Nunes Fight Closer Than We Think?

    UFC women’s bantamweight champion Kayla Harrison has made it crystal clear that she is ready for her superfight with Amanda Nunes as fans await an official announcement regarding a date and location.

    After defeating Julianna Pena to win the belt at UFC 316, Kayla Harrison found herself immediately facing off with her next opponent – the GOAT Amanda Nunes. It’s safe to say that this is now one of the most highly anticipated fights in the history of women’s mixed martial arts, and nobody really knows how it’s going to go.

    As we wait for more information on the fight, Kayla Harrison noted in a recent interview that she’s ready, even though it may be a while before we get to see it.

    Kayla Harrison is ready for Amanda Nunes

    ā€œObviously, Amanda’s next. We spoke to her at the Hall of Fame yesterday. She says Q4. But she’s not in the drug testing pool yet, so she might not be able to fight till Q1 of next year.

    ā€œI’m sure they’re talking to Ali and letting him know about everything. That’s why I pay him the big bucks—so I don’t have to think about stuff like that. I just show up, train, work hard, stay ready. Send a location, I’ll be ready.ā€

    Harrison is a warrior and she won’t mind waiting until Nunes is 100% ready to go. Regardless of when this fight happens, it absolutely needs to be a pay-per-view main event – and the UFC needs to give it the kind of promotion and hype that it deserves.

  • Kayla Harrison on UFC Title Win: ā€œI Was Just a 6-Year-Old Girl With a Dream Watching the ’96 Olympicsā€

    Kayla Harrison on UFC Title Win: ā€œI Was Just a 6-Year-Old Girl With a Dream Watching the ’96 Olympicsā€

    Kayla Harrison is at the top of the mountain in mixed martial arts and the young version of her with the big martial arts dreams seems to be soaking it all in. Harrison is coming off of a massive win in Newark as she submitted two time titleholder at 135 pounds Julianna Pena in the co-main event of UFC 316 when she secured a submission in the waning seconds of the second round.

    The newly minted UFC bantamweight champion spoke with UFC.com’s McKenzie Pavacich in the wake of her title win during a backstage interview piece. Referencing her multiple Olympic gold medals in judo and now being the UFC champion which is representative of elite accomplishment in another martial art altogether, the former multi-time PFL champion was asked what it was like to become the best in the world at multiple combat sports and Harrison said,

    ā€œIt’s crazy, because I was just a six-year-old kid with a dream. I watched the ’96 Olympics on my grandma’s couch—on my Mimi’s couch—and I was like, ā€˜I want to be the best at something someday.’ Then I started judo shortly after that, and I just loved it. I have a passion for it, and I love what I do now. It’s scary as—don’t get me wrong—every time I’m walking to the cage, I’m like, ā€˜Why am I doing this?’ But when you have passion and drive… I mean, it’s hard to even think about someone saying that. I do it because I love it.ā€

    Kayla Harrison gets hero’s welcome from Dustin Poirier and other ATT compatriots

    Kayla Harrison was also able to return to her gym as a champion and her American Top Team peers showered her with positive sentiments when she stepped through the gym doors holding the hardware. The visit took place on Monday with footage of the trip posted to both the official Instagram accounts for American Top Team and for Kayla Harrison herself. Current UFC flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja and former interim UFC lightweight champion Dustin Poirier were among some of the recognizable names that greeted Harrison as she hugged her teammates amid calls of “Yes, baby!!! We did it!”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Hit: Andreas Gustafsson Puts On Beating In UFC Debut

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

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

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

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

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

    Hit: Add Another Finish For Azamat Murzakanov

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

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

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

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

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

    Hit: Joshua Van Continues His Surge At Flyweight

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

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

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

    Hit: Is Kevin Holland A Welterweight Contender For Good?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Miss: Be Joe Pyfer? Maybe Not On This Night

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

    Amanda Nunes Confirmed To Unretire, Challenge Kayla Harrison

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

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

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

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

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

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

    “I’m back,” Nunes said.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    UFC 316 Results: Main CardĀ 

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

     
    Preliminary Card

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

     
    Early Preliminary Card

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

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

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Yoo Joo-sangĀ def. Jeka Saragih

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

    Azamat Murzakanov def. Brendson Ribeiro

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

    Joshua Van def. Bruno Gustavo

    Joshua Van stopped Bruno Gustavo late in their flyweight bout.

    Main Card Highlights

    Kevin HollandĀ def. Vicente Luque

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

    Mario Bautista def. Patchy Mix

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

    Joe Pyfer def. Kelvin Gastelum

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

    Kayla HarrisonĀ def. Julianna Pena

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

    Merab Dvalishvili def. Sean O’MalleyĀ 

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

  • ā€œYou’ve Got to Go Through Hell to Get to Heavenā€ Kayla Harrison Finds Peace Beyond Perfection

    ā€œYou’ve Got to Go Through Hell to Get to Heavenā€ Kayla Harrison Finds Peace Beyond Perfection

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

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

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

    Kayla Harrison Talks FreedomAhead of UFC 316

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

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

    Kayla Harrison
    Image:Jeff Bottari/UFC, Zuffa LLC
  • UFC 316 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Dvalishvili vs. O’Malley, Pena vs. Harrison, And More

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Main Card:

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

    Preliminary Card:

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

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Women’s Flyweight: Ariane da Silva (+350) vs. Wang Cong (-455)
    • Featherweight: Jeka Saragih (+400) vs. Yoo Joo-sang (-535)
    • Lightweight: Quillan Salkilld (-470) vs. Yanal Ashmouz (+360)
    • Lightweight: MarQuel Mederos (-170) vs. Mark Choinski (+142)
  • Watch UFC 316 Press Conference Video Featuring Dvalishvili, O’Malley, Pena, Harrison, And More

    Watch UFC 316 Press Conference Video Featuring Dvalishvili, O’Malley, Pena, Harrison, And More

    We’re in the midst of UFC 316 fight week, and with the build reaching it’s boiling point, it’s time to make things potentially boil further with a good ol’ fashion question-and-answer session.

    The sixth UFC pay-per-view event of the year goes down from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, on Saturday, June 7. UFC 316 will be headlined by a UFC bantamweight championship rematch featuring champion Merab Dvalishvili and former champion Sean O’Malley.

    The co-main event will also see gold on the line, as Julianna Pena makes her first defense in her second reign as women’s 135-pound UFC champion, taking on former two-time PFL champion and Olympic gold medalist Kayla Harrison.

    The main card of UFC 316 will also feature middleweight action from Kelvin Gastelum and Joe Pyfer, the UFC debut of former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix (who takes on Mario Bautista) and a welterweight clash between Vicente Luque and Kelvin Gastelum.

    As per tradition, the UFC pay-per-view main card participants will be featured in a press conference during fight week. This is the opportunity for fighters to answer questions from media and fans, as well as potentially lay in some smack talk on their opponents.

    Check out a live stream of the presser below viaĀ the UFC’s official YouTube channel, commencing at 5 PM ET.

  • Olympic Gold vs. UFC Gold? Kayla Harrison Says, ā€œWe’re Going to Find Outā€

    Olympic Gold vs. UFC Gold? Kayla Harrison Says, ā€œWe’re Going to Find Outā€

    Kayla Harrison knows a thing or two about gold. The American judoka made history by claiming two Olympic gold medals, first in London 2012 and again in Rio 2016, becoming the first American to ever top the podium in Olympic judo.

    Olympic Gold vs. UFC Gold? Kayla Harrison Answers

    Not content with just conquering the tatami, Harrison made a seamless leap into mixed martial arts, where she quickly collected two PFL titles in 2018 and 2019, remaining undefeated and earning the distinction of being the PFL’s first female champion. She later jumped to the UFC.

    Kayla Harrison responds to PFL mocking her record
    Image: @kaylaharrisonofficial/Instagram

    Now, the stage is set for Kayla Harrison’s next mountain: a shot at UFC gold. This Saturday night at UFC 316, against Julianna Pena, she steps into the Octagon for her first UFC title fight, a moment that could see her add another accolade to her already weighty trophy case. This is Harrison’s chance to prove that her determination can translate just as well in the UFC as they did on the Olympic mats and in the PFL cage.

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

    Kayla Harrison herself isn’t shy about the significance. ā€œCan winning a belt compare to an Olympic gold?” She was asked at the UFC 316 pre-fight press conference.”We’re going to find out on Saturday night,ā€ she said with a wry grin. ā€œI’m sure it’s going to feel very similar … It’s a testament, I think, to my character, my grit, my determination. I’m very happy with my career—I’ve climbed a lot of mountains, I’ve done more than most will ever do, and I’m very satisfied with it. But this belt is for me.ā€

    UFC 316

    Kayla Harrison’s UFC tenure has been short but impactful, and now she stands on the brink of making history once again. After signing with the UFC in early 2024, Harrison wasted no time making her mark, debuting in the bantamweight division with a statement win over former champion Holly Holm by submission at UFC 300. She followed that up with a dominant unanimous decision victory against Ketlen Vieira, quickly climbing to the No. 2 spot in the women’s 135-pound rankings.

    With an 18-1 professional record and a reputation for overwhelming her opponents with both judo and striking, Harrison now faces reigning bantamweight champion Julianna PeƱa in the co-main event at UFC 316 in Newark, New Jersey. If Harrison prevails, she will become just the second athlete ever – after Henry Cejudo – to win both Olympic gold and a UFC title, joining an elite club.

    UFC Champ Julianna PeƱa Sees Submission Win Over Olympian Kayla Harrison: ā€œI'll Frustrate Her Until She Breaksā€
  • Kayla Harrison: ā€œI’m Ready to Put That UFC Belt Around My Waist – Then Kiss Dana on His Bald Headā€

    Kayla Harrison: ā€œI’m Ready to Put That UFC Belt Around My Waist – Then Kiss Dana on His Bald Headā€

    Kayla Harrison may involve the chrome dome of Dana White into her celebrations if all goes well at UFC 316. Speaking with Mike Heck of MMA Fighting ahead of her bid for UFC bantamweight gold this weekend, Harrison discussed several subjects. The multi-time Olympic gold medalist and former PFL champion looks to claim the 135 pound crown presently held by Julianna Pena when the two clash in the pay-per-view co-maine vent set for Saturday, June 7th in Newark, New Jersey. When discussing her mindset heading into such a massive matchup considering her martial arts pedigree ons ome of the biggest stages in the world, Kayla Harrison said.

    Kayla Harrison

    “This is what it’s all about, you know? It’s all about daring to dream big. I know that I’ve put in the work, I know that I have the best team, I have the best game plan, I’m prepared, I’m ready—and that is going to be the fruit of my labor. To feel those feelings, to feel the weight of the UFC belt go around my waist, to probably give Dana a big old kiss on his bald head and just hug my family… yeah, I can’t wait for that moment.”

    “I think it’s probably a little more nerves, just because it’s my dreams on the line. But every fight matters, especially in MMA. It’s been a long journey to get here, and I’ve just been trying to be mindful of that. When the days are long or the sessions are hard, I remember that it’s all going to be worth it. Practicing gratitude, I think quite a bit about the fact that I’m living my dream. I don’t know that there are many people on the planet who get to say that—every day I wake up and I do exactly what I want to do; I chase my dream. When I remember that, it’s easy.”

    Kayla Harrison Discloses Hospitalization Due To Infection Before UFC 307
    Image: @ufc/Instagram

    Kayla Harrison and her run in the UFC octagon so far

    Kayla Harrison came into the octagon with a lot of hype from her days as a star in the PFL smart cage and she has lived up to the hype so far in her UFC tenure. Harrison debuted with the promotion on one of the biggest shows in company history as she submitted former bantamweight champion Holly Holm at UFC 300 last April. In her sophomore contest withthe MMA powerhouse, Kayla Harrison would defeat Ketlen Vieira by unanimous decision at UFC 307 last October to punch her ticket for this championship opportunity versus Julianna Pena.

    Kayla Harrison
    Image credit: UFC
  • Kayla Harrison on falling for judo at six: ā€˜I believe in love at first sight, that was it for me’

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

    The US-born Kayla Harrison arrives at UFC 316 after a rapid and successful transition from judo to mixed martial arts. After a dominant UFC debut over Holly Holm at UFC 300 and a unanimous decision win against Ketlen Vieira at UFC 307, which secured her title shot. Harrison’s background as a judoka is central to her fighting style. She is known for her powerful ground game and heavy ground-and-pound, attributes that have made her one of the most popular female fighters in MMA today.

    Kayla Harrison And Judo

    A two-time Olympic gold medalist in judo, Kayla Harrison, traces her love for the sport back to her childhood. At six years old, Harrison was inspired by a karate commercial on television, which led her mother, who had taken judo in college, to introduce her to the local dojo. ā€œI don’t know what it was about judo specifically, but I definitely believe in love at first sight because I fell in love. That was it. I never played any other sports growing up. It was just judo,ā€ Harrison said, in a recent interview.

    Kayla Harrison’s dedication to judo quickly became apparent, and her talent was confirmed when she won the junior world championships in Thailand at age 18. ā€œI was like, ā€˜Oh wow, I’m good at this. I won a big tournament. This is good,ā€™ā€ she recalled. Harrison went on to make history at the 2012 London Olympics, becoming the first American to win Olympic gold in judo, and repeated her success at the 2016 Rio Games.

    Kayla Harrison
    Image credit: UFC

    Her achievements were recognized at the highest levels, with her black belt displayed in the Smithsonian Museum. ā€œSometimes I still can’t believe it. Sometimes I’m like, ā€˜The Smithsonian has my black belt in the museum because I won the first gold medal for our country.’ I’m just like, ā€˜What?’ It’s crazy. But it also taught me that you can do anything you set your mind to—even if no one’s done it before, it’s still possible,ā€ Harrison explained.

    Kayla Harrison Discloses Hospitalization Due To Infection Before UFC 307
    Image: @ufc/Instagram

    UFC 316

    After her Olympic career, Kayla Harrison transitioned to MMA, joining the PFL in 2018. She quickly established herself as a dominant force, winning the PFL women’s lightweight tournament twice and compiling an undefeated record until 2022. Harrison’s success in MMA led to her signing with the UFC in early 2024, where she made her debut with a decisive win over former bantamweight champion Holly Holm at UFC 300.

    Kayla Harrison responds to PFL mocking her record
    Image: @kaylaharrisonofficial/Instagram

    Upcoming this weeken at UFC 316, Julianna PeƱa will look to defend her world championship against Harrison. While some, including former champion Valentina Shevchenko, have predicted a tough night for Kayla Harrison, oddsmakers currently favor the Olympic champion. If Harrison wins, she will become only the second fighter to hold both an Olympic gold medal and a UFC title, further solidifying her legacy as one of the most accomplished athletes in combat sports.