Showing posts with label MMA Junkie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MMA Junkie. Show all posts

Monday, April 20

Anderson Silva admits anti-inflammatory use, but insists no steroids

Anderson Silva

Anderson Silva

Upon hearing news that he failed a drug test in connection with UFC 183, Anderson Silva denied using performance-enhancing drugs, but he admitted he took an anti-inflammatory prior to the Jan. 31 fight, as seen on the fourth episode of “The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil 4.”

The episode features the quarterfinals of a bantamweight tournament and documents Silva’s positive test as it unfolds. The ex-champ is seen answering a call from his co-manager, Ed Soares, following a training session with his team.

“What?” the ex-champ asks, according to the UFC’s translation of his native Portuguese. “What do you mean?”

“No, I didn’t take anything,” he continues as the camera adjusts to capture his face. “Hear me out. I never took anything like that. No way. I’ve never taken anything. I did take anti-inflammatory shots.

“No way! I’m telling you I didn’t do it! Are you crazy? I took hydroxocobalamin for three days. That was the only thing I took.”

An out-of-competition urine test conducted on behalf of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which regulated UFC 183, on Jan. 9 found the presence of two steroids: drostanolone and androstane. A post-fight urine test conducted Jan. 31 also found drostanolone, as well as a pair of over-the-counter benzodiazepines used to treat anxiety and insomnia.

In the UFC’s translation, the anti-inflammatory is noted as hydroxocobalamin. However, several native Portuguese speakers who listened to the clip told MMAjunkie that the substance Silva names is dexalgen.

Hydroxocobalamin is a natural form of B-12 and is used, according to online medical sources, as an injectable to treat a deficiency of the vitamin. Dexalgen, meahwhile, contains vitamin B-12, metamizole and dexamethasone – an anti-inflammatory steroid.

During the “TUF” episode, after hearing the bad news, Silva tells strength and conditioning coach Rogerio Camoes that “some illegal substance showed up.” Talking to UFC cameras, he again denies PED use.

Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz

Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz

“I’ve never used any anabolic steroid to fight or to improve my performance,” said an emotional Silva (34-6 MMA, 17-2 UFC), who earned a decision win over Nick Diaz (26-10 MMA, 7-7 UFC) in UFC 183’s pay-per-view headliner.

Silva tells Soares to call his wife, Dayane, and get his prescriptions.

“What a mess!” Silva then tells Camoes in the “TUF” locker room. The two have a pointed exchange:

“You didn’t take it?” Camoes asks.

“For Christ’s sake, Master!” Silva responds.

“You didn’t take steroids?” Camoes asks.

“No, Master! I’ve never taken any of that! Are you crazy? Am I crazy? I’ve never taken any of that,” Silva persists. “I don’t know what happened.”

Silva elects not to pass the news of his positive test to his team as bantamweight Reginaldo Vieira prepares to represent him. Later, though, following the event’s weigh-ins, he delivers an emotional speech.

“Listen up, guys,” he explains in the Team Silva locker room. “I failed a drug test. The athletic commission decided that I must stand down.”

“You can’t give up on your dreams. Maintain your focus in the game. Continue to be disciplined; remember everything you went through to get here. You cannot allow anything to strip this away from you. Got it? I’m asking this as a brother and a friend – maintain your focus.”

Camoes steps in with a few words for Silva, who fights back tears along with several members of his team.

“No matter what happens, Anderson, nothing will change,” Camoes says. “No one can take away everything that you’ve achieved in this sport. So no matter what happens, everyone in this sport truly respects and admires you.

“You are our hero. You’re not going away. Your spirit remains with us. We’re strong, and we know you’ll get through this. You don’t have to prove anything to anyone. You’re Anderson Silva, and you’ve made history. Anderson is a man of honor. Let’s honor his name and his team. Let’s honor our country. Let’s go.”

The team then prays before Silva gives an exit interview with the UFC.

“I hope they fight great bouts and manage to fulfill their dreams,” he tells the camera. “Many will fall. There’s no other way. It’s a game. I’ll be cheering for all of them.”

Silva, who denied PED use in a formal statement, recently requested and received an extension to formally respond to the NSAC’s complaint against him. He’s currently suspended pending a formal hearing on the matter, likely in May.

After initially backing Silva, the UFC supported the NSAC’s request to remove him from “TUF: Brazil 4.” In recent weeks, the ex-champ has made headlines by lobbying to compete for his native Brazil in taekwondo in the 2016 Olympics as well as talking up a rematch with Diaz.

For complete coverage of UFC 183, check out the UFC Events section of the site.


Filed under: Featured, News, UFC

Champ Douglas Lima meets Andrey Koreshkov at Bellator 140 on July 17

Douglas Lima

Douglas Lima

Bellator MMA’s welterweight title will be on the line on July 17 when reigning champion Douglas Lima (26-5 MMA, 8-1 BMMA) meets Andrey Koreshkov (17-1 MMA, 8-1 BMMA) at Bellator 140.

Bellator official today announced the bout.

Bellator 140 takes place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. The main card airs on Spike TV following prelims on MMAjunkie.

“Douglas Lima is an incredible champion who is in for one of the toughest fights of his life against Koreshkov,” Bellator President Scott Coker stated. “When the rest of this card is announced, we’ll have put together one of the greatest showcases of welterweight talent ever assembled on one night.”

Lima, who’s ranked No. 13 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA welterweight rankings, won the vacant belt in April 2014 after scoring a TKO win over Rick Hawn. The 27-year-old Brazilian has won five consecutive fights and is 14-1 (with eight knockouts) over his past 15 fights. The lone defeat during that stretch came in a 2012 title fight with them-champ Ben Askren.

Lima, who was forced out of a scheduled title fight with Paul Daley earlier this year due to an injury, now meets Koreshkov, a 24-year-old Russian with a four-fight winning streak of his own. Like Lima, Koreshkov’s lone loss came in a title fight with Askren. Most recently, he followed back-to-back knockout wins over Justin Baesman and Nah-Shon Burrell with a decision victory over Adam McDonough in a Season 10 tournament final.

Additional Bellator 140 bouts will be announced in the coming weeks.

For more on Bellator 140, check out the MMA Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: Bellator, MMA Rumors, News

The Speed Bag: Sorry, 'Jacare' – It's just not your fault, but it's also not your turn


Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Sorry, “Jacare.” While it’s not your fault, it’s also not your turn for a shot at the UFC middleweight title.

At this past Saturday’s UFC on FOX 15 event, Ronaldo Souza (22-3 MMA, 5-0 UFC) picked up his fifth straight UFC win with a first-round submission win over late replacement Chris Camozzi (21-10 MMA, 6-7 UFC) in the night’s co-headliner.

While his recent run of dominance has prompted some fans to call for Souza to get the next title shot, that honor probably belongs to UFC on FOX 15’s main-event winner, Luke Rockhold (14-2 MMA, 4-1 UFC). The former Strikeforce champion looked spectacular in a drubbing of ex-UFC titleholder Lyoto Machida (22-6 MMA, 14-6 UFC), and he could be up next for the winner of UFC 189’s co-headliner between champ Chris Weidman (12-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) and Vitor Belfort (24-10 MMA, 13-6 UFC).

So why should Rockhold get the edge over Souza? In his latest installment of The Speed Bag, MMAjunkie’s Ben Fowlkes breaks it down.

Check out the full video above.

And for complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.


Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Max Holloway takes issue with Conor McGregor tweet: 'We will meet again'

Conor McGregor and Max Holloway

Conor McGregor and Max Holloway

With six straight wins and a dominant performance over fellow featherweight contender Cub Swanson this past weekend, Max Holloway’s stock in the division has never been higher. But an old foe has popped up again.

Holloway (13-3 MMA, 9-3 UFC) dominated Swanson (21-7 MMA, 6-3 UFC) and earned a third-round submission victory this past Saturday on UFC on FOX 15’s main card in Newark, N.J. The 23-year-old, who’s already registered 12 career UFC fights, is likely to get a bump in the USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA featherweight rankings, where he was No. 12 heading into the fight against No. 7 Swanson.

But despite Holloway’s dominant performance, his former opponent, Conor McGregor, continued his world-class trolling (via Twitter):

Holloway, in fact, hasn’t suffered a loss since his decision defeat to McGregor back in 2013. After McGregor’s latest tweet, as he did prior to UFC on FOX 15, Holloway again expressed interest in a rematch (via Twitter):

In their first fight, McGregor said he tore his ACL, which slowed down his performance. In fact, it’s his only career victory that didn’t come via stoppage. Holloway, though, is a bit annoyed by those claims, as he told MMAjunkie prior to UFC on FOX 15.

“Everyone always says this and that about the first fight, but he cried about an injury that he had at the end of the second round,” Holloway said. “I didn’t cry about no injury. I had an injury (sprained ankle) in the first 30 seconds of the fight, and I fought him all the way to a decision. He had two rounds to finish me, and he couldn’t get it done.

“If he wants to get it done and he wants to get that back, then give me a rematch, and we’ll see what happens. If he wins his next fight and I win my fight, we’ll see what happens. Maybe we could do that rematch. I would love to get back at him. The first fight was great, and the second fight is going to be even better.”

McGregor (17-2 MMA, 5-0 UFC), of course, has a pretty major challenge ahead of him. He meets reigning and longtime champ Jose Aldo (25-1 MMA, 7-0 UFC) on July 11 in UFC 189’s pay-per-view headliner.

For complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.


Filed under: Featured, News, UFC

UFC: Fighter rankings will no longer determine Reebok sponsorship pay

Jon Jones

Jon Jones

After UFC fighters and their reps reportedly voiced opposition to rankings-based pay, the promotion has shifted gears on how the money from from its deal with Reebok will be distributed.

Now, a fighter’s share of the sponsorship pie will be determined by their experience in the UFC’s octagon, according to a Sports Business Journal report.

The new tiered system replaces rankings and instead will use the fighter’s number of bouts in the octagon, with different tiers (1-5 fights, 6-10 fights, 11-15 fights, and 16-20 fights). The UFC said it will formally notify its roster of the change in the coming weeks.

What remains unknown is the exact dollar figures for each tier. In an interview this past January with MMAjunkie Radio, veteran lightweight Joe Lauzon said the numbers would be coming in May.

The SBJ report said the UFC considers the experience-based scale “preferable” to a rankings-based system because the latter is determined by a panel of media members and is “subjective in nature.”

In fact, early critics of rankings-based compensation pointed out obvious flaws in the UFC’s top-15 lists and the potential pitfalls of giving the media power to determine a fighter’s standing. Lauzon, for example, was concerned about the money he stood to lose when the sponsorship program took effect in July. He said the promotion took “a hard stance” on experience over rankings during an informational meeting this past January.

“(UFC lightweight) Joe Proctor trains at my gym,” Lauzon, who has 17 UFC bouts under his belt, told MMAjunkie Radio. “He was on ‘The Ultimate Fighter,’ had a couple of (UFC) fights. He’s technically unranked; I’m unranked. But I make a lot more in sponsors than he does.

“Looking at the new system, we’re going to be on the exact same page, which is pretty crappy.”

As previously reported, fighters are required to wear Reebok-branded apparel in conjunction with all official UFC events. They are given a “kit” of gear that can be tailored to their individual preferences that they must wear to their fights, press conferences, weigh-ins and open workouts. Additionally, in-cage sponsor banners are forbidden.

In addition to experience-based pay, UFC fighters will receive, in perpetuity royalty, payments amounting to 20 percent of any UFC merchandise sold that bears their likeness.

The UFC considers the uniform a positive for fighters hit hard by a declining sponsorship market. Executives also say a branded apparel policy mirrors other major sports leagues. Several UFC fighters already have struck exclusive deals with Reebok, including light heavyweight champ Jon Jones, women’s bantamweight champ Ronda Rousey, ex-welterweight champ Johny Hendricks, featherweight contender Conor McGregor, and rising strawweight star Paige VanZant.

For more on the UFC’s upcoming schedule, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: News, UFC

MMAjunkie Radio (noon ET): Luke Rockhold, Paige VanZant and Beneil Dariush

Paige VanZant

Paige VanZant

MMAjunkie Radio kicks off at noon ET (9 a.m. PT) with guests Luke Rockhold, Paige VanZant and Beneil Dariush.

All three fighters were victorious this past weekend at UFC on FOX 15.

MMAjunkie Radio airs from noon to 2 p.m. ET (9 to 11 a.m. PT), live from Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas. The show is available on SiriusXM Sports Zone (channel 92). You can also listen to and watch a video stream of the two-hour show at http://ift.tt/1gbysMB.

MMAjunkie Radio listener guide:

  • HOW TO WATCH (ON WEB): Check out a live video/audio stream of the show on the MMAjunkie Radio page.
  • HOW TO CALL: MMAjunkie Radio takes phone calls from listeners throughout the show. Call into the MMAjunkie Radio hotline at (866) 522-2846.
  • HOW TO DISCUSS: The MMAjunkie MMA Forums has a new section devoted solely to MMAjunkie Radio. Stop by the MMAjunkie Radio forum to discuss the show, interact with the hosts, suggest future guests and catch up on the latest MMAjunkie Radio news.
  • HOW TO VISIT THE SHOW: You can watch MMAjunkie Radio live and in person at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino on the world-famous Las Vegas Strip. The booth is located in the resort’s Race & Sports Book next to the Mandalay Bay poker room. To plan a trip to Sin City and MMAjunkie Radio, go to www.mandalaybay.com.

Filed under: News, UFC

ONE Championship 26 preview: Is Luis Santos really champ Ben Askren's biggest challenge?


Filed under: News

ONE Championship welterweight titleholder Ben Askren needs top competition to maintain his current world ranking, but is he getting more of a challenge than he can handle on Friday?

It’s the key question heading into Friday’s ONE Championship 26 event, where Askren (14-0) meets veteran fighter – a man with more than 70 pro bouts – Luis Santos (61-9-1).

The event takes place at Mall of Asia Arena in Manila, and the event streams as an online pay-per-view in North America.

Askren, the former NCAA Division I national wrestling champion and Olympian who’s ranked No. 5 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA welterweight rankings, puts his undefeated record on the line and looks for his first title defense when he meets Santos, a 15-year vet who’s riding a seven-fight winning streak with seven stoppages. In fact, over the past six years, the 35-year-old is 16-2-1 with 11 knockouts.

Although both fighters previously competed for Bellator MMA, where Askren held the organization’s 170-pound title, their paths never crossed in the cage. But there was plenty of talk outside of it.

Check out the video preview above as both fighters – as well ONE Championship executive Rich Franklin, coaches and media members – discuss the title fight.

And for more on ONE Championship 26, check out the MMA Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: News

C.B. Dollaway thanks Michael Bisping for not being so elusive

C.B. Dollaway

C.B. Dollaway

Long before the force of Lyoto Machida’s left leg reverberated through his body, C.B. Dollaway was thinking of the future. As in, what might happen if he won at UFC Fight Night 58.

You could hardly blame him for fantasizing a little. After all, he’d gotten this far. He’d upset Vitor Belfort protege Cezar Ferreira in Brazil. Then he upset Georges St-Pierre protege Francis Carmont in Berlin. He’d asked for more money on his next contract and gotten it.

The guy that didn’t get a single question at “The Time is Now” press conference was one step away from a title shot. Momentum was behind him.

Lyoto Machida and C.B. Dollaway

Lyoto Machida and C.B. Dollaway

Until that kick.

Less than a minute into their UFC Fight Night 58 headliner, Machida swung his left leg at Dollaway, who mistakenly thought it was coming at his head. He raised his arm to block it, and the kick sunk into his ribs, instantly sucking the life out of him. In just 62 seconds, the fight was over.

For the past three months, Dollaway (15-6 MMA, 9-6 UFC), who at UFC 186 meets Michael Bisping (25-7 MMA, 15-7 UFC), has thought a lot about the past. What he might have done differently. How he made such a classic error. And how he’s arrived at another classic conclusion among athletes – that only the present is important.

“I let a lot of stuff get to me, looking into what that fight could bring, and if I win, I’m one fight away from a title, or maybe I could get a title shot,” he told MMAjunkie. “All this sh-t and not worrying about fighting Lyoto. You’ve got to win first.”

Dollaway brushes aside the idea that, sometimes, stuff just happens and no amount of mental preparation or living in the moment can stop it from happening. It’s a lot more acceptable to be negligent than helpless.

“That fight, I had a lot of different nerves I don’t usually have,” he said. “I don’t think so much that it was Lyoto Machida; it was the pressure of, ‘I can win this, I’ve gotta win this fight,’ instead of just going out and just fighting.”

And so, Dollaway promises he’s going to live in the moment for his meeting with Bisping, which co-headlines UFC 186 on April 25 at Montreal’s Bell Centre. To Dollaway, the fight isn’t just a chance for the winner to get back on track. It’s kind of a loser leaves town situation, if leaving town means staying even remotely in the conversation of top contenders.

Bisping’s title hopes were quashed this past November by Luke Rockhold, leading many MMA fans and pundits pretty much to dismiss his chances of ever getting a shot at the belt. Most fans never gave Dollaway much of a chance to do that, so it’s hard to inflate the stakes of the meeting. But for Dollaway, the fight presents a turning point.

And isn’t it hard for any UFC veteran not to look at trips to the promotion’s octagon in the same way? Imagining a sudden reversal of fortune might be wishful thinking, but maybe it’s the kind that motivates you on tough days in the gym. It might be a lot more useful than the kind that prompts you to cash career checks before they clear.

“One of us is going to go one way, and one of us is going to go the other,” Dollaway said. “Unfortunately, it’s going to be him. I’m still young in this sport. I’ve got a lot to prove; I feel like he’s got a (commentator) job at FOX. I don’t know if he’s got one foot out the door.”

One thing Dollaway is sure of is what kind of fight he’ll get, which is a comforting thing after such a random outcome four months ago. The way he sees it, there won’t be much time to think when the opening bell rings.

“I love the way he fights,” Dollaway said. “He’s in your face. As compared to the last guy I fought, who’s just elusive – he was hard to find training partners for, and when I got in there, he was obviously very elusive there. Michael Bisping, he’s going to come right after me. I have no doubt about that in my mind. He’s going to have a high pace off the bat, and we’re going to get down.”

For more on UFC 186, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: News, UFC

Frankie Edgar picking against Conor McGregor, aims to take belt from Jose Aldo


Filed under: Featured, Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

On July 11, UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo looks to defend his title against brash challenger Conor McGregor. Top contender Frankie Edgar admits he’s been impressed with McGregor’s run to the top but believes the champ will ultimately keep his belt.

“I think it’s a favorable matchup for McGregor, but I’m going to go with the champ,” Edgar said this past Friday at a UFC Q&A session. “I think Aldo is just – he hasn’t fought anybody like Aldo yet.”

McGregor, of course, has made waves on his run to the title, becoming as renowned for his trash-talking skills (or “truth-talking,” as he calls it) as his fighting abilities. Critics point out his lack of signature wins over top contenders and question whether McGregor truly deserves a shot at the belt.

Edgar doesn’t believe that really matters.

“To me, in fighting and in life, you don’t get what you deserve; you get what you get, and he got it,” Edgar said. “So that’s the bottom line. Whether he got it from running is mouth or whatnot, but everybody that he’s come across, he’s beat in devastating fashion, so I say he’s got it, and that’s all that matters.

“Whether he deserves it or not, that’s in the past. He has it on July 11. It’s what he does with it that counts.”

Edgar, a UFC lightweight champion, will be an interested observer in Aldo (25-1 MMA, 7-0 UFC) vs. McGregor (17-2 MMA, 5-0 UFC), which headlines UFC 189 at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Garden Arena. But if Edgar (18-4-1 MMA, 12-4-1 UFC) can pick up a win over Urijah Faber (32-7 MMA, 8-3 UFC) in next month’s UFC Fight Night 66 headliner in the Philippines, he’ll become even more invested in the Aldo vs. McGregor matchup.

Edgar’s ultimate goal is becoming the featherweight champ, and a win over Faber would likely secure him a shot at the Aldo-McGregor winner. Edgar said he’s not really concerned with who ends up with the belt, but he’d be satisfied if his prediction comes true, setting up a rematch with Aldo.

“It doesn’t matter; I want the belt,” Edgar said. “But the fact that Jose has beaten me before and he’s been at the top for so long, I’d like to be able to be the one to take the belt from him.”

To hear more from Edgar and his thoughts on McGregor, Faber and the state of the featherweight division, check out the video above.

And for more on UFC Fight Night 66 and UFC 189, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: Featured, Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Benson Henderson vs. Michael Johnson targeted for TUF 21 Finale on July 12


Filed under: MMA Rumors, News, UFC

Benson Henderson (22-5 MMA, 10-3 UFC) and Michael Johnson (16-8 MMA, 8-4 UFC) will likely meet in the main event of The Ultimate Fighter 21 Finale in July.

UFC President Dana White confirmed the event, which take place July 12 at a Miami-area venue TBD, with sun-sentinel.com.

White stopped short of confirming the Henderson vs. Johnson lightweight bout, but according to the report, “it’s in the works.”

The TUF 21 Finale, which airs on FOX Sports 1, also will feature the tournament final of “TUF 21,” which debuts Wednesday on FOX Sports 1. The 10-year anniversary edition of the UFC’s long-running reality series features a new format as two of South Florida’s top gyms – American Top Team and the Blackzilians – take part in a welterweight tourney. The winning team earns $500,000 (check out a preview above).

Although Henderson, who’s ranked No. 5 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA lightweight rankings, is based in Arizona with The MMA Lab, No. 10-ranked Johnson is part of the Blackzilians and should be the crowd favorite at the TUF 21 Finale.

Henderson and Johnson recently campaigned for a fight against each other.

Henderson, a former UFC and WEC lightweight champion, recently moved up to welterweight on two weeks’ notice and scored a “Fight of the Night” win over Brandon Thatch. The much-needed victory halted a two-fight skid for the 31-year-old, who had previously suffered a knockout loss to now-champ Rafael dos Anjos and a decision defeat to Donald Cerrone.

Johnson, a “TUF 12″ runner-up, has moved into title contention with his current four-fight winning streak, which included wins over vets Joe Lauzon, Gleison Tibau, Melvin Guillard and Edson Barboza. The 28-year-old recently told MMAjunkie he wanted to fight Henderson because the ex-champ was likely to engage and wouldn’t run away from him during a fight:

For more on The Ultimate Fighter 12 Finale, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: MMA Rumors, News, UFC

Dana White remaining cautiously optimistic New York MMA legislation will pass

Dana White

Dana White

NEWARK, N.J. – It’s been six weeks since Dana White dropped the news that the UFC was planning a December show in the famed Madison Square Garden.

To pull that off, though, requires a little help from some folks who haven’t quite been friends to the UFC – members of the New York State Assembly.

New York remains the country’s lone holdout for legalized MMA, keeping the UFC from holding events there and forcing it across the river to New Jersey, where Saturday’s UFC on FOX 15 took place at Prudential Center in Newark.

The man thought to be the biggest political stumbling block for passage of an MMA bill in New York, former New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, now is out of the picture, though, and that has White, the UFC’s president, confident enough to hold a date at the Garden, one of the most famous sports venues in the world.

Silver was arrested in January on corruption charges and resigned his post. Silver long has been seen as one of the road blocks to MMA passage in New York, along with fights put up by the Las Vegas Culinary Union. The union’s beef with the UFC stems from company owners Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta keeping unions out of their Station Casinos empire in Las Vegas.

After UFC on FOX 15, White said another failure of an MMA bill’s passage this year would be devastating.

“I’m so confident. If it doesn’t happen this year – c’mon, New York. It’ll be crazy. It’ll be just nuts if it doesn’t happen this year,” White said at the post-event news conference. “I think we’re in a pretty good position. I don’t even have words for what it would be if it doesn’t happen this year. We have a date held in December at the Garden, and I expect to be there. I expect to use that date, and be here in New York in Madison Square Garden and do this this year.”

The talk about who might headline a December UFC pay-per-view at Madison Square Garden has been wide-ranging, but the UFC has two current champions from the state in light heavyweight champ Jon Jones and middleweight champ Chris Weidman.

Both have title defenses coming up in May at UFC 187, so if successful, the timing could be there for them to return a little more than six months later at the Garden.

Saturday’s main event winner, Luke Rockhold, put himself in prime position to potentially challenge the winner of Weidman and Vitor Belfort, and he said before and after the fight that West Coast (Rockhold) vs. East Coast (Weidman) at MSG is a fight the fans would no doubt get behind.

He even pressed White to have him vs. Weidman, if Weidman beats Belfort, as coaches on a fall season of “The Ultimate Fighter” with a title fight at MSG to wrap it up. And while White said that’s not likely to happen, he did say he admired Rockhold’s outside-the-box thinking and campaigning.

First things first, the legislation has to make it through and finally pass this summer. The UFC has been down this road before, only to see the legislation fail to make it to the Assembly floor for a vote.

But White is holding firm that this might be the year.

For complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.


Filed under: News, UFC

Video: 'Countdown to UFC 186: Demetrious Johnson vs. Kyoji Horiguchi' full segment


Filed under: News, UFC, Videos

Did you miss Sunday’s debut of “Countdown to UFC 186,” or just want to watch it again? Check out the full segment devoted to headliners Demetrious Johnson vs. Kyoji Horiguchi.

Johnson (21-2-1 MMA, 9-1-1 UFC), the UFC’s reigning flyweight champion, looks for his sixth consecutive title defense when he meets Horiguchi (15-1 MMA, 4-0 UFC) on Saturday in UFC 186’s pay-per-view headliner. The event takes place at Montreal’s Bell Centre.

Check out a preview of that fight above.

For more on UFC 186, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: News, UFC, Videos

Video: 'Countdown to UFC 186: Michael Bisping vs. C.B. Dollaway' full segment


Filed under: News, UFC, Videos

Did you miss Sunday’s debut of “Countdown to UFC 186,” or just want to watch it again? Check out the full segment devoted to co-headliners Michael Bisping and C.B. Dollaway.

After a series of card shuffles, veteran middleweights Bisping (25-7 MMA, 15-7 UFC) and Dollaway (15-6 MMA, 9-6 UFC) find themselves in the pay-per-view co-headliner, which takes place Saturday at Montreal’s Bell Centre.

Check out a preview of that fight above.

For more on UFC 186, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.


Filed under: News, UFC, Videos

Sunday, April 19

UFC on FOX 15 reactions: Winning and losing fighters on social media

Since the early days when the sport was anything but a mainstream endeavor, the MMA industry has thrived and survived through various websites, forums and, perhaps most importantly, social-media platforms.


Fighters interact with fans, each other and many more through the likes of Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, which helps outsiders get a deeper look into the minds of the athletes.


Following Saturday’s UFC on FOX 15 event in Newark, N.J., several of the winning and losing fighters, along with their coaches, training partners or family members, took to social media to react to the event or share a message with supporters.


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The defeated


















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The victorious


















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For more on UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.




Filed under: News, UFC

Luke Rockhold deserves to be next, but let's not forget who's first

Luke Rockhold

Luke Rockhold



The problem with trying to locate a top contender before the last top contender has even had his day in the cage is that sometimes you get your wish.


That’s what happened in the main event of Saturday’s UFC on FOX 15 event, where Luke Rockhold (14-2 MMA, 4-1 UFC) ended the contender conversation in a crowded middleweight division with a dominant second-round submission win over former UFC light heavyweight champ Lyoto Machida (22-6 MMA, 14-6 UFC).


His win was so dominant (watch the Rockhold vs. Machida video highlights), in fact, and so impressive, that as he turned his attention to current UFC middleweight titleholder Chris Weidman (12-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) during his post-fight interview, it was easy to temporarily forget that the champ already has other plans.


Anyone remember Vitor Belfort (24-10 MMA, 13-6 UFC)? Brazilian guy? Loves weird haircuts? Been around in the sport since you could show up wearing wrestling shoes and pummel a man with your bare fists? Yeah, him. Lest we forget, MMA’s best source of bizarre interview quips has got next in the UFC’s 185-pound class. So why are we so quick to fall in love with the idea of Weidman vs. Rockhold for the UFC middleweight strap?


On some level I get it. We’re a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately kind of sport, and what Rockhold just did is demolish a former champ who was last seen giving Weidman all he could handle in a failed bid for the belt. He didn’t just beat Machida. He took something from him. He stepped in against a fighter who, at his best, is the human equivalent of a physics exam that smacks you in the face when you get a question wrong, and he made him look like a slightly buzzed karate instructor who couldn’t wait to get out of there and go home.


After a performance like that, it makes sense that we’d want to see Rockhold against somebody higher up the totem pole. And you can’t go too much higher than Machida without getting to the very top.

















Thing is, though, Belfort is already there. He’s been there since last year, watching and waiting as his title shot gets delayed by one setback or another, only some of which were self-inflicted. The next thing you know, he hasn’t fought in almost a year and a half, and the resurrection of “The Phenom” goes from the story of the year to a stale old legend we dimly remember hearing once upon a time. You hear people talk about the middleweight division, and they sound like they’re one step away from writing Belfort’s obituary.


But, admit it: Something about a Weidman vs. Rockhold showdown just feels right. It feels like the future, which is hard to say any fight including Belfort, who’s closing in on 40 and comes with just a little too much performance-enhancing baggage for our troubled times.


Weidman and Rockhold seem like a pairing we might actually be able to feel good about. It’s also one that feels kind of inevitable, as annoying as it might be for a guy like Belfort, who’s waited a long time just to be overlooked.


From the UFC’s perspective, it’s a fantastic problem to have. One division, many bankable contenders. Rockhold and Belfort could both get struck by lightning, and still the UFC could call on Ronaldo Souza to save the day. Face it: You can’t swing a Fram Cam without hitting a viable contender in the UFC middleweight division right now.


Good for the UFC. Good for us, even, since it makes the 185-pound the closest thing we can find to an injury-proof division in a sport that’s anything but. With guys like Rockhold hanging around as our backup plan, how can we go wrong? Other than, you know, being so concerned about the fantasy fights we might see in six months that we forget all about the ones we’ve got booked for next month.


For complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.




Filed under: Featured, News, UFC

Aljamain Sterling on UFC on FOX 15 win: Rock 'em Sock 'em Robots wars are 'just silly'
















Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

NEWARK, N.J. – Aljamain Sterling believes his striking skills have progressed substantially in recent years, and though he wants to show them off, he’s not exactly anxious for all-out slugfests.


The undefeated Sterling (11-0 MMA, 3-0 UFC) picked up his biggest win yet on Saturday’s FOX-televised UFC on FOX 15 preliminary card. At Newark, N.J.’s Prudential Center, he choked out Takeya Mizugaki (20-9-2 MMA, 7-4 UFC), who’s ranked No. 9 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA bantamweight rankings, with a third-round arm-triangle choke.


Sterling looked to neutralize Mizugaki with clinch work and trips to the mat. The 25-year-old said there’s a reason he didn’t rely solely on his striking.


“I’m not about that,” he said. “I’m not into going in there to bang. I want to prolong my career and hopefully have a long, lengthy career – not going out there and being in these Rock ’em Sock ’em Robots wars. I think it’s just silly when I could go out there and just kind of show that I’m the superior athlete and definitely the tougher and more durable fighter.”


Check out the full backstage interview above.


And for complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.




Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

With four straight UFC wins, what's next for Tim Means? 'Maybe beat up some Oreos'
















Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

NEWARK, N.J. – How does Tim Means plan to celebrate his fourth straight UFC victory and another step up the welterweight ladder? It’s already got his mouth watering.


Despite George Sullivan (16-4 MMA, 2-1 UFC) being a fashionable underdog pick, Means (24-6-1 MMA, 6-3 UFC) battered him with body shots before finally tapping out his opponent with a third-round arm-triangle choke.


Means, whose current winning streak puts him 6-1 overall in his past seven fights, will let his manager and UFC matchmakers figure out his next opponent. He’s focused on other stuff.


“I’m not thinking of no opponent right now,” Means said. “The only thing is I want to go see my mom and dad out in Oklahoma, have a fish fry, get some fishing going, and that’s about it.


“Maybe beat up some Oreos. That’s about it.”


Check out the full backstage interview above.


And for complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.




Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Fight Tracks: Michael Jackson, Queen and Rockhold's 'Karate Kid' at UFC on FOX 15

While it takes intense training, world-class skills and maybe even a bit of luck to register a UFC win, picking the right song to accompany you to the cage is a key talent, as well.


See what the fighters of Saturday’s UFC on FOX 15 event in Newark, N.J., went with as their backing tracks.


* * * *


Luke Rockhold def. Lyoto Machida via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 2:31


Luke Rockhold: “You’re the Best Around (Karate Kid Theme)” by Joe Esposito



Lyoto Machida: “Jump Around” by House of Pain



Ronaldo Souza def. Chris Camozzi via verbal submission (armbar) – Round 1, 2:33


Ronaldo Souza: “It’s My Time” by Fabolous



Chris Camozzi: “Jungle” by X Ambassadors and Jamie N Commons



Max Holloway def. Cub Swanson via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 3, 3:58


Max Holloway: “Hawaiian Kickboxer” by Moki Boy



Cub Swanson: “Still Dre” by Dr. Dre feat. Snoop Dogg



Paige VanZant def. Felice Herrig via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-26, 30-26)


Paige VanZant: “Let’s Go” by Trick Daddy



Felice Herrig: “The Warrior” by Scandal



Beneil Dariush def. Jim Miller via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)


Jim Miller: “Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress” by The Hollies



Beneil Dariush: “Rock With You” by Michael Jackson



Ovince Saint Preux def. Patrick Cummins via knockout (punches) – Round 1, 4:54


Ovince Saint Preux: “100 Black Coffins” by Rick Ross



Patrick Cummins: “Oblivion” by Grimes



Gian Villante def. Corey Anderson via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 4:18


Gian Villante: “God’s Gonna Cut You Down” by Johnny Cash



Corey Anderson: “Blessings” by Big Sean feat. Drake and Kanye West



Aljamain Sterling def. Takeya Mizugaki via submission (arm-triangle choke) – Round 3, 2:11


Aljamain Sterling: “Uptown Funk” by Mark Ronson



Takeya Mizugaki: “Numb” by Linkin Park



Tim Means def. George Sullivan via submission (arm-triangle choke) – Round 3, 3:41


Tim Means: “We Will Rock You” by Queen



George Sullivan: “Survival Of The Fittest” by Mobb Deep



Diego Brandao def. Jimy Hettes via TKO (doctor’s stoppage) – Round 1, 5:00


Diego Brandao: “Sandstorm” by Darude



Jimy Hettes: “Welcome To Jamrock” by Damian Marley



Chris Dempsey def. Eddie Gordon via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)


Chris Dempsey: “Bad Company” by Five Finger Death Punch



Eddie Gordon: “Truck Intro” by Eric Smith

No video


For complete coverage of UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Events section of the site.




Filed under: News, UFC

Saturday, April 18

UFC on FOX 15's Cub Swanson: The fan backlash hurt more than the Frankie Edgar loss
















Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Cub Swanson had won six straight fights and was knocking on the door of a potential title fight before an untimely loss to Frankie Edgar in November. The fan backlash, though, hurt more than the defeat, he said.


Earlier this week, we caught up with Swanson (21-6 MMA, 6-2 UFC) ahead of today’s UFC on FOX 15 main-card bout against tough youngster Max Holloway (12-3 MMA, 8-3 UFC).


For Swanson, whose bout airs on FOX from Newark, N.J.’s Prudential Center, it’s a pivotal opportunity to get back in the title picture after his recent defeat. Admittedly, it was a tough loss to swallow, especially considering the fallout.


“The loss hurt, but some of the backlash I got from social media – from fans – hurt a lot worse,” Swanson told MMAjunkie. “They just kept critiquing me about my wrestling, about how I’m washed up, blah, blah. It really hurt because I’ve always felt like I just fight for the fans. I’ve always given it all I have. I mean, I got my ass kicked for five rounds in that fight, and I didn’t want to give up because it’s just not my style.


“That definitely took a toll.”


Check out the above video as Swanson discusses that tough time, how he’s rebounded, where he thinks a win puts him, and what fans – the nice ones and the mean ones – can expect tonight.


And for more on UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.




Filed under: Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

Friday, April 17

Video: UFC on FOX 15 fighter weigh-ins replay



Filed under: News, UFC, Videos


NEWARK, N.J. – Check out a video replay of today’s official fighter weigh-ins for UFC on FOX 15.


The weigh-ins took place at Prudential Center in Neark, N.J. The same venue hosts Saturday’s event on FOX and UFC Fight Pass.


For a full rundown of today’s proceedings, check out our UFC on FOX 15 weigh-in results post.


And check out the full video of the weigh-ins above.


For more on UFC on FOX 15, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.




Filed under: News, UFC, Videos