Tag: Valentina Shevchenko

  • Wang Cong Rips UFC Champ Valentina Shevchenko For Skipping Q&A Appearance With Her

    Wang Cong has reignited her rivalry with Valentina Shevchenko — and this time, it’s happening outside the cage.

    The Chinese contender took to social media ahead of UFC Macau, claiming the reigning flyweight champion pulled out of a planned joint fan Q&A appearance to avoid sharing the stage with her. The two were expected to appear together during fight week festivities, but according to Cong, those plans changed at the last minute.

    “Valentina and I were originally scheduled to appear together at the UFC Macau fan Q&A,” Cong wrote on Instagram. “However, she submitted a request to UFC to opt out of the joint appearance, refusing to share the stage with me.”

    “The Joker” didn’t stop there, launching into a sharp critique of Shevchenko’s character and fighting style while referencing their past encounter.

    “As my defeated opponent, it’s clear she’s afraid I’ll expose the truth behind her lies,” Cong added. “She’s a sore loser with no class—nothing more than a compulsive liar who can’t handle defeat.”

    “Oh, and one more thing. I call her ‘Box Office Poison,’ because boring fights are exactly what she’s good at.”

    The tension between the two dates back to 2015, when Cong defeated “Bullet” by decision in a kickboxing bout — a result that still stands as one of the few losses on the champion’s striking rĂ©sumĂ©. While Shevchenko’s team has long disputed the outcome, Cong has continued to lean on that victory as leverage in her pursuit of a UFC showdown.

    Currently riding a three-fight win streak, “The Joker” is working her way back into contention after a setback in 2024. She’s now scheduled to face Tracy Cortez at UFC 329 in July, a fight that could bring her closer to a long-awaited clash with Shevchenko.

  • UFC Champion Calls Out Jake Paul To MMA Fight: ‘They’ll Wipe The Floor With Your Pretty Face’

    UFC Champion Calls Out Jake Paul To MMA Fight: ‘They’ll Wipe The Floor With Your Pretty Face’

    UFC Women’s Flyweight Champion Valentina Shevchenko has challenged Jake Paul to compete in MMA after the YouTuber-turned-boxer claimed the UFC is “dying” and criticized grappling-heavy fighters. The UFC flyweight champion responded on social media, daring Paul to step into the octagon.

    ‘The Problem Child’ made the controversial comments during an appearance on Theo Von’s podcast while promoting his upcoming MMA event on May 16 in Inglewood, California. The show will feature former UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey facing WMMA pioneer Gina Carano in a comeback fight.

    Jake Paul’s Criticism of MMA

    The 29-year-old Paul told Von that he believes MMA won’t stand the test of time because the sport has become too dominated by wrestlers. He specifically called out fighters like Khabib Nurmagomedov and Khamzat Chimaev as examples of “boring” competitors.

    Paul added that he thinks the UFC has become “too greedy” and “super corporate,” claiming that “boxing has been around since the 1500s, MMA is 30 years old, and it’s declining.”

    Valentina Shevchenko’s Response

    Shevchenko discovered Paul’s comments on social media and fired back with a direct challenge. The champion questioned Paul’s understanding of MMA and invited him to experience the sport firsthand.

    “UFC dying?! Hey Jake, you definitely don’t know what you’re talking about,” Shevchenko wrote on X.

    “Criticizing MMA from a long distance. Try to get into an octagon with one of them, and they’ll wipe the floor with your pretty face.”

    She continued:

    “You will show spectacular, breathtaking fight from down there! Then you can tell us how fun or boring it was!”

    Shevchenko hasn’t competed since outpointing Zhang Weili at UFC 322 in November last year. The flyweight champion doesn’t currently have a fight scheduled but has remained active on social media, previously engaging in public disputes with both Rousey and Nurmagomedov.

  • Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas Conflicted About Fighting Idol Shevchenko

    Rose Namajunas has been promised a UFC flyweight title shot with a win at UFC 324, but the prospect of fighting her idol Valentina Shevchenko comes with mixed feelings for the former two-time strawweight champion.​​

    Speaking with Ariel Helwani, Namajunas confirmed the UFC has told her a victory over Natalia Silva on January 24, 2026, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas will earn her the next crack at Shevchenko’s flyweight title. The announcement puts significant weight on her main card bout against Silva, who enters the fight riding a 13-fight winning streak and holding a perfect 7-0 record in the UFC.​

    Rose Namajunas Faces Complex Emotions Ahead of Potential Valentina Shevchenko Title Fight

    For Namajunas, the path to becoming a two-division champion leads through a fighter she considers the greatest in women’s mixed martial arts.

    “It would be weird,” Namajunas said when asked about facing Shevchenko. “We’re martial artists, so at the end of the day I’m down to do it, but I’d love to have a conversation with her first because she’s somebody that inspired me and I’ve looked up to.”​

    The two fighters have trained together in the past, with sparring footage showing their technical exchanges during camp preparations.

    “She’s literally my favorite female fighter,” Namajunas explained. “It would definitely be conflicting emotions, I would never want to see her lose, but I’d have to go into a fight and try to beat her.”

    Namajunas described the potential matchup as both a dream scenario and an emotional challenge. She ranks Shevchenko alongside Amanda Nunes as the greatest female fighters in MMA history.

    “At the same time, as a martial artist, it would be the ultimate culmination of being able to test myself,” she said. “I feel like she and Amanda Nunes are the greatest female fighters in MMA. So it would be a dream come true, but also like, ‘Oh
’”​​

    The 33-year-old Milwaukee native emphasized that personal animosity plays no role in her approach to competition. “That’s kind of what fighting is, it’s weird,” Namajunas said. “I don’t hate anybody I fight. I’ve fought people I train with, then we train again after. I don’t have to hate anyone to compete with them. I love all of my opponents, even the ones I was rivals with, afterward it’s just water under the bridge.”​

    Namajunas currently holds a 14-7 UFC record and is ranked sixth in the flyweight division. After losing her strawweight title to Carla Esparza in May 2022, she moved up to 125 pounds and has gone 2-2 in the division, with losses to Manon Fiorot and Erin Blanchfield. Her flyweight record includes wins over Amanda Ribas and Miranda Maverick.

    The two-division championship goal has driven Namajunas throughout her flyweight campaign. “Basically, it’s the two-division thing, to just have that as an accomplishment,” she told Helwani. “It be a dream come true and it’s definitely on the list of what I wanted to achieve in MMA.” A victory over Shevchenko would make Namajunas only the second woman in UFC history to hold titles in two divisions, following in the footsteps of Nunes.​

    UFC 324

    Before any of those plans materialize, Namajunas must overcome Silva, who has defeated former champions Jessica Andrade and Alexa Grasso without dropping a round in either fight. Silva was originally slated to face Grasso before the former champion withdrew due to injury in December, opening the door for Namajunas to step in.

    UFC 324 marks the promotion’s first event under its new seven-year broadcast agreement with Paramount+, eliminating the pay-per-view model. The main event features Justin Gaethje defending the interim lightweight title against Paddy Pimblett.

  • 9 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev

    9 Hits And 4 Misses From UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev

    For the ninth time in its history, the UFC landed in “The City That Never Sleeps,” as Madison Square Garden played host to UFC 322 — highlighted by a pair of stellar super title fights.

    A card in November at MSG has been an annual UFC tradition (minus the heavily-restricted 2020) since 2016, when the sport of Mixed Martial Arts was finally legalized in New York. Last year’s MSG event saw Jon Jones send Stipe Miocic into retirement in a heavyweight championship headliner.

    The main event of this year’s MSG show saw Jack Della Maddalena put the UFC welterweight championship on the line against Islam Makhachev. This marked JDM’s first title defense since capturing it at UFC 315 in May with a win over Belal Muhammad. Makhachev is the former UFC lightweight champion, having won that title by defeating Charles Oliveira at UFC 280 and retaining it against Alexander Volkanovski, Dustin Poirier, and Renato Moicano.

    The co-main event saw perhaps the two best women in the UFC doing battle, as Valentina Shevchenko defended the UFC women’s flyweight title against Weili Zhang. Shevchenko is a two-time champion who has been a dominant force in the division since 2018. After regaining the gold from Alexa Grasso at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306, she defended the title successfully against Manon Fiorot at UFC 315. Zhang is a two-time former UFC strawweight champion, defeating Carla Esparza to start her second reign that featured wins over Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    Who made a statement under the big city lights? Who cracked under the pressure? Let’s go through together with the Hits and Misses of UFC 322!

    Miss: Susurkaev’s KO His Only Positive

    I have to wonder if Dana White is having any buyer’s remorse about signing Baisangur Susurkaev. He’s gotten two wins in the UFC, but neither has been particularly good.

    He has to be given credit for taking the opportunity to fight on just a few days’ notice when he earned his UFC contract, but the fight against Eric Nolan proved to be not the most outstanding. Against Eric McConico, many felt the fight had no business entering the third round.

    The knockout itself was great and shows his power. But we also need to see more from Susurkaev if he’s going to display the ego and confidence that he does.

    Hit: Daukaus Does It Again

    Probably one of the best feel-good stories for the Octagon in 2025 is the re-emergence of Kyle Daukaus. And after stopping Michel Pereira in less than a minute at UFC Shanghai, he followed it up with another highlight, sub-minute finish of Gerald Meerschaert.

    Daukaus needed just one flurry to put Meerschaert in trouble. After scoring a knockdown, Daukaus jumped right on and locked up a choke, earning a submission victory.

    The way Daukaus has performed, he deserves a main card spot for his next UFC bout. And if he continues to perform the way he has, he’s going to be one of the most fun fighters to watch.

    Hit: Another Successful Ewing In MSG

    Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Patrick Ewing entertained and earned the hearts of New York Knicks fans with his play in Madison Square Garden, helping the Knicks to two Eastern Conference titles in the process. In November 2025, Ethyn Ewing, just one week after winning a championship in 1AC, made his UFC debut on short notice and pulled off a highlight of his own.

    The highly-touted Malcolm Wellmaker seemed to trouble him in the early stages of the fight, making things look like he’d earn another win in a memorable 2025 for him. But Ewing fought back, doing damage in the clinch and turning the tide in his favor.

    While Wellmaker used body work during the second round, Ewing had his own moments and connected on some hard clinch knees, before using his boxing and takedowns in the third to seal the victory and end Wellmaker’s undefeated record.

    Wellmaker will be back; no need to worry about him. But for Ewing, he’s just opened doors to more opportunities with what he displayed.

    Hit: Blanchfield Vies For Title Shot

    Erin Blanchfield has been a rising women’s flyweight fighter since arriving from Invicta in 2021, but she hasn’t been able to secure a title shot just yet. That may all have changed following her finish of Tracy Cortez.

    Blanchfield baffled people during the first round by trying to stand and trade in a kickboxing battle with Cortez, who got the better of Blanchfield in the striking game. But Blanchfield worked her way back in the second round and scored a takedown. Blanchfield then used her grappling to work her way into a couple of choke attempts, with the second scoring her the submission win.

    Blanchfield has now avenged one of the two losses in her MMA career, with the other coming against recent title challenger Manon Fiorot. Perhaps her resume has shown more than enough now to get the next shot at the 125-pound gold.

    Hit: Bo Knows The KO

    Bo Nickal needed to show a big performance after losing in grand fashion to Reinier de Ridder at UFC Des Moines earlier this year. He did that and then some, not only demonstrating his excellent wrestling, but now also his continuing-to-evolve striking.

    Nickal easily scooped Rodolfo Vieira up and slammed him in the first round, laying into him with a series of knees and punches before threatening a guillotine choke. After continuing to lay into Vieira in the second, Nickal used his left hand to set up a devastating left head kick that crushed Vieira and sent him to La La Land.

    Is Bo Nickal ready for next-level competition? No, and the RdR fight was typical UFC pushing fighters too quickly. But this performance showed he is getting better, and if he can have performances like this another couple of times, then I think you give him tougher competition.

    Hit: Sacre Bleu, Saint-Denis

    Benoit Saint-Denis barely broke a sweat in his fight that opened the pay-per-view card, obliterating Beneil Dariush and making his case for a higher spot in the UFC’s lightweight rankings.

    After Dariush tripped him up with a couple of low kicks to start the fight, Saint-Denis needed just a couple of blows to the head to make Dariush faceplant.

    This now marks three straight wins for BSD, with his only two losses in the Octagon coming in hearty performances against Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano. BSD should certainly be in the top 10 at lightweight in a couple of days, but he should also be getting a huge contenders fight in his next matchup.

    Miss: Dariush’s Title Dreams Dashed?

    Let’s go back to UFC 289 – Beneil Dariush has won eight straight and is in a pivotal battle with Charles Oliveira. If he wins this fight, Dariush probably earns a lightweight title shot against Islam Makhachev.

    Instead, Dariush lost that fight, and the loss to BSD now means he’s lost three of his last four. Dariush is 36, but he’s also been a name in the UFC for a while now. I’m not going to say his best days are behind him; he did score a win over Renato Moicano earlier this year after all. But at this point, he might just be a gatekeeper for others making their way up the 155-pound ranks. Unless he’s somehow willing to switch divisions?

    Hit: Carlos Prates Makes Emphatic Statement

    The Fighting Nerds may have some of their momentum back, and it all comes courtesy of Carlos Prates. He’s now earned the biggest win of his UFC career, taking out the very man who spurred the popularity of the “Head shot. Dead.” phrase with his own highlight knockout — former welterweight champion Leon Edwards.

    Edwards looked to use his grappling earlier on, pressing Prates to the fence. Prates then engaged in a trash talk battle, daring Edwards into a striking contest. Eventually, Prates’ striking helped him get success, landing a left hand that dropped Edwards out cold in a bad way.

    Prates has continued to rack up finish after finish, with his only loss in the Octagon coming against Ian Machado Garry — a fight where he nearly finished things in the fifth in comeback fashion. Prates has solidified himself as a name in the welterweight title picture now, and a title eliminator should be in his near future.

    Miss: Leon Edwards Eats Three Ls

    Leon Edwards has never looked as bad as he has in his last three fights now. He was dominated by Belal Muhammad in their title fight. He then gets decimated by Sean Brady earlier this year in London. Now, after all the talk about not facing a wrestler, Edwards tries to use wrestling and gets worked up into a strategy that got him straight-up knocked out for the first time in his UFC career.

    After these three consecutive losses, Edwards might find himself one loss away from exiting the top 10. And with how dangerous welterweight is with all the up-and-comers in the division, it’s going to be a long, hard back to the top of the mountain for “Rocky.”

    Hit: Michael Morales Makes Case For Title Shot

    A question surrounding this fight was if Brady’s grappling or Morales’ striking was going to be too much for the other. We got our answer, as Morales put away Brady and seems to have racked up the next title shot at 170.

    But then, Brady tried to get his striking going. And he paid the price for it as Morales landed a flurry that troubled him. After getting dropped once, Brady was dropped again from another Morales combination, with Morales landing follow-up shots to put the fight away.

    Morales is now 19-0 and has now put away Brady, Gilbert Burns, and Neil Magny in his three most recent fights. I’m not sure what Dana White is thinking considering him, Carlos Prates, and Ian Machado Garry, but Morales is due for a title shot if White’s words as the press conference are anything to go by.

    Miss: Super Title Fights Aren’t So Super

    For all the great highlights that UFC 322 provided, it’s a shame that the two title fights ended up being perhaps the worst part of everything.

    With Islam Makhachev looking to make history and the two best women’s fighters in the UFC today doing battle, you would have thought we’d have more competitive outings. Instead, in both matchups, one fighter proved to be the more superior by a seeming mile.

    Makhachev’s ground dominance was one way the fight could have gone, but JDM’s performance is being panned across the board. Zhang, meanwhile, had shockingly no answer for the ground game of Shevchenko.

    It’s not that UFC 322 is a bad card at all, but for some, the way the two title fights played out left a sour taste.

    Hit: Who Can Stop Valentina?

    But, let’s talk about Shevchenko. She has dominated through the women’s flyweight scene. Even when she got caught and lost to Alexa Grasso, she worked her way back in the latter two fights the pair had. Now, she’s just taken out the most dangerous force that could have come up from 115.

    So, what is next for her? Will Shevchenko defend against someone like a Natalia Silva or an Erin Blanchfield? Will she eye her way back up to 135 — where she took Amanda Nunes to the limit twice? Time will tell.

    Hit: Makhachev Makes History

    And then there’s Makhachev. He may have some of the best wrestling that can be found in the UFC today. He looked great at 170, not undersized at all. It looked as if everything that Makhachev had while dominating the lightweight scene was still found at welterweight.

    Will we get Ilia Topuria vs. Islam Makhachev now? Will Morales, Prates, or Garry get the first crack at him? It will be fun to see what the UFC matchmaking crew decides.

  • ‘Best In The World’ – Fans & Fighters React As Valentina Shevchenko Easily Handles Weili Zhang To Keep Women’s Flyweight Title At UFC 322

    ‘Best In The World’ – Fans & Fighters React As Valentina Shevchenko Easily Handles Weili Zhang To Keep Women’s Flyweight Title At UFC 322

    A fight featuring the two best pound-for-pound female athletes in the UFC ended in a one-sided whopping, as Valentina Shevchenko wiped the floor with Weili Zhang to retain the women’s flyweight title in the UFC 322 co-main event.

    After some early trading and feeling out, Shevchenko scored first blood by dropping Zhang with a knee to the body. Zhang stopped the efforts of Shevchenko to get in full mount and worked her way to the feet; however, Shevchenko seemed to rock her again with a backfist.

    Shevchenko got Zhang back to the ground and ended up dominating in side control and the crucifix for nearly the entire second round. Zhang had her moments in a third round that was quieter, but Shevchenko scored another takedown with 90 seconds left in the frame.

    Shevchenko did more damage to Zhang in the fourth round, focusing on the body. Even when Zhang landed a kick to the body, Shevchenko grabbed her leg and scored yet another takedown.

    Valentina Shevchenko Dominates Weili Zhang At UFC 322

    https://twitter.com/xJahstin/status/1989919755352871235?s=20
    https://twitter.com/boobsweat1989/status/1989919804636250478?s=20

    Shevchenko lost and won back the UFC women’s flyweight title in her trilogy bout with Alexa Grasso. She then successfully retained against Manon Fiorot earlier this year at UFC 315.

    Zhang won back the UFC women’s strawweight title by defeating Carla Esparza at UFC 281. She retained against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez before vacating the title to challenge Shevchenko.

  • UFC 322 Results & Highlights: Islam Makhachev Decisions Jack Della Maddalena

    UFC 322 Results & Highlights: Islam Makhachev Decisions Jack Della Maddalena

    UFC 322 took place tonight from Madison Square Garden in New York City, and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    In the main event, welterweight champion Jack Della Maddalena looked to defend his title against Islam Makhachev. While in the co-main event, women’s flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko took on Zhang Weili.

    UFC 322 Results: Main Card

    Welterweight title: Islam Makhachev def. Jack Della Maddalena via unanimous decision (50-45×3)
    Women’s flyweight title: Valentina Shevchenko def. Zhang Weili via unanimous decision (50-45×3)
    Welterweight: Michael Morales def. Sean Brady via TKO: R1, 3.27
    Welterweight: Carlos Prates def. Leon Edwards via KO: R2, 1.28
    Lightweight: Benoit Saint Denis def. Beneil Dariush via KO: R1, 0.16

    Preliminary Card

    Middleweight: Bo Nickal def. Rodolfo Vieira via KO: R3, 2.24
    Middleweight: Gregory Rodrigues def. Roman Kopylov via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield def. Tracy Cortez via submission: R2, 4.44
    Featherweight: Ethyn Ewing def. Malcolm Wellmaker via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)

    Early Preliminary Card

    Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus def. Gerald Meerschaert via submission: R1, 0.50
    Featherweight: Pat Sabatini def. Chepe Mariscal via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    Strawweight: Fatima Kline def. Angela Hill via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
    Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev def. Eric McConico via KO: R3, 1.38
    Lightweight: Matheus Camilo def. Viacheslav Borshchev via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Baisangur Susurkaev def. Eric McConico

    Kyle Daukaus def. Gerald Meerschaert

    Erin Blanchfield def. Tracy Cortez

    Bo Nickal def. Rodolfo Vieira

    Main Card Highlights

    Benoit Saint Denis def. Beneil Dariush

    Benoit Saint Denis took just 16 seconds to get the KO.

    Carlos Prates def. Leon Edwards

    Carlos Prates earnd a KO early in the second.

    Michael Morales def. Sean Brady

    Michael Morales earned a first-round TKO.

    Valentina Shevchenko def. Zhang Weili

    In the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko earned a unanimous decision to retain the women’s flyweight title.

    Islam Makhachev def. Jack Della Maddalena

    In the main event, Islam Makhachev earned a dominant unanimous decision to capture the welterweight title.

  • UFC 322 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Della Maddalena vs. Makhachev, Shevchenko vs. Zhang, And More

    UFC 322 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Della Maddalena vs. Makhachev, Shevchenko vs. Zhang, And More

    UFC 322 is here, and we here at MMA News are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from Madison Square Garden, in New York City, on Saturday, November 15. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/6PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6PM ET/3PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature a UFC welterweight championship matchup between Jack Della Maddalena and Islam Makhachev.

    The co-main event will see the UFC women’s strawweight championship on the line as Valentina Shevchenko defends against Weili Zhang.

    The pay-per-view main card will also feature Sean Brady taking on Michael Morales, Leon Edwards facing Carlos Prates, and Beneil Dariush going up against Benoit Saint-Denis.

    UFC 322: Della Maddalena vs. Makhachev Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 322 as of 8:30pm ET on November 14, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena (+245) vs. Islam Makhachev (-305)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (-135) vs. Weili Zhang (+114)
    • Welterweight: Sean Brady (-135) vs. Michael Morales (+114)
    • Welterweight: Leon Edwards (+136) vs. Carlos Prates (-162)
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush (+150) vs. Benoit Saint-Denis (-180)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Bo Nickal (-198) vs. Rodolfo Vieira (+164)
    • Middleweight: Roman Kopylov (+154) vs. Gregory Rodrigues (-185)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield (-270) vs. Tracy Cortez (+220)
    • Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus (-470) vs. Gerald Meerschaert (+360)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Featherweight: Pat Sabatini (-118) vs. Chepe Mariscal (-102)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Angela Hill (+390) vs. Fatima Kline (-520)
    • Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev (-1050) vs. Eric McConico (+675)
    • Lightweight: Viascheslav Borschev (+145) vs. Matheus Camilo (-175)
  • Watch Jack Della Maddalena, Islam Makhachev Face Off At UFC 322 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    Watch Jack Della Maddalena, Islam Makhachev Face Off At UFC 322 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    We’re 24 hours away from UFC 322, and MMA News is here to bring you the video from the ceremonial weigh-ins for the card!

    UFC 322 takes place on November 15 from Madison Square Garden in New York City.

    The main event will see Jack Della Maddalena defend the UFC welterweight championship against Islam Makhachev. This marks JDM’s first title defense since defeating Belal Muhammad for the gold at UFC 315. Makachev moves up to welterweight after a run as lightweight champion, which began with a win over Charles Oliveira and contained successful defenses against Alexander Volkanovski, Dustin Poirier, and Renato Moicano.

    The co-main event will see the top two UFC female fighters in action, as Valentina Shevchenko defends the UFC women’s flyweight championship against Weili Zhang. Shevchenko, in her second run as champion of the division she has dominated since 2018, retained the championship against Manon Fiorot at UFC 315. Zhang, meanwhile, moves up to 125 after two title runs at strawweight. Her second reign began with a win over Carla Esparza and saw defenses against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    The rest of the main card sees welterweight action between Sean Brady and Michael Morales, a welterweight showdown featuring former champion Leon Edwards and rising contender Carlos Prates, and a lightweight battle that sees Beneil Dariush pitted against Benoit Saint-Denis.

    Though Dariush missed weight for his fight, all bouts appear ready to move forward to UFC 321!

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

    UFC 322 Ceremonial Weigh-In Video

  • UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Full Weigh-In Results: One Main Card Fighter Misses Weight

    UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Full Weigh-In Results: One Main Card Fighter Misses Weight

    We are just one day away from UFC 322, and we’ve got the official weigh-in results for you here at MMA News.

    UFC 322 takes place from Madison Square Garden in New York City, featuring a number of noteworthy names topped off with two highly anticipated title fights.

    The main event will see Jack Della Maddalena defend the UFC welterweight championship against Islam Makhachev.

    This will mark JDM’s first title defense since capturing the gold with a decision win over Belal Muhammad at UFC 315 in May. Della Maddalena has won 18 fights in a row and has a perfect Octagon record, having not dropped a fight since losing his first two pro outings.

    The one-loss Makhachev is the former UFC lightweight champion. He defeated Charles Oliveira for the title at UFC 280 and has since retained the belt against Alexander Volkanovski, Dustin Poirier, and Renato Moicano. He vacated the belt to move up to 170.

    The co-main event will see the top two UFC pound-for-pound female fighters clash, as Valentina Shevchenko puts the women’s flyweight title on the line against Weili Zhang.

    Shevchenko has been a mainstay in the division since moving there from bantamweight in 2018, becoming a two-time champion in the process. After losing and regaining the gold in her trilogy with Alexa Grasso, Shevchenko retained the title against Manon Fiorot at UFC 315. Zhang is a two-time former strawweight champion. Her second reign began at UFC 281, and she went on to retain against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    The rest of the main card sees welterweight contenders Sean Brady and Michael Morales in battle, as well as former welterweight champion Leon Edwards being putting up against Carlos Prates and lightweight action featuring Beneil Dariush and Benoit Saint-Denis.

    UFC 322 Weigh-In Video, Results

    UFC 322 takes place Saturday, November 15 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The main card begins at 10 PM ET/7 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6 PM ET/3 PM PT.

    See above to watch the UFC 322 Weigh-In Show, and check out the full results below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena (169.8) vs. Islam Makhachev (170)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (124.6) vs. Weili Zhang (124.6)
    • Welterweight: Sean Brady (169.4) vs. Michael Morales (170.6)
    • Welterweight: Leon Edwards (170) vs. Carlos Prates (169.6)
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush (157.2)* vs. Benoit Saint-Denis (155.6)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Bo Nickal (185.8) vs. Rodolfo Vieira (186)
    • Middleweight: Roman Kopylov (185.2) vs. Gregory Rodrigues (185.8)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield (125.8) vs. Tracy Cortez (125.6)
    • Bantamweight: Malcolm Wellmaker (143.6) vs. Cody Haddon (145.2)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus (186) vs. Gerald Meerschaert (185.6)
    • Featherweight: Pat Sabatini (145.6) vs. Chepe Mariscal (145.6)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Angela Hill (115.6) vs. Fatima Kline (115.4)
    • Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev (185.2) vs. Eric McConico (185.6)
    • Lightweight: Viascheslav Borschev (155.8) vs. Matheus Camilo (155.8)

    *Dariush fined 20 percent of his purse for weight miss

  • Watch UFC 322 Press Conference Video Featuring Della Maddalena, Makhachev, Shevchenko, Zhang, And More (5 p.m. ET)

    Watch UFC 322 Press Conference Video Featuring Della Maddalena, Makhachev, Shevchenko, Zhang, And More (5 p.m. ET)

    UFC 322 is just a couple of days away, featuring a pair of highly anticipated super title fights headlining the show. Time to stir the pot more and gain more hype for UFC 322, courtesy of a good ol’ fashion question-and-answer session.

    The 12th UFC pay-per-view event of the year goes down from Madison Square Garden, in New York City, on Saturday, November 15.

    UFC 322 will be headlined by Jack Della Maddalena defending the UFC welterweight championship against Islam Makhachev.

    The co-main event will see Valentina Shevchenko put the UFC women’s flyweight championship on the line against Weili Zhang.

    The rest of the main card sees a welterweight clash between Sean Brady and Michael Morales, former welterweight champ Leon Edwards facing Carlos Prates, and a lightweight battle between Beneil Dariush and Benoit Saint-Denis.

    Watch The UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Pre-Fight Press Conference

    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 via the UFC’s official YouTube channel, commencing at 5 PM ET.

  • UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Staff Predictions

    UFC 322: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Staff Predictions

    The UFC brings a pair of super title fights to its annual November pay-per-view outing in New York City this Saturday for UFC 322. Get yourself ready and in the know with another edition of MMA News staff fight predictions.

    The event will be available exclusively on ESPN pay-per-view on Saturday, November 15. The main card will begin at 10pm ET, with preliminary card action kicking off at 6pm ET.

    The main event will see the UFC welterweight championship on the line as Jack Della Maddalena defends against former lightweight champion Islam Makhachev.

    Della Maddalena has won 18 straight fights since dropping the first two of his professional MMA career. This includes a perfect 8-0 record in the Octagon, which includes wins over Kevin Holland Gilbert Burns. This is JDM’s first title defense since defeating Belal Muhammad to capture the gold at UFC 315 in May.

    The 27-1 Makhachev spent most of the last approximately three years as UFC lightweight champion, capturing the title with a win over Charles Oliveira at UFC 280. He defended the belt against Alexander Volkanovski twice, Dustin Poirier, and Renato Moicano before vacating the title to move up to 170.

    A similar situation can be found in the co-main event of the evening, as Valentina Shevchenko puts up the women’s flyweight championship against Weili Zhang in a battle of the UFC’s top-two women’s pound-for-pound combatants.

    Shevchenko is in the midst of her second reign as flyweight champion, reclaiming the gold in a trilogy bout with Alexa Grasso at Noche UFC 2: UFC 306. Shevchenko retained the title against Manon Fiorot at UFC 315. Zhang is a former two-time women’s strawweight champion, reclaiming the title with a win over Carla Esparza at UFC 281 and defending it successfully against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    The rest of the main card will see a welterweight battle featuring Sean Brady and Michael Morales, another welterweight scrap with former champion Leon Edwards facing Carlos Prates, and a lightweight battle that sees Beneil Dariush take on Benoit Saint-Denis.

    UFC 322: MMA News Staff Predictions

    With UFC 322 just a couple of short days away, Ryan Jarrell, Pranav Pandey, and myself (Thomas Albano) have provided our picks for the fights that make up the main card.

    Below, you can check out the current leaderboard through 11 cards in 2025.

    Thomas Albano (30-21)
    Ryan Jarrell (28-23)
    Pranav Pandey (27-24)

    And now, let’s take a look at everyone’s picks for UFC 322!

    Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Benoit Saint-Denis

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: When Beneil Dariush got re-booked against Renato Moicano at UFC 317, with Moicano coming off the last-minute title shot at the start of the year, I thought that was going to spell the end of Dariush’s time in the top 10 of the lightweight contender rankings. But somehow he was able to pull through and come out on top.

    I doubt lightning strikes twice here. Benoit Saint-Denis has proven to be a strong, durable, and scrappy fighter in this weight class. He has looked great even in his losses the past couple of years. BSD is going to have the advantage in terms of both size and striking. Both men have noteworthy grappling abilities, with Dariush holding a particular edge in this regard. If Dariush can’t get BSD to the ground, however, I don’t think he’s able to hold up well against Saint-Denis’ strikes. (Prediction: Saint-Denis)

    Ryan Jarrell: I am all the way back in on the BSD hype train after seeing what BSD did in his last fight which was an extremely impressive win over top prospect Mauricio Ruffy. Dariush is a tough well rounded veteran, but at this stage of his career I’m not sure he can hang with Benoit if he is at his best. As long as the ‘God of War’ shows up like he did against Ruffy, I definitely expect him to overwhelm and beat up Dariush over three rounds and he may very well find the finish. (Prediction: Saint-Denis)

    Pranav Pandey: Dariush regained his footing after two tough knockout losses by earning a solid decision over Renato Moicano, and he showed he still has high-level skills. But at this stage of his career, I feel like the margins are getting thinner for him, and facing someone like Saint Denis is far from ideal.

    “God of War” brings youth, power and a ruthless finishing instinct. Dariush has never been the type to back down or fade, but when I weigh their momentum, I end up leaning toward BSD taking this one. (Prediction: Saint-Denis)

    Consensus: 3-0 Saint-Denis

    Welterweight: Leon Edwards vs. Carlos Prates

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: I think this is a situation where Leon Edwards has everything to lose and Carlos Prates has everything to gain. Edwards’ two most recent fights – against Sean Brady and Belal Muhammad – have not been his best showings. And now he has to face Prates, who has proven himself to be a dangerous striker – even in his loss to Ian Machado Garry earlier this year. There are two things that can turn this fight in Edwards’ favor. Firstly, if he makes this more of a technical striking matchup than trying to match power for power, Edwards can win this fight. Secondly, if he can spend time on the ground with Prates and bring him to the mat, Edwards can win this fight. Prates and the Fighting Nerds are in need of some major momentum to come back to their side, and if he can defeat Edwards here by managing the power of his strikes well, that will be what is needed. (Prediction: Prates)

    Ryan Jarrell: Carlos Prates’ stoppage win over Geoff Neal was truly remarkable. It was important for ‘The Nitemare’ to remind the MMA community just how scary he truly is, especially after suffering his first loss inside the octagon to a game Machado Garry. This matchup with Leon will be a strikers delight and could very well steal the show as fight of the night. Leon is very technical and will definitely give Prates some problems early on as the two tussle to find one another’s timing. But to me, the difference will be the violent nature of strikes that Carlos always seems to bring to the table. I could see Prates getting a finish but the more likely outcome is Prates landing the more significant strikes and winning a decision over the former champion. (Prediction: Prates)

    Pranav Pandey: Leon Edwards, once riding a remarkable 13-fight unbeaten streak with two title defenses, hasn’t looked like himself lately. In his last two outings, he seemed a step behind, struggling to match the pace and intensity of his opponents. If he hasn’t patched those holes, he could find himself in serious danger here because Prates is the last person you want to give openings to. The Brazilian is a razor-sharp sniper on the feet.

    “The Nightmare” has been tearing through opponents with knockouts. Aside from a tight loss to Ian Garry, he has been nearly flawless. For me, UFC 322 feels like his moment to break through in a big way. I honestly see this matchup leaning in Prates’ favour if Edwards shows the same inconsistencies we’ve seen recently. (Prediction: Prates)

    Consensus: 3-0 Prates

    Welterweight: Sean Brady vs. Michael Morales

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: Of all the non-title fights present on this UFC 322 card, this is the one I am struggling with the most. You’ve got two rising names in the weight class who are extremely talented and have some wins over noteworthy names under their belt. This is definitely the fight I have the most uncertainty with and just want to kick back and watch it all happen. Ultimately, Michael Morales is the better, more powerful striker; however, Sean Brady is the better overall performer. This is not a striker vs. grappler battle, but I think it comes to that. If Brady can take Morales’ power and can take him down and neutralize Morales’ offense, the fight is his. But if Brady gets cracked in the same way that Belal Muhammad (of all people) cracked him, that doesn’t spell good news for him. If I had to lean one way, give me Brady to be the one to put the first L in Morales’ career. I will say, however, a win here for Morales, and we might legitimately be looking at someone who can pose a threat to the 170-pound title starting in 2026 or 2027. (Prediction: Brady)

    Ryan Jarrell: I am so excited for this matchup. This is your striker versus grappler fight with huge future #1 contender implications on the line. Both of these guys will be around the top of the division for years to come and I wouldn’t be surprised if we see these two match up again down the line. I was extremely impressed with what Sean Brady did in his wins over Edwards, Burns and Gastelum. Brady will have to be incredibly careful on the feet when entering for a takedown because Morales is a sniper. But I do think we will see somewhat of a grappling clinic put on by Brady throughout fifteen minutes. Morales is a live dog here and could easily catch Sean coming in and close the show. But I’m leaning Brady to continue doing what we have seen lately and smother his opponent en route to a clear victory. (Prediction: Brady)

    Pranav Pandey: Brady looked so dominant in his last performance that he made Leon Edwards appear completely out of rhythm. His consistency stands out, and it genuinely feels like he’s sharpening his game every time he fights. The only real blemish on his record is the loss to Belal, and even then, I believe he simply got caught on an off night.

    Meanwhile, Morales brings serious knockout danger, and he doesn’t need many openings to end a fight. His last two finishes over seasoned veterans Gilbert Burns and Neil Magny were the kind of wins that make you stop and take notice, and he handled both with almost casual ease. If the young Ecuadorian can stay disciplined, keep the distance and avoid being dragged into Brady’s grappling radius, I think he has a very real chance of landing something clean and game-changing. (Prediction: Morales)

    Consensus: 2-1 Brady

    Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Weili Zhang

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: I have long been dreaming of this fight, and I am so excited that we’re finally get to see it go down – and on a major world stage like MSG, too. These are legitimately the two best women’s fighters in the UFC now, and this is one of the hardest fights on this card to pick. Ultimately, however, I am going to lean toward Valentina Shevchenko. While Shevchenko has had a couple of down performances over the past couple of years, she has been a consistent mainstay in the flyweight division’s title picture since moving there in 2018. And other than Alexa Grasso catching her with a submission, we haven’t seen anyone bring her down. I don’t think any of Weili Zhang’s recent title challengers have brought her the preparation needed for facing a dangerous striker like Shevchenko – who, remember, moved down a weight class when she moved to 125, rather than Zhang, who is moving up. I think we will see an awesome scrap, but I think Shevchenko does enough to retain her title. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is such a tough fight to pick. These are two of the absolute best women’s fighters of all time, so the fans should be in for a real treat. I think it’s safe to say Valentina will have the size and strength advantage. While Weili will have the speed advantage on the feet. To me, Weili  has to use her speed and movement to frustrate Valentina on the feet and stuff the takedowns that will most certainly come her way. I think we will see an extremely close fight where Shevchenko steals the 50/50 rounds with a timely takedown and top control. I can see this fight going either way, but I’ll lean Valentina to win a split decision. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Pranav Pandey: When I look at this matchup, it feels like one of the most intriguing clashes in women’s MMA right now. Their skill sets line up so closely. With Weili moving up a division, I don’t see toughness being an issue at all. She’s as durable and explosive as they come, and I genuinely believe she can push Shevchenko in ways very few have. “Magnum” has a style that mirrors Valentina’s in many ways. Her striking remains her strongest weapon, yet what really stands out to me is how much her grappling has evolved, even at 36.

    On the other side, Shevchenko has spent years beating the best of the best and establishing herself as one of the greatest women’s fighters ever. She’s still incredibly composed and well-rounded, and she never fades mentally. But even though she regained her belt and defended it, I feel like that untouchable aura she used to have has softened a bit. She hasn’t looked quite as dominant lately, especially against strong grapplers, where she has shown some vulnerabilities.

    If Weili comes in with a smart mix of pressure, level changes and her usual high-paced striking, I think she has a real chance to walk out as a two-division champion. (Prediction: Zhang)

    Consensus: 2-1 Shevchenko

    Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: I was left jaw-dropped by Jack Della Maddalena, as he was able to stop the takedown efforts of Belal Muhammad at UFC 315 and worked his way to a decision win and the UFC welterweight title. It was a win that shook things up a little bit in the UFC; however, I feel that win might all be for naught with him going up against Islam Makhachev.

    Makhachev, point blank, is one of the best, if not the best, pound-for-pound fighters in the UFC. Della Maddalena might have been able to stop the takedown efforts seen in Muhammad’s wrestling, but how many times have we been told (and seen) that Dagestani wrestling is a different kind of animal? JDM is a tough dog when it comes to his boxing, but I doubt he’ll be able to have the same kind of takedown defense success against Makhachev. I expect Makhachev to bring this fight to the ground often and control the action en route to a mid-to-late fight finish and earn UFC gold in a second weight class, furthering his legacy. (Prediction: Makhachev)

    Ryan Jarrell: I just want to be clear and admit that I am a big JDM fan and I am cheering for him to get this win. Having said that, my head is telling me that Islam will become the 11th fighter in UFC history to win a title in two weight classes. JDM had a great performance against Belal, but he really struggled in previous fights against Basil Hafez, Kevin Holland and Gilbert Burns. If JDM had issues against those fighters, then he definitely will against the former 155 champ. I expect the striking and power advantage to lean towards JDM, but Islam does such a masterful job of mixing things up and at the end of the day, his grappling is world class. Because of that, I have to lean towards Islam winning this fight via decision and cementing himself as the No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter on the planet. Bring on Islam vs Ilia! (Prediction: Makhachev)

    Pranav Pandey: This matchup is one of the hardest calls on the entire card. oth guys are elite in what they do, and the dynamics of this fight make it feel genuinely close. Della Maddalena showed in his last outing that he’s got a rock-solid blueprint for shutting down high-level wrestlers. The way he stuffed Belal Muhammad’s attempts and kept his striking sharp and punishing was a statement. His boxing is crisp, his counters are nasty, and once he finds his rhythm, he’s a problem for anyone at 170.

    But here is the catch. Makhachev is not your typical grappler. Even moving up to welterweight, I do not think strength will be an issue for him. He has built a career on making elite opponents look helpless once he gets his hands on them. And it is not just the wrestling. His ability to blend striking with constant grappling threats is what makes him such a dangerous fighter. That blend could create serious problems for the Aussie champ.

    Still, for this one, I find myself leaning toward Della Maddalena. I think he will be incredibly tough to take down, even tougher to keep down, and confident enough to engage when things get scrambly. Plus, he has a bit of a roadmap in how Alexander Volkanovski approached Makhachev in their first meeting. (Prediction: Della Maddalena)

    Consensus: 2-1 Makhachev


    That’ll do it for our UFC 322 staff picks! What do you think? Do your predictions look similar? Let us know in the comments section!

    Also, you can check out the full UFC 322 card below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Weili Zhang
    • Welterweight: Sean Brady vs. Michael Morales
    • Welterweight: Leon Edwards vs. Carlos Prates
    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Benoit Saint-Denis

    Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Bo Nickal vs. Rodolfo Vieira
    • Middleweight: Roman Kopylov vs. Gregory Rodrigues
    • Women’s Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield vs. Tracy Cortez
    • Bantamweight: Malcolm Wellmaker vs. Cody Haddon

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus vs. Gerald Meerschaert
    • Featherweight: Pat Sabatini vs. Chepe Mariscal
    • Women’s Strawweight: Angela Hill vs. Fatima Kline
    • Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev vs. Eric McConico
    • Lightweight: Viascheslav Borschev vs. Matheus Camilo
  • What’s Next After UFC 321? Full Confirmed UFC 322 Main Card For New York On November 15

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Main Card:

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

    Preliminary Card (Order TBA):

    • Lightweight: Beneil Dariush vs. Benoit Saint-Denis
    • Middleweight: Roman Kopylov vs. Gregory Rodrigues
    • Women’s Flyweight: Erin Blanchfield vs. Tracy Cortez
    • Bantamweight: Malcolm Wellmaker vs. Cody Haddon
    • Middleweight: Kyle Daukaus vs. Gerald Meerschaert
    • Women’s Strawweight: Angela Hill vs. Fatima Kline
    • Middleweight: Baisangur Susurkaev vs. Eric McConico
  • Dakota Ditcheva To Defeat Valentina Shevchenko According to UFC Veteran

    Dakota Ditcheva To Defeat Valentina Shevchenko According to UFC Veteran

    Dakota Ditcheva would get it done over Valentina Shevchenko if the two were to fight now, according to a former UFC title challenger. This was expressed by Dan Hardy who was asked about how a hypothetical fight would play out between the undefeated PFL standout and the UFC flyweight champion.

    During a recent interview with MMA Fighting, Hardy said [via Fighters Only],

    “I would put my money on her [Ditcheva] against Valentina right now. That’s with all due respect to Valentina, who I’ve held in high regard for a long time. The thing that Valentina always made challenging about my job when I was doing Inside the Octagon for the UFC was there’s no highlight reel moments in her fights really. Very, very rarely—and that’s because she completely dominates people with just this steady pace. The kind of person that would break that style of fighting is someone that attacks ferociously.”

    “Dakota’s got the height and reach, the power, she’s got the viciousness, and the reality is American Top Team is probably one of the toughest mats, especially for a female fighter. I’ve got to expect her to at least hold her own on the ground with Valentina, if not be able to defend the takedowns. I think Dakota beats anybody right now in her weight class. I think pound-for-pound, if she’s not top three, then I’m crazy. I think she has a damn good chance against anybody and even going up to bantamweight and fighting there and having a lot of success there as well.”

    Dakota Ditcheva
    Image: PFL MMA

    Dakota Ditcheva and her pro MMA resume so far

    Dakota Ditcheva boasts a 15-0 overall record in professional mixed martial arts. The surging star out of the United Kingdom has captured tournament titles in both the PFL Europe and main stage PFL circuits.

    Ditcheva has become one of the big grassroots stars in the promotion and since debuting with that promotion in 2022, has become one of the first fighters you think of who compete inside the Smart Cage.

  • Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Announced For UFC 322 Main Event, Weili Zhang To Vacate Title And Challenge Valentina Shevchenko In Co-Main Event

    Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev Announced For UFC 322 Main Event, Weili Zhang To Vacate Title And Challenge Valentina Shevchenko In Co-Main Event

    The UFC will be returning to New York’s Madison Square Garden for UFC 322 on November 15, featuring a pair of what could be considered championship superfights to headline the night.

    The main event will see Jack Della Maddalena make his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship, as he faces the challenge of former UFC lightweight champion Islam Makhachev.

    JDM, an alumnus of Dana White’s Contender Series, has gone unbeaten in professional MMA since dropping his first two fights. His rise up the welterweight ranks ended in successful fashion with a win over Belal Muhammad at UFC 315 in May to claim the UFC’s 170-pound title.

    Makhachev became UFC lightweight champion with a submission of Charles Oliveira at UFC 280. He defended the title four times, defeating Alexander Volkanovski twice, as well as defeating Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano, before vacating the belt — now held by Ilia Topuria — earlier this year.

    Jack Della Maddalena vs. Islam Makhachev, Valentina Shevchenko vs. Weili Zhang Official For UFC 322

    Like the stories of Makhachev and Topuria, Weili Zhang will be vacating her strawweight championship and challenging Valentina Shevchenko for the women’s flyweight title in the UFC 323 co-main event — a battle of the top two-ranked pound-for-pound women’s fighters in the UFC today.

    Shevchenko initially won the women’s flyweight championship at UFC 231, defending the belt seven times before her trilogy with Alexa Grasso that saw her lose and regain the title. Shevchenko defended the belt earlier this year at UFC 315, defeating Manon Fiorot.

    Zhang, a two-time UFC women’s strawweight champion, began her second run with the gold by submitting Carla Esparza at UFC 281, which was also held at Madison Square Garden. She has since successfully defended the title against Amanda Lemos, Yan Xiaonan, and Tatiana Suarez.

    UFC 322 will also feature former welterweight champion Leon Edwards in action against Carlos Prates. Edwards lost to Sean Brady earlier this year in his first fight since dropping the belt to Belal Muhammad. Prates, meanwhile, scored a highlight knockout of Geoff Neal just a couple of weeks ago at UFC 319.

  • Dakota Ditcheva is Ready for a Super-Fight against Valentina Shevchenko “History Making”

    Dakota Ditcheva is Ready for a Super-Fight against Valentina Shevchenko “History Making”

    PFL sensation Dakota Ditcheva has made it clear that she’d be interested in a superfight against Valentina Shevchenko.

    As we know, Dakota Ditcheva is easily one of the most exciting fighters in women’s mixed martial arts right now and that’s been the case for quite some time. She continues to thrive under the PFL umbrella and while many want to see her make the switch over to the UFC, she’s decided to continue plying her trade with the PFL, recently signing a new deal with the promotion.

    Of course, given her flyweight success, Dakota Ditcheva has often been linked with an eventual superfight against the one and only Valentina Shevchenko. It doesn’t seem like it’s going to be happening anytime soon, but the masses still want to see it.

    In a recent interview, Dakota Ditcheva spoke about the possibility of that bout coming to fruition.

    Dakota Ditcheva looks ahead to possible superfight

    “I don’t know if UFC super-fight is in my immediate future, but if PFL champ versus UFC champ happens, I’m happy to do it. That would be a serious, history-making fight.”

    Ditcheva has many years ahead of her in MMA as she celebrates her 27th birthday today. As far as the UFC is concerned, you’d have to imagine they’ll be keeping a close eye on her – and with so much potential clearly yet to be brought to the forefront, we can’t imagine they’ll turn their nose up at signing her one day.

    Will Valentina still be at the top? We’ll have to wait and see.

  • Valentina Shevchenko’s Soviet-Era Secret: Why the UFC Champion Says “No Water” During Training

    Valentina Shevchenko’s Soviet-Era Secret: Why the UFC Champion Says “No Water” During Training

    Valentina Shevchenko, the UFC’s reigning flyweight queen and a woman with more title defenses than most fighters have Instagram followers, has a training rule that’s left the MMA world parched: no water during exercise. Yes, you read that right – while most athletes are guzzling fluids between rounds, Shevchenko is channeling her inner Soviet scientist and keeping her water bottle firmly capped.

    Valentina Shevchenko Says No Water In Training

    “I don’t drink water during exercise. It comes from Soviet sports science—if you drink during intense exercise, it can disrupt your body’s rhythm. After training, you rehydrate, but during, you want everything working like a clock. Excess is never good, whether it’s water, protein, or caffeine,” she explained, in an interview with Helen Yee, with all the certainty of someone who’s kicked heads from Kyrgyzstan to Las Vegas.

    This isn’t just a quirky personal habit. Valentina Shevchenko’s “no water” policy is a relic of Soviet-era sports science, where the idea was to toughen athletes up and keep their bodies running with mechanical precision. The theory? If you can train under the harshest conditions, parched and focused, then you’ll perform better when it counts, especially when water breaks aren’t guaranteed. Some former Soviet coaches believed that minimizing water intake during training would help athletes adapt to competition scenarios where hydration is limited.

    But here’s where modern science throws a wet towel on the tradition. Leading sports nutritionists, including Jordan Sullivan (a.k.a. “The Fight Dietitian”), have called Shevchenko’s approach “outdated.” According to Sullivan, depriving athletes of water during training doesn’t build toughness it just makes them train worse.

    Medical experts also warn that dehydration during exercise can impair performance, increase fatigue, and even pose serious health risks like heat exhaustion. Still, Shevchenko isn’t budging. She’s doubled down on her policy, even imposing it on her team during “The Ultimate Fighter” season 32, insisting that it’s about cultivating a champion’s mindset and keeping the body “like a clock.”

    Critics may scoff, but it’s hard to argue with her results. And what results they are. She’s a two-time UFC women’s flyweight champion, boasting several successful title defenses in her first reign. Her resume reads like a who’s who of women’s MMA: victories over Joanna Jędrzejczyk, Jessica Andrade, Holly Holm, and Lauren Murphy, among others.

    Is Shevchenko’s no-water rule a secret weapon or just a stubborn throwback? The science says hydrate, but “Bullet” Shevchenko says stay thirsty.

  • 7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    For the first time in a decade, the UFC arrived to Montreal, looking to bring the Bell Centre a night of memorable action with two title fights and some rising stars to watch out for.

    It was the UFC’s first visit to the biggest city in the Canadian province of Quebec since UFC 186 in 2015 — a card that was headlined by Demetrious Johnson retaining the UFC flyweight title against Kyoji Horiguchui.

    Though Canadian talent was featured during the course of the evening, the main event’s focus was on the welterweight championship clash between Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena.

    Muhammad had entered UFC 315 on an unbeaten streak that stretched back to 2019. He had risen his way up the ranks and all the way up to the UFC championship, taking out names such as Demian Maia, Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, Sean Brady and Gilbert Burns. He captured the gold with a decision win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304.

    Standing across the cage from him was Jack Della Maddalena — who was given this opportunity a couple of months ago when Shavkat Rakhmonov was still unable to make the walk due to injury. JDM hadn’t lost since dropping his first two bouts as a pro and was a perfect 7-0 in the UFC. It was also JDM’s first fight since defeating Burns at UFC 299 last year.

    Gold was also on the line in the co-main event as Valentina Shevchenko looked to defend the UFC women’s flyweight championship against Manon Fiorot.

    This was Shevchenko’s first fight not against Alexa Grasso since recapturing the 125-pound title in their trilogy fight back in September. Outside of the 20 months or so that Grasso was wearing the gold, Shevchenko had been dominating the division since winning the title at UFC 231 in December 2018. Most, if not all, challengers that came up against her were completely outclassed.

    Like her title challenger counterpart on the evening, Fiorot hadn’t lost a fight since her own professional MMA debut. Fiorot had quickly made impressions since entering the UFC, taking out notable names in the division that included Mayra Bueno Silva, Jennifer Maia, Katlyn Cerminara, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield.

    Who delivered in Canada? Who didn’t? Let’s go into it together with the hits and misses of UFC 315!

    Hit – Hometown Hero Barriault

    I had been in debate about whether or not to include this, given Bruno Silva being stretchered out at the end of this fight. But with Silva seemingly okay in the UFC’s updates, and “bonuses” misses I need to give, I’ve decided to give this a hit.

    Marc-AndrĂ© Barriault had one of the earliest strong performances on the night, finishing Silva during the early prelims. After both men landed big early and Silva momentarily dumped Barriault to the mat, Barriault put Silva away with some vicious elbows in the clinch. They didn’t just do big damage, but one of them dropped Silva out cold.

    It was an incredible and much-needed performance for Barriault. Coming into this fight off three straight losses, Barriault may have been facing the chopping block with a loss here. Instead, he gets to have a major knockout and memorable performance in front of a crowd in his home country.

    Miss – Whatever Those Judges’ Scorecards Were

    To quote commentary after Melvin Manhoef vs. Rafael Carvalho at Bellator 155, “The only thing more disappointing than that fight, was that horrendous decision.” Not only was Mondestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba a letdown, but the nature of the bout’s decision left MMA fans either scratching their heads or filled with rage.

    Though it wasn’t his most exciting performance, Cutelaba appeared to do enough over three rounds. He applied early pressured, delivered damaging calf kicks and had strong clinch work. Though Bukauskas had his moments — especially in the final round where he stuffed takedowns and landed counters — his overall output was inconsistent. Despite Cutelaba’s early work, the judges were split in baffling fashion.

    Even if you don’t consider this fight a robbery, the nature of the scorecards being all over the place is what is confusing. How do we get to a point where there is a 30-27 scorecard for one fighter and a 30-27 for the other? How the heck did Pasquale Procopio see all three rounds for Bukauskas anyway? There are more questions than answers, and we’re never going to get any (I have problems with two judges giving Belal Muhammad round one in his fight against Jack Della Maddalena, too, but I digress…)

    Once again, coming out of an MMA card, we’re talking about bad judging. How is it 2025 and we’re still on this? It’s tiring, and if we’re not going to get the Global/PRIDE scoring system into the Unified Rules of MMA, then why can’t we at least hear from judges after controversial scorecards like these? Sadly, that’ll never happen.

    Hit – Jasmine Jasudavicius On The Rise

    I’ve been a fan of Jasmine Jasudavicius for a little while now, and it’s clear that she may be a future star in the flyweight division after the performance she put on in the win over former strawweight champion Jessica Andrade.

    Using her physical advantages, Jasudavicius overwhelmed Andrade on the feet before taking her down with ease. She then swiftly transitioned into a rear-naked choke for the submission win.

    The performance was as emphatic as it was efficient, pushing Jasudavicius firmly into title contention. Will she be next in line for a shot at the title? No. But this fight has shown she’s ready for top competition. And it will be interesting to see what Jasudavicius can do against another notable contender in the division right now — be it former champ Alexa Grasso, Erin Blanchfield, Maycee Barber or Rose Namajunas.

    Hit – Is Natalia Silva Ready For A Title Shot?

    Jasmine Jasudavicius may be still another couple of fights away from a title shot. Natalia Silva, on the other hand, may be next in line after her strong win over former champion Alexa Grasso.

    Silva utilized her speed and sharp strikes to control all three rounds against the former champion. Silva repeatedly found success with leg kicks, quick combinations and slick footwork, while Grasso struggled to find openings and momentum.

    Silva has now scored victories over two former UFC champions in Jessica Andrade and Grasso. And the kind of performance she put on against the very woman who interrupted Valentina Shevchenko’s dominance at 125 might be enough to make her next in line for the gold. If not, a title eliminator against another top-5 ranked performer isn’t out of the question — and a win there would make it undeniable.

    Hit – A Wild Third Round Between Jose Aldo And Aiemann Zahabi

    Jose Aldo’s MMA career might not have ended with a win or a tribute video package. But it did end with an exciting bout against Aiemann Zahabi that included a final round that could be up for Round of the Year nominations in any MMA End of Year awards.

    Aldo’s forward pressure and combinations had brought him an early edge in the fight, but a strong performance in the second round from Zahabi made the fight close. The third round, however, saw wild momentum swings. Aldo dropped Zahabi early but couldn’t find the finish. A fatigued Aldo when saw Zahabi capitalize, unloading punches, elbows, and ground-and-pound as he looked for a finish of his own. In a fight that saw so close, Zahabi’s late momentum in the final two rounds earned him the nod in a fight that could have been scored either way.

    Though Zahabi is 37, this win continues a string of success he has been on for the last five years now. People will have their opinions on how he’d perform against the best contenders in a stacked bantamweight division, but it can’t be denied that he’s at least earned the opportunity to fight a top-10 contender at 135 now.

    Hit – A Tribute To A Legendary Career

    I could focus on Aldo’s weight issues entering this week. I could focus on his gas tank emptying out during the flurry in the third round. But I’m not going to do any of that.

    I’m instead going to take the time and pay my respects to one of the greatest careers this sport has seen. Jose Aldo is one of the reasons we talk about the lighter weight classes in the modern day and age of MMA. During the times when the UFC wasn’t hosting fights below 155 pounds, people like Jose Aldo were making a killing and showing their talents. Aldo dominated the featherweight scene in the WEC, and that continued when he became the inaugural UFC featherweight champion, pulling off victory after victory before competing against Conor McGregor at UFC 194 — one of the industry’s most memorable and highly publicized title fights.

    From Cub Swanson to Urijah Faber, from Chad Mendes to “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung-Jung, from Frankie Edgar to Max Holloway, Jose Aldo has been in the cage with some of the greatest to ever be in this sport. And not only did he dominate in his prime, but Aldo even showed he could still go as he nears 39 years of age.

    A happy retirement to the legend and UFC Hall of Famer! A toast to his memorable career!

    Hit – One Step Closer To The Next Women’s Superfight?

    There were plenty of questions about Valentina Shevchenko heading into this fight. In spite of winning back the women’s flyweight title in September, the interruption to her reign, combined with Manon Fiorot’s size and winning streak, led to Shevchenko being pegged as the underdog heading into this fight despite being defending champ.

    But Shevchenko proved how oddsmakers sometimes just don’t get it.

    Shevchenko started strong with sharp striking and a takedown in the first round, but Fiorot took control in the middle rounds with clinch control and increased aggression. Shevchenko tried to take momentum back in the fourth with powerful body kicks, a takedown, and a knockdown in the closing seconds. The fifth round remained tight, but Shevchenko’s consistency and impactful moments throughout earned her the unanimous decision on all three scorecards.

    So, what’s next for Shevchenko? There are still a couple of names in contention (like the aforementioned Silva and Jasudavicius). But, of course, the fight plenty of people want to see is a superfight between Shevchenko and women’s strawweight champion Weili Zhang. Zhang will probably still have to deal with Virna Jandiroba, then depending on if the UFC matchmakers want Silva as the next flyweight challenger or not, a Zhang win there could mean there can’t be another fight but it.

    Hit – JDM Turns Opportunity Into Gold

    Jack Della Maddalena would have gotten the opportunity to be a champion tonight. He was supposed to be fighting in the main event of UFC London a couple of months ago, taking on Leon Edwards. But with Shavkat Rakhmonov still on the sidelines, JDM was granted the chance to challenge Belal Muhammad. Now, after 25 minutes in the Octagon, JDM has managed to turn a sudden chance into a jackpot, walking out of UFC 315 the new UFC welterweight champion.

    JDM largely dictated the pace with technical striking. Muhammad held his own early and even managed to secure some positional control late, including a takedown and brief back control in round four. JDM’s striking volume and accuracy, as well as his ability to stuff takedowns, however, kept him in control for most of the fight. Despite Muhammad’s best efforts in the fifth, including a moment where he appeared to wobble his challenger in the fifth and landed ground control, JDM consistently rebounded and reasserted his rhythm, likely sealing a close but clear decision win and the championship.

    You have to feel good for someone like JDM completing his rise toward the gold. This opens up a lot of potential options for what could be next at 170, and here’s hoping that this injects some excitement in the division.

    On that note of what could be next, however…

    Miss – No Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria?

    A longstanding belief heading into this past weekend’s card was that a JDM win would result in Islam Makhachev moving up to 170 to challenge him for the UFC welterweight championship. That very well may still be the case even though there’s no official announcement yet.

    But it those are the plans, then unfortunately JDM’s victory brings us a monkey’s paw scenario. As it would mean a lightweight title fight between Islam Makhachev and Ilia Topuria would be off.

    Let me state this for the record: I was not a fan of Topuria’s decision to vacate the featherweight championship. Though he won the belt and retained it once against two of the greats in, respectively, Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway (the former of whom has now regained the title), there were still fights to be had for Topuria at 145. He didn’t clear the division; Diego Lopes and Movsar Evloev were chomping at the bit for title opportunities. Topuria’s reign was supposed to present us with fresh ideas for the division.

    That said, if we don’t get to see Topuria vs. Makhachev, it will be a disappoint. These two are without question two of the best athletes in the sport. And in a time when we say MMA is in a recession, in a time when Jon Jones seems to not want to unify the heavyweight title with Tom Aspinall, in a time in which the sport’s biggest star ever in Conor McGregor appears to be out of the picture for good now (for better or worse [maybe and instead of or]), and when one of the UFC’s other pound-for-pound names in Alex Pereira appears to be having negotiation issues with the promotion, a major fight like Topuria vs. Makhachev is a welcome sight.

    Topuria vs. Oliveira and JDM vs. Makhachev are solid fights, but it will be a case of “what could have been” if this is the case. And if Topuria vs. Makhachev does ever end up getting booked, we’d hope it’s not a case of “[insert timeframe here] too late.”

    But on that note…

    Miss – STILL No UFC 317 Main Event?

    UFC CEO Dana White promised us an answer to the questions regarding a UFC 317 main event (including the situations seen above) following UFC 315. But lo and behold, UFC 315 has come and gone, and we still don’t have an answer.

    White didn’t even appear at the press conference. Instead, Dave Shaw, the UFC’s Senior Vice President of International Operations, was there and promised an answer would be delivered in the coming week.

    To which my response is, it better.

    From the time of this piece’s publication, we are 47 days out from UFC 317, which is this year’s International Fight Week card. It’s had it’s fair share of shake-ups to main events in its history, but it’s always an event UFC puts a lot of stock into.

    And with just under seven weeks to go, an event that has all these attached events to it — a Hall of Fame induction ceremony, fan expo, etc. — has no announced main event. Even UFC 318 to be held the following month has a main event announced.

    UFC 315 was supposed to give us answers. Right now we’re still left with questions, and if we don’t get answers in a few days time, the UFC needs to be given even more flack.

  • ‘Weili Vs Valentina Next’ – Fighters And Fans React To Valentina Shevchenko Winning Narrow Decision Against Manon Fiorot At UFC 315

    ‘Weili Vs Valentina Next’ – Fighters And Fans React To Valentina Shevchenko Winning Narrow Decision Against Manon Fiorot At UFC 315

    Coming into this fight as the underdog, Valentina Shevchenko had one of the toughest and closest fights of her career. But she ultimately came out on top against Manon Fiorot in the co-main event of UFC 315 to retain the UFC women’s flyweight championship.

    Shevchenko got off to a strong start in the opening frame, being tactical with her striking and connecting solidly with her right hook early, taking advantage of Fiorot trying to be aggressive early. One of those shots connected right on Fiorot’s nose, busting her up. Shevchenko added a takedown before the end of the round.

    Fiorot came out for a better second round. Despite some early struggle, she managed to land a takedown on Shevchenko and controlled the positioning and pace. Shevchenko, however, appeared to still be landing the more effective striking. The third round proved to be just as close, with Fiorot controlling the action in the clinch, landing some key knees and finding her power to land on Shevchenko.

    Shevchenko, of course, would not be deterred. She picked her striking game back up, connecting powerful strikes and landing some notable body kicks. Shevchenko would then cement the round with a takedown and dropping the challenger with a hook in the closing seconds of the fourth.

    After yet another close the fifth round, the fight went to the judges’ hands, with all three judges giving three rounds to Shevchenko, allowing her to retain the title.

    Valentina Shevchenko Edges Out Manon Fiorot, Retains Flyweight Title

    https://twitter.com/ProchazkaSzn/status/1921424641349877961
    https://twitter.com/Geralt31065966/status/1921422919617458425

    This was the first title fight for Shevchenko since re-capturing the UFC women’s flyweight title in the trilogy fight with Alexa Grasso back in September. Shevchenko originally won the title at UFC 231 in December 2018, defending the title seven consecutive times before her upset loss to Grasso at UFC 285.

    This was Fiorot’s first loss since dropping her professional MMA debut back in 2018. Fiorot had won 12 straight and was 7-0 in the UFC, which included wins against Jennifer Maia, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield.

  • UFC 315 Results & Highlights: Jack Della Maddalena Decisions Belal Muhammad 

    UFC 315 Results & Highlights: Jack Della Maddalena Decisions Belal Muhammad 

    UFC 315 took place tonight from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena faced off for the welterweight title. While in the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko looked to defend her flyweight belt against Manon Fiorot. 

    UFC 315 Results: Main Card

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena def. Belal Muhammad via unanimous decision (48-47×2, 49-46)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko def. Manon Fiorot via unanimous decision (48-47×3)
    • Featherweight: Aiemann Zahabi def. Jose Aldo via unanimous decision (29-28×3)
    • Women’s Flyweight: NatĂĄlia Silva def. Alexa Grasso via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Lightweight: BenoĂźt Saint Denis def. Kyle Prepolec via submission: R2, 2.35

     
    Preliminary Card

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott def. Charles Radtke via KO: R2, 0.26
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius def. JĂ©ssica Andrade via submission: R2, 2.40
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas def. Ion Cutelaba via split decision (30-27, 29-28, 27-30) 
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling def. Ivan Erslan via unanimous decision (29-28×2, 29-27) 

     
    Early Preliminary Card

    • Middleweight: Marc-AndrĂ© Barriault def. Bruno Silva via KO: R1, 1.27 
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos def. Lee Jeong-yeong via unanimous decision (30-27×3)

    Bantamweight: Bekzat Almakhan def. Brad Katona via KO: R1, 1.04

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Bekzat Almakhan def. Brad Katona

    Bekzat Almakhan got UFC 315 off to a huge start with a first-round TKO of Brad Katona.

    Marc-André Barriault def. Bruno Silva

    Marc-André Barriault earned a first-round KO of Bruno Silva.

    Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Jéssica Andrade

    Jasmine Jasudavicius took care of Jéssica Andrade with a rear-naked choke in round two.

    Mike Malott def. Charles Radtke

    Mike Malott earned a second round KO of Charles Radtke in their welterweight bout.

    Main Card Highlights

    BenoĂźt Saint Denis def. Kyle Prepolec

    BenoĂźt Saint Denis submitted Kyle Prepolec in the second round.

    https://twitter.com/ufc/status/1921393187463049407

    NatĂĄlia Silva def. Alexa Grasso

    NatĂĄlia Silva got it done on the scorecards.

    Aiemann Zahabi def. Jose Aldo

    Aiemann Zahabi earned a unanimous decision against Jose Aldo.

    Valentina Shevchenko def. Manon Fiorot

    In the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko retained her flyweight title with a decision win.

    Jack Della Maddalena def. Belal Muhammad

    In the main event, Jack Della Maddalena claimed the welterweight title from Belal Muhammad with a decision win.

  • UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 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 Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on Saturday, May 10. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6:30PM ET/3:30PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature Belal Muhammad defending the UFC welterweight championship for the first time, as he takes on Jack Della Maddalena.

    Fan favorite Valentina Shevchenko, eight months after reclaiming the UFC women’s flyweight championship, will defend the title against Manon Fiorot.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Jose Aldo taking on Aiemann Zahabi, Alexa Grasso battling NatĂĄlia Silva and BenoĂźt Saint Denis in action against Kyle Prepolec.

    UFC 315: Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 315 as of May 9 at 7:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (-185) vs. Jack Della Maddalena (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (+114) vs. Manon Fiorot (-135)
    • Featherweight: Jose Aldo (-185) vs. Aiemann Zahabi (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso (+200) vs. NatĂĄlia Silva (-245)
    • Lightweight: BenoĂźt Saint Denis (-1600) vs. Kyle Prepolec (+900)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (-205) vs. Charles Radtke (+170)
    • Women’s Flyweight: JĂ©ssica Andrade (+235) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (-290)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (+105) vs. Ion Cutelaba (-125)
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling (-310) vs. Ivan Erslan (+250)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-AndrĂ© Barriault (-166) vs. Bruno Silva (+140)
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos (+124) vs. Lee Jeong-yeong (-148)
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona (+124) vs. Bekzat Almakhan (-148)
  • Zhang Weili’s Hopes For Champ-Champ Opportunity In The UFC Receive A Big Boost

    Zhang Weili’s Hopes For Champ-Champ Opportunity In The UFC Receive A Big Boost

    UFC Women’s Strawweight Champion Zhang Weili is targeting glory in another division — and the queen directly above her has given the green light.

    Zhang has long outlined a desire to add a second belt to her collection, and “Magnum’s” hunger to do so appeared to increase after she recorded yet another successful defense of her 115-pound strap last month.

    At UFC 312 in Sydney, Australia, the Chinese fan favorite dominated the previously undefeated Tatiana Suarez, marking the third defense of her second rule over the strawweight division.

    With limited fresh challenges remaining in her weight class, Zhang pitched a champ vs. champ showdown with flyweight titleholder Valentina Shevchenko in the aftermath of her most recent triumph.

    And during an interview with MMA Junkie‘s Mike Bohn, “Bullet” gave her nod of approval for the potentially huge clash.

    “I’m open to all opportunities,” Shevchenko said of a potential battle with Zhang Weili. “She showed a lot of heart in her fights and with all the years that she’s put into her performances, she’s showed that she’s a great fighter. Why not? It’s an amazing fight and I think all the fans are going to be excited to see that.”

    Shevchenko was speaking while in Montreal to promote her next outing inside the Octagon, which will come eight months on from her return to the top at the expense of Alexa Grasso in their trilogy.

    The Kyrgyz star is set to put her gold on the line against Manon Fiorot at UFC 315 on May 10. Should Shevchenko hand the Frenchwoman her first defeat in the promotion, perhaps her attention will next turn to Zhang Weili.

  • WATCH: UFC 315 On-Sale Press Conference For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot

    WATCH: UFC 315 On-Sale Press Conference For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot

    The top fighters confirmed to be in action at UFC 315 on May 10 will take to the stage for an on-sale press conference in the event’s host city this week.

    Mixed martial arts’ leading promotion will return to Canada later this year for the first time in 2025. After trips to Toronto and Edmonton last year, the promotion’s latest trip to “The Great White North” will see Octagon action go down in MontrĂ©al.

    The main event will see UFC Welterweight Champion Belal Muhammad make his first defense of the title. After an injury to Shavkat Rakhmonov, “Remember the Name” will face the challenge of Australian striker Jack Della Maddalena.

    There will also be championship stakes in the co-headliner, with Valentina Shevchenko returning for the first defense of her second reign, which got underway with redemption against Alexa Grasso last September. If she’s to remain on the throne, “Bullet” will have to become the first woman to defeat France’s Manon Fiorot in the UFC.

    With Fight Club Pre-Sale starting on Wednesday, the promotion is hosting a press conference in Montréal, where Muhammad, Della Maddalena, Shevchenko and Fiorot will all have mics in hand.

    See below for a live stream of the presser via the UFC’s official YouTube channel, commencing at 11:30 AM ET.

    UFC 315 On-Sale Press Conference Live Stream

  • UFC Matchmaking Bulletin: New Fights For Shevchenko, Prates, Ige And More

    MMA News has you covered with this week’s UFC matchmaking bulletin, featuring all the additions to upcoming fight cards.

    With events being held most weekends, Mick Maynard and Sean Shelby have their matchmaking work cut out if they’re to fill them, meaning new bouts are confirmed each and every week.

    Between Monday, February 17, and Sunday, February 23, a number of fights were made official by the UFC or reported as being in the works by reputable sources.

    For those matchups, including multiple championship bouts, check out the list below:

    But it wasn’t all positive, with four fights falling through or being adjusted:

  • Manon Fiorot Loses Patience In Title Fight Wait, Tells Valentina Shevchenko ‘Sign The Contract Or Retire’

    Manon Fiorot Loses Patience In Title Fight Wait, Tells Valentina Shevchenko ‘Sign The Contract Or Retire’

    UFC women’s flyweight Manon Fiorot continues to berate Valentina Shevchenko over their expected championship collision.

    Fiorot earned her shot this past March when she got the better of Erin Blanchfield in Atlantic City. The result, which came in the Frenchwoman’s maiden main event on MMA’s biggest stage, extended her professional win streak to 12 and perfect UFC record to 7-0.

    Having defeated “Cold Blooded,” Rose Namajunas, Katlyn Cerminara and Jennifer Maia consecutively, there’s little doubt over the #2-ranked contender’s place at the front of the queue. But for much of this year, “The Beast” was made to wait as Shevchenko and Alexa Grasso completed their trilogy.

    “Bullet” emerged victorious from it at the Sphere, returning to the throne and beginning a second reign as 125-pound queen. Fortunately for the matchmakers, Shevchenko’s first challenge was already seemingly lined up — and it’s safe to say she’s in a hurry…

    Fiorot recently took to social media to express frustration at the ongoing wait for her title chance, tagging Shevchenko and calling for her to either put pen to paper on a bout agreement or hang up her gloves.

    @BulletValentina You can’t hide anymore, so sign this contract or retire,” Fiorot wrote.

    For now, a date and event for Fiorot’s likely title shot is unclear, but she’ll no doubt be preparing for the her shot at joining Ciryl Gane as only the second French UFC champ — first to achieve the feat as an undisputed titleholder.

    With two championship fights set for both UFC 311 in Los Angeles on Jan. 18 and UFC 312 in Australia the following month, it would appear that the earliest Shevchenko vs. Fiorot could come together is March.

  • Valentina Shevchenko Challenges ‘Ill-Mannered’ Manon Fiorot  To ‘Loser Leaves UFC’ Match

    Fight fans are in store for an old-fashioned “loser leaves the promotion” match between Valentina Shevchenko and Manon Fiorot, with tension already building from a heated war of words.

    Fiorot, eager for her shot at the women’s flyweight title, is done waiting. She last fought in March, defeating Erin Blanchfield, and many fans believe this victory should have earned her a title opportunity. However, the title picture has been stalled due to the ongoing rivalry between Shevchenko and Alexa Grasso.

    Grasso claimed the title from Shevchenko in early 2023, only for their rematch at the end of the year to end in a split draw. The UFC capitalized on the rivalry, having them coach opposing teams on The Ultimate Fighter, culminating in a September fight where Shevchenko reclaimed the belt.

    Growing impatient, Fiorot took to Twitter, writing, “Stop making people wait! Let’s do it soon enough so I can send you to retirement and move on.”

    Shevchenko replied with a challenge: “You lose, you retire. Deal?!! Ill-mannered first-grader.” Fiorot responded swiftly, “Deal. I’ll take you seriously when you’ve signed the contract, damn teacher’s pet.”