‘I’ve fought like this before’ – Dillashaw claims similar injuries in Garbrandt bouts after UFC 280 disaster

Is TJ Dillashaw trying to have his cake and eat it too? Both the fighter and the UFC have claimed that his shoulder injury was kept secret from the organization ahead of Dillashaw’s disastrous showing against Aljamain Sterling at UFC 280 on October 22nd.

The former bantamweight champion was notably absent during open workouts, and even his opponent had to note Dillashaw’s lack of footage for the event’s series of ‘Embedded’ video blogs. That may have all been down to careful camp management, but in a recent interview with ESPN the Huntington Beach Ultimate Training Center athlete looked to downplay criticism he’s received from fans and fighters for hiding the severity of his problems—noting that he’s fought, and won, with his shoulders in a similar state before.

“I’ve fought like this before,” Dillashaw admitted (transcript via MMA Fighting). “I knocked out Cody Garbrandt twice with two blown-out shoulders. My shoulders were both dislocating for that Garbrandt fight. Before that first Garbrandt fight, I tore my left shoulder on The Ultimate Fighter doing the coaches challenge. We were playing tetherball on the balance beam, and I fell off and tried to catch myself and hurt my shoulder. In that fight camp, I dislocated my shoulder a good 10-15 times. … It hurt and affected my grappling, but what was I going to do, not take the fight? I wanted to get my title back. Kind of the same situation I’m in now.

“Look, I believe I’m the best in the world, so I want to get my belt back and do these things before I go and get my body fixed. Because if you get your shoulder fixed, you’re out for a year and you’re never guaranteed to be back. … So this isn’t new. I’ve fought in this situation before. I needed surgery, but it was something I wasn’t willing to do yet. I’d think about that when I got my belt back.”

The 36-year-old went on to explain that his apology wasn’t intended to cast blame on himself for intentionally deceiving fans and fighters, but rather “I apologized for the situation.” He also noted that—despite months of knowing he was injured—Dillashaw didn’t consider withdrawing from the bout until just three weeks before fight night, as the severity of the injury increased.

“It was hard to decide so far out, because it wasn’t as bad,” Dillashaw explained. “As I got closer and I’m three weeks out, it’s like, ‘Man, this isn’t looking good.’ I’m three weeks out, now I’m going to ruin the whole card. It’s like damned if you do, damned if you don’t. Say I’m two weeks out and I say my shoulder is too bad, then I’m going to get so much sh-t for pulling out of the fight, to where if I pulled out way in advance, that’s not the end of the world, but my shoulder wasn’t that bad then. It’s a culmination of things that happened that really led to that situation.”

Also of note, Dillashaw revealed in the interview that he was diagnosed with “a torn supraspinatus and infraspinatus in his left shoulder” early in 2022. So while he may have been hiding his injury from the UFC’s medical team, it wasn’t kept entirely in the training room. At this point it sounds like he’ll be spending significant time on the sidelines once again as he looks to undergo surgery. If fans hope to see the longtime Duane Ludwig protege back in the Octagon again, they may be waiting until sometime in 2024.

“I’m not done,” Dillashaw claimed. “You guys will see me again. There’s no way I’d go out like that, and if I come back, I’ll get back to the top.”

The MMA Vivisection – UFC Vegas 63: Allen vs. Kattar picks, odds, & analysis

As is so often the case with the UFC, a major PPV binge is getting followed by a bit of a hangover from the promotion’s matchmakers. Arnold Allen vs. Calvin Kattar is a great main event fight. After that, it’s hard to find another fighter ranked near the top of their division, let alone carefully booked bouts.

For fans interested in diving into a very thin undercard, check out the Prelims Vivi below.

June M. Williams

The MMA Vivisection is brought to you by ‘The Fine Art of Violence’, a collection of art and essays recapping the year in MMA by Chris Rini, featuring the most talented artists and writers in Mixed Martial Arts. The book is available in both hard copy and digital formats at chrisrini.com.

Here’s a look at the UFC Vegas 63 fight card as it stood at the time of recording:

ESPN+ MAIN CARD | 7pm/4pm ET&PT
Calvin Kattar vs. Arnold Allen — At 6:09, Odds 29:26, Picks, Both: Allen
Max Griffin vs. Tim Means At 32:43, Odds 46:46, Picks, Zane: Griffin, Connor: Means
Jared Vanderaa vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta At 47:02, Odds 50:34, Picks, Both: Cortes-Acosta
Josh Fremd vs. Tresean Gore At 50:49, Odds 55:54, Picks, Both: Fremd
Dustin Jacoby vs. Khalil Rountree Jr. — At 57:37, Odds 1:07:15, Picks, Both: Jacoby

ESPN+ PRELIMS | 4pm/1pm ET&PT
Phil Hawes vs. Roman Dolidze At 0:47, Odds 16:29, Picks, Both: Hawes
Andrei Arlovski vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima At 16:42, Odds 27:41, Picks, Both: Lima
Jun-yong Park vs. Joseph Holmes At 28:16, Odds 32:51, Picks, Both: Park
Chase Hooper vs. Steve Garcia At 33:06, Odds 37:39, Picks, Both: Hooper
Carlos Mota vs. Cody Durden At 37:51, Odds 45:40, Picks, Zane: Mota, Connor: Durden
Christian Rodriguez vs. Joshua Weems — At 46:18, Odds 52:10, Picks, Both: Weems

For those of you following the picks made on the show, we started tracking them with the July 13th, 2020 Vivisection shows for UFC Fight Island 1: ‘Kattar vs. Ige’. So far, here are the overall standings:

  • For our last event, UFC 280: Oliveira vs. Makhachev: Zane went 9/12 for 75%, while Connor went 8/12 for 66.7% as well
  • Overall from UFC Fight Island 1 through UFC 280: Zane is now at 752/1158 for 65% and Connor is now at 705/1158 for 60.9%
  • So far, in 2022: Zane is at 282/421 for 67% and Connor is at 263/421 for 62.5%
  • 2021: Zane went 305/493 for 62% and Connor went 285/493 for 58%
  • July-Dec 2020: Zane went 164/244 for 67% and Connor went 157/244 for 64%
  • Reference: Vivi Picks Stats_10.27.22.pdf

If you enjoy our variety of shows, give us a shout out in the comments here on Bloody Elbow, and give us a “like”, share & subscribe on your BE Presents Podcast platform of choice: SoundCloud, YouTube, Apple Podcasts, iHeartRadio, Stitcher, Spotify, TuneIn, OverCast, Player FM, & Amazon Music – For previous episodes, check out our playlists on any of our BE Presents channels. Check out the new MMA Vivi Facebook Page, where the shows always drop an hour earlier than they do anywhere else on the network, be sure to “Like”, Follow, Share — At: https://www.facebook.com/TheMMAVivi.


Official UFC Vegas 63 Fight Night Poster featuring Calvin Katter vs Arnold Allen

Live! Stream UFC Vegas 63 on ESPN+

FEATHERWEIGHT SHOWDOWN — Calvin Kattar vs. Arnold Allen – OCT 29: Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) returns to the UFC Apex Facility in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday, October 29th, 2022, with a thrilling 145lb Featherweight top contenders brawl between No 6 division ranked, Calvin Kattar (23-6) who looks to stop the rise of his No. 7 division ranked foe, ‘Almighty’ Arnold Allen (18-1). In UFC Vegas 63’s co-main event, hard-hitting Welterweights go to war when Max ‘Pain’ Griffin meets up with fellow fight veteran, Tim ‘The Dirty Bird’ Means. Plus — Dustin ‘The Hanyak’ Jacoby vs Khalil ‘The War Horse’ Rountree, Waldo ‘Salsa Boy’ Cortes-Acosta vs Jared ‘The Mountain’ Vanderaa, Tresean ‘Mr Vivious’ Gore vs Josh ‘The Big Yinz’ Fremd & Andrei ‘The Pitbull’ Arlovski vs Marcos ‘Pezão’ Rogério de Lima all on this Fight Night card! Tune-in for a stacked 11-bout event…

Don’t miss a single second of face-punching action!

‘This guy may want to look at something different’ – DC says Petr Yan thinking about UFC exit

Don’t leave it in the hands of the judges. It’s a phrase that’s been repeated so often as to become cliche in the MMA world. In a sport with few rules and many, many options for generating offense, traditional scoring methods have a way of feeling even more subjective than they do in other combat sports. Even what seem to be clear decision wins have a way of getting confused and becoming split decision losses.

The latest point of controversy to darken the UFC’s Octagon came last Saturday, October 22nd in Abu Dhabi, when top-ranked bantamweight contender Petr Yan took on rising star Sean O’Malley. Both men traded serious blows over three close rounds, with many feeling that Petr Yan’s wrestling and control were enough to sway the cards in his favor. Only, when the scores were read, judges didn’t see it that way. Sean O’Malley walked out with the biggest win of his career to date, and the Russian was left with yet another controversial disappointment.

After the bout, Yan took to Twitter to air his frustrations with officials, the message couldn’t have been more simple: “F-ck the judges.” It turns out, however, that Yan’s displeasure may run deeper than a single social media outburst. In a recent episode of his DC & RC show for ESPN, former UFC champion and current commentary member Daniel Cormier revealed some inside info that he’s been privy to.

“A little ‘inside baseball’,” Cormier said, prefacing the rumor he’d heard. “Petr Yan is so disappointed in this decision—Petr Yan is so disappointed in the decision against Aljo, that I’m hearing word that this guy may want to look at something different down the line in terms of his career. Because he just does not feel like, maybe, the organization doesn’t have his back. It’s crazy.”

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How exactly Yan might go about exiting the UFC remains to be seen. Back in January, following his decision win over Cory Sandhagen to capture the interim bantamweight title, Yan revealed that he had just signed a new six-fight contract extension with the world’s largest MMA organization. Since making that deal, Yan has competed twice, losing his title unification bid against Aljamain Sterling before this latest setback against O’Malley.

That’s not to say the UFC absolutely wouldn’t let Yan go, they’ve come to deals before with the likes of Kyoji Horiguchi, Nikita Krylov, and their infamous trade of Demetrious Johnson for Ben Askren. But it seems like a long shot that the Endeavor-owned company would be all that willing to part with a talent of Yan’s caliber in the prime of his career.

‘I’m preparing to fight Stipe’ – Jon Jones says he’s still training for UFC 282 on Dec. 10th

The top of the UFC heavyweight division remains an unending enigma. Francis Ngannou, Jon Jones, Stipe Miocic; the UFC has a trio of notable stars that could make for a variety of high-profile PPV headlining fights. When any of them will actually step in the cage again is anyone’s guess.

Fans had looked to be getting some answer to that question earlier in October, when rumors surfaced that the UFC was planning a bout between Jones and Miocic to headline UFC 282 later this year. Unfortunately that fight seems less and less likely by the day.

In fact, in a press release on October 25th the UFC announced that a light heavyweight title rematch between Jiri Prochazka and Glover Teixeira has now been declared the main event for December 10th.

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The timing couldn’t be rougher for Jones, who took to Twitter earlier that same day to announce that he was still preparing to fight Miocic on the last UFC PPV of the year. From the sound of things, that puts the holdup for the fight on the Miocic side of things.

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When rumors of Miocic vs. Jones first started circulating, MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani noted that if the UFC couldn’t get the two men in the cage for December the promotion might move on to a potential bout between Jones and Ngannou for sometime in the spring of 2023.

Of course, any potential movement on that fight could only come after the UFC comes to a contract agreement with their heavyweight champion first. Until that happens it seems the heavyweight title picture will remain as muddled as ever.

‘Let’s trade concussions for cash’ – Admittedly ‘bitter’ Dan Hardy goes off on Dana White’s slap fights

Dan Hardy’s relationship with the UFC, and its president Dana White, has seemingly been in free-fall for a while now. The former title contender and broadcast team member was unceremoniously released from the world’s largest MMA promotion back in the spring of 2021—following reports of a dust-up between Hardy and another UFC employee.

In the time since, the ‘Outlaw’ hasn’t shied away from critiquing his ex-employer, even going so far as to suggest that White staged his concern for featherweight contender Calvin Kattar in a ‘behind the scenes’ mini-doc including footage from Kattar’s 2021 bout against Max Holloway. The accusation didn’t go unnoticed by the UFC boss, who fired back at Hardy during a recent press conference—calling the ex-welterweight “obviously bitter,” and telling reporters that Hardy “was mistreating a woman who worked here.”

In a new UFC 280 post-event video blog, Hardy addressed White’s comments, admitting that while he is a “little bitter” it’s “unbelievable” that the promoter would frame the circumstances of his firing from the UFC as “mistreating a woman.”

Hardy then took aim at White’s newest business venture, which recently got cleared for regulation by the Nevada Athletic Commision: Dana White’s Power Slap League. White, Lorenzo Fertitta, and several other longtime UFC & Ultimate Fighter execs have teamed up to create a new TV show around the cult combat sports sensation. One that Hardy was quick to remind listeners is essentially just a ticket to unchecked brain damage.

“I know what we’ll do,” Hardy joked of White’s Power Slap League (transcript via MMA Fighting). “We love our athletes, we care about them so much, let’s start a f-cking slap fight league. Let’s trade concussions for cash. I mean, c’mon. And you’re going to advertise that to me while I’m trying to watch MMA, while I’m trying to watch my sport? C’mon. Say one thing, do another. Say one thing, talk some sh-t, do another. It’s the same pattern, over and over again.”

“How did that become a thing?” Hardy added. “I wonder, back in the old MMA days, if anybody was watching MMA and feeling like I do about slap fighting now, because I’m sure they did. I had a long conversation with somebody about, ‘Oh it’s this and that, it’s human cockfighting.’ But I can’t, for the life of me, understand the endeavor of slap fighting, aside from to make a bit of cash and get some [followers] for your Instagram. It’s cashing in on f-cking brain trauma.”

Hardy’s MMA career was sidelined in 2012 following a diagnosis of an irregular heartbeat, stemming from Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome. The 40-year-old has regularly talked of making a return to competition over the last decade, with talks for a boxing match against Tyron Woodley late last year (a fight that reportedly fell apart when the ‘Chosen One’ stepped in for a rematch with Jake Paul instead).

Following Woodley’s 6th round KO loss to Paul, the former UFC champion stated that he’d prefer an MMA bout against Hardy to another boxing contest. However, talk of the potential fight has largely died away in the months since.

Bryce Mitchell set to face Ilia Topuria at UFC 282

If everything had fallen the way it was supposed to, Bryce Mitchell would have been stepping in the cage in a little less than two weeks’ time. ‘Thug Nasty’ had been set to tangle with fellow rising featherweight star Movsar Evloev in the main event of UFC Vegas 64 at the Apex facility on November 5th. At least that was the plan right up until Evloev had to pulled from the bout due to injury.

Shortly after Evloev’s withdrawal, Ilia Topuria stepped up to the plate to offer himself as a replacement. There was just one problem, it seems that despite Topuria’s offer (and thirst traps), he couldn’t actually make the featherweight limit.

“I just wanna update y’all with some fight news,” Mitchell told fans in a self recorded video for his social media accounts on October 17th. “To the best of my knowledge, Ilia Topuria has not accepted the fight, as of now. So, they’re moving on, looking for other opponents. That’s to the best of my knowledge. I don’t really know. Maybe in a couple days he’ll change his mind. But, I hear that Ilia is now saying that he can’t make the weight, which is crazy, because he was supposed to fight the week before.”

Topuria denied that narrative, calling Mitchell a “piece of shit! Coward and liar!” Whatever the truth of the situation it seems the fight is now back on track, just kicked a few more weeks down the line. Mitchell and Topuria have both confirmed a report from Eurosport Nederland’s Marcel Dorff, that the two men will face off at UFC 282 on December 10th.

Unbeaten in his pro career, Mitchell will enter the fight with a shiny 15-0 record alongside six victories inside the Octagon. Back in March the Arkansas native defeated former top-ranked lightweight competitor Edson Barboza at UFC 272.

For his part, Topuria will also enter the bout with a spotless MMA career to date, sitting comfortably at 12-0. Topuria made his UFC debut back in 2020 against Youssef Zalal, and followed that decision win up with knockout victories over Damon Jackson, Ryan Hall, and Jai Herbert. Topuria last competed up in the lightweight division after being removed from an expected January contest against Charles Jourdain, following weight cut complications. Despite the trouble on the scales, ‘El Matador’ has seemed confident he can make the drop down to 145 lbs again.

UFC 282 is expected to be headlined by a light heavyweight title rematch between Jiri Prochazka and Glover Teixeira. A bout between former champ Jan Blachowicz and top contender Magomed Ankalaev is currently set for the co-main event.

‘Aim to head butt the chest cavity’ – Conor McGregor advises Volkanovski on lightweight move

Never one to stay out of drama around the lightweight title picture, former two-division champion Conor McGregor was quick to insert himself in the discourse following Islam Makhachev’s victory over Charles Oliveira and the UFC’s quickly announced plans that the next title shot would be going to Alexander Volkanovski.

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‘The Notorious’ 34-year-old hasn’t been seen in the Octagon since a pair of 2021 losses to Dustin Poirier, the second of which involved a brutal leg break and months of rehab. Although it seems McGregor should be nearly back to full strength, there’s no telling when he might get back in the cage—with a movie project and a return to the USADA testing pool firmly between him and fighting at the moment. All facts that didn’t escape Volkanovski’s attention in a response to McGregor’s social media post.

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That must have struck a chord with McGregor, who quickly responded that he was “just watching and monitoring” and that he was really “happy for” Volkanovski and his opportunity to gain a second title. In fact, McGregor was so thrilled for Volkanovski’s upcoming bout against Makhachev that he took it up on himself to offer some advice on how the Aussie should approach his move up to lightweight.

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Volkanovski vs. Makhachev hasn’t been made official yet, but the bout is currently planned for UFC 284 in Perth, Australia, on February 12th at the RAC Arena. A middleweight top contender’s fight between Robert Whittaker and Paulo Costa is also expected for the PPV card.

‘There’s a higher power fully guiding my boxing career’ – Watch Jake Paul vs. Anderson Silva: All Access

The UFC has a Fight Night card going down this Saturday, Bellator is on the calendar as well. Katie Taylor returns to the ring for the first time since her split decision victory over Amanda Serrano in what was considered one of the highest profile women’s boxing fights of all time. But, the most notable event in the combat sports world, by far, belongs to a bout of little real consequence.

Jake Paul looks to continue his immensely popular celebrity boxing career this weekend, against former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva. There will be no titles on the line, there will be no stakes beyond pride. Both men will likely immediately move on to other notable celebrity fights once this bout is done. But it will absolutely command attention across the MMA and boxing worlds alike.

“I believe there’s a higher power, fully guiding my boxing career,” Paul explained in the intro to Showtime’s All Access: Paul vs. Silva show. “What I’m doing for the sport of boxing? The universe wants it to continue. Because the sport needs it and I think the youth—the next generation of kids—need this.

“Chosen, is a kinda, like, a narcissistic word, maybe? But, yeah, I definitely feel like what I’m doing has a much higher purpose than what I even understand at the moment. And I don’t feel like this is just for Jake Paul to go knock people out.

“Everything happens for a reason. The Haseem fight could have happened. And maybe that meant that people weren’t interested in it. Maybe the universe was like, ‘Ah, let’s not do this. Let’s go to the biggest fight possible: Anderson Silva.’ I think the universe is working in my favor.”

The video gives fans a behind the scenes look not just at the training camps of both men, but behind the scenes for media engagements, and some of the buildup and fallout for recent bouts for both fighters—including Paul vs. Woodley and Silva vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

“I don’t need to prove nothing for anybody,” Anderson Silva said of his reasons for taking the fight with Paul. “The fight with Jake, is a fight.”

“Everybody talking about, ‘Oh, he’s young and this is very dangerous fight?’” The 47-year-old revealed. “I do this for a very long time in my life. My entire life. Doesn’t matter your age. Age is not youth.”

“Absolutely. Of course,” Silva concluded when asked if he’d win. As for whether he’d knock Paul out? “Maybe” was as far as the ‘Spider’ was willing to go.

Paul vs. Silva takes place on October 29th at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, AZ. THe bout will be available on Showtime PPV, starting at 9pm ET/6pm PT. Alongside the 187 lb main event, the card will also play host to the boxing debut of former UFC middleweight Uriah Hall, taking on former Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell in a cruiserweight contest.

UFC 280: Oliveira vs. Makhachev – Fights to make

UFC 280 was a fascinating card. In the main event, Islam Makhachev made a difinitive statement, that he’s the best lightweight in the world today, with a second round submission of Charles Oliveira. The co-main event was nothing short of a sham, with TJ Dillashaw showing up in no condition at all to fight Aljamain Sterling. And questions about with Sean O’Malley’s split decision win over Petr Yan in an absolute thriller of a contest.

So, does Alexander Volkanovski have a chance in hell against the new king at 155 lbs? Did O’Malley do enough to get the title shot Dana White promised? And is there any way that the UFC rewards Belal Muhammad for his continued string of top-flight victories?

To answer those questions—and a whole lot more—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!

ISLAM MAKHACHEV

Those who doubted Islam Makhachev’s resume and skills heading into Saturday night looked pretty foolish pretty fast. The longtime heir apparent to Khabib Nurmagomedov’s throne finally ascended on Saturday night, with a dominating second round submission win over Charles Oliveira. And not only did he have no trouble hanging with the Brazilian submission ace on the mats, he was laser focused with his heavy-handed counter-punching game as well—catching ‘Do Bronx’ time and time again as he stepped into the pocket to initiate offense. A masterful victory for the Dagestani, and one that has all the appearances of a long reign atop the lightweight division.

Teased ahead of the fight—with Alexander Volkanovski flying out to the event to serve as ‘backup’, in case of last minute weight or injury shenanigans—the UFC already has their next title challenger ready. Volkanovski was escorted into the cage after Makhachev’s win, where both fighters agreed to meet with the lightweight title on the line at UFC 284 in Perth, Australia. 23-1 squares off against 25-1 in a battle for top pound-for-pound supremacy. Volkanovski vs. Makhachev should be awesome.

CHARLES OLIVEIRA

Barely recovered from his loss, Charles Oliveira was quick to reassure fans that he would hold lightweight gold once again. Based on what we just saw, beating Makhachev will be no easy task. But with wins already over Poirier, Gaethje, and Chandler, if anyone has the inside track on a quick return to contendership, it’s the 33-year-old Chute Boxe talent. I’ve made a case further down for Dariush vs. Gaethje (and I’m averse to matching guys from the same card), but a fight between Dariush and ‘Do Bronx’ would also be an excellent next bout since Dariush himself seems out of the immediate title conversation.

Even though Dana White finally let slip that Conor McGregor needs six months of USADA testing before he can take his next fight, that’s a bout that Oliveira seems likely to find himself eyeing as well. And there’s always Rafael Fiziev out there as a dark horse. Given all the options, I’ll say the UFC should go with Oliveira vs. the Poirier/Chandler winner. Both those men want to compete for gold again, both have a loss to avenge, both would make for thrilling fights. Feels like a rematch here, whoever the winner might be, would be a great way for someone to make the best argument for another chance at a UFC belt.

ALJAMAIN STERLING

After an absolutely crushing (and injury tainted) victory over TJ Dillashaw, Aljamain Sterling had a whole bunch of callouts ready; “Henry Ce-doo-doo,” “Sugar Tits,” “Chito Dorito”—all of them can get it, apparently. Considering that Cejudo still hasn’t actually returned from retirement (and more recently sounded less intrested in a comeback than he has in quite a while), then we’re really just looking at Vera and O’Malley. There’s Dvalishvili too, but Sterling has said in the past that he’d move to featherweight before fighting his teammate (an offer notably not made after this latest title defense). My guess is that the UFC plows ahead with the O’Malley vs. Sterling fight that they had all ready to go. At this moment that seems like the biggest bout to make in the bantamweight division.

TJ DILLASHAW

An absolute, unmitigated disaster for TJ Dillashaw, who revealed shortly after the brutal loss that his shoulder has been badly injured for the last six months and that he was just hoping to push through the injury all the way through the title bout. From the very first takedown entry though, his left shoulder dislocated. He made it to the bell and got it back in place, but it dislocated again immediately in round 2. Shortly afterward, Sterling picked up the GnP TKO.

A fight that honestly shouldn’t have happened and should have been cancelled the moment officials were informed of the injury before the bout. There’s a reason that the UFC puts two title fights on a card, it’s so they can afford to lose one and still have a strong PPV. This was that time. Whenever he returns, assuming he does, then a Dominick Cruz rematch seems like a fight that should have happened five years ago. Cruz vs. Dillashaw 2 is still a lot of fun, if Dillashaw is ever ready to go again.

SEAN O’MALLEY

Whether or not fans feel Sean O’Malley won this fight, this was an a fantastic performance for him and speaks volumes for his potential as a title challenger. He took all the best that Yan had to offer and answered with powerful offense of his own every time. He hurt Yan at multiple points during the fight, did well to fight off takedowns and fight his way up when he did hit the ground. It was a consummate showing and one that should allay any criticism of O’Malley as a frontrunner. Yan had him in serious trouble and he rallied hard to convince judges that he won.

After the bout, ‘Sugar’ was anything other than his usual brash self, however. He sounded like he had been through hell and was as surprised as anyone to get the win for it. Will he be the next title challenger, as advertised? Probably. If not, however, then a fight with Cory Sandhagen or a Marlon Vera rematch would both be must see. O’Malley’s likely headed for the belt, but there are plenty of great fights for him to take if not.

PETR YAN

Yan had the gameplan set to win rounds. Heavy strikes, mixed right into takedowns and ground and pound. There’s a reasonable argument (at least to me) that he could have taken all three frames against O’Malley. But, he got hurt, bad, a couple of times along the way. Anytime that happens, there’s no guarantee at all that judges are going to credit your own violence and offensive success more than the shots you’ve taken. O’Malley was out there landing heavy leather. Even if Yan was putting it back on him, he was taking a lot of big shots to do it. With that out of the way, there’s only one clear fight for Petr Yan right now, and that’s against Marlon Vera. Vera vs. Yan would be a legendary battle. Just make sure it’s five rounds in a fight night headliner. We deserve it.

BENEIL DARIUSH

An absolutely perfect fight from Beneil Dariush. Gamrot came out looking to put the pace on the 33-year-old with his takedowns and scrambles, but Dariush stayed with him every step of the way landing the heavier shots and jumping on sub opportunities whenever he could. The result—surprisingly, given the ‘Gamer’’s cardio credentials—was that Gamrot’s wrestling game only got less effective as the fight went on. Dariush shut him down over and over in prolonged takedown attempts and made him pay standing with heavy leather. All of which led to a commanding win for the longtime Kings MMA product.

At some point he really should be in title contention, but without a lot of fan hype or interest, it feels like the UFC will always have one more option to go to first. To his credit, Dariush seems to know it, and said he’d win another 10 straight if that’s what it took to get UFC gold. With Volkanovski next in line and a willingness to fight all comers, fights with Rafael Fiziev and Justin Gaethje both seem like must make contests. Just the idea of Gaethje vs. Dariush seems like too much fun to refuse.

MANON FIOROT

Even Manon Fiorot seemed to know that she didn’t look like a title contender against Katlyn Chookagian. She did enough to get by the ‘Blonde Fighter’, which is a task more than a few potential prospects have failed to complete. But it was the kind of narrow, sticky, back-and-forth striking battle that saw neither woman clearly separate themselves as a cut above. After the bout, Fiorot suggested she’d probably need to take at least one more fight before getting to Shevchenko. That could mean the winner of Andrade vs. Murphy or a winner/loser fight with Taila Santos. But, by far the most obvious option would be a battle with Alexa Grasso. Similar to Fiorot, Grasso squeaked by Viviane Araujo in her last bout. Both women have the potential to contend for gold, but both still need to prove they can be more than simply the next notch in Shevchenko’s belt. Fiorot vs. Grasso is a great top contender fight.

BELAL MUHAMMAD

Another fight, another great Belal Muhammad game-plan. Sean Brady’s rise in the welterweight division has been marked by lots of power wrestling and grappling, and a noted late decline in competitive striking. Muhammad negated the takedowns with continuous front foot pressure, making sure that Brady never got anywhere near putting his back against the cage. Even if he had to walk through some serious counters to do it, Muhammad kept that pressure high enough that when Brady’s striking defense did start to unravel, it did so in a hell of a hurry. What had been a competitive 1.5 rounds turned into a sudden landslide for ‘Remember the Name’.

After the bout, Muhammad called out Leon Edwards, but it’s a near certainty that Kamaru Usman gets a rematch instead. And if the UFC can put together Covington vs. Chimaev, then there’s not even a guarantee that Muhammad is next in line after that. Realistically, Muhammad deserves his chance at gold, but it just might be that he’ll find himself fighting Gilbert Burns or Jorge Masvidal just to tread water. Muhammad vs. Burns seems like a consolation prize, but the title shot seems unlikely right now.

MUHAMMAD MOKAEV

An interesting performance from Muhammad Mokaev that doesn’t necessarily diminish his status as one of flyweight’s top prospects, but certainly wasn’t the dominance most were expecting him to display as a massive favorite. On the feet, Mokaev looked shaky at best, landing a few big strikes but eating just as many hard shots in return whenever Malcolm Gordon pressed forward. On the mats, as expected, Mokaev was mostly dominant—mostly. Gordon was able to hit some sweeps, get to back control a couple times, and even got a takedown all his own.

Ultimately, Mokaev sealed the deal with a third round submission, making it clear that he’s no less dangerous than advertised as a grappler. But potential opponents got to see a few gaps along the way. To that end, I’d say a smaller step up than Brandon Royval wouldn’t be a bad idea, if that’s still the fight Mokaev wants. We’ve got a bout between Jimmy Flick and Jeff Molina upcoming. Both men are aggressive, tough, and dangerous for 3 rounds and can scramble like hell. Mokaev vs. the Flick/Molina winner would be surefire fun.

OTHER BOUTS: Mateusz Gamrot vs. the Hooker/Puelles loser, Katlyn Chookagian vs. Taila Santos, Sean Brady vs. the Rakhmonov/Neal loser, Caio Borralho vs. the Petroski/Turman winner, Makhmud Muradov vs. Nick Maximov, Nikita Krylov vs. the Reyes Spann winner, Volkan Oezdemir vs. Jim Crute, Abubakar Nurmagomedov vs. Sergey Khandozhko, Gadzhi Omargadzhiev vs. AJ Fletcher, Armen Petrosyan vs. Jacob Malkoun, AJ Dobson vs. the Fremd/Gore loser, Malcolm Gordon vs. CJ Vergara, Karol Rosa vs. Pannie Kianzad, Lina Lansberg vs. Jessy-Rose Clark


‘What about that was manly?’ – Aljo surprised by Dana White’s praise for self-admitted cheater TJ Dillashaw

“He made a mistake, and he handled it like a man,” Dana White recently said in an interview with Barstool Sports speaking of TJ Dillashaw’s past suspension for PED use.

“I’ll tell you what, we’ve had a lot of guys in the history of this company who have been busted for steroids and handled it the exact opposite way. They handled it not like men. Dillashaw did. He took it on the chin. You’ve got to respect him for that.”

Do you though?

That’s the question Aljamain Sterling seems to have found himself asking at the UFC 280 press conference, after the disgraced former champion threw his own history of rule-breaking in the Serra-Longo fighter’s face.

“You’re gonna get your ass whipped by a cheater, motherf-cker,” Dillashaw quipped when Sterling brought up the lack of Dillashaw footage in recent embedded episodes. “He’s so worried about it, he can come test me himself. He can test these nuts in his mouth.”

Later on, media pressed Sterling about the UFC president’s praise for Dillashaw and how the fighter had comported himself when it came to owning up to his actions. The ‘Funk Master’ sounded not just a little confused by White’s kind words for his opponent.

“Very strange,” Sterling agreed, when asked how he found White’s comments. “Dana’s an interesting cat, man. I like Dana a lot, but some of the things, I just have to wonder—like, his reasoning, his rationale. You’re praising the guy who got caught, and saying that he ‘did it the right way,’ and ‘did it like a man.’ What about that was manly? The guy got caught, he didn’t come clean, Dana. I’m just—I don’t get it. And I think it’s a very odd thing to say.

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“There’s been so many people who have popped,” he continued, “and a lot of them have been real, legitimate tainted stuff. And I don’t get it. What makes this situation more like a ‘man’ versus anybody else? I really don’t understand. Unless you got caught red handed, you know you cheated, like, having the needle in your hand, knowing you’re about to do it, and you’re like ‘No I didn’t, no I didn’t.’ That’s different. But, saying that he’s ‘more of a man’, that’s a very weird and odd thing to say.”

For his part, Dillashaw has maintained that his PED use was a one-time thing, tied to his bid to challenge for the flyweight title against Henry Cejudo. A fight he would go on to lose by first round knockout. However, former training partners have long claimed that the former Team Alpha Male talent had a long history of doping, well before he was picked up by USADA.

UFC 280 goes down this Saturday, October 22nd at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi. The card is expected to be headlined by a lightweight title fight between former champion Charles Oliveira and top contender Islam Makhachev. Sterling vs. Dillashaw is set for the PPV co-main event.