Andre Fili’s got himself a new tattoo… of Urijah Faber’s face

What’s the old saying, never get a tattoo of someone else’s name? The relationship you hold dear and cherish today, may not be the one you have tomorrow. Still, it’s a advice that countless people have ignored over the years, often at their own peril. And it’s an honorific that Andre Fili is looking to one-up with his latest piece of body art.

The Team Alpha Male featherweight standout and longtime UFC fighter recently unveiled his latest tattoo, a portrait of team founder and former WEC champion Urijah Faber.

“Portrait of big bro @urijahfaber,” Fili wrote alongside a video posted to Instagram, “done by the homie @stevebutchertattoos. This is not only for him but all the other @teamalphamalemma family that helped raise and guide me on this journey. #brotherskeeper”

The tattoo will join what appears to be portraits of famed clown Emmett Kelly, on his left forearm, and (I think) Daniel Day Lewis’ ‘Bill the Butcher’ character on his left calf—along with a host of other work.

Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Fili was last seen in the cage, defeating Sheymon Moraes via KO, back July. That fight marked his second straight victory, following a somewhat controversial defeat to Michael Johnson in 2018. His next bout in the Octagon has not yet been announced.

Urijah Faber recently returned to action after two-and-a-half years of retirement, to beat rising young prospect Ricky Simon on the same Sacramento card where Fili beat Moraes. Faber is now set to face top contender Petr Yan at UFC 245, on December 14th, in Las Vegas Nevada. But, part of him will still be outside the cage, on Fili’s ankle.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC 244: Masvidal vs. Diaz picks, odds, & analysis

UFC 244 is just about perfect. A card where every fight seems to hold secondary narratives beyond just the physical battles themselves. Can Jorge Masvidal truly transform into one of MMA’s star performers? Can Nate Diaz jump back into the welterweight elite? Is Darren Till about to make an immediate impact at middleweight? Will Vicente Luque crown himself as a title contender. Top to bottom, this card is stacked.

Dive into all the nuances, story lines, and match-up breakdowns for the rest of the undercard, on the Prelims Vivi below:

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 UFC 244 fight card as it stands right now:

ESPN+ PPV CARD | SATURDAY NOV. 2 – 10PM/7PM ET/PT
170 lbs – Jorge Masvidal vs. Nate Diaz – 6:07, Odds 22:15
185 lbs – Kelvin Gastelum vs. Darren Till – 23:10, Odds 41:10
170 lbs – Stephen Thompson vs. Vicente Luque – 41:40, Odds 51:13
265 lbs – Derrick Lewis vs. Blagoy Ivanov – 51:52, Odds 59:31
205 lbs – Kevin Lee vs. Gregor Gillespie – 1:00:17, Odds 1:11:30

ESPN 2 PRELIMS | 8PM/5PM ET/PT
205 lbs – Corey Anderson vs. Johnny Walker – 2:15, Odds 11:55
145 lbs – Shane Burgos vs. Makwan Amirkhani – 12:29, Odds 22:11
185 lbs – Brad Tavares vs. Edmen Shahbazyan – 22:43, Odds 29:25
265 lbs – Andrei Arlovski vs. Jairzinho Rozenstruik – 30:15, Odds 38:24

FIGHT PASS/ESPN+ EARLY PRELIMS | 6:30PM/3:30PM ET/PT
125 lbs – Katlyn Chookagian vs. Jennifer Maia – 39:20, Odds 49:46
170 lbs – Lyman Good vs. Chance Rencountre – 50:36, Odds 1:00:57
145 lbs – Julio Arce vs. Hakeem Dawodu – 1:01:23, Odds 1:08:47

Be sure to follow Zane on twitter @TheZaneSimon, follow Connor, @BoxingBusch, and follow @BloodyElbow for all the latest in MMA happenings.

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, 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.

Woodley sees Israel Adesanya evolving ‘into a star right underneath Conor McGregor’

There’s no exact science to star building in combat sports. Some great, fun athletes just don’t seem to click. Some become overnight sensations. There’s lots of work that promoters, PR reps, and well placed media appearances can do to help the whole process along, but often an athlete either has ‘it’ or they don’t.

By all appearances, Israel Adesanya has it.

The kickboxer-turned-mixed-martial-artist has taken the UFC by storm over the past year-and-a-half, running out an 18-0 unbeaten record in MMA, and seven straight wins to start his Octagon career. All of which culminated in his unifying the middleweight title with a victory over Robert Whittaker in Melbourne, Australia. It was a thrilling performance, in front of a packed stadium, and one that has many pegging the newly minted champion as a future superstar. Including former welterweight champ Tyron Woodley, as he told the Hollywood Beatdown in a recent interview (transcript via MMA Fighting).

“To be honest, I think Israel is going to evolve into a star right underneath Conor McGregor,” Woodley said. “It’s hard to deny him. He fights crazy, he has great I.Q., he’s tough, he’s shown he can take punches, he’s with the shit. He’s gonna talk shit in the press conferences, his entrance was the best entrance we’ve ever seen in mixed martial arts—even when freaking Conor had a live music playing in the top. It superseded that in my opinion—[and] he’s getting better with time.”

That kind of star potential is also why Woodley would someday like to meet Adesanya in the cage. “For me, it’s like a respect thing. So, if I can get in front of somebody like Carlos Condit or Robbie Lawler—back in those days, that shit pumped me up.”

The longtime Roufusport fighter has recently been considering a move to middleweight, after he makes good on plans to “wipe out the division clean at welterweight.” Especially having seen the success former 170 lb fighters like Whittaker and Gastelum have had there. And for his part, Adesanya is on the smaller side of 185 lbs, having even weighed in as low as 183 for bouts against Rob Wilkinson and Kelvin Gastelum.

Still, before Woodley can make good on any future fighting plans, he has to get back into the cage. ‘The Chosen One’ hasn’t set foot in the Octagon since dropping his title to Kamaru Usman back in March. A planned bout with Robbie Lawler, for June, fell apart due to a hand injury. The 37-year-old underwent surgery in early October, with an expected 8-12 weeks of recovery to follow. And with the UFC calendar already nearly full for the year, it seems unlikely fans will see him competing again until 2020. Until that happens, any designs for a middleweight title run will just have to wait.

Tyson Fury to MMA? Heavyweight boxing star teases potential debut this year

MMA has had its fair share of crossover superstars. We’ve seen kick boxers like Tenshin Nasukawa and Rico Verhoeven give mixed martial arts a try. Pro wrestlers like Brock Lesnar and and Dave Bautista have stepped into the cage, and obviously a wealth of grapplers—both from collegiate wrestling and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. But, boxing has been a more rarefied air. In part, for elite pro boxers, the money is just too good to consider dabbling in MMA. And for those few that have tried, like James Toney and Ricardo Mayorga, the attempt has been humiliating and ugly.

In large part that’s likely because the boxers who have been interested have been so far past their competitive prime that the realities of any athletic competition may have been poor. Or maybe it’s just that the deep devotion to a punching-only style of fighting for years on end doesn’t lend itself to an easy transition to wrestling and grappling. At just 31-years-old, however, unbeaten heavyweight boxer Tyson Fury may help test those theories.

The ‘Gypsy King’ made a surprising announcement during a recent interview with Sky Sports News. That, under the guidance and training of UFC superstar Conor McGregor, he’s looking to step into the cage sometime before the end of 2019.

“I’ve got something epic coming up, after this. Even more bigger than this,” Fury told the news outlet, referencing his upcoming WWE Crown Jewel match against Braun Strowman, on October 31st, in Saudi Arabia.

“Yeah, we might see Tyson Fury have his MMA debut this year too,” Fury went on to reveal.

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“It’s different,” he acknowledged, “but like I say, ‘Tyson Fury, taking over.’”

“Yeah, I’ve been speaking to Conor [McGregor] about it, and he’s willing to train me. And it’s gonna be good.”

“Yeah, but I come from a long line of bare knuckle boxing champions,” Fury explained, when asked about having the mindset for MMA training. “Getting hurt, getting bloody – you saw my last fight, blood everywhere – nothing new to me. All a part of my heritage and upbringing. So, I’d love to get in there and smash someone up.”

Fury said he’s had a standing offer from the former UFC ‘double-champ’ to come to Dublin and work on his MMA game. The UFC and McGregor both recently teased a return to action for the Irishman, who has been embroiled in a number of controversies over his last year away from the sport—including two separate accusations of sexual assault and accusations that he and his entourage forced a bottle service girl into the back of a car outside an LA night club.

“He just said, any time you’re ready, when you get the time, let’s go. Come over to Dublin, and we’ll start training. So, can’t wait! Gonna take him up on the offer,” Fury enthused.

“Who knows, who knows? We might be on a double header. The ‘Gypsy King’ and Conor McGregor. It even rhymes, doesn’t it? Double header, Gypsy King and Conor McGregor! Wooo!”

If Fury did come knocking for a UFC contract, would the world’s largest MMA promotion be willing to foot the bill? Fury’s getting a reported $15 million for his upcoming WWE appearance. It remains to be seen if he’d be willing to take a major pay cut to compete in MMA, or if the UFC would open up their pocketbooks for a potential massive one-off PPV smash.

UFC Singapore: Maia vs. Askren – Fights to make

UFC Singpore was just about the perfect card, for what it was billed and booked to be. Packed with action fights, strong prospects, and with an elite grappling battle at the top —one that had the potential to bore, but instead turned into a Fight of the Night worthy performance. Demian Maia turned back the clock with an aggressive boxing and grappling attack to defeat Ben Askren, while Ciryl Gane & Movsar Evloev backed up the hype around their games.

So, what’s the perfect next grappling battle for Demian Maia as he rides off into the sunset? How long before Cyril Gane hits the UFC rankings? And where does Ben Askren go from here?

I’ll be answering all those questions – and maybe one or two others – with the help of the classic Silva/Shelby fight booking model 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 stab at making some matches for UFC 244 next weekend, leave a comment below starting with, “I guess there’s a reason why he’s the best grappler in the division, possibly in MMA ever.” I’ll pick one winner from the entries to join me next time.

Now, let’s get to the fights…

DEMIAN MAIA

I don’t know that this was exactly a shocking upset, but it is the first time in a minute that Maia has gone out and beat a top shelf wrestler. Fans would have to go all the way back to Jon Fitch to find the Brazilian’s last win over someone with a serious collegiate wrestling career under their belt. It’s also the kind of win that keeps Maia in line for top tier welterweight fights, even as his career comes to a close. That makes his call out of Diego Sanchez, while understandable, not a particularly interesting one. Sanchez is still something of a fan favorite, and has had some good wins recently, but we just saw him against a good grappler in Michael Chiesa. And he got handled, easily.

A bout against Chiesa has a lot more fascination to it, in fact. Or perhaps a fight with Gilbert Burns, who has had a fantastic start to his welterweight career—and a great grappling pedigree as well. But, there’s one other fight that I think would be just right, and that’s a bout against Claudio Silva. ‘Hannibal’ isn’t nearly as entrenched with fans as Sanchez or Chiesa, but he’s an all action grappler who hasn’t lost since 2007—and is unbeaten in the UFC. At 37, time is short for Silva if he’s ever going to make a real run. Give Silva chance to make a huge splash, give Maia an all-grappling action fight. Demian Maia vs. Claudio Silva seems like it’d be just right.

BEN ASKREN

‘Funky’ Ben wasn’t exactly winning this fight, but by the end of the second round, it did seem like Maia’s cardio was starting to flag and Askren relentlessness was building momentum. It’s a rough turn of events then, that saw Askren swept and subbed just a few minutes later. And it all makes for something of an inauspicious run for Askren’s brief UFC career. A controversial debut sub win over Robbie Lawler has been followed by the first two losses of the Roufusport fighter’s career, both stoppages. Fans may argue Askren just needs a step back – a chance to regather his confidence – but at 35 and with one retirement already under his belt, it’s worth asking just what he’d be stepping back for.

Askren’s UFC bid has had a very ‘do or die’ flavor from the get go, is he really going to turn around and face Court McGee or Nordine Taleb on an undercard? Probably not. There’s still one very good challenge I’d like to see him take on right now, however. Gunnar Nelson is another grappling ace who’s faced some hard setbacks lately. ‘Gunni’’s UFC form has been spotty after a dominant early run, but he’s still got a great reputation as a fan-favorite grappler with an action-friendly ground game. Seems like just the right challenge for Askren right now. Ben Askren vs. Gunnar Nelson is a worthwhile step back for the former ONE & Bellator champ.

BENEIL DARIUSH

Dariush looked every bit like the top 10 fighter he’s been in the past. It keeps him on a strong run of form, stretching back to his win over Thiago Moises in late 2018. He’s now won three in a row, and should be targeted for an opponent closer to the fringes of the top 15 again. That could be a rematch with Carlos Diego Ferreira, or a bout against Islam Makhachev, or top-flight prospect Nasrat Haqparast. If I thought I could trust Leonardo Santos to get back in the cage any time soon, that would make an excellent next bout for Dariush.

End of the day, I think the most fascinating fight for Dariush right now would be that bout against Haqparast. The Afghanistan-born German is coming off a fantastic highlight over Joaquim Silva. He’s got the kind of striking and range that could give Dariush trouble, and the wrestling and grappling to compete if the fight hits the mat. A step toward contention for the prospect, another chance to reassert himself as a top flight lightweight for Dariush. Beneil Dariush vs. Nasrat Haqparast for a great prospect vs. veteran battle.

CYRIL GANE

Gane really has shown a ton of potential as he’s found his way into the bottom end of the UFC’s heavyweight division. A great sense of space and timing, some good head movement, strike variety, and the ability to carry powerful offense all the way into late rounds. Not even to mention finishing the whole thing with a heel hook. He dominated a tough, dangerous puncher in Mayes and didn’t ever look in any danger. It’s the kind of performance that suggests he’ll be a future title contender, and it may not take that long to get there. A bout against Todd Duffee would be a surefire thriller. And the winner of Arlovski/Rozenstruik would be must-see stuff. But, with Serghei Spivak getting an upset win to run into the rankings, that feels like a bout Gane should be heading toward as fast as possible. A chance to enter the rankings and immediately put himself in line for name opponents. And if Spivak can win, then he’ll prove that he’s here to stay as an underrated darkhorse. Cyril Gane vs. Serghei Spivak should be exactly the bout Gane wants to get him ranked at 265.

RANDA MARKOS

A win for Markos keeps her set in that gatekeeper role to more elite competition. She may have her struggles against the division’s best, but she’s still a half-step ahead of a lot of the talent trying to claw their way up 115 lbs behind her. If the UFC wants to keep her in that role, she would be a real test for Brianna Van Buren. She’d also make a great next step for Amanda Ribas, with Ribas coming off that surprising win over Mackenzie Dern. When Yan Xiaonan returns from injury, a bout with Markos would be a great entry for her to try and get a number by her name. Considering all of those, I think the fight with Ribas makes the most sense. Ribas has a name win to her credit, but Markos’ composure would still be a challenge she hasn’t faced. And for Markos, it’s a chance to show the kind of consistency she needs if she wants to make her own run toward the division’s best fighters once again. Randa Markos vs. Amanda Ribas; keep the Canadian in her role as gatekeeper to the top 15.

RAFAEL FIZIEV

This was the dominating performance Fiziev was expected to have in his debut. A striking clinic against an opponent willing to stand in and trade with the expert Muay Thai striker. He didn’t finish Alex White, but he showed off his technical mastery all the way through—and should be set up for another all-action bout. If the UFC just wants to slam newcomers together, he could face Arman Tsarukyan next, but I don’t feel like that fight would offer Fiziev much. Bouts against Alex da Silva or Matt Frevola would also be pretty quality ideas. However, I think there’s a pretty clear ‘must see’ bout that the UFC can make right now. Mike Davis just came off a brutal beating of Thomas Gifford; absolutely punishing his lanky opponent with heavy boxing combinations. Fiziev vs. Davis would be electric… for as long as it lasted. Rafael Fiziev vs. Mike Davis is as good a bout as the UFC can book.

MOVSAR EVLOEV

Evloev is just one hell of a problem in the featherweight division. He’s got a solid fundamental boxing game – built on footwork and output – a highly technical wrestling game, and a serious willingness to stay in the scramble and win difficult positions. Enrique Barzola may not be the biggest name in the Octagon, but this was a huge step up from his debut against Seung Woo Choi. The fact that Evloev battled out a strong win should mean he’s going to be ready to keep taking strong steps forward. That could mean fights against Ryan Hall, Dan Ige, or Charles Rosa, fresh off his latest win. But, I think the UFC should target a battle against another top shelf prospect on the rise who looks to have a pretty technical game in development: Sodiq Yusuff. Yusuff just blew past ‘Moggly’ Benitez and took a great win from Sheymon Moraes. He’s a dangerous task for anyone, just the kind of challenge Evloev looks ready to test himself against. Movsar Evloev vs. Sodiq Yusuff is the prospect battle we need.

SERGEI PAVLOVICH

Pavolvich is likely on his way to a pretty fast rise through the UFC heavyweight ranks. Not just for his size and physicality, but at 14-1 with a Fight Nights Global title to his name, he’s got a lot of the kind of experience that some of the other recent heavyweight signings just don’t have. Fights against ranked opponents like Oleksiy Oleinik, or Shamil Abdurakhimov wouldn’t be way out of line if the UFC really wants to push him hard. If, on the other hand, they want to slowplay Pavlovich’s career, a fight with Serghei Spivak seems like it’d be a pretty forgiving matchup—with Spivac’s surprising recent entry at the 15 spot. However, there seems like a pretty ideal mid-point out there, between the hyper seasoned vets and the too-green newcomers. That’s Augusto Sakai. Like Pavlovich, Sakai has faced a lot of good competition on his way to the UFC, he’s had a hot start, and he seems destined for contendership. Let them meet up and see who keeps their momentum rolling. Sergei Pavlovich vs. Augusto Sakai is a fantastic fight.

OTHER BOUTS: Stevie Ray vs. Jim Miller, Michael Johnson vs. Lando Vannata, Frank Camacho vs. Thiago Moises, Don’tale Mayes vs. Justin Tafa, Muslim Salikhov vs. Belal Muhammad, Laureano Staropoli vs. Curtis Millender, Ashley Yoder vs. Livia Renata Souza, Alex White vs. Joaquim Silva, Enrique Barzola vs. Rick Glenn, Maurice Greene vs. Tai Tuivasa, Loma Lookboonmee vs. Hannah Cifers, Aleksandra Albu vs. Ariane Carnelossi, Raphael Pessoa vs. Tanner Boser, Jeff Hughes vs. Allen Crowder

The MMA Vivisection – Bellator 231 & 232: Mir vs. Nelson 2 & MacDonald vs. Lima 2 picks, odds, & analysis

Bellator is taking over the mantle of premier MMA organization this week with two cards, in primetime, full of interesting mixed martial arts action. Starting on Friday night, former champion Phil Davis returns against top prospect Karl Albrektsson in the co-main event of a card headlined by former UFC champ Frank Mir against longtime action heavyweight Roy Nelson, for a rematch of their 2011 bout.

And on Saturday, Bellator’s welterweight title is on the line, with Douglas Lima hoping to take back the belt from the man who beat him back in 2018, Rory MacDonald. World class kickboxer Robin van Roosmalen makes his Bellator debut, and Nick Newell and Paul Daley help fill out what should be an action heavy card.

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 Bellator 231 & 232 cards as they stand right now:

BELLATOR 231: MIR VS. NELSON 2

Paramount Main Card | Friday, Oct. 25th 9pm ET&PT
Frank Mir vs. Roy Nelson
Phil Davis vs. Karl Albrektsson
Ed Ruth vs. Jason Jackson
Bec Rawlings vs. Ilara Joanne
Jack Hager vs. Anthony Garrett

Online Prelims
Phumi Nkuta vs. Adrian Haly
Connor Dixon vs. Orkhan Ismatzade
Mandel Nallo vs. Killys Mota
Talita Nogueira vs. Jessy Miele
Steve Mowry vs. Gokhan Saricam
Dalton Rosta vs. Claude Wilcox
Tim Caron vs. Lucas Pimenta
Jon Manley vs. Thiago Oliveira
Elise Reed vs. Rebecca Bryggman

BELLATOR 232: MACDONALD VS. LIMA 2

DAZN Main Card | Saturday, Oct. 26th 10pm/7pm ET&PT
Rory MacDonald vs. Douglas Lima
Paul Daley vs. Saad Awad
Robin van Roosmalen vs. Cris Lencioni
Nick Newell vs. Manny Muro
Patrick Mix vs. Isaiah Chapman

Online Prelims
Devin Powell vs. Marcus Surin
Zarrukh Adashev vs. Tevin Dyce
Lance Gibson Jr. vs. Dominic Jones
John Douma vs. Jornel Lugo
Tom Connolly vs. Ryan Hardy Evans
John Lopez vs. Dan Cormier
Kevin Ferguson Jr. vs. Craig Campbell

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, 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.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC Singapore: Askren vs. Maia picks, odds, & analysis

The UFC’s card in Singapore this week is just about perfectly designed to be an event fans can afford to miss live. That’s not to say there aren’t some good bouts. The main event between Demian Maia and Ben Askren feels like a fight that needs to happen, and Frank Camacho, Muslim Salikhov, and Enrique Barzola are almost always fun to watch. But, it’s not the kind of card to lure most fans into staying up all night just to see it. Watching a replay of the event the next morning should be good enough.

For those interested in diving deep into the prelims, however, check out the UFC Singapore Prelims Vivi below:

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 the UFC Singapore fight card as it stands right now:

ESPN+ MAIN CARD | SATURDAY OCT. 26 8AM/5AM ET/PT
Demian Maia vs. Ben Askren – 4:22, Odds 24:42
Michael Johnson vs. Stevie Ray – 25:38, Odds 35:48
Beneil Dariush vs. Frank Camacho – 36:58, Odds 46:37
Ciryl Gane vs. Dontale Mayes – 47:36, Odds 53:57
Muslim Salikhov vs. Laureano Staropoli – 55:08, Odds 1:04:10

ESPN+ PRELIMS | 5AM/2AM ET/PT
Randa Markos vs. Ashley Yoder – 3:38, Odds 9:45
Rafael Fiziev vs. Alex White – 11:18, Odds 22:00
Enrique Barzola vs. Movsar Evloev – 22:18, Odds 31:17
Sergey Pavlovich vs. Maurice Greene – 31:43, Odds 38:25
Aleksandra Albu vs. Loma Lookboonmee – 39:27, Odds 48:52
Raphael Pessoa vs. Jeff Hughes – 50:19, Odds 54:29

Be sure to follow Zane on twitter @TheZaneSimon, follow Connor, @BoxingBusch, and follow @BloodyElbow for all the latest in MMA happenings.

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, 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.

Video: ‘Bazooka Arms’ guy with pure synthol biceps gets beat by blogger in MMA bout

Kirill Tereshin’s story is something of an insane trip. A Russian ex-army soldier who reportedly became frustrated with his lack of ‘gainz’ and decided to move straight to injecting pure synthol into his biceps—and eventually, allegedly, a homemade concoction of olive oil, benzyl alcohol, and lidocaine. In the past couple years there appear to be almost as many stories about him looking for a way to get surgery to reverse the damage he’s done as there are those that just can’t help stopping and staring at it all.

Among rurmors that he’s trying to get together enough money to travel to the UK for treatment, he’s entered himself in some publicity driven contests to make bank off his freakish appearance while there’s still bank to be made. Back in May, videos surfaced of him taking on a Russian competitive slapping champion. The results were, unsurprisingly, not great.

In the months since, it appears he’s decided to try his hand at MMA as well. This time, against someone a little more his speed. A blogger in his 40s named Oleg Mongol. The fight may have been a little closer, but the results were still poor.

The fight lasted somewhere around 3 minutes before Tereshin ended up on his back, tapping to a forearm to the throat. You can watch the full thing here or check out the lowlights below.

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Hopefully, somewhere along the way in all this, Tereshin is making the kind of money he needs to get his arms repaired. “At the moment, my arms are in a bad state and are reddening,” he apparently told the Sun, earlier this year—adding that he hopes to raise somewhere around ₽3 million (~$47,000) for the procedure.

Covington won’t leave ATT, even though, ‘obviously, everybody in the gym’s jealous of me’

Fighter relationships in MMA are always a precarious thing. The training partner an athlete works with today just may become the opponent they fight tomorrow. And while some fighters have gone on record saying they’d never be willing to fight the people they consider friends and teammates, relationships have a habit of being transitory. Just ask Colby Covington and Jorge Masvidal.

Back in 2017, when ‘Chaos’ was making his first push toward title contention, Masvidal told MMA Junkie Radio, “The goal’s still the same: not fight each other and destroy everybody else.” Fast forward a couple years, and ‘Gamebred’ is just one of several voices (including Dustin Poirier and Joanna Jedrzejczyk) coming out of Covington’s home camp, American Top Team, publicly denouncing their teammate.

Things apparently got bad enough that Covington moved at least part of his camp to a more private facility to get away from the distractions. But, in a recent interview with Submission Radio, the former NCAA D1 All American wrestler revealed that he’s now back full time at ATT—with no intentions of leaving.

“Yeah, I’m back in American Top Team officially,” Covington said. “This is the homegrown gym that I started at. I started at American Top Team with Dan Lambert, he recruited me straight out of college wrestling. I’ve never been to another gym except for American Top Team, so this is where I started and this where I’ll finish. I can’t thank the godfather enough, Dan Lambert, for what he does for me and everything that he provides. So, my training goes according to plan so I can keep improving as a martial artist. I bleed American Top Team through and through, and I’ll finish my career with them.”

”It wasn’t more about training anywhere else,” he added. “It was more about just staying away from the distractions, the drama that’s going on at the gym. Obviously, everybody in the gym’s jealous of me. I’ve got a lot of haters in the world, and that’s just how the world is today. Everybody’s hates on people that are doing better than them. I can’t control other people’s feelings if they’re jealous and envious of where I’m at in my career, making more money than them, doing bigger things.”

Covington added that apparently ATT owner Dan Lambert stepped in on his behalf to lay out some rules so that interactions in the gym remained calm and professional. Maybe that will be enough to keep things calm at one of MMA’s biggest ‘super camps.’ Or, it may just be that Covington’s persona, and the drama that comes with it, will continue to play as big a part in his career as his performances inside the cage.

In front of Covington at the moment is a planned title fight against champion Kamaru Usman as the headliner to UFC 245, on December 14th, in Las Vegas, NV. The event is also expected to include a featherweight title fight between Max Holloway and Alexander Volkanovski, and a bantamweight title fight between Amanda Nunes and Germaine de Randamie.

Joe Silva details locker room bonus process as UFC lawsuit class certification hearings close

When talk about UFC fighter pay and revenue splits comes up, few points are as regularly debated as the legendary ‘locker room bonuses’ of the ZUFFA era. Documents have revealed that Lyoto Machida earned $100,000 for each KO/TKO or submission win he racked up—at least in one iteration of his UFC contract. And reports are that Frank Mir got an extra $1,000,000 for his second bout with Brock Lesnar, at UFC 100.

And while those cases may be extreme, in the final day of class certification hearings for the UFC antitrust lawsuits, former UFC matchmaker Joe Silva revealed a more workaday scale and approach to just how the UFC handed out their extra cash. According Silva’s testimony, he maintained a large amount of autonomy under the promotion’s ZUFFA ownership. And after events, he’d bring a list of bonus recommendations to Dana White and the Fertittas—fighters he believed deserved something extra after their latest performance.

“Now, there was other bonuses, too, that were not discussed that were not fight of the night,” Silva told the court on September 23rd (transcript via Forbes). “And that’s what I believe this chart references, that for a long period of time what would happen is after a show would end – the next day, for Monday – I would summarize the card to Dana, Lorenzo, Sean. And I’d say, here’s what happened in every fight, and here’s money that’s not knockout of the night or fight of the night, here’s extra bonuses that I think these guys are worth. And I would make suggestions: this guy lost, but it was a good fight, he did that, I think he should get 3,000 extra; I think that that guy should get 10,000 extra. And I’d go down the whole card.

“Then Dana and Lorenzo would look at that, and they would decide did they agree with me. Do they want to give more or do they want to give less. But that had nothing to do with knockout of the night or performance of the night, that was different bonuses.”

Silva also talked about his rational behind contract structuring, why some fighters would get a better offers from the UFC than others. As well as the restructuring of the ‘of the night’ bonus system, which had formerly been on a sliding scale depending on the size of the event.

“There was a time where a bonus amount was different from show to show based on how big the show was,” Silva testified. “But that caused a problem, which I solved, where it was just like, well, your people, maybe they’re not the highest ranked guy, but they’re very exciting, and they get bonuses, and he doesn’t want to go out and fight on this small show, because lesser bonuses, and he’s a bonus machine. So to avoid people wanting to skip shows because the bonuses are different, it’s like let’s just make them all standard for all the shows.”

This is just the latest round of details, as to the inner-workings of the UFC, to come out of the ongoing class action lawsuit against the promotion. Because of the discovery process, and testimony from UFC employees, fans now have a clearer picture of the longterm financial success of the promotion, the costs that go into promoting individual events, and the details of the UFC’s PPV business. With no clear end to the lawsuit in sight, no doubt there’s even more information yet to come.