Jake Paul vs. Paddy Pimblett? ‘Baddy’ says ‘challenge accepted’ to $1 million sparring session

The secret to fishing is all in choosing the right bait. Jake Paul has made an entire boxing career out of hustling athletes from other sports to face off against him in the ring. Most recently, he picked up a unanimous decision victory over former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva, his fourth straight win over a former MMA title holder.

While Paul’s next professional boxing opponents seem most likely to be either Tommy Fury or Nate Diaz, the celebrity pugilist’s feud with UFC owner Dana White has seen him make regular ovations to face active UFC talent. It may be that he’ll finally get his wish.

Rising lightweight star Paddy Pimblett recently took a swipe at Paul, claiming that the former Disney star’s bouts were fixed. In response, Paul issued a challenge: A 5-round boxing sparring session, in Puerto Rico. If Pimblett “wins,” he walks away with $1 million.

If that offer seems too good to be true, the ‘Baddy’ is ready to find out.

“Challenge accepted,” Pimblett announced in a video posted by ESPN.

Unfortunately for fans hoping to see these two hook ‘em up in the ring in the immediate future, the 27-year-old from Liverpool through in a couple stipulations that make the idea much less likely to go forward.

“But I’m not going to Puerto Rico when I’m fighting next Saturday. If you wanna come and spar, get to the [UFC Performance Institute] next week. As I say, I fight Saturday, I’ll chill Sunday, and I’ll beat you up Monday. Offer’s there.”

Not sure that has the same ring to it as Puerto Rico and a million bucks, but maybe pride alone will see Paul fly to the UFC PI to take on Pimblett for free. Stranger things have happened.

In the meantime, Pimblett is set to face Jared Gordon in the co-main event of UFC 282 on December 10th, in Vegas. The card is expected to be headlined by a bout between Jan Blachowicz vs. Magomed Ankalaev for the vacant light heavyweight title.

‘We should never resort to violence, ladies and gentlemen’ – Anthony Taylor on slugging Dillon Danis

Dillon Danis has turned himself into something of a walking liability in the combat sports world. Despite not competing in any form of licensed grappling or striking events in the last 3+ years he’s become notable for finding himself in the middle of scraps. Most recently, Danis showed up for a Misfits Boxing x DAZN Series weigh-in event, where he squared off with noted celebrity pugilist Olajide William Olatunji—better known as ‘KSI’.

Things got a little chippy, with Danis smacking the hat off KSI’s head before getting escorted out of the building—which is where it all really kicked off. MMA fighter and boxer Anthony Taylor was on the scene and took exception to Danis’ attitude, pursuing the longtime grappler into the parking lot.

In the midst of the ensuing brawl, Taylor landed a hard right hand on Danis that sent the 29-year-old reeling. In a recent interview for MMA Fighting Taylor explained his actions, noting that he felt Danis was trying to “bully YouTubers” and pick on reporters.

“So he comes in to do his thing with KSI, flips his hat, or smacks him in the face, throws coffee and just runs off. Like, man, don’t come to a YouTube event trying to be a bully to other fighters, especially YouTubers who have no legitimate background in fighting. They’re learning how to fight. It’s called a YouTube event, don’t come over trying to be a bully. You don’t see Jon Jones trying to bully YouTubers.

“I took that in my hands to say something. Nobody, for years, has said or done anything to Dillon, and he’s gotten away with it for so many years doing it to Logan Paul, Jake Paul, to Khabib, to all of these [people], and he got away with it. Don’t come to an event, try and be a bully, push reporters, because now I’m going to call you out. You want to fight YouTubers and boxers, fight me. I’m an MMA fighter, too. What’s up? That’s how it escalated.”

Taylor added that he feels he only hit Danis with “30%” power on his punch, but that “without that truck being there, he would’ve fell.” Still, despite his seeming pride in his work, the 33-year-old Team Bodyshop talent also sounded a note of caution. The last thing he wants is for others to follow in his footsteps.

“But, we should never resort to violence, ladies and gentlemen,” Taylor said of his actions. “Don’t resort to violence because that’s not always the way to resort to things. I could’ve sat down and had a talk with him, ‘Hey Dillon, come sit down with me. Let’s go have a talk and drink some coffee.’ But instead, I said f-ck that, I’m going to hit you with an overhand right, buddy. I had to let it be known to the world. I’ve got kids coming to me saying, ‘Thank you for your service.’ What? I’ve never served in the military. ‘No, for what you did to Dillon Danis.’”

Eventually it seems that Taylor isn’t expecting to see any charges from the altercation. While he explained that he was fully willing to face the consequences of his actions, he also admitted he’s been relieved that no repercussions have been forthcoming.

“Nobody wanted to challenge him like that besides me. I was willing to take on the consequence. It could’ve been a bad situation there. It could’ve been a very bad situation with the aftermath of me hitting him. Thank God there was no bad repercussions on that.”

On the other side of things, Danis is now actually set to face off against KSI in the ring this coming January 14th at the MF & DAZN X Series 4 event in London, England. The two men are scheduled for six three-minute rounds of exhibition boxing. No other bouts have been announced for the card at this time.

‘That’s life’ – Jiri Prochazka releases video message on injury, title loss

Jiri Prochazka’s rise to the top of the UFC light heavyweight division was nothing short of meteoric. The former RIZIN champion first set foot inside the Octagon in July of 2020, picking up a second round KO over Volkan Oezdemir. Two years and one fight later and he was battling Glover Teixeira for gold.

At that point fans could be excused for thinking the 30-year-old was on the cusp of a long and thrilling title reign. Instead, on Wednesday, November 24th, Prochazka announced that he was officially vacating his belt without a single title defense. The reason? What UFC president Dana White called the “worst shoulder injury the doctors have seen in UFC history.”

In a short video released to his social media accounts, Prochazka sent a message to his fans and to Teixeira—who he was set to make his first title defense against on December 10th.

“Hello everyone,” Prochazka stated in his self-recorded message. “Thank you for your messages. I have to say sorry to Glover; I cancelled that fight so short to [UFC 282]. That’s life.

“So, congratulations to Ankalaev and Blachowicz for a title chance. But still, I feel like a champion. And after I will be back I will come for that title and more. Because my targets are more higher; higher than just a title.

“I’ll be back. Thank you for your messages.

“Mastery. Victory.”

In an initial statement to his Instagram account, Prochazka claimed he would be back and ready to fight again in just six months. However, other sources familiar with shoulder injuries as severe as has been claimed for the Czech fighter have suggested that a year may be a more reasonable timeline.

In the meantime, with former champion Jan Blachowicz set to face off against Magomed Ankalaev for the vacated title at UFC 282, Glover Teixeira is hoping that he’ll have the next shot at UFC gold, once a new champion has been crowned. Where the belt will lie by the time Prochazka returns from injury is anyone’s guess.

The MMA Depressed-us: Get in the locker, nerd – Hettes vs. Bermudez

The UFC is taking a rare week off for the Thanksgiving holiday, which means we’re giving thanks for all the good fights we get to watch by watching some less than sparkling examples of elite mixed martial arts competition. This week’s episode is centered around MMA’s nerdiest fighters and their horrible, soul crushing moments when they took on guys who were just way better.

June M. Williams

Opening up the festivities is a relatively recent bout. Chase Hooper hit the Octagon for the second time as a pro back in 2020, when he fought Alex Caceres at UFC 250. Unfortunately for ‘The Dream’, ‘Bruce Leeroy’ put a three round whipping on him, and then dumped his books. From there we move to a 2017 bout between Jack Marshman and full-time web developer (part-time fighter) Ryan Janes at UFC Fight Night: Nelson vs. Ponzinibbio. Marshman followed a fairly one-sided three round drubbing by giving Janes a nasty swirly. And finally, to wrap the whole thing up, we went all the way back to 2014 and UFC 171, where Dennis Bermudez put a hurting on crafty grappler Jimy Hettes. A true locker-stuffing if ever there was one.

As is usual, we’re watching all three bouts on UFC Fight Pass. For those that want to watch along with us, press play on each video when Zane says “Go.” For those watching the fights via another resource, Connor will try to announce the beginning of round 1 so that videos can be synced up there.

If you enjoy our 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.

I had my worst concussion ‘falling off of a pole’ – Vanessa Demopoulos on switch from stripping to MMA

Vanessa Demopoulos has been making a splash in the Octagon. The former LFA strawweight champion made her UFC debut back in 2021 with a rough loss to JJ Aldrich, but has found nothing but success since—picking up her third straight victory at UFC Vegas 65 this past Saturday, October 19th.

While winning has plenty of its own rewards, the victories are extra sweet in the case of ‘Lil Monster’ who plunged in to the life of being a full time fighter after quitting her job as an exotic dancer. In a recent interview on the MMA Hour, Demopoulos talked about making the transition and why she gave up her more stable profession.

“It was the worst,” Demopoulos said of balancing both jobs at once (transcript via MMA Fighting). “Staying up late, constant stimulation, overstimulating your nervous system that late at night. I’d get home, I couldn’t sleep. My body automatically wakes up so early for training that even if I go to sleep late, I was only getting three hours of sleep because I’d automatically wake up. It just wasn’t good for me in a lot of aspects. I have to give a lot of my emotional energy to the job, and I just want to focus on fighting.

“So I took a risk, actually. I really didn’t have the money to quit and I believed in myself enough and I was like, ‘I’m going to make this happen, no matter what.’ So I burned the bridge and I walked away.”

While it seems like the move from stripping to fighting would only be harder on the body, Demopoulos might disagree. Especially since she claims that the worst concussion she ever suffered didn’t come from a punch, but a fall from a dancing pole.

“[It hurt] like hell,” she said. “I had the worst concussion I think I’ve ever had falling off of a pole. I fell straight down, it was almost two stories.

“I instantly woke up and ran, and then I had this giant bag of ice on my head, and I fell to sleep on the bag of ice, so that’s how I knew that I was badly concussed. For sure [worse than anything I felt in fighting.]”

No word yet on when the 34-year-old may be looking to return to competition. But, with her latest successes it seems more and more obvious that her change of careers is paying off.

‘Your father’s plan is never complete’ – Conor McGregor takes shot at Khabib Nurmagomedov

When it comes to legacies, it’s clear Khabib Nurmagomedov has a lot to be proud of. Not only did the former UFC lightweight champion retire unbeaten, at 29-0, with his title belt still in hand, but he’s also successfully helped guide the careers of a whole new batch of top tier MMA fighters.

Even his old UFC belt is back in-house, with longtime training partner and mentee Islam Makhachev picking up the title with a second-round submission over Charles Oliveira back in October. So it’s no surprise that, during a recent speaking engagement with Class A Events in Toronto, the now-retired mixed martial artist & coach had a little crowing to do.

“Right now we have current UFC & Bellator lightweight champions. And this is amazing, this is amazing,” Nurmagomedov enthused. “I hear, like, long time ago, when one guy was talking about, ‘We’re here to take over.’ But, we’re here to take over.

“And you know, what’s interesting is, I coach not a lot of people. I coach people who was around me, like, when I was active fighter. This is maybe 12, 15 guys? … We 13 people, we have a combined win in MMA of almost 300 fights. And this is crazy. Nobody ever did this in MMA before. This never happen. And I’m very happy because of this, because I know it was my father’s hard work. The way how he invest us, the way how he teach us, the way how he push us was everything. Even now, his legacy keep going.”

If Nurmagomedov’s praise for his father’s work seemed like it might have included a little shot at Conor McGregor’s iconic “We’re not here to take part, we’re here to take over!” line along the way, the ‘Notorious’ Irishman wasn’t about to let that slight go un-noted. Shortly after video of the interview emerged, McGregor took to social media and skipped the shade. Opting instead to take a more direct swipe at his onetime sporting rival.

“I fight on! Your fathers plan is never complete because you quit and ran, brother,” McGregor wrote in a since-deleted post to his Twitter account (h/t MMA Fighting). “God bless. I’m still here if you wanna go again. But your fear of defeat means you’ve already lost. Run from it all you want. We all lose in the end. Death takes us all. I fear nothing but God”

While McGregor’s SBG Ireland camp had a long-running feud with members of Nurmagomedov’s Eagles MMA fight team, the two men only met in the Octagon once, back in 2018—for the first defense of Nurmagomedov’s lightweight title reign. McGregor last set foot in the Octagon back in 2021, for a pair of bouts against Dustin Poirier, losing both fights via TKO. He has since been sidelined with an extended injury recovery due to a broken ankle suffered in the second loss.

Nurmagomedov retired suddenly in October of 2020, following his father’s passing and the third defense of his belt. For months afterward UFC president Dana White made serious ovations to try and bring the then-32-year-old back to competition, but Nurmagomedov has remained steadfast in his decision to continue his MMA career exclusively from the sidelines.

UFC Vegas 65: Cutelaba vs. Nzechukwu – Fights to make

Considering that the card had the feel of an unmitigated disaster by the time that the prelims were wrapped up, it turned out… okay? Kennedy Nzechukwu made a valiant comeback to put a stamp on Ion Cutelaba, Waldo Cortez-Acosta & Chase Sherman scrapped it out, and Muslim Salikhov added to his highlight reel against Andre Fialho.

So, is Nzechukwu on his way to becoming a ranked fighter in the light heavyweight division? Can Salikhov get a high profile bout or two before his career winds down? And is Jack Della Maddalena Australia’s next star attraction?

To answer those questions—but nothing else—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!

KENNEDY NZECHUKWU

Sooner or later he’ll have to really work on shedding his reputation for slow starts, but that won’t be today. Kennedy Nzechukwu got blasted with big right hands and powerful takedowns in his opening round against Ion Cutelaba. Even after gaining some momentum at the end of the first, fans could be forgiven for thinking that the ‘African Savage’ was on his way to a hard loss. But it was Nzechukwu who started round 2 firing hard punches, forcing the ‘Hulk’ into an obvious shot from way outside; the perfect setup for a massive jump knee. That’s two straight knockout wins for the Fortis MMA talent, who’s looking more and more like a future top-ranked light heavyweight. And it sets him up for either of two obvious fights right now: Azamat Murzakanov or Khalil Rountree. Both men have the kind of violent power that would make it a real poor idea to give away a whole round trying to find the rhythm of the bout, but Nzechukwu’s size and toughness would present a real challenge in both cases. Given Rountree’s up-and-down UFC career, it feels like he has more need of building a real win streak, Nzechukwu vs. Rountree is a great chance for both men to prove they’re really hitting their stride.

WALDO CORTES-ACOSTA

It wasn’t pretty, but Waldo Cortes-Acosta passed exactly the kind of test he needed to, in order to prove himself a UFC ready heavyweight. Sherman isn’t the most deft or defensively minded man in the division, but he pushes a pace, and he had his sights dead set on Cortes-Acosta’s lack of low-kick defense. ‘Salsa Boy’ battled through the early damage to land the much sharper strikes all the rest of the way, working behind a heavy jab and some really nice counter left hooks. After the bout he said he wanted to fight again as soon as possible. If he’s just willing to go out and fight anyone at any time, then a bout with Martin Buday seems like easy booking. A massive, tough-as-nails heavyweight with a tendency to drag opponents into deep water and slow them down. A good test for the hard-hitting athlete on the rise. Cortes-Acosta vs. Buday seems like a good way to get more experience.

MUSLIM SALIKHOV

A sticky, back-and-forth fight between Muslim Salikhov and Andre Fialho early turned slowly more and more toward a showcase for the Dagestani ‘King of Kung Fu’. It’s a long standing problem for Fialho, that he’s just too static at range and doesn’t offer enough offense as he steps into the pocket. A crafty range striker like Salikhov was always going to be a huge problem for him. Even at the 38, after the bout, Salikhov used his platform to assure fans that he’s better prepared and hungrier than ever. Time isn’t on his side, as long as he’s winning, the UFC should throw him in the toughest fights they can. Bouts with Michel Pereira, Daniel Rodriguez, Randy Brown, or Jake Matthews would all be decent options. Of those, the Brown fight interests me most. Brown is incredibly dangerous at Salikhov’s preferred distance, but has plenty gaps in his style that other opponents have been able to leverage for the win. Muslim Salikhov vs. Randy Brown seems like a great bout for two men who really could have a number next to their names.

JACK DELLA MADDALENA

As expected, a punishing first round knockout from Jack Della Maddalena. His pressure and power caught Roberts off his guard numerous times early in the fight and it wasn’t long before ‘Hot Chocolate’ was just too overwhelmed to respond. After the fight, Della Maddalena made it clear that he doesn’t care who he fights, as long as he gets a chance to fight at UFC 284 in Perth in February. Seems likely the UFC will make that booking happen. Fights with Jeremiah Wells and Brian Battle would both be decent offerings, Khaos Williams or Matthew Semelsberger would work too. Given that he doesn’t mind who he faces, I’ll say book him against Jeremiah Wells. Two huge punching welterweights throwing down Down Under. Seems like a surefire KO. Jack Della Maddalena vs. Jeremiah Wells would be a ton of fun.

JENNIFER MAIA

Its a good thing for Maia that her comments about seeing Maryna Moroz as a good bounce back opportunity didn’t come back to bite her. With another hard fought victory she’s going to be hanging around right back in the top ten of the flyweight division. That could mean a matchup with the loser of Lauren Murphy vs. Jessica Andrade or with a young rising talent like Maycee Barber. But with Alexa Grasso and Viviane Araujo both hanging around without a booking it seems like one of them would be the better way to go. Grasso’s the one coming off a win, and she needs to put together more impressive showings to get a title shot. Grasso vs. Maia is a good way to test if Grasso can separate herself from the pack at 125.

MILES JOHNS

Not exactly a thrilling fight from the bantamweight wrestle boxer, but coming off USADA troubles and a stoppage loss, just getting the win likely had to be first and foremost in the 28-year-old’s mind. That sets him up for fights with Heili Alateng, Taylor Lapilus, Mana Martinez, or Javid Bashrat. The Alateng fight feels like the best option among those. Another veteran who has largely found wins in the Octagon without seeming to separate himself much from the rest of the pack. For Johns, it’s a dangerous puncher and strong athlete who can likely make takedowns difficult. For Alateng, those two takedowns he gave up in his draw against Gustavo Lopez represent the only real wrestling threat he’s faced. Johns can give the Fight Ready talent a chance to prove his ground game isn’t a liability. Johns vs. Alateng is a solid bout between two men struggling to find recognition for their success.

NATALIA SILVA

I still had a few doubts about Natalia Silva after her impressive UFC debut, but it’s clear now that she’s a big cut above the average prospect at women’s flyweight. She’s now taken on two of the division’s biggest athletes and looked totally at ease dealing with their physicality both times. A great thing to see going forward for her prospects against the elite. And that spinning back kick was wicked cool. Fights with Priscila Cachoeira, Melissa Gatto, or Gillian Robertson would all be decent next fight options. I especially like the idea of the Robertson fight, since it seems like a decided step up, especially with the threat of a super crafty, aggressive grappler. Silva vs. Robertson seems like a good way to start fast tracking the Brazilian to the top 15.

OTHER BOUTS: Ion Cutelaba vs. Nick Negumereanu, Chase Sherman vs. Lukasz Brzeski, Andre Fialho vs. Gabriel Green, Danny Roberts vs. Court McGee, Charles Johnson vs. Jake Hadley, Maryna Moroz vs. J.J. Aldrich, Vince Morales vs. Brandon Davis, Ricky Turcios vs. Mana Martinez, Kevin Natividad vs. Liudvik Sholinian, Vanessa Demopoulos vs. Lupita Godinez, Maria Oliveira vs. Denise Gomes, Brady Hiestand vs. Christian Rodriguez, Fernie Garcia vs. Garrett Armfield, Tereza Bleda vs. Hannah Goldy


‘He’s my bitch forever’ – Anthony Smith not impressed by Ryan Spann’s KO win

It seems Anthony Smith still hasn’t forgotten that promo Ryan Spann cut heading into their 2021 Fight Night main event. Attempting to channel Rorschach’s line from the ‘Watchmen’ about Smith being “locked in here with me,” Spann was quickly made to eat his words when the two men stepped in the cage on fight night, with Smith picking up the first round submission.

‘Lionheart’ has been out of action for the last several months, dealing with an ankle injury, knee surgeries, and multiple infections, but it doesn’t seem the extended time riding the bench has dulled his competitive instincts at all.

Coming off a big win over Dominick Reyes at UFC 281, Spann issued a callout to the top five of the light heavyweight division. Most specifically, for his chance to fight at UFC gold. In a recent appearance on Michael Bisping’s Believe You Me podcast, Smith took a moment to remind Spann to ‘check the record.’

“I don’t know what happened in our fight that left him with any kind of confidence that he can still beat me or that he deserves a rematch,” Smith said (transcript via MMA Mania). “I had him on ice skates until he was shooting takedowns, I strangled him, and then stood over his body, reminding him what he was going to do to me. So, he’s my b—ch forever and he knows it.”

While Smith has denied any interest in re-matching Spann in the past, this time around he did sound a little more open to the idea—provided, of course, that Spann works his way up to it.

“Eventually, he may work himself into a situation where we’re gonna rematch, but I already fought down when I gave him an opportunity,” Smith continued. “Until he does something where I go, ‘Oh, wow. That was super impressive,’ he can f—k off. Him being an asshole didn’t work out for him the last time. He barely handled the first fight, how’s he gonna handle the second?”

Although no fight announcement has been made, Smith has stated that he’s ready to return to action and expects his next bout to be made public soon. Most recently, the Factory X talent suffered a TKO loss to Magomed Ankalaev, back in July at UFC 277. That fight broke a streak of three-straight victories for the 34-year-old.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC Vegas 65: Lewis vs. Spivac picks, odds, & analysis

We’re now one week removed from UFC 281, which means we’ve got a pretty severe downgrade in fight card quality to look forward to. In the main event, Serghei Spivac hopes to insert his name into the stack of rising heavyweight contenders with a victory over Derrick Lewis. The card drops sharply in notoriety from there.

For fans interested in diving deeper into the 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 65 fight card as it stood at the time of recording:

ESPN+ MAIN CARD | 4pm/1pm ET&PT
Derrick Lewis vs. Serghei Spivac — At 2:38, Odds 15:21, Picks, Both: Lewis
Ion Cutelaba vs. Kennedy NzechukwuAt 17:21, Odds 24:12, Picks, Both: Nzechukwu
Chase Sherman vs. Waldo Cortes-AcostaAt 25:02, Odds 37:55, Picks, Zane: Cortes-Acosta, Connor: Sherman
Andre Fialho vs. Muslim SalikhovAt 40:28, Odds 47:36, Picks, Both: Salikhov
Jack Della Maddalena vs. Danny RobertsAt 49:14, Odds , Picks, Both: Della Maddalena

ESPN+ PRELIMS | 1pm/10am ET&PT
Charles Johnson vs. Zhalgas ZhumagulovAt 1:03, Odds 12:14, Picks, Both: Zhumagulov
Jennifer Maia vs. Maryna MorozAt 13:56, Odds 23:30, Picks, Both: Moroz
Vince Morales vs. Miles JohnsAt 24:35, Odds 32:02, Picks, Both: Johns
Kevin Natividad vs. Ricky TurciosAt 32:20, Odds 46:27, Picks, Both: Natividad
Vanessa Demopoulos vs. Maria OliveiraAt 47:05, Odds 58:37, Picks, Zane: Oliveira, Connor: Demopolous
Brad Hiestand vs. Fernie GarciaAt 59:04, Odds , Picks, Both: Hiestand
Natalia Silva vs. Tereza BledáAt , Odds , Picks, Zane: Bledá, Connor: Silva

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 281: ‘Adesanya vs. Pereiera’: Zane & Connor picked 100% the same for the first time, they went 7/14 for an even 50%
  • Overall from UFC Fight Island 1 in 2020, through UFC 281, this year: Zane is now at 770/1194 for 64.49% and Connor is now at 724/1194 for 60.64%
  • So far, in 2022: Zane is at 300/457 for 65.65% and Connor is at 282/457 for 61.71%
  • 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_11.17.22.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.


Live! Stream UFC Vegas 65 on ESPN+

HEAVYWEIGHT SHOWDOWN – Derrick Lewis vs. Serghei Spivac — NOV 19: Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) returns yet again to the renowned APEX Facility housed in ‘Sin City’ – Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday, November 19th, 2022, with an exciting 265lb Heavyweight top contenders tilt between Derrick ‘ The Black Beast’ Lewis (26-10) and Serghei ‘Polar Bear’ Spivac (15-3).

In UFC Vegas 65’s co-main event, hard-hitting Light Heavyweights go to war when Ion ‘The Hulk’ Cutelaba squares off with the ‘African Savage’, Kennedy Nzechukwu.

Plus — Chase ‘The Vanilla Gorilla’ Sherman takes on DWCS Alumni, Waldo ‘Salsa Boy’ Cortes-Acosta on the main card of this UFC Fight Night Event! Tune-in for a stacked 13-bout event…

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

‘That’s not the way I wanted it to go’ – Frankie Edgar on UFC 281 retirement loss

Every fighter wants to say that they walked away on a win. That they knew just when to hang up their gloves and that they ended their career exclusively on their own terms. Reality is rarely ever so kind.

Unfortunately for Frankie Edgar, that’s a lesson he learned full well this past Saturday night at UFC 281 on the PPV main card. Set up against surging bantamweight Chris Gutierrez, Edgar found himself on the wrong end of his third-straight knockout loss—just two minutes into the first round. After the bout, even Gutierrez seemed a bit broken up by what he’d just done to the former lightweight champion.

For his part, Edgar took some time to reflect on his latest defeat and what—at least for now—appears to be the end of his career as a mixed martial arts fighter.

“Obviously, (I’m) heartbroken,” Edgar said on a recent episode of ‘The Champ and the Tramp’ podcast (transcript via MMA Junkie). “That’s not the way I wanted it to go, but that’s the way it goes. I had a great week, awesome week out there. It was incredible, the love I got from everybody. The UFC gave me love, the little video that they did. From my peers, my peers are the most important. … I was zooming in the back. I felt like I was on in the back. I go out there and boom. Obviously, you saw it. Everybody saw it.”

“It f-cking sucks but how can I complain, to be honest?” Edgar added. “People were cheering my name the whole time before, during, after. I worked hard to get where I got, like f-cking hard, very hard. I sacrificed a lot in my life. I put my all into my athletic career since Day 1, but who am I to complain? There are people out there who work hard and they just make it by. I know both sides of that. I’m just trying to be grateful for what I accomplished, for the ride I had.”

Edgar won his first bid for UFC gold all the way back in 2010, with a decision victory over BJ Penn. Over the next decade the ‘Answer’ would compete for some form of a UFC title eight more times, including his pair of legendary fights against Gray Maynard. If this truly is the end of the line for the 41-year-old, he’s put together a remarkable career across three divisions inside the Octagon.