‘I just see Khabib taking him down’ – Eddie Alvarez feels Gaethje doesn’t have the style to beat the champ

Thus far in his MMA career, Khabib Nurmagomedov has been a problem without a solution. The Dagestani Sambo champion turned mixed martial artist currently sits at 28-0 heading into his 3rd title defense, this coming October 24th in Abu Dhabi.

The man across the cage from him will be team Elevation’s Justin Gaethje. The former WSOF title holder has had a rougher run of things in the UFC – having dropped back-to-back KO losses to Eddie Alvarez and Dustin Poirier – but has righted the ship since then, to the tune of four straight victories—and an interim lightweight title in the process.

While no man has yet bested the ‘Eagle’ inside the cage, some fans and pundits have theorized that Gaethje’s combination of power strikes to all levels, fearless aggression, and collegiate wrestling background could make him Khabib’s biggest stylistic challenge to date. But, if that school of thought has any purchase in MMA’s collective imagination, at least one former lightweight champion doesn’t appear to be buying it.

Eddie Alvarez was one of the two men to knock out Gaethje during his UFC career, picking up the KO with a perfectly placed knee late in the third round of their UFC 218 battle. And as he recently told MMA Junkie Radio, as far as he can see, the ‘Highlight’ just doesn’t have the style to keep Khabib at bay.

“The style matchup I think—whenever I look at a big fight like that, the first thing I ask myself is kind of where I feel like the fight is going to take place,” Alvarez said of Gaethje’s upcoming bout with Nurmagomedov. “The majority of the fight, where is it going to happen? And I just see Khabib taking him down. We’ve got to assume it’s going to be on the ground. And I just don’t feel like Justin has the experience jiu-jitsu-wise to be able to deal with what Khabib is going to be able to bring on the ground.”

“I think it takes some time, like a lot of strategy, to fight a guy like Khabib. And I think Justin’s style is tailor made for Khabib,” Alvarez added. “Justin is a come-forward fighter, and I think against a guy like Khabib, you need to be really lateral. You need to move a lot so he can’t get square and then get his shots in on you and Justin’s kinda there. He’s right in front of you and even his mind coming into the fight when I hear the media, ‘I’ve just got to create a car accident,’ I don’t know if that’s the right mindset against Khabib.”

That ‘car accident’ quote came back in August from a guest appearance by Gaethje on Michael Bisping’s Believe You Me podcast, where Gaethje told the former middleweight champion that there would be a zone in front of him during the fight, “a zone of death.”

“I know he wants to hurt him, and you want to do that,” Alvarez explained. “But it should be more of a ‘tag, you’re it,’ game against Khabib. And making sure you’re keeping lateral, and then ‘tags, you’re it,’ one-twos down the middle, and then move again. And that’s how I would like the first round or two played against a guy like Khabib, in order to stop that takedown and stop that dominant grappling he has.”

Many fighters have tried to keep from standing in front of Nurmagomedov, only to find themselves getting chased further and further toward the cage, and eventually taken down anyway. Will attempting to stand in and meet the champion in open space work better? Or will Gaethje find himself stuck in a pair of Dagestani handcuffs, just like everyone else before him? We’ll find the answer in just a few weeks, in the main event of UFC 254.

Why not just say ‘I was afraid of Dominick Reyes’ – DC on Jon Jones teasing LHW return

Even at the winning-est, most consistently performing points in his UFC career Jon Jones has always come across as a somewhat mercurial personality. The kind of man who, can be seen online telling people to just stay home and do nothing one day, and then find himself getting charged with driving while intoxicated and negligent use of a firearm just a few days later.

So perhaps it should come as no surprise that his long teased move to heavyweight is coming with just as much potential for course reversal.

“Obviously, if Jon Jones wanted that fight, we wouldn’t deny Jon Jones the opportunity,” Dana White said of a potential bout against Jan Blachowicz, shortly after the Polish powerhouse picked up Jones’ recently vacated light heavyweight title with a second round TKO over Dominick Reyes.

Whether or not Jones is actually interested enough in chasing Blachowicz down for a bout remains to be seen, but he’s at least giving the notion some thought.

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And while that may just be a case of Jones once again chasing the latest new idea in front of him, Daniel Cormier sees a little something else in the whole situation. The longtime rival to Jones and former two-division champion was back on his regular web-cast with Ariel Helwani this week, where he gave a few thoughts to Jones’ sudden willingness to fight Blachowicz after leaving light heavyweight in the face of a potential Dominick Reyes rematch.

“That’s so whack,” Cormier said (transcript via MMA Fighting). “Have you ever met a guy that’s so out of touch? He’s out of touch. It’s like, OK, Jon, then why not just go, ‘I was afraid of Dominick Reyes. Now I want to go back to 205 and fight Jan Blachowicz because he beat Dom.’ That’s crazy. Why would he do that? I mean, who does that? Who does that?

“He could have fought Reyes. This could have been him and Reyes. This was supposed to be him and Reyes. Instead, he gave up the belt. He gave up the belt and said, ‘I want to fight at heavyweight.’ Now, ‘Maybe, I’ll go back?’ How could you be so out of touch? I don’t get it. . . That’s your boy over there kicking people while they’re down and pretty much admitting, ‘I didn’t want to fight Dominick Reyes but I’ll fight Jan Blachowicz.’ That’s crazy.”

Cormier went on to add that, while he’s critical of Jones’ motivations, if he were in a position to still make light heavyweight (and not be retired) he’d likely be chasing that Blachowicz fight too.

“No disrespect, just because I think… it’s surprising, right?” DC said of Blachowicz’s newly crowned status as LHW champ. “When you have the footage of people getting old victories over him, you think you can do it, too. Any fighter does. And if you’re a guy like myself or Jones, then, of course, you think you can beat him. That’s why Jones will go fight him.”

Of course, Jan might have one or two things to say about that—but it doesn’t sound like DC is about to lace up the gloves again.

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Report: UFC flyweight Rogerio Bontorin lost family to COVID-19 after surge of cases in Curitiba

Wellington Turman is out of his upcoming bout against Sean Strickland, set for October 31st’s UFC Fight Night, likely headlined by a middleweight bout between Anderson Silva and Uriah Hall. MMA Fighting spoke to the young UFC middleweight about being forced from the card, due to ongoing fallout from his bout with COVID-19.

“I was in bad shape for two weeks, in really bad shape, with fever and pain to the body and chest, a bit of shortness of breath,” Turman told the outlet. “I missed two weeks of camp — I mean, I can say I missed the entire camp if I stayed in bed for two weeks, right? I’m doing light training now, nothing heavy, and thank God I’m getting better. But it was rough.”

But Turman isn’t the only fighter out of Gile Ribeiro Team in Curitiba, Brazil to get hit with the virus. Fighting’s report also revealed that heavyweight Augusto Sakai, along with one of his cornermen, tested positive for COVID-19 shortly after returning from his September 5th headlining bout against Alistair Overeem in Las Vegas.

And most tragically, UFC flyweight Rogerio Bontorin reportedly lost both his grandparents to the pandemic. Bontorin had apparently been living with his grandparents in Curitiba when they contracted the virus in August. Bontorin was recently forced from a planned August bout against Manel Kape due to an injury, but contracted COVID-19 as well.

In general, the southern region of Brazil has seen a recent surge in coronavirus cases, with the Washington Post reporting back in July that while “states across the south imposed strict containment measures” initially, when the outbreak failed to hit in the early months, those measures were relaxed.

“In the last two weeks, the number of cases has risen more than 50 percent across the southern states,” WaPo reported back on July 23rd. “In the interior city of Belo Horizonte, cases have nearly doubled. The hospital system in the southern city of Curitiba is flirting with saturation. In Porto Alegre, hospital officials announced the system had reached capacity.”

Speaking to Fighting, head coach Gile Ribeiro intimated that his gym had been taking precautions, but even still the pandemic had found its way into fight camps.

“It caught us by surprise because we were being careful for this fight,” Ribeiro said, “But we had an outbreak the last few days in Curitiba because of the cold weather and ended up contaminated even though we were taking all the precautions.”

It’s an unfortunate example of the ways in which the current COVID crisis has the potential for far reaching and widely divergent effects. For some, the virus presents only passing symptoms (or none at all) for others it has had a major impact on their health and ability to compete. And at its worst, COVID-19 has proven fatal. If not for athletes in the prime of their health, then for those around them.

Conor McGregor sends out SOS to Disney CEO: I’ve asked for ‘four fights since February’

In some ways, Conor McGregor’s relationship with the UFC has never felt more fraught. He’s threatened retirement before, he’s been suspended before, he’s even made a prior run to boxing (one that got the UFC a whole bunch of money in the process). But at this moment, it truly seems that he and Dana White aren’t seeing eye to eye.

“Everybody here knows – even the ladies – this is some man code stuff,” White told the press after UFC 253, when asked about Conor McGregor’s decision to share texts between he and Dana White showing their recent negotiations. “It’s just something you don’t do. It’s one of the dirtiest things you can do.”

McGregor shot back that White broke the code first, “when you lied about me turning down fights,” and now it looks like he’s just hoping to cut the UFC president out of the conversation altogether. The former double-champ released his latest social media screed. While most of it was focused on his missed opportunities to head kick Floyd Mayweather – and plans for fighting Manny Pacquiao – the SBG Ireland talent eventually got around to his current state of affairs with the world’s largest mixed martial arts organization.

“I’d rather fight MMA anyway,” McGregor wrote of his boxing plans, “not sure why I’ve been held back like this, it’s borderline criminal at this stage. The biggest number generator in the game asking for four fights since February this year and getting left on[sic] seen. It’s pretty fucked up when I keep thinking of it. I’ve been right here this whole time.

“Bob Chapek, do you copy!

“I repeat, Bob Chapek – Do You Copy!”

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The very first shot of the fight. Right on the button through the guard. I didn’t even put anything into that shot. Just placed it. It was hard for me not to dwell on the full 12 rounds that were potentially ahead of me and hold back my shots early. Still tho right on the absolute button. The first punch thrown. Remember the experts saying I wouldn’t land even 1 lol. I landed more than them all. The picture above is the very first punch of the fight thrown, and landed, and inside the very first second of the fight. Bums all of them “experts”. Listen to none of them! Really I should have just sat right thru that shot and took his head off and fuck the distance. If it didn’t work out just give him a good boot into the neck and get DQ’d and fined and who’d give a fuck. I’m upset I fully followed the rules for that fight to be honest. Floyd deserved a volley at the least. A shoulder even, break the face. Manny not so much tho I don’t think, but I will see how the build up goes and wait to hear what bitter old Freddie Roach has to say and then make a decision. My Whiskeys at half a b and climbing I could take a fine. I’d rather fight MMA anyway not sure why I’ve been held back like this, it’s borderline criminal at this stage. The biggest number generator in the game asking for four fights since February this year and getting left on seen. It’s pretty fucked up when I keep thinking of it. I’ve been right here this whole time. Bob Chapek, do you copy! I repeat, Bob Chapek – Do You Copy! Anyways boxing it is for now and I’m up for this! I hope no bottling takes place here. I’m already agreeing to these limited rules and holding back my full array of weapons. Let’s get it going guys. Much love, the champ champ

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on

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Chapek is the CEO of the Walt Disney Corporation, having taken over the role from Bob Iger in February of this year. ESPN has been a Disney property since 1996. And while the sports news & broadcasting platform doesn’t have any ownership stake in the UFC, as the promotion’s sole North American broadcast partner, both ESPN & Disney have shown some surprising sway in Dana White’s decision making.

Back in April, amid the early stages of America’s pandemic response Dana White told reporters that he had been forced to ice the UFC’s plans to move their UFC 249 PPV event to tribal lands in California in order to avoid COVID-19 regulations against public gatherings. The reason?

“We got a call from the highest level you can go at Disney, and the highest level of ESPN,” White told ESPN in a brief statement. “And the powers that be there asked me to stand down, and not do this event next Saturday.”

It was a major move from the executive level to steer the promotion’s immediate future. But it seems doubtful that the same kind of effort would be made when it comes to getting Conor McGregor fights. In the meantime, the ‘Notorious’ Irishman has teased a return to boxing and a potential charity showcase rematch against Dustin Poirier. But obviously, those will both depend on what his contract allows.

‘I would literally tear one of your arms off’ – Jon Jones responds to Israel Adesanya

Jon Jones may no longer hold the light heavyweight title, but he appears to be on one or two fighters’ radars following UFC 253. The long-time (and now former) king of the 205 lb division seems to be working his way toward a title shot against Stipe Miocic sometime in the not too distant future; adding muscle and potentially power in his goal to become an instant heavyweight contender.

However, after beating Dominick Reyes in Saturday’s co-main event, Jan Blachowicz had only one question in mind: “Jon Jones where are you?” And he wasn’t the only one on the lookout for ‘Bones.’ With a dominant victory over Paulo Costa fresh under his belt, Israel Adesanya made his own passing shot at the Jackson-Wink talent.

“I just wanted to f-ck up Jon Jones,” Adesanya said, speaking of Anderson Silva’s history of fighting both at middleweight and light heavyweight, “and I still will. But, I’ll just have to talk to Eugene [Bareman], because even he…”

That’s where the video Jones posted to his Instagram feed cuts off. ‘Bones’ may have suggested he’d entertain heading back to 205 to grab his belt “real quick” in a fight against Blachowicz, but his response to Adesanya’s suggested superfight was a lot more forceful.

“BUT what?” Jones wrote alongside the clip from Adesanya’s presser. “You’ve stepped into the ring over 100 times now and you’re still not ready!? You have a youth advantage and like four times the fighting experience. The truth is you’re already my pussy, you love being undefeated and you’ve seen what’s happened to everyone else. It raises your stock to mention my name, you’re aware of this. You don’t want real confrontation with me, I’m not gonna just stand there and kickbox with you. I’ve been preparing for heavyweights, right around now I would literally tear one of your arms off”

For the moment, there seems to be zero chance of a Jones/Adesanya fight anytime soon. Dana White is already on the record backing up the ‘Last Stylebender’’s assertion that Jared Cannonier is next in line if he gets past Robert Whittaker. It appears, however, that if Adesanya ever decides to take a serious look at 205 he’d have an opponent ready and waiting for him.

‘I disapprove 100%’ – After months of bashing Adesanya, Paulo Costa not happy with Izzy’s post-fight antics

For all the trash talk in the build up, the main event of UFC 253 was not a close fight. Israel Adesanya kicked Paulo Costa’s lead leg to pieces on his way to setting up a second round TKO. He landed nearly five-times as many significant strikes as the Brazilian in just under nine minutes of action. Leaving no doubt who the better man was on the night.

And then, just for good measure, Adesanya gave Costa a quick hump.

As the ref pulled the champion off his defeated foe’s prone form, the ‘Last Stylebender’ reached down and gave ‘Borrachinha’’s backside one gentle thrust. A markedly unsportsmanlike gesture that clearly has no place in a sport as hallowed as mixed martial arts. Also one that will be forever enshrined on tape to become highlight fodder all around the internet.

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And although Costa admits he didn’t notice anything in the moment, now that he’s had a little time to go back and check the record, he’s not at all pleased by what he saw.

“I come here to talk about that action that human trash did—the human trash did after a fight,” Costa said in a short video released to social media. “I didn’t see when I was there on the cage, but I saw now. And I disapprove 100%. To me, this is mortal now. Nobody will stop me. Nobody can stop me. [????] I want my rematch. And you know – you know – I am wait for you. Something happened before the fight, I’m not excuse here to my people, my fans, but I will be 100% to fight him, and to make him pay. That’s my words.”

Somewhat surprising words from a fighter who seemed more than happy to play into the weird sexual energy of their fight buildup—going so far as to spread photoshopped pics of Adesanya’s face on Grace Jones’ body, and make various other insinuations that the champ was too femme to face him. Seems Costa was happy enough with the whole dynamic when he imagined himself as the one on top.

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In a separate post, Costa once again referenced some kind of pre-fight incident connected to his performance, but refused to elaborate as to its nature.

“Thank you all the haters too for the messages,” Costa told fans in another Instagram video (translation via MMA Fighting). “To my friends, and also those who aren’t – but especially my friends and those who cheer for me – don’t worry, I’m fine. I already know what happened, I know what was done wrong, and it won’t happen next time. I won’t keep waiting. Some things happens, I had some problems but I won’t give any excuses, ok? The fight is over, he won, but I guarantee you that the next one will be different. Next time I meet him, if he continues the champion, it will be different.”

The 29-year-old Team Borracha fighter went on to say that he and his coaching team have already diagnosed the flaws in their game plan and look forward to bringing the middleweight title back to Brazil “soon.” Until that happens, however, the impression of his first title loss seems likely to linger.

UFC 253: Adesanya vs. Costa – Fights to make

UFC 253 is done and dusted—and as expected, in it’s wake has been left a multitude of story lines and sub-plots. Israel Adesanya has maintained his claim to the crown at 185 lbs with a dominating (and somewhat humiliating) defeat of challenger Paulo Costa. Jan Blachowicz has captured light heavyweight gold at the fine young age of 37. And Brandon Royval has announced himself as flyweight’s newest hot prospect.

So, while Adesanya angles for a fight with Jared Cannonier, what can Costa do to pick up the pieces? Can Jan really carve out a legacy as light heavyweight king in the absence of Jon Jones? And is there any fight too big for Royval at 125 lbs right now?

To answer those questions – and a few other things, too – I’ll be using the classic Silva/Shelby fight booking methodology from the UFC of years past. That means pitting winners against winners, losers against losers, and similarly tenured talent up against one another. Hopefully, by following that model, a few of these bout ideas will actually make it off the page and into the Octagon. Now, let’s get to the fights.

ISRAEL ADESANYA

Even in his mind, I doubt Adesanya could have drawn up a more perfect performance than this. Costa seemed absolutely flummoxed, flabbergasted, frayed, and unfocused in the cage. It was a masterclass of building offense through a command of range and attrition. And it erased any and all doubts I might have had that Adesanya might be a bit easily put off his game by the right kind of bully. Instead, he immediately forced Costa to reckon with damaging low kicks and take chances on creating wild pressure. When Costa wasn’t willing to do that, he just became that much easier to force into guessing what strike was coming when and where. The counter hook that bounced off his temple looked like a shot Costa absolutely never saw.

With that win, Adesanya made his next move pretty clear. There’s a middleweight fight incoming between Robert Whittaker and Jared Cannonier the winner of that likely gets Adesanya next. In the ‘Stylebender’’s own words, it sounds like he’s angling for that “beautiful, beautiful man,” the ‘Killa Gorilla’ to pick up the victory. Even if Cannonier doesn’t, however, I don’t see a bigger fight ready to make right now than a rematch between Whittaker and Adesanya. So, either way it goes, I expect we’ll see Adesanya vs. the Whittaker/Cannonier winner next.

PAULO COSTA

When a fighter talks the talk that Costa does, any failure to walk the walk is only going to seem that much more humiliating. Costa seemed to have fully embraced a sort of ‘beach bully’ mentality over the course of his UFC career to date. And his performance against Romero (even for those who want to credit Romero as having won that fight) appeared to solidify an elite perseverance in that style. No matter how ferocious the opponent, Costa would stand in and try to exert his will. Where that guy was on Saturday night, I have no idea.

Perhaps this was the first time that Costa felt like getting humiliated, himself, was possible? The stakes were too high, the opponent someone he couldn’t stand the thought of losing to? Or maybe he just changed too many things in camp, attempting to reform himself into an elite technician now that he was fighting for the belt? Whatever the cause, once Adesanya got the jump on him, Costa appeared to have no answers. No response to even the first layer of Adesanya’s offense, nevermind the layers he built on top of it.

Fortunately, his fast rise to the belt has left a lot of top 10 competition un-fought in his wake. Bouts against Kelvin Gastelum, Derek Brunson, the loser of Jack Hermansson vs. Darren Till or even someone like Edmen Shahbazyan all have a certain amount of sense to them. Of all those, I think the fight I’d most like to see is Gastelum vs. Costa. Gastelum’s cardio, durability, and southpaw power-punching should make for a wild fight if Costa wants to wade in and pressure him constantly. And if not, both men have the power to make a more cautious fight tense and interesting. Costa vs. Gastelum sounds like a great way to see if ‘Borrachinha’ can recapture the form he had on his way to the belt.

JAN BLACHOWICZ

I can barely believe it. Jan Blachowicz is light heavyweight champ at 37-years-of-age. The former king of KSW entered the UFC with some interest six years ago, and immediately dropped four of his first six Octagon bouts. He’s righted the ship since then, with only one loss in his last nine fights. And now, climbing toward 40, he looks to be in the best form of his career. After his win, he called out Jon Jones, but the former longtime light heavyweight champ seems clearly departed from the division for heavyweight pastures. Instead, the upcoming bout between Glover Teixeira and Thiago Santos looks highly probable to crown the next contender. If it doesn’t, then Aleksandar Rakic may only be a win or so away. But right now, Teixeira vs. Santos is the only fight that looks lined up to give Blachowicz his next clear opponent.

DOMINICK REYES

Reyes got his second straight title fight after arguably beating Jon Jones. But if he had a claim to winning the belt way back in February, he’s got no claim to it now. Blachowicz put the stamp on him with those blitzing combos to pick up the TKO win and take UFC gold home in the process. Which means, after running his way up to title contention, Reyes is gonna have to reassert his bonafides. Fights with Aleksandar Rakic, Jiri Prochazka, or Johnny Walker await if he wants to go winner/loser. And part of me just thinks he should take on the loser of Santos/Teixeira, since those are two men he hasn’t fought before. But with a few young contenders on the rise looking for bouts, why not mix things up a little. Dominick Reyes vs. Aleksandar Rakic seems like a great fight to put Rakic in contention, or give Reyes a path back to it.

BRANDON ROYVAL

Royval is looking like something seriously special at flyweight, and putting off some strong WEC Anthony Pettis vibes in the process. A relentelessly creative, dangerous striker with a nasty, hair trigger sub game on the mats. Kara-France was basically in defensive mode from moment one of their bout. The Kiwi still got his licks in, but Royval just forced him into too many mistakes. The moment Kara-France decided he needed to shoot in, he paid for it badly. Given Kara-France’s ranking, that lines Royval up for something big next. With Pantoja, Benavidez, and Formiga all coming off losses, how about Brandon Royval vs. Askar Askarov? After all, it’s not like Askarov has a whole lot more UFC experience to laud over him. Royval has announced himself, time to see how far he can go. If that fight won’t work, then a bout against Alexandre Pantoja is a surefire banger even as a winner/loser scrap.

KETLEN VIEIRA

On paper this matchup looked a lot kinder for Vieira than it ended up being in reality. Eubanks did well to go to the body, and Vieira looked a bit shook on the feet after getting KO’d hard her last time out. Still Vieira’s size and pace were just too much for the first couple rounds and picked up the win for her. That should lead directly to a fight with Raquel Pennington. A victory in that bout and Vieira’s path to title contention is back on track. Lose it and she’s once again treading water in the middle of the division. Raquel Pennington vs. Ketlen Vieira is the right next fight for the Brazilian if the UFC wants to push her as a contender any time in the near future.

HAKEEM DAWODU

A reasonable enough fight from Dawodu here on his way to a split decision win, but also just a miserable fight from Tukhugov—who must have been especially mislead as to the scores to coast out the third round the way he did. Dawodu picked more targets, landed more often, and simply outpaced the Chechen. Fights with Grant Dawson, Movsar Evloev, and Makwan Amirkhani would all be solid next steps. Of those, I think the Evloev fight makes the most sense. yeah it’s not a huge step up for Dawodu, but Evloev is a real challenge and would add to ‘Mean’ Hakeem’s ever growing resume. A good step up for Movsar Evloev, and another hard challenge for Dawodu. A great test for both men.

JAKE MATTHEWS

It was a dominating win from Matthews, but not quite the powerful performance it seems like he could have had. Notably, when he hurt Sanchez early in round 3, he spent most of the rest of the round just struggling with Sanchez’s guard on the mat, when he could have clearly stood up and done a lot more by forcing Sanchez back to his feet. Still, the win leaves Matthews on a 3-0 run with his only welterweight loss coming to Anthony Rocco Martin. Time for another bout against a quality action fighter scraping the edges of the top 15; someone like Belal Muhammad, Tim Means, or Alex Oliveira. Of those, a booking against Belal Muhammad seems like the most reasonable matchup of mid-card welterweight action fighters really looking to separate themselves from the rest of the division.

L’UDOVIT KLEIN

Klein walks out of this card as one of the night’s big winners, even with his serious weight miss. He looked phenomenal against a very game Shane Young in his Octagon debut, picking up a quick KO to leave no question that he’s got some real striking talent. That should throw him right into the pack of fun action-oriented featherweights looking to scale the ladder at 145. People like Billy Quarantillo, Movsar Evloev, or Lerone Murphy. I know Murphy seemed like he was eyeing that performance, and I’d love to see that bout, but what about a fight with Gavin Tucker. Tucker’s another fantastic striker who nonetheless has had some defensive struggles with power punchers willing to stand in and throw back at him. He’s also had a pretty decent takedown game when he’s needed it, something that’s troubled Klein in the past. Tucker vs. Klein seems like a surefire action bout in the featherweight division.

OTHER BOUTS: Kai Kara-France vs. Jussier Formiga, Sijara Eubanks vs. Lina Lansberg, Zubaira Tukhugov vs. Ricardo Ramos, Brad Riddell vs. Rafael Fiziev, Alex da Silva vs. Alex Munoz, Shane Young vs. Matt Sayles, William Knight vs. Jamahal Hill, Aleksa Camur vs. Dalcha Lungiambula, Juan Espino vs. Aspinal/Spivak Winner, Jeff Hughes vs. Philipe Lins, Danilo Marques vs. Kennedy Nzechukwu, Khadis Ibragimov vs. Nick Negumereanu

Report: Glover Teixeira vs. Thiago Santos back on for November 7th UFC Fight Night

It looks like the UFC isn’t about to give up on their planned light heavyweight top contender’s tilt between Glover Teixeira and Thiago Santos. The bout, originally set for September 12th was originally delayed due to a positive COVID-19 test from Glover Teixeira just over a week out from fight night.

Along with the announcement of Teixeira’s positive test, the UFC re-booked the bout for October 3rd on the upcoming Holm vs. Aldana Fight Night card. Unfortunately, that plan also had to be cancelled. This time because Santos tested positive for COVID-19.

ESPN reports that the UFC has been less hasty this time around in booking Santos vs. Texieira, waiting more than a week following the announcement of Santos’ test before lining up the fight once more. The promotion also pushed the bout out a full month from its last scheduled event, rather than the 3 weeks they planned after Texiera’s test.

Santos enters this fight after more than a year’s layoff, having suffered a complete wrecking of his left knee in his (controversially) failed bid to capture Jon Jones’ title in July of 2019. Heading into this fight with Jones, ‘Maretta’ was on a 4-fight win streak, fresh off a KO of Jan Blachowicz in the main event of UFC on ESPN+ 3.

For Teixeira, his bout with Santos represents what could be a return to title contention for the 40-year-old former Chuck Liddell training partner. Teixeira challenged Jon Jones for the light heavyweight title way back in 2014, in just his 6th bout with UFC. While he’s had a few setbacks in the years since, the Brazilian has remained a constant presence in the light heavyweight top-ten picture. Most recently he’s put together a 4-fight win streak, including a shockingly brutal 5th round TKO of Anthony Smith just back in May of this year. A win over Santos just might make him next in line for the winner of the upcoming fight for Jon Jones’ vacated belt.

The UFC’s November 7th Fight Night event has yet to have an officially announced location, although expectations are that it will take place at the Apex facility in Las Vegas, NV. The UFC also has yet to announce an official main event for the card, although Santos vs. Teixeira seems likely to grab that honor, as it was originally scheduled to headline at it’s first September booking.

Report: Robbie Lawler vs. Mike Perry on tap for UFC 255

Robbie Lawler’s recent UFC run has been a less than graceful fall from the kind of form that once saw him capture and twice defend the UFC’s welterweight title. Stretching back to 2017, Lawler has now lost four straight fights. And while his loss to Askren came with a touch of controversy, his defeats at the hands of Rafael Dos Anjos, Colby Covington, and most recently Neil Magny have all been far more definitive.

Still, even at a low ebb in his professional career, there’s at least one fight that garnered some fan interest following Lawler’s latest setback. A surefire slobber-knocker against Mike Perry. For fans hoping to see ‘Ruthless’ Bob get one more chance to regain the violenceweight world title, it looks like they’re getting their wish.

ESPN reports that the welterweight donnybrook is currently expected for the upcoming November UFC 255 PPV event. That card is set to be headlined by a flyweight title fight between champion Deiveson Figueiredo and former bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt—making his debut in the 125 lb division. Also atop the billing is a women’s flyweight title fight between Valentina Shevchenko and Jennifer Maia.

Perry enters this bout fresh off a victory over Mickey Gall. His first fight under a new coaching team, Perry leaned heavily on his wrestling and grappling games against Gall to pull out the decision. Prior to that win, Perry dropped fights against Vicente Luque and Geoff Neal—the latter via head kick TKO.

No location has been officially announced for the November 21st fight card. Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for more news and updates on the event as it approaches.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC 253: Adesanya vs. Costa picks, odds, & analysis

It’s finally time for another big ‘stacked’ UFC PPV card. The headline bout of UFC 253, between Paulo Costa and Israel Adesanya is a real thriller that should offer wall-to-wall action of the very highest order. The co-main event between Dominick Reyes and Jan Blachowicz may not have the big name value fans want out of a light heavyweight title fight, but I expect it to be a technical, persistent rage striking battle between two men with light heavyweight firepower. Throw some Kai Kara-France, Ketlen Vieira, and Hakeem Dawodu vs. Zubaira Tukhugov in there and the whole thing spells violence.

For those who want to dive deeper into the undercard, check out the Prelims Vivi below.

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Here’s a look at how the UFC 253 card stacks up right now:

PPV MAIN CARD | 10pm/7pm ET&PT
Israel Adesanya vs. Paulo Costa – At 3:51, Odds 30:28, Picks, Both – Costa
Dominick Reyes vs. Jan Blachowicz – At 31:15, Odds 40:12, Picks, Both – Reyes
Kai Kara-France vs. Brandon Royval – At 41:04, Odds 50:40, Picks, Both – Kara-France
Kelten Vieira vs. Sijara Eubanks – At 52:02, Odds 55:55, Picks, Both – Vieira
Hakeem Dawodu vs. Zubaira Tukhugov – At 56:11, Odds , Picks, Zane – Dawodu / Connor – Tukhugov

ESPN2 PRELIMS | 7pm/4pm ET&PT
Brad Riddell vs. Alex da Silva – At 1:51, Odds 11:55, Picks, Both – Riddell
Diego Sanchez vs. Jake Matthews – At 12:25, Odds 16:56, Picks, Both – Matthews
Shane Young vs. L’udovit Klein – At 18:16, Odds 30:33, Picks, Both – Klein
William Knight vs. Aleksa Camur – At 31:05, Odds 39:46, Picks, Both – Camur
Jeff Hughes vs. Juan Espino – At 40:23, Odds 44:06, Picks, Both – Espino
Khadis Ibragimov vs. Danilo Marques – At 44:30, Odds 48:58, Picks, Both – Ibragimov

For those of you following the picks made on the show, we started tracking them with the July 13th Vivi for ‘Kattar vs. Ige’, so far the standings are: Zane is now 73/110 & Connor is now 75/110 – last week Zane went 9 out of 11 & Connor went 8 out of 11, unfortunately we had a draw and a cancellation they made picks for that did not count when the card was finalized.

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 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.