Vivi Araujo gives message to victims of domestic violence at UFC 240: ‘I believe you, you are not alone’

Brazil’s Viviane Araujo is one of MMA’s top prospects in the women’s flyweight division. The 32-year-old has only been in the UFC for just over two months, but she electrified in her debut—with a 3rd round KO of Talita Bernardo on short notice. And now, down a division, at 125 lbs, she’s picked up a solid win over former title contender Alexis Davis.

Her victory against Davis may not have been quite as decisive as her debut, but Araujo used her time in the cage to make a much more meaningful statement. Immediately after the fight, she got on the mic with a message. After thanking fans and coaches and family members for their support, she added a few words for women who have been victimized by violence.

“And I’d like to leave a message to all the women who are victims of violence,” Araujo said, still gasping to regain her breath from her fight. “At home, at work, on the streets, anywhere. I believe you, you are not alone. And we all have great power in us.”

Later, during her post fight media scrum, Araujo clarified her words somewhat with the help of a translator.

“Actually, in Brazil, all the women have a problem now,” her translator told the assembled press. “It’s a little bit dangerous, with a lot of killings and this kind of stuff. I told them that they can train MMA or martial arts, or whatever, and can defend yourselves.”

It’s an especially meaningful message to deliver from the platform the UFC offers, which has unfortunately, over the years, played host to a number of fighters convicted of violent crimes against women. And while the promotion has touted a ‘zero tolerance’ policy for athletes who commit acts of domestic violence, their enforcement of it has been notably lax. Even to the point of allowing fighters to compete in the Octagon while awaiting hearings on charges of rape and assault.

Hopefully, fighters like Araujo can continue using their time in the cage to deliver a more positive image of mixed martial arts to the world.

Max Holloway ready to fight Volkanovski in 2019, but maybe not at UFC 243: ‘We’ve got to get medical testing’

If the UFC had a plan for a featherweight title fight to co-headline UFC 243 alongside Israel Adesanya’s bid to unify the middleweight title against Robert Whittaker, then the main event of UFC 240 couldn’t have gone much better. Champion Max Holloway smoothly out-worked Frankie Edgar for five rounds, piecing up the former lightweight title holder with a precision jab and his trademark, ever-increasing workrate. And while Edgar, by the numbers, landed a solid 96 significant strikes over the course of their bout, Holloway walked away seemingly fresh faced, none the worse for wear.

“I look fine. I look great…” Holloway said after the event, when speaking to the assembled media. (transcript via MMA Fighting)

However, when pressed about the potential of taking on top contender Alex Volkanovski at home, in Australia, just two months from now, Holloway was a bit more circumspect.

“…but,” he continued, “We’ve got to get medical testing.

“I’ve fought three title fights in seven months. I want to fight one more time this year, but we’ve got to go take all the right tests and see. And we’ll go from there.”

Holloway added that he understands how much a title fight in front of his home crowd would mean to the challenger, and doesn’t “want to take that away from the guy.” However, he seemed more set on the possibility of fighting in December than October.

“UFC has this habit of putting me the first week of December. Hopefully if I”m medically cleared and everything and I’m good to go by December, I can get that first week. ‘Cause that’s been Max week the last three years, I think.”

If ‘Blessed’ does get a clean bill of health, perhaps the UFC will find a way to sweeten their offer and get him in the cage in Melbourne. If not, fans may just have to wait until UFC 245 in Las Vegas (or maybe UFC on ESPN 7 in D.C.) before they see the Hawaiian grace the Octagon again.

UFC 240: Holloway vs. Edgar – Fights to make

Much as the card looked heading in to fight night, UFC 240 ended up being all about perceptions. The narratives that fans brought with them entering the evening were largely likely to color much of what they took away. Max Holloway and Cris Cyborg put on reasonably strong, decidedly winning performances. But, they didn’t set the world alight. And, outside Jotko/Barriault the rest of the main card was fun, but not a showcase of the highest levels of MMA—if that’s what PPV is supposed to offer. Still, the performances weren’t bad. Two great fighters won based on being… great fighters. And Price vs. Neal was a banger.

So, with their Edmonton card in the books, will Volkanovski finally get his title shot? And how quickly? Can the UFC convince Cris Cyborg to stay? And what the hell does Deiveson Figueiredo do while Joe-B is waiting to fight Cejudo?

I’ll be answering all these questions – and one or two others – using the classic Silva-Shelby matchmaking methodology from years past. That means pitting winners against winners, losers against losers, and similarly tenured talent up against one another. For fans interested in getting their own chance to make some fantasy fights, stay tuned for the UFC Fight Night: Shevchenko vs. Carmouche column in two weeks—for your opportunity to play matchmaker for UFC 241.

Due to circumstances outside the realms of human control, I’m flying solo this week as well.

MAX HOLLOWAY

There’s really only one answer here, isn’t there? Max Holloway needs to fight Alex Volkanovski. At 7-0, the Aussie has looked near unstoppable in the Octagon to date, even forcing Jose Aldo into one of the most anemic striking performances in the Brazilian Hall of Famer’s long career. He’s strong, tough, persistent, a good wrestler, and an increasingly deft striker with a powerful right hand. It may be a style matchup that still favors Holloway, but it’s a good, legitimate challenger for a champion who has really started to dominate his division. There’s always a chance, if Chan Sung Jung actually does fight Ortega – and finishes him violently – that the ‘Korean Zombie’ could leap the queue and grab the spot as next contender. But Volkanovski has earned his place in line, give him his chance at UFC gold. Max Holloway vs. Alex Volkanovski is the featherweight title fight to make.

FRANKIE EDGAR

While some contingent of the MMA fan base expected Edgar to call it quits after losing to Holloway last night, he sounded as resolute as ever about continuing his MMA career. But, after years in a featherweight division battling among the top contenders, it’s reasonable to ask: Just who is left out there for Edgar to fight? He could dive back into the world of rising new contenders. Take on the likes of Calvin Kattar, Zabit Magomedsharipov, or even Josh Emmett. But, I’d rather see Edgar in the type of fights that feel like they have more pizzazz this late in his career. Of which, there are still one or two.

I have no idea when/if he’ll ever be back, but I’d still like to see Dominick Cruz and Edgar fight at some point before both men call it a day. More realistically, however, Frankie Edgar has never fought Chan Sung Jung. That feels like it needs to change. There’s rumor that TKZ might be fighting Ortega in Mexico City in September. But even if that fight happens, and no matter the result, Edgar would make sense. Book Frankie Edgar vs. the Korean Zombie for December, in Korea. If that won’t work, then Edgar vs. Emmett would be fine and fun.

CRIS CYBORG

I’m just gonna assume that Cyborg is gone from the UFC after this. She doesn’t seem interested in coming back, and I don’t think the UFC’s negotiating tone is likely to change that. So the question is, does she go to Bellator, to RIZIN, or to something else entirely? A bout against Julia Budd has some interest to it, but I don’t think it’s all that likely. Someone like ‘King’ Reina over in Japan may be the option that wins out if the Brazilian is sticking to MMA and wants showcases. But, I get the feeling she wants to try out her boxing skills. See what she can do to the best fistic fighters in the world. Claressa Sheilds has sparred with Cyborg multiple times. Would they be willing to fight? It’d be a funky ‘superfight’ to book. But at this point, it might be more likely than anything else. Cris Cyborg’s boxing career seems like it’s on the horizon, even if I’m not sure who she’d fight. Otherwise, maybe the UFC can pay her for that Nunes rematch. Everything else seems like it’d be kind of a waste.

FELICIA SPENCER

Spencer was game as hell, I’ll give her that. She got handily out-classed, but she also didn’t fold, even after eating a ton of shots. Unfortunately for her, the UFC’s women’s featherweight division is only 5 fighters deep at the moment. Cat Zingano is out there somewhere, and Megan Anderson is fighting Zarah Farin dos Santos—so she could take on ZFdS win or lose after her UFC debut. And that’s literally it. Given that lineup, Cat Zingano vs. Felicia Spencer is the fight to make. But really, the UFC needs to hire more women at 145.

GEOFF NEAL

Neal didn’t exactly follow the gameplan of staying composed and picking Price off with pressure and counters, but he still got the win. And it’s clear his combination of speed and accuracy is a big problem at 170. Fights with Warlley Alves or Michael Chiesa would make a lot of sense for the fast rising prospect. And that Alves fight may be the best way to go. But, frankly, I think I’d rather see Neal wait for the winner of another action bout for his next contest. The winner of Thiago Alves vs. Gunnar Nelson or Mike Perry vs. Vicente Luque or Elizeu Zaleski vs. Li Jingliang would all make for amazing fights. Of those, Perry vs. Luque in Montevideo is nearest to being on the same schedule. So, Geoff Neal vs. the Perry/Luque winner sounds like surefire banger.

ARMAN TSARUKYAN

It doesn’t always happen this way. A fighter loses a close, competitive decision to an elite, veteran talent, and everyone is quick to expect a winning performance with a step down in competition. As often as not, young fighters who falter against great competition can and will falter against lesser competition too. Especially when it’s another seasoned vet like Olivier Aubin-Mercier. However, Arman Tsarukyan looks like he can really be a potential force at lightweight. The 22-year-old has a bullish frame and a relentless pace. He’s a capable striker (if not yet a totally comfortable one) and a powerful wrestler and strong grappler. He’s going to be tough for a lot of men to beat.

Normally, I’d want to see him slowed down a bit, given some time to tread water, maybe take on Vinc Pichel or Alexander Yakovlev, someone right around the same level. But, there’s a fight just too right to pass up at the moment: Alexander Hernandez. Hernandez’s performance against Francisco Trinaldo asked a lot more questions than it answered. He burst on the scene, much like Tsarukyan as a physically dominating, aggressive force. And suddenly, after a hard loss to Donald Cerrone, he looked… cautious. Tsarukyan will force a fight out of him. And afterward we’ll know which of these talented prospects is really ready to jump into the deep waters of the lightweight elite. Arman Tsarukyan vs. Alexander Hernandez is a great litmus test for both men.

VIVIANE ARAUJO

There were no guarantees for Vivi Araujo in her second UFC bout. She blasted Talita Bernardo, but Alexis Davis was a huge step up. And that showed in the cage. Davis was much more able to weather the storm and drag Araujo deep into the fight. However, Araujo’s ability to deal damage – even at 125 lbs – has clearly set her apart from her peers, and got her a closely contested win. It’s also thrown her right into the mix in a flyweight division still very much trying to figure out who its elite talents are. That could mean rushing Araujo to the top, with a bout against the winner of Calderwood/Shevchenko, or Jennifer Maia, or Katlyn Chookagian. But, I’d rather see Araujo take her time. At least just a little bit. A fight with the winner of Mara Romero Borella vs. Lauren Murphy next week seems like it’d be just right. Two big, strong flyweights with physical styles and enough experience to once again drag Araujo out of her comfort zone. While, at the same time, not so obviously offensively potent opponents to easily derail Araujo’s own game. Vivi Araujo vs. the Borella/Murphy winner seems like a good next step for the prospect, on her way to title contention.

DEIVESON FIGUEIREDO

Exactly the win Figueiredo needed to put himself back in the hunt. His loss to Formiga last time was a rough one, but with just how shallow the flyweight division is right now, he could easily be in line for a title fight sometime in the near future—even without getting that one back. The trick is all about finding him a meaningful opponent in the meantime. It’d be great to see him against Joseph Benavidez, but unless that’s for an interim belt, I don’t think it makes much sense for Joe-B to go take that. Not with a title fight already promised. So if Benavidez is off the table, then Figueiredo doesn’t have much choice but to wait for another big winner, or hope that someone like Tim Elliott returns, or the UFC signs some more talent. Figueiredo against Moreno, Kara-France, or Bontorin off electrifying wins, but really… just get some more talent to 125.

ALEXANDRE PANTOJA

A setback for Pantoja in his hopes for a future flyweight title shot. He just couldn’t match the accuracy of Figueiredo’s attacks and didn’t have a clear answer for the fellow Brazilian’s elbows inside the clinch. There aren’t a lot of options for him, with the year of cutbacks to flyweight; he could easily face a winner from one of the less notable upcoming bouts, like Bontorin vs. Paiva or Moreno vs. Askarov. But, I think that he’s best set for a rematch from a bout way back in his past. In 2010, Pantoja dropped a decision to current fellow top contender Jussier Formiga. Formiga is coming off his second loss to Joseph Benavidez. Time to see where both men are at, almost a decade after their first go-round. Alexandre Pantoja vs. Jussier Formiga 2 sounds like a shockingly solid fight for the current, trimmed-down flyweight division.

OTHER BOUTS: Niko Price vs. Bryan Barberena, Olivier Aubin-Mercier vs. Damir Hadzovic, Krzysztof Jotko vs. Kevin Holland, Marc-Andre Barriault vs. Bevon Lewis, Alexis Davis vs. Roxanne Modafferi, Hakeem Dawodu vs. Dan Ige, Yoshinori Horie vs. Sung-Bin Jo, Gavin Tucker vs. Shane Young, Seung Woo Choi vs. Martin Bravo, Gillian Robertson vs. Maycee Barber, Sarah Frota vs. Priscila Cachoeira, Erik Koch vs. Jordan Mein, Kyle Stewart vs. Ricky Rainey

The MMA Vivisection – UFC 240: Holloway vs. Edgar picks, odds, & analysis (special guest Jimmy Smith)

UFC 240 is something of a ‘mileage may vary’ kind of PPV. Do you love watching Max Holloway and Cris Cyborg fight? Then this card has stuff for you. Are you into well-booked action fights no matter who the fighters are? Then yeah, UFC 240 will probably fill your void. But, outside the main event and Cyborg, it’s definitely a card short on name value. And it’s only one or two last-minute injuries away from being pure Fight Night material.

For fans that want to dig deeper into the lineup, however, we’ve got them covered with a complete breakdown of the UFC 240 prelims—which you can watch right here, via YouTube (or check out over on SoundCloud):

The MMA Vivisection is brought to you by Combat Wombat, makers of combat sports themed artwork featuring MMA’s legendary fighters and legendary fights. Visit chrisrini.com for the latest pieces and commissions. Get your Combat Wombat themed Vivi t-shirts today! cottonbureau.com/products/dr-wombat

Here’s a look at the complete UFC 240 fight card as it stands right now:

ESPN+ PPV CARD | SAT JULY 27 – 10PM/7PM ET/PT
Max Holloway vs. Frankie Edgar – 3:00, Odds 24:42
Cris Cyborg vs. Felicia Spencer – 25:04, Odds 34:32
Geoff Neal vs. Niko Price – 39:05, Odds 49:52
Olivier Aubin-Mercier vs. Arman Tsarukyan – 51:38, Odds 1:02:41
Krzysztof Jotko vs. Marc-Andre Barriault – 1:03:54, Odds 1:12:06

ESPN 2 PRELIMS | 8PM/5PM ET/PT
Alexis Davis vs. Viviane Araujo – 2:00, Odds 14:14
Hakeem Dawodu vs. Yoshinori Horie – 15:20, Odds 20:32
Gavin Tucker vs. Seung Woo Choi – 21:38, Odds 32:51
Alexandre Pantoja vs. Deiveson Figueiredo – 33:54, Odds 44:28

FIGHT PASS/ESPN+ PRELIMS | 6PM/3PM ET/PT
Gillian Robertson vs. Sarah Frota – 47:55, Odds 1:00:08
Kyle Stewart vs. Erik Koch – 1:01:12, Odds 1:06:54
Giacomo Lemos vs. Tanner Boser – 1:07:45, Odds 1:12:13

Be sure to follow Zane on twitter @TheZaneSimon, follow Connor, @BoxingBusch, and follow @BloodyElbow for all the latest in MMA happenings. You can find Jimmy Smith on twitter @jimmysmithmma, on instagram @jsmithmma, and catch his podcast Our MMA Show on podbean and iTunes.

If you enjoyed our show, give us a shout out in the comments here on Bloody Elbow, or give us a “like”, share & subscribe over on one of our other BE Presents Channels: SoundCloud, YouTube, iTunes & Apple TV, iHeartRadio, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, blubrry, TuneIn, OverCast, or Player FM – whichever one happens to be your listening platform of choice. While you’re there, don’t forget to subscribe to Bloody Elbow Presents; that way you’ll always be the first to get all of BE’s daily MMA offerings. For previous episodes of the show, check out our playlists on all of our BE Presents channels.

*Intro/Outro music for the audio podcast of the Main Card Vivi has been provided by OxBow, starring Eugene S. Robinson: http://www.theoxbow.com

Wittman talks UFC analyst role: ‘I have screwed up so many damn times in the corner’

One of the more recent upgrades to the UFC’s live event broadcasts has been the addition of in-fight analysis from long time veteran coach Trevor Wittman. Wittman has worked with and helped craft multiple world champions and title contenders in MMA, and lends a detailed eye to in-fight adjustments that fighters and their teams are looking to make—specifically focusing on between-rounds corner instruction.

His presence has been refreshingly down to earth, and free of much of the drama and posturing that can come with bringing in active fighters to fill color commentary spots (as the UFC tends to like to do). Nonetheless – and although it doesn’t sound like he’s about to step away from the role – in a recent interview with MMA Fighting, Wittman admitted he’s found his new role with the UFC a bit difficult at times. Delivering criticism of other coaches and their game plans doesn’t always necessarily sit comfortably.

“Yeah, it’s hard. I love to be there live, watch the fights,” Wittman said, “but when it comes to critiquing? It’s tough. I’m the first to say, I have screwed up SO many damn times in the corner, and I’ve had great corners. So, for me to go out there and call things? I think one thing that would make it fun for me is, let me tell some stories. Let me tell some stories of the times I forgot mouthpieces and looked at the guy and said, ‘Oh man, we got a minute left, and I can’t jump up there.’ Especially in the boxing world, you get up on the canvas, fights get stopped.

“Man, I would love to tell those stories; how all the times I screwed up. Because it’s what made me learn from those situations. I think that would make it funner. But again, all the coaches out there, they’re my brothers—they’re the people I love sharing this industry with, they’re the people I love sharing the cage with. From a competitive aspect, I love that. For me to say what’s right, what’s wrong? It’s tough.”

On the flip side, however, Wittman also said his new position has gained him a lot of insight into how other coaches work. And exposed him to some new ideas and points of view he might never have other come across.

“That has been the best part,” Wittman exclaimed. “There’s so many times that I’ve been in there and been like, ‘Oh my god! That’s a great perspective.’ Then they go out and do it. That, to me, that kind of just kinda stamps, ‘Who am I to be saying something?’ Because I haven’t spent the time in the camp. I haven’t been with them for 12 weeks. I don’t know the gameplan. And when you see it and you hear it, that’s – to me – spectacular. So again, how am I going to critique when you listen to 30 seconds of it. It’s awesome. I love to see my friends in the industry out there doing their thing. To me, to sit live and watch it, that is the best part. On top of that, I love to talk to the fans.”

And while he may not quite fully enjoy delivering criticism to his fellow coaches, he wouldn’t at all mind finding himself on the opposite end of the equation. Having someone in the booth, looking over his corner work and giving feedback on it isn’t an experience he’d shy away from, at all.

“Honestly, I wouldn’t mind it, because I love it,” Wittman said. “I think criticism, especially from someone that’s coming from a place that they like you, I think you need to know different perspectives. Because perspectives are key to life. I can say I’m right, and you’re wrong. But that’s only from this perspective. If I step around, we’re on the complete opposite. So again, perspectives are just perspectives—and I don’t take anything to heart. But again, these are peoples’ careers. They got their families watching, things like that. I don’t take much things to heart. I hope they don’t. I’m just here to go out there and help the industry—but man, I love all the coaches out there.”

Perhaps he’ll get a chance to experience exactly that, coming up on September 14th in Vancouver, British Colombia, Canada. There, Wittman-trained top lightweight contender Justin Gaethje is expected to take on long-time fan-favorite action fighter Donald Cerrone in the evening’s main event. If Wittman plans on being in the ‘Highlight’’s corner, perhaps the UFC can find another coach to man the booth and break down his work.

UFC on ESPN 4: RDA vs. Edwards – Fights to make

The UFC’s latest ESPN offering was set up for limited returns. A card stacked with tough veteran fighters who not only don’t tend to get finished, but who are also entirely comfortable fighting to a decision. Throw in some greener talent without the consistency or technical depth to create dominating performances and, well, fans just might be treated to nine straight decisions—and ten overall on the night. That doesn’t mean no one shined, however. Leon Edwards put together a great performance to work his way past Rafael dos Anjos, Walt Harris and Dan Hooker lit up their respective opponents, and Mario Bautista went to war with Jin Soo Son.

So, will people finally start calling out Leon Edwards, or is he stuck playing the bridesmaid at 170 lbs? Is it time to insert Walt Harris’ name into the top of the heavyweight division? And, after faltering in her debut, is Jennifer Maia on her way to title contention at 125 lbs?

I’ll be answering all those questions – and maybe one or two more – using the classic Silva/Shelby fight-making methodology from years past. That means pitting winners against winners, losers against losers, and similarly tenured talent up against one another. If you’d like to take your own chance at some fantasy matchup glory for UFC 240 next week, leave a comment below starting with, “San Antonio is a sleeping giant and I am the alarm clock.” I’ll pick one winner from the responses to join me next time. As I’m only soliciting entries for PPV cards right now, there’s no guest writer this week.

Now, let’s get to the matchups!

LEON EDWARDS

A huge win for Leon Edwards that just might net him… none of the fights he’s hoping for. He called out Jorge Masvidal and Kamaru Usman – which is good and fine – but it seems much more likely that they’re about to fight each other. If Usman is going to be held up by injury for a while, then a bout with Masvidal has some narrative heat to it. But, Masvidal’s already made it clear that he’s not very interested. The winner of Colby Covington/Robbie Lawler is another possibility, especially if Lawler wins. But, if Colby takes that, he’s almost certainly going to try and get the next shot at the title (one he’s frankly earned). That means Edwards could have to take a super tough fight that won’t get him much beyond a high profile name on his resume—or a serious chance at a loss. Demian Maia, Santiago Ponzinibbio, Stephen Thompson, Ben Askren? These are the kinds of opponents that Edwards will likely need to chose from. Of all those, Thompson is probably the best combination of style and name value that would divert Edwards from his preferred bouts. Unless, of course, Edwards feels like Askren has been thoroughly exposed. Leon Edwards vs. ‘Wonderboy’ seems like the best tread-water fight the Brit can hope for, while the title picture shakes out.

RAFAEL DOS ANJOS

A hard setback for RDA, who has to be thinking about the fastest ways back to title contention late in his career. He took a strong win over Kevin Lee just back in May, but Edwards wasn’t about to fade over the stretch like Lee did—and put his superior size to work on dos Anjos in the clinch. Fortunately, there are plenty of top-ranked welterweights coming off hard losses right now in need of an opponent. Ben Askren, Stephen Thompson, and Darren Till all got shellacked recently, and dos Anjos is probably just the kind of opponent they’d like to see on the rebound. Of course, if the UFC wanted to create some narrative drama, RDA beat both Nate Diaz and Anthony Pettis – back-to-back – in 2014/15. The winner or loser of that bout could get themselves a chance at revenge if they wanted it.

The other option is the continued use of RDA as a sounding board for rising contenders. That’d mean a bout with Santiago Ponzinibbio, whenever the Argentinian is ready to go again. Given all these, I’ll say the UFC should go with RDA vs. Darren Till. I know the Brazilian tends to struggle with bigger opponents (and Till is huge), but the questions Till needs to answer about his defense and pace are numerous to the point that I think RDA can make this fight fascinating just by being tough and staying in Till’s face. If Pettis wants to run one back with RDA, I’d watch that too, but I get the feeling he and Diaz are looking for other kinds of fights. Rafael dos Anjos vs. Darren Till is a good fight to see if either man will answer the questions the other wants to ask.

WALT HARRIS

Harris’ career has come with all sorts of hiccups. At one point cut from the UFC, he’d arguably be 7-1 in his last eight fights (or 9-1 in his last ten if you swing the Abudrakhimov split) if it weren’t for a DQ and an overturned win due to a drug test failure. His game is clicking and he’s got the speed and power to compete with a lot of the division’s best—even if what he’s looking to do isn’t all that varied. He hits hard and his hands are fast. Fights with Alistair Overeem, Derek Lewis, or Blagoi Ivanov would all be solid bouts to that end. He could also wait for the winner of Tybura vs. Sakai or Blaydes vs. Abdurakhimov (although I’m not sure we really need Harris vs. Abdurakhimov 2 if that’s what shakes out). Personally, I think there’s a hell of a lot of fun to be had with a Derek Lewis matchup, but Lewis is also coming off two straight losses. Overeem’s been making a comeback, and that fight seems like it would be edge of the seat action. Plus it’s pretty hard to find new, fun fights for the ‘Reem’ at this point in his career. Alistair Overeem vs. Walt Harris should be a good one.

DAN HOOKER

A big win for Hooker to get him back on track. He took a hard loss to Edson Barboza, but seems to have collected himself well—doing some great work to find the gaps in Vick’s game and exploit them for a knockout win. That puts him in position to get a tough, ranked opponent. I know he’s called out Al Iaquinta—and he just might get that fight, with Iaquinta looking to bounce back from his own rough defeat. But, Iaquinta has also seemed pretty particular about opponents in the past, and may not want to fight someone just breaking into the rankings. If that’s the case, then a bout with Charles Oliveira would be fantastic option. Oliveira’s striking has steadily improved to the point that he’s not easily handled at range by all but the best strikers, and he’s still an amazingly underrated wrestler with a devastating sub game. Just the kind of dangerous action fight that should provide a chance for Hooker to shine (or fail) spectacularly. It’s either that or take a high risk bout with Leonardo Santos. But, I think Dan Hooker vs. Charles Oliveira is just the right fight.

JAMES VICK

Another crushing KO loss, and it seems Vick’s style has been somewhat solved, at least among the upper echelons of the lightweight division. A hard wall for a fighter who had to take a long road to getting big fights. There are still some solid action bouts out there for the ‘Texecutioner’ however. Fights with Nik Lentz, Drew Dober, Yancy Medeiros, or Alex White would all make some sense. Of all those, the bout against Medeiros seems like the most fun combination of size and action. Medeiros has had his own setbacks lately, and hasn’t returned since a TKO loss to Gregor Gillespie back in January. But, when he’s ready to go again, he and Vick would make for an excellent scrap. James Vick vs. Yancy Medeiros for a fun lightweight action battle.

ALEXANDER HERNANDEZ

Not the performance anyone might have hoped for out of Hernandez—and it’s incredibly debatable whether or not he deserved that win. But, he got it, and he’s likely going to get a bigger fight next time out. Bouts with Charles Oliveira and Gregor Gillespie seem like really obvious easy fights to book. Both men coming off strong wins, one with great grappling and the other with relentless wrestling. I’ll say throw Hernandez at Gillespie over the Oliveira, however. I really want to see how he reacts to a wrestler with the insane pace that Gillespie can push. It seems tailor made to draw an action fight out of him in the exact way that Trinaldo didn’t. Gregor Gillespie vs. Alexander Hernandez seems like a great prospect vs. prospect battle at 155.

RAQUEL PENNINGTON

A good comeback win for Pennington after a rough couple of losses. She stayed composed, stuck to her counters, and took advantage of her physicality when the opportunities presented themselves. Unfortunately there aren’t a lot of easy bookings for her at the top of 135. She’s not about to get another title shot, and she’s fought just about everyone of the division’s old guard. This could be the time for a rematch with Holly Holm; a chance to get back a tough loss that Pennington competed well in. Or a fight with Yana Kunitskaya, who is making her own name as a new contender. But, surprisingly there’s an even more obvious fight that Pennington hasn’t had yet: Julianna Pena. Pena is coming off a win over former flyweight champion Nicco Montano, and would almost certainly like to reassert herself as a top contender at women’s bantamweight after her time off. A win over Pennington would be a great way to do that, and potentially set up an new challenger for Amanda Nunes. Raquel Pennington vs. Julianna Pena is the fight I’m sure we should have seen already.

JENNIFER MAIA

A very solid win for Maia, who has fought her way back to flyweight relevance after a bad debut against Liz Carmouche. Wins over Davis and Modafferi put her right in contention. That could mean fights with Jessica Eye, Katlyn Chookagian, or the winner of Joanne Calderwood vs. Andrea Lee. It’s hard to know just how soon Eye is going to return after her brutal loss to the champ, and while the winner of Calderwood vs. Lee is clearly right in the hunt, Chookagian is the woman that was supposed to have the top contender spot on lock after beating Calderwood last time out. So put Maia and Chookagian in together. If Katlyn can win that, she’s the unquestioned top contender. If Maia wins, she’s got a great case for her own shot at the Shevchenko/Carmouche winner. Jennifer Maia vs. Katlyn Chookagian is as good a top contender bout as women’s flyweight can get.

OTHER BOUTS: Oleksiy Oliynyk vs. Sakai/Tybura loser, Greg Hardy vs. Maurice Greene, Juan Adams vs. Serghei Spivac, Francisco Trinaldo vs. Rustam Khabilov, Andrei Arlovski vs. Blagoy Ivanov, Ben Rothwell vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima, Alex Caceres vs. Movsar Evloev, Steven Peterson vs. Daniel Teymur, Irene Aldana vs. Aspen Ladd, Klidson Abreu vs. Dalcha Lungiambula, Sam Alvey vs. Paul Craig, Roxanne Modafferi vs. Montana De La Rosa, Ray Borg vs. Luke Sanders, Gabriel Silva vs. Randy Costa, Mario Bautista vs. Jonathan Martinez, Jin Soo Son vs. Anderson dos Santos, Felipe Colares vs. Hunter Azure, Domingo Pilarte vs. Journey Newson

The MMA Vivisection – UFC on ESPN 4: RDA vs. Edwards picks, odds, & analysis (w/ special guest Mitch Clarke)

The UFC is headed to Texas this week with an ESPN card that feels very much like a pretty typical fight night offering. The welterweight top contenders bout at the top between Rafeal dos Anjos and Leon Edwards promises to be a skilled, multi-faceted competition, and James Vick vs. Dan Hooker should be a rock solid high level lightweight contest. But much of the rest of the night’s action will depend on some fighters who trend toward uneven performances.

For those interested in learning more about the UFC on ESPN 4 prelims, check out our undercard Vivi below, on YouTube (or find it on SoundCloud).

The MMA Vivisection is brought to you by Combat Wombat, makers of combat sports themed artwork featuring MMA’s legendary fighters and legendary fights. Visit chrisrini.com for the latest pieces and commissions. Get your Combat Wombat themed Vivi t-shirts today! cottonbureau.com/products/dr-wombat

If you enjoyed our show, give us a shout out in the comments here on Bloody Elbow, or give us a “like”, share & subscribe over on one of our other BE Presents Channels: SoundCloud, YouTube, iTunes & Apple TV, iHeartRadio, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, blubrry, OverCast, or Player FM – whichever one happens to be your listening platform of choice. While you’re there, don’t forget to subscribe to Bloody Elbow Presents; that way you’ll always be the first to get all of BE’s daily MMA offerings. For previous episodes of the show, check out our playlists on all of our BE Presents channels.

Here’s a look at the complete UFC on ESPN 4 fight card as it stands right now:

ESPN MAIN CARD | 9PM/6PM ET/PT
Rafael dos Anjos vs Leon Edwards – 3:13, Odds 15:20
Alexey Oleinik vs Walt Harris – 17:47, Odds 27:28
Greg Hardy vs Juan Adams – 27:47, Odds 34:09
James Vick vs Daniel Hooker – 34:31, Odds 48:14
Francisco Trinaldo vs Alexander Hernandez – 49:33, Odds 1:02:47
Andrei Arlovski vs Ben Rothwell – 1:06:07, Odds 1:14:49

ESPN PRELIMS | 6PM/3PM ET/PT
Alex Caceres vs Steven Peterson – 3:06, Odds 8:02
Raquel Pennington vs Irene Aldana – 8:56, Odds 17:48
Sam Alvey vs Klidson Abreu – 19:07, Odds 26:00
Roxanne Modafferi vs Jennifer Maia – 26:50, Odds 37:50
Ray Borg vs Gabriel Silva – 38:21, Odds 45:40
Mario Bautista vs Jin Soo Son – 46:34, Odds 56:21
Domingo Pilarte vs Felipe Colares – 59:57, Odds 1:05:08

Analyst warns of debt in upcoming Endeavor IPO, highlights UFC as an unpredictable asset

Endeavor, parent company to the world’s largest MMA organization, filed for an initial public offering (IPO) back in May of 2019. For fans of the UFC, that may mean the chance to own their own little piece of the Octagon.

However, according to Wall Street Analyst Todd Juenger, while the UFC may be one of the entertainment companies more promising acquisitions of the last few years, Endeavor’s IPO comes with a lot of risk to investors. In a recently released report from Bernstein Research, Juenger notes that the company carries “an extraordinarily high amount of debt”—as much as 9.5 times their earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA).

“Current investors must surely be uncomfortable operating a volatile business under such a large debt load,” Juenger writes. “So we think Endeavor is motivated to go public and raise equity to reduce this indebtedness, which could translate into a more favorable offering price for equity investors.”

When it comes to the UFC, Juenger was more positive—estimating that the promotion produced $650 million in revenue in 2018 and $240 million in EBITDA. He added that “MMA is a growing sport with international appeal and an audience that skews young and male, a demographic that is very hard for brands to reach,” and that “The opportunity to own a stake in a dominant league in a growing sport with global potential doesn’t come along every day.”

But, his tone around the UFC carried its own notes of caution as well…

“There are also a number of existential risks, including reliance on bombastic UFC star personalities, the violence inherent in MMA combat, pressures on representation packaging and relationships with talent (the WGA is currently in a major dispute with all talent agencies over packaging and affiliated production companies), and risk of agents leaving the firm (just like Endeavor’s founder did when he left ICM in 1995).”

“Conor McGregor is a great example,” says Juenger. “But one of his antics injured innocent bystanders in 2017 and another one led to his arrest on felony robbery charges.”

Eventually, he warned that “shareholders will need to be willing to accept an extraordinarily high amount of debt and very tight interest coverage,” and that the company has a “questionable ability to de-lever organically, depending on one’s confidence in revenue growth and operating leverage.”

All of which could lead for interesting times for MMA fans in the near future. If Endeavor’s IPO doesn’t produce as planned, who knows what the future could hold for the entertainment company, or for the UFC as a result.

Cody Garbrandt: UFC drug testing should either have no exceptions or ‘let it all be legal’

When Urijah Faber’s fiancée recently recounted a story about the UFC’s drug testing partner showing up at the hospital to collect a sample from the now-unretired bantamweight, while she was in labor with the couple’s first child, the question had to be asked: Is USADA going too far? Are fighters giving up too much of their privacy in the unending battle to get PEDs out of MMA?

In the mind of at least one Team Alpha Male training partner, the drug testing organization either needs to take an even firmer hand, or just back off completely. Former bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt spoke to the assembled media backstage at UFC Fight Night: De Randamie vs. Ladd, where he gave an update on his plans to return to the cage, as well as his views on the need for more strict drug testing in the UFC (transcript via MMA Fighting).

“He stole a lot from me,” Garbrandt said, speaking of disgraced former champion TJ Dillashaw’s back-to-back TKO wins over him to take and defend the UFC bantamweight title. “I wasn’t surprised at all. I was surprised that’s the first time USADA’s ever tested for EPO. I stated back in – what was it 2017? – that I’d like to do more invasive testing. We have to log in everywhere we go. We have to answer the door at 6:00am, piss, urine, blood, everything, write down every supplement we have. There should be no boundaries or picos or this or that. You either cheat or you don’t.

“The first time he got tested for EPO was when he fought Henry? It’s crazy. What are they even testing for. We’re not in there shooting steroids and getting big, they’re doing EPO. They’re doing all that kind of sh*t to cardio base. I knew that. I knew T.J. was on that and that’s why I said I wanted more invasive testing. He’s been on it for five, six years. And that’s not the only thing he’s on. There’s a lot of other fighters that are on sh-t too. So, if you’re gonna draw a line on what we can do or how we can test – you can’t keep this sample, we can’t detect EPO – then what are we getting tested for? Let it all be legal and let’s all get juiced up and go in there and f*ck each other up.”

Despite his misgivings, however, Garbrandt is still looking forward to returning to the Octagon soon. ‘No Love’ stated that he hopes to fight sometime in November, following his recovery from a hand injury suffered in his latest loss to Pedro Munhoz. And that he’s targeting a top-5 opponent. In the meantime, he was on hand to witness Faber’s triumphant re-entry into the bantamweight division—via a first round knockout of #15 ranked Ricky Simon.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC Sacramento: De Randamie vs. Ladd picks, odds, & analysis

The UFC returns this week with something of a palate cleanser after their big UFC 239 PPV event. Germaine de Randamie takes on Aspen Ladd in a women’s bantamweight top contender bout as the main event, with Urijah Faber returning from 2.5 years of retirement to take on Ricky Simon in the co-main. The rest of the card is dotted with action fights and Team Alpha Male talent, but does little to stand out from the UFC’s constant schedule of Fight Night offerings.

There’s no separate prelim Vivi this week. All fights have been covered (in varying degrees of depth) on the main show. But we’ll be back next week with another YouTube offering for the UFC’s trip to San Antonio.

The MMA Vivisection is brought to you by Combat Wombat, makers of combat sports themed artwork featuring MMA’s legendary fighters and legendary fights. Visit chrisrini.com for the latest pieces and commissions. Get your Combat Wombat themed Vivi t-shirts today! cottonbureau.com/products/dr-wombat

If you enjoyed our show, give us a shout out in the comments here on Bloody Elbow, or give us a “like”, share & subscribe over on one of our other BE Presents Channels: SoundCloud, YouTube, iTunes & Apple TV, iHeartRadio, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, blubrry, OverCast, or Player FM – whichever one happens to be your listening platform of choice. While you’re there, don’t forget to subscribe to Bloody Elbow Presents; that way you’ll always be the first to get all of BE’s daily MMA offerings. For previous episodes of the show, check out our playlists on all of our BE Presents channels.

Here’s a look at the UFC Sacramento card as it stands right now:

ESPN+ MAIN CARD | 8PM/5PM ET/PT
Aspen Ladd vs Germaine de Randamie – 5:29, Odds 13:06
Urijah Faber vs Ricky Simón – 14:56, Odds 22:10
Josh Emmett vs Mirsad Bektic – 24:01, Odds 36:03
Karl Roberson vs Wellington Turman – 37:33, Odds 38:39
Cezar Ferreira vs Marvin Vettori – 38:59, Odds 44:11

ESPN+ PRELIMS | 5PM/2PM ET/PT
Mike Rodriguez vs John Allan – 45:20, Odds 47:03
Andre Fili vs Sheymon Moraes – 47:53, Odds 57:32
Julianna Peña vs Nicco Montano – 58:08, Odds 1:03:24
Darren Elkins vs Ryan Hall – 1:04:36, Odds 1:09:54
Pingyuan Liu vs Jonathan Martinez – 1:16:00, 1:18:32 Odds
Livia Renata Souza vs Brianna Van Buren – 1:11:00, 1:15:02 Odds
Benito Lopez vs Vince Morales – 1:19:27