UFC Fight Night: Sean Strickland is ‘Mr. APEX’

While it’s been obvious in practice for years, the UFC has never had a more clearly tiered product than they do right now. What was once a fuzzy line between a PPV event to a network TV Fight Night card to a standard Fight Night has now become a series of hard divisions. PPVs have title fights, network TV cards get top contenders and fan favorite action fighters, ESPN+ gets misc. There are even event tiers for UFC-adjacent talent scouting shows, with DWCS getting top honors over TUF—which at least still gets more love than Road to UFC.

In that ecosystem of octagonally-branded fighting fixtures, Sean Strickland’s place couldn’t be clearer. The Xtreme Couture talent has locked down his role as ‘King of the Third Tier’ through a combination of skill and personality that makes him exactly notable and talented enough to headline something, while not enough of either to break out into the main stream. There are a couple of very simple reasons for all this, and unfortunately (fortunately?) for Strickland, they’re probably not going to change.

Sean Strickland is a weird fighter

First and foremost, any conversation about an athlete and their ability to perform has to start with a discussion of their ability to perform as an athlete. Whatever else might be said of Strickland both in and out of the Octagon, the man is where he is today because he knows how to win fights. But, his journey to becoming one of the UFC’s most consistent talents has been anything but clear and obvious.

Jump all the way back to Strickland’s time in King of the Cage and a fairly typical vision of an athletic ‘MMA native’ prospect emerges. He looked stiff and uncomfortable on the feet, drove for takedowns whenever he started getting plugged, and had a solid BJJ game to fall back on as the fundamental core of his training. It’s where most fighters find themselves when their first experience of combat sports comes from joining their local MMA gym.

Even in those old fights, however, the framework of what would become Strickland’s modern game could be seen in flashes. The insistence on a pawing jab, the swatting attempts at hand parries. While the confidence and consistency wasn’t there, the tools were at least in play.

Unlike most fighters in his position—who tend to lean, insistently on a well-rounded jack-of-all-trades style for the entirety of their career—by the time he took his first knockout loss (against Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos back in 2018) Strickland’s interest in being the guy that does everything had seemingly vanished. Over his first eight fights in the Octagon, Strickland shot for 19 takedowns. In the ten bouts that followed? 9 takedown attempts—and 6 of those came against Uriah Hall.

Instead, Strickland began leaning increasingly on a weirdly bastardized version of the modern MMA meta-game (which calls for large amounts of high-volume kickboxing at the top levels of the sport). With his feet close together and his chin high, Strickland has been walking opponents down with near robotic consistency, pushing out a constant stream of low power jabs and winging hooks. Pushing the jab down the middle of the guard, while trying to fit his followup strikes around it.

When it comes to defense, while he can slip and counter once he commits to fighting on the inside, he mostly focuses on pulling straight back and parrying punches to chase followup strikes. Long fighters who aren’t afraid to pull the trigger on him, find his chin square on the center line, but his tendency to keep his eyes on his work, means he doesn’t usually get caught so off guard that he gets knocked down by much.

On offense, at least, it’s not dissimilar to some of the striking form that Colby Covington has fallen into. But without a clinical wrestling game to go with it, Strickland finds himself living and dying entirely on his ability to be unbreakable and indefatigable. To his credit, he’s largely been both.

The result, however is a long series of battles that feature function over form. He’s so continuous and one-note in his approach that he can rarely surprise anyone enough to knock them out, and he shows little interest in controlling anyone enough to truly break them down. It’s death by 1000 cuts, but with time only for 750 of them. Sean Strickland wins rounds, but he doesn’t make highlights or win fans. At least not inside the cage.

Sean Strickland is a weird dude

The other part of this equation, then, is the person Sean Strickland is outside the Octagon. Even terribly boring fighters who are successful enough for long enough tend to bring in some kind of following, and Strickland’s certainly won enough fights for that. But, much like he’s placed a firm cap on the excitement he creates in a fight by insisting on volume and persistence over form or power, he puts a firm cap on his public image with a personality shipped straight out of a 4chan forum.

It’s no secret at this point that Strickland’s got his past traumas to deal with. A childhood filled with abuse and trouble, a short stint in prison, some dabbling in white supremacy; it’s a cocktail that could skew anyone’s view of the world. It probably doesn’t help that, by all appearances, the 32-year-old seems to be battling through all his demons with MMA alone.

“[Fighting] gives me purpose,” he admitted in a 2021 post-fight interview. “If I wasn’t in the UFC, I’d probably be cooking meth in a trailer in prison. I’m grateful for the fans, to the UFC, you guys that gave me purpose. And I appreciate that.”

Listen to Strickland talk long enough about anything and it becomes pretty clear that all the functional parts of his life are trafficked purely through his fights and his training. His ‘celebrity cribs’ style tour of his apartment was equal parts hilarious and sad.

In another, more recent interview, Strickland was asked about his favorite food, leading to a rant about how “good food” like “sushi” and “pizza” was only something guys eat to “get pussy” or if they’re “a gay” and that he only eats “cheap shit.” It’s a perfect distillation of the man’s personality, which comes off as unflinchingly honest, and occasionally even funny, while also totally sad and unmarketable all in the same breath.

In the lead up to his UFC on ESPN headlining fight against Abus Magomedov, Strickland used his media day press conference to go on an extended rant about why women shouldn’t be allowed to vote and are generally responsible for the downfall of society.

“We need to go back to taking women out of the workforce, and maybe that’s where we f—d up,” Strickland told the assembled media (transcript via the Daily Mail). “We let women vote, no offense. Think about America prior to women voting. They tried to ban alcohol, I don’t even drink but I’m not trying to ban alcohol. So, what you did, man, you let these women come into the workforce, now we make less money, you got kids raising themselves on TikTok, we need to go back to like 1942, maybe 1958 after we f—d up the Germans.”

After he finished his screed one member of the media asked if Strickland had ever considered going to therapy. That’s more or less where his personality has left people, though; willing to give him the time of day for his ability to fight, but quickly running out of ways to interact with him that produce anything more than a stark reminder of why he’s best left to fighting.

The end result

Where does all this leave Sean Strickland? Or, more importantly, us as fans? With another headliner upcoming that, for better and worse, promises predictability. Strickland will always show up and fight his fight, he’ll always show up and speak his terrible truth. He is a fighter that can be entirely relied up on to hit all his marks at a very specific level.

For the UFC, that’s just exactly the right level of a Fight Night headliner; someone that wins enough to be considered really very good, but never demands a PPV audience. And who, if we’re being real here, wouldn’t know what to do with one if he got it all to himself.

Maybe Abus Magomedov can provide a bump in the road, and throw Strickland off his game enough to get a win and push his own profile higher up the UFC ladder. But win or lose for Strickland, it seems likely fans will see more of him filling high spots in low places.

Note: H/T to Andy Hickey on Twitter for coining the ‘Mr. Apex’ nickname.

Did anyone really believe Jake Paul could make a fighters’ union?

Jake Paul has crafted a career out of blurring the line between performative stunts and earnest endeavors. Along the way, however, the man who first rose to stardom as a social media prankster before a brief stint as a Disney actor has carved out a space in the combat sports world that shows no signs of going away—even as questions of his seriousness and integrity continue to dog him.

For those that thought Paul would be a flash in the pan, his dedication to boxing thus far seems largely earnest and lasting. The ‘Problem Child’ may not be any kind of elite talent (or facing any kind of elite talent), but he’s clearly training hard and getting better year after year. For all that, though, it’s still hard not to wonder if anything else Paul does can be taken at face value. The man built a fortune on being serially unserious, it’s hard to shake that kind of reputation.

Jake Paul still trying to make ‘near impossible’ fighter’s union

One of the biggest crusades that Jake Paul has attempted to lend his celebrity status to is the conversation around fighter pay in MMA. It’s a cause the 26-year-old was first drawn to as part of a feud with Dana White. A spat that, itself, evolved from Paul’s tendency to pick out washed former UFC stars to create showcase PPV boxing events for himself. What started out as an easy way to needle the UFC president has, seemingly, become a topic Paul actually cares about.

At the very least, Paul clearly cares about some segment of combat sports outside of his own success. He’s made a priority out of promoting unified featherweight champion Amanda Serrano’s boxing career. Setting her up for a massive superfight with Katie Taylor at Madison Square Garden. A major success that likely would not have happened without Paul’s continuous effort.

So, as difficult as it is to believe, it’s not entirely unreasonable to think that Paul might have some of that same drive for fixing MMA (and more pointedly UFC) fighter pay. If that’s the case, however, he’s set himself one hell of a task—as he’s very quickly finding out.

“We’ve been working nonstop on it behind the scenes,” Paul said of building a fighter’s union with Anderson Silva in a recent interview with MMA Mania. “It’s just … damn near impossible to figure this one out (laughs). It’s very difficult. Very, very difficult. We’re not shying away because of that, but it takes a lot of people, a lot of brains, a lot of money that we are funding, a lot of time, a lot of thought. So, really, we’ve been chugging along in this whole entire time behind the scenes and making slow progress more and more every single day.”

Not especially known for public disagreements with the UFC during his time in the promotion, Silva ended up roped into this project as the result of a bet with Paul; namely, if the ‘Spider’ couldn’t beat the social media influencer inside the ring he’d have to help him unionize fighters. Silva couldn’t beat Paul, so here he is—with several years worth of work ahead of him by the sound of it.

“This is a big three, four-year thing,” Paul continued in his interview with Mania. “It doesn’t happen overnight. We’ve been working and fingers crossed, man. I think it’s gonna be great for the combat sports world in general and sort of change the history of fighters being treated terribly and not having health insurance, being underpaid, the list goes on and on and on. Hopefully, that’s something we can fix in the next couple of years.”

Is it a fun, eye catching way to start a business partnership? Sure, totally. Is it a solid foundation for what could be a massively important labor movement? Well…

A fighter’s union is doomed to fail

As Paul himself noted, above, the task he’s set himself is nearly impossible. Considering how long he’s been talking up the idea, however, that shouldn’t have come as a surprise. There are multiple avenues that could be taken to potentially improve the financial future for athletes in the UFC (and, by proxy, in MMA in general). Unionization is probably the worst of them.

The first and easiest thing that should probably be at the forefront of any discussion over fighter rights and fighter pay is the Ali Act. Since the legislation already exists and has been put into action for decades in the boxing world, bringing it to MMA would be a case of a whole lot of lobbying and likely minimal adjustment. The Ali Act’s provisions about contract lengths, title sanctioning bodies, and the relationships between managers, promoters, rankings, and belts would be a huge shakeup to the industry that would see a massive increase in bargaining power for top drawing fighters when negotiating new contracts.

The second, and still fairly clear option available to Paul would be to enter the broader legal battle for clearly defined rights for independent contractors.

Anyone remember this disaster?

Industries like ride-sharing, food delivery, and other modern tech disruptions in the ‘gig economy’ have created huge gray areas in what it means to work as an independent contractor in the US, a status that the UFC has exploited for years, despite the exclusive nature of the deals their athletes agree to.

The reason independent contractor status is so important—and that the fighter’s union idea feels so seriously misplaced—is that independent contractors like UFC fighters don’t have the right to unionize. The best they could do would be to form a loose ‘association’, that would provide only the most bare bones structure for collective bargaining, and hold the UFC to no kind of legal obligation to either recognize the organization or work with its members. We already have the MMA Journalists Association for a look at just how much power that kind of thing holds.

Fighters are already pretty obviously wary about collective bargaining. Given their lack of power in negotiating with the UFC, it’s not hard to see why. Past attempts to create any group action among UFC talent yielded incredibly limited results and saw most invested parties either walk away from their efforts, or get released from the UFC altogether. If Paul is going to try and build an association of fighters in the UFC, while operating purely outside the promotion himself, it seems extremely unlikely he’ll find athletes lining up to join him for a fight he has no actual stake in winning.

Could Jake Paul take the UFC to court?

Setting lobbying and organizing efforts aside, if Paul wants to make more immediate impact without all the burden of running an union nobody wants to join—or without spending all his money trying to out-lobby the UFC in congress—it seems like there’s one other big option he could try to force change in the combat sports world. Jake Paul could try taking the UFC to court.

All things considered, it seems as though no action in the last twenty years has created more information or more potential for positive change in the UFC than the class action lawsuit filed against the promotion by a number of veteran fighters. Despite currently sitting in an apparently unending state of legal limbo, the discovery involved in that case, and the claims made against the UFC by the athletes involved, more than likely created the exact circumstances that led to the promotion losing control of their heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou.

The UFC’s past attempts to enforce things like the ‘champions clause’ and other automatic extensions that leave fighters locked in seemingly near-permanent deals, have been a major cornerstone to legal arguments against them, and were notably absent in the deal Ngannou ended up with that allowed him to enter free agency while still holding UFC gold.

Obviously, Paul not being a UFC fighter, he doesn’t have a contract to challenge. But Conor McGregor’s boxing match with Floyd Mayweather opened up some fascinating circumstances. Notably that while the UFC initially balked at McGregor’s insistance on the boxing match, when McGregor became a licensed boxer, it seemed as though the UFC’s tune had to change.

If Paul were able to find a top UFC talent that wanted to enter a boxing bout with him, he could put his financial support behind the ensuing legal battle. The case the UFC would have to stop a licensed boxer from entering into an agreement for a boxing match, simply because of an existing MMA contract could be exactly the kind of stress test UFC contracts need. If Paul is serious about spending his time battling the promotion for fighters’ rights, a case like that might be the biggest impact he could ever hope to make.

He wouldn’t even have to look that far to find someone positioned to take just that risk. Jorge Masvidal recently revealed that he’d be very interested in taking a boxing bout sometime in the future, but his current UFC contract prevents it. With ‘Gamebred’ retired from MMA, he’s got less to lose than most in battling out the details with the UFC. It’d be the kind of fight that could inform other fighters just how far under the promotion’s thumb they really are.

Masvidal talks boxing interest with Jake Paul.

In the meantime, if Paul keeps up with the idea of a fighter’s union, then no doubt he’ll talk a big game. He may even seriously believe that the idea has a viable future. But more likely than anything, he’ll end up looking more like the un-serious clown people paint him as, and less like the serious fighter and businessman he’s trying to become.

Can Conor McGregor still save the Ultimate Fighter from ultimate failure?

From a publicity standpoint this season of the Ultimate Fighter has been a complete mess. After two years on the sidelines, the UFC brought superstar Conor McGregor back to TUF to try and bring some juice to a long faded centerpiece of Dana White’s brand.

While not a massive success from the jump, the program’s 294,000 opening night viewers (and .14 18-49 demographic share) were at least somewhat of step up from the last time the show appeared on network TV (capturing just 186,000 viewers back in 2018 on FS1). From that point on, however, ratings appeared to be in a free fall. By episode 3, TUF had just 222,000 viewers and a .07 share of the 18-49 demographic.

Conor McGregor brings a ratings boom to TUF?

Last week, however, something interesting happened, TUF captured 468,000 viewers. People who had been slowly tuning out of a show that had been running more or less unchanged for the last decade were tuning back in. Unfortunately, it seems most likely that the reasons behind the jump were anything other than positive. Two weeks ago McGregor was accused of sexually assaulting a woman in a bathroom stall at game 4 of the NBA finals. Since then, he’s been nothing but front page news.

That likely exposes a hard truth about the Irishman’s current celebrity status at the moment, if he’s not fighting—be it in the cage, in the street, or in court—people aren’t watching. Fans didn’t show up to watch a stale, outdated reality TV show just because Conor McGregor was on it, but they did show up to watch celebrity trashfire Conor McGregor even when he’s just on some stale, outdated reality TV show.

TUF didn’t do McGregor any favors

Outside of the scandal rocking McGregor’s personal (and legal) world, it has to be wondered if this season of TUF isn’t doing McGregor’s reputation more harm than good. The major narrative surrounding his involvement in the show hasn’t been about highlighting his coaching skills or the camaraderie of his team, instead it’s been all about the expectations his participation have created for his fighting career.

If the ‘Notorious’ SBG talent signed up to coach against Michael Chandler, surely he also intends to fight against Chandler as well, right? It’s an obvious booking to make, and seems like it’d be a strong PPV seller. It would also require McGregor to pass a drug test of some kind at some point. Something that he still doesn’t seem prepared to do. The further the process drags on more it seems like all this potential promotion work to pit these men against each other has become a big waste of time. As of the moment, his waffling and delaying only looks more suspicious and less like the actions of a man serious about competing against the best.

The other point that seems to have seriously undercut McGregor here was the tweak the producers made to this season of the show. Their attempt to freshen things up by pitting former UFC talents against untested newcomers has been nothing short of an abysmal failure to create competitive fights. That’s also something of an own goal on McGregor’s part, given that he had the option of choosing which group of fighters he wanted to coach and chose the rookies both times around.

The combined result? Through four episodes Team McGregor is 0-4 with two first round knockout losses and two one-sided unanimous decisions. This week, former Ultimate Fighter season winner Brad Katona will face off against 12-3 former Atlas Fights title contender Carlos Vera. Katona went 2-2 in his brief UFC stint, beating Jay Cucciniello and Matthew Lopez, while losing decisions to Merab Dvalishvili and Hunter Azure. Since leaving the promotion he’s 4-0 under the Brave CF banner. There are no odds for the event, but it’s hard not to think Katona will be a very large favorite to take McGregor’s team one fight closer to a season-long shutout.

Silver linings?

Despite the serious cloud of an ongoing sex assault investigation, unnecessary drama from USADA, and a team that can’t seem to win a fight to save their lives, there are still upsides here. In a world where all press is good press, McGregor is making a lot of headlines. Ratings are up and, if his fighters can actually get a few competitive results and carve out even one finals spot, the UFC still has plenty of options to figure out a McGregor/Chandler PPV.

As much as it might gall, the promotion always has the option to give McGregor a drug testing hall pass (at least on the 6-month availability side of things), and as long as people are talking about the man he can always sell a lot of PPVs. The second highest selling UFC PPV of his career was his last one. If he can get out of his own way for just a couple of months, it seems pretty likely a return to the Octagon would still be a major financial success.

TUF is already recorded and in the can as an entertainment product, there’s nothing Conor could do now to make the show ‘better’, that he hasn’t done already—and by the look of things he didn’t do much. But if he can actually start setting down real plans to fight again, he might be able to capture a lot of interest that’s still out there to see McGregor actually perform like an athlete and not just act like one.

Elon Musk vs. Mark Zuckerberg is not a gimmick as long as Dana White does it

At this point everyone knows what a gimmick fight looks like. It’s a big, showy publicity move that has less to do with integrity and quality than it does attracting attention and creating buzz. Unsurprisingly, in a world like combat sports, where buzz and attention grabbing are the oil that makes all the biggest fights run, there are gimmicks aplenty.

When Dream did their Super Hluk [sic] Grand Prix in 2009, featuring Bob Sapp, Minowman, Hong Man Choi, and Jose Canseco among others, that was a gimmick. When KSW put Popek Monster in a heavyweight fight against promotional star and former World’s Strongest Man Mariusz Pudzianowski, that was a gimmick. And when Bellator brought Kimbo Slice and Dada 5000 together alongside Ken Shamrock vs. Royce Gracie back in 2016, that was a gimmick.

Dana White doesn’t do gimmicks

But, you know who doesn’t do gimmicks? Dana White and the UFC. When the promotion brought 41-year-old boxing legend James Toney into the Octagon against 47-year-old former multiple time champion Randy Couture. That was not a gimmick. That was simply a one-off opportunity to bring casual viewership to the product.

When the UFC signed completely untested and under-trained WWE star CM Punk to a contract and dropped him on PPV against a totally unknown Mickey Gall? Not a gimmick. That was a creative and savvy investment strategy in crossover branding.

So, when Dana White says that he’s going to bring Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg to the UFC for a full contact cage fight, fans have to know that it’s no kind of gimmick. After all, if it were a gimmick, White wouldn’t be doing it.

“This isn’t a gimmick fight,” White wrote in response to fan backlash on his Instagram account. “Gimmick is MMA guys going to Boxing and getting beat. We have seen it already and know how it ends. This is a fight between 2 of the most powerful/richest guys in the world. Who will win? Who has seen this before? NOBODY. It’s also a crossover fight that literally EVERY EVERYONE will watch.”

Why did Dana White sign James Toney?

So if White’s idea of a gimmick is something everyone’s seen and already knows the answer to, then what was the point of putting Toney in the cage against Couture? Even by 2010 everybody knew what it looked like when a boxer who doesn’t do any grappling at all tries MMA. In retrospect, even White doesn’t seem to know what the idea was there.

“To be honest, I don’t know why I did it,” White said of the Toney bout. “There’s been this whole boxing versus mixed martial arts thing forever.”

Before the fight, however, the Slap Fight CEO was a lot more interested in Toney’s abilities, in part because of the man’s deep resume of fighting credentials. To his mind, what made it different than Strikeforce signing Herschel Walker or Dream signing Jose Canseco, was that Toney wasn’t just an athlete, but a combat sports athlete.

“I like James Toney. He’s one of the greatest boxers ever,” White explained back in 2010. “I have tremendous respect for him. He said he wanted to fight in the UFC and I was interested. Now he’s here and I have to figure out what to do with him. What we won’t do is make a freak show out of it. I’d be the first to scream if someone else did that, so I’m not going to do it.”

“Hey, I don’t want this to be seen as a joke, and it’s not like Herschel Walker or Canseco or any of those guys. James Toney is a fighter. The worst thing anyone can ever say to me is that they were watching one of my fights and they changed the channel. That’s why I’ll never put [expletive] fights on.”

Give it to White, if he actually can get these two billionaires to step into the cage together, I doubt anybody’s gonna change the channel. But it will absolutely be guaranteed to be the most “[expletive]” fight in UFC history.

UFC Fight Night: Ilia Topuria vs Josh Emmett – Fights to make

The UFC put together a Fight Night card with a little more punch on Saturday for their return to ABC. It didn’t hurt either that the event was out from under the Apex and in front of a live audience. In the main event, Ilia Topura asserted his place as a featherweight contender over Josh Emmett. Maycee Barber reminded everyone why she was once one of flyweight’s brightest prospects, and Brendan Allen continued to look like a man on a mission.

So, is Ilia Topuria on the cusp of grabbing UFC gold? Is Barber ready for the top 5 at flyweight? And is Joshua Van the next big thing.

To answer those questions—and maybe a couple other things—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!

ILIA TOPURIA

There’s no question, at this point, that Ilia Topuria is on the edge of greatness. The Georgian walked into the UFC with a game built not just on speed and power, but on sharp pocket boxing, and dynamic wrestling and controlled grappling. While he’s had his scares in the Octagon, he’s continued to look more polished and controlled as his career moves forward. Never more so than against Josh Emmett on Saturday night.

That kind of domination should have him perfectly lined up, if not for the winner of Volkanovski vs. Rodriguez, then for someone who has already had their chance to contend. It’s almost too bad that Max Holloway is booked in that tragic bout against Chan Sung-Jung. With both Brian Ortega and Arnold Allen free, either man would make for an excellent booking. That Allen fight feels especially like a war that we need to see sometime in the not too distant future.

Then again, a closer look at the featherweight top ten of the moment shows a division where literally every fighter ranked above Topuria that’s not named Holloway is currently riding a loss. Why put Topuria against a fighter who isn’t in position to contend right now for his next bout. With no other title challengers primed for their own shots at the belt, ‘El Matador’ is the man of the moment. Topuria vs. the Volkanovski/Rodriguez winner seems like the logical next title fight.

JOSH EMMETT

If the narrative around Ilia Topuria is that he’s found his time to contend, then the narrative around Josh Emmett is starting to look a lot more like he’s missed it. At 38-years-old and with lopsided losses in his last two fights, Emmett’s run from 2019-22 may have been his pinnacle as an elite performer. It’s especially unfortunate as well, since speed and power were always such serious parts of the long time Alpha Male fighter’s game. As that kind of physicality diminishes, have a crafty, technical skill base becomes more and more important to papering over the holes that age brings.

That said, there should still be some thrilling wars left for Emmett in the featherweight division. Bouts with Giga Chikadze, Bryce Mitchell, or a rematch with Calvin Kattar all seem like they’d make a fair amount sense. Given where Kattar’s at and how controversial their first fight was, that seems like the highest priority to me. Two men likely closer to the end of their contender status than the beginning, who already have a story between them and probably not too much time to find a conclusion. Emmett vs. Kattar 2 is a rematch worth seeing.

June 18, 2022, Austin, Texas, Austin, TX, United States: AUSTIN, TX - JUNE 18: (R-L) Calvin Kattar punches Josh Emmett in their featherweight bout during the UFC Fight Night: Kattar v Emmett event at Moody Center on June 18, 2022 in Austin, Texas, United States. Austin, Texas United States - ZUMAp175 20220618_zsa_p175_156 Copyright: xLouisxGrassex
These boys need to run it back. IMAGO/USA TODAY

MAYCEE BARBER

There was never really a question that Maycee Barber had the physicality to contend at a high level in the woman’s flyweight division. The question was, without a defensively sound game anywhere, and seemingly without much of a technical punching game, could she turn her raw skills into a package dangerous enough to beat other woman who couldn’t easily be run over by her speed and power.

Ribas started strong against Barber, pushing her back to the fence and making her pay for her defensive lapses. But Ribas has plenty of gaps of her own on defense, and as she began to find out, the more she sat down and looked to trade with ‘The Future’ the more she got the worse end of the deal. If Barber can keep her offense consistent, especially in transition areas like the clinch, she can be a big problem in a division that still doesn’t have a ton of finishers.

MMA: UFC 283 - Murphy vs Andrade Jan 21, 2023; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Lauren Murphy (red gloves) enters the arena before the fight against Jessica Andrade (blue gloves) during UFC 283 at Jeunesse Arena. Rio de Janeiro Jeunesse Arena Brazil, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xJasonxdaxSilvax 20230121_szo_db3_0194
Murphy can be a tough test at 125. IMAGO/USA TODAY

Unfortunately at the moment, if Barber has any title ambitions, the top five of the flyweight division is already fully booked. There are a few former contenders without a bout just outside that level, though. Katlyn Chookagian, Lauren Murphy, and Jennifer Maia all need a bout and would all provide a serious test of Barber’s craft. Between them, I think Murphy is the most guaranteed to put on a fun show and not turn the bout into a simple grind. Murphy vs. Barber seems like a great next step for the 25-year-old.

DAVID ONAMA

For most of David Onama’s bout against Gabriel Santos, he seemed very nearly on the verge of losing. While Santos was happy to fall into Onama’s brutal pace and wild form, he was also the more technical fighter in almost every area. When Onama chased Santos to the ground, he was immediately tangled in submission attempts, when Onama met Santos in the pocket he was clipped up and hurt. It was really only when the two men found their way into the clinch that Onama seemed to have the more natural feel for the flow of the fight. As Santos started to fade, however, it turned out one advantage was all Onama needed.

Charles Jourdain just came off a win over Kron Gracie, Onama vs. Jourdain would be a thrill all the way through. If not that fight, then Bill Algeo would be pretty cool too.

May 6, 2023, Newark, New Jersey, USA: Newark, NJ: CHARLES JOURDAIN(Top) kicks KRON GRACIE(Bottom) during Featherweight bout at Prudential Center, Newark, NJ United States Newark USA - ZUMAr187 20230506_zsp_r187_040 Copyright: xJustinxRenfroex
Always a thrill. IMAGO/ ZUMA Wire

BRENDAN ALLEN

While Allen had a few brief scares slugging it out with Bruno Silva, the dramatic increase in his calm and confidence getting through a firefight was quickly evident. When push really came to shove, it was Silva who got hurt and Allen who poured on the power in the pocket. That led straight to a nifty club-n-sub, and the 5th-straight victory for the Kill Cliff FC talent.

With a win over Andre Muniz last time out, especially, Allen should be fighting his way up the division. He called out Jared Cannonier and Dricus Du Plessis (assuming Du Plessis loses to Whittaker), but still just ranked at #13, there’s a lot of space to cover between him and the top 5. It’s too bad Gastelum is chasing Shavkat Rakhmonov down at 170, because that would be a great booking. Otherwise Nassourdine Imavov, Jack Hermansson, or Roman Dolidze would all be decent options too. I really don’t want to see Imavov vs. Curtis again, so how about Imavov vs. Allen instead? Seems like a great fight.

NEIL MAGNY

Another day, another under-prepared opponent, another win for Neil Magny in the welterweight division. Philip Rowe decided to make this fight all about closing down Magny straight out of the gate, getting clinched up with him right away. He had the size to make it competitive, but that’s a bout Magny knows like the back of his hand. It wasn’t in any way the kind of victory that could raise the ‘Haitian Sensation”s profile in the Octagon, but it kept him treading water in that #11 spot in the rankings.

Interestingly everyone else other than Magny in the bottom half of the welterweight top 15 currently has a fight booked. The bout between Jack Della Maddalena and Sean Brady is probably the best fit for the 35-year old to see the winner, but with Magny so willing to fight anyone and with his tendency for close/boring grinds, another booking further down the division probably makes more sense. Randy Brown just picked up a win on the same card and would make sense.

But Elizeu Zaleski also got a big win recently and as a longtime veteran of the welterweight division feels like someone who should have a fight with Magny at some point. Zaleski vs. Magny seems like the right fight for both guys.

RANDY BROWN

Given his size and speed, it seems like Randy Brown should have a lot more highlight wins to his record. He’s got the ability to put hands on people and to surprise opponents with creative strikes, but the consistency of form to actually go from hurting someone to putting them away. As a result he’s become a bit of a lost soul at 170 pounds. A man with 11 victories to his name who seems nowhere near the contender’s picture.

Nicolas Dalby has been around a long time and has been on a great run of form lately. His strength and pace could make him a big challenge for Brown’s tendency to let opponents dictate the tempo. Dalby vs. Brown is a great chance for Brown to add to his resume and make a case for himself as a top tier athlete.

TABATHA RICCI

Once again, Gillian Robertson’s lack of a striking game came back to bite her. Even as she’s developed more technique and more tools to manager the standup portions of her fights, she’s yet to find the confidence and consistency to make her striking game feel like it’s more than survival. Tabatha Ricci may not be some kind of striking savant, but she’s got plenty of confidence in her ability to throw hands. Luana Pinheiro had a close run of things in her last bout against Michelle Waterson-Gomez, Ricci vs. Pinheiro seems like it’d be a great chance to see if Ricci can keep her success running at women’s strawweight.

Dana White still re-writing history on Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou

UFC CEO Dana White talks a lot. MMA media pays close attention, practically serving as transcribers and unquestioning disseminators of the ‘Bald One”s sage wisdom. That would be fine and all but then there’s the whole objective reality aspect and the fact that some fans have “conceptual object permanence” ie the ability to remember what White said before.

At the moment, his most pressing concern is to get fans to think that the reason the world’s largest MMA promotion never got Jon Jones and Francis Ngannou in the ring together had everything to do with Ngannou’s exit and nothing to do with Jones taking 3 years off in the ‘Predator”s prime.

Dana White buries PFL co-promotion idea

White appeared on Pat McAfee’s PMSLive show and was asked about the possibility of co-promoting a Francis Ngannou vs Jon Jones bout with PFL. The UFC boss rejected that possibility outright.

“It wouldn’t work,” White said, bluntly, when McAfee started waxing hypothetical about PFL and the UFC working hand-in-hand.

“Francis was here, Jon Jones wanted that fight the whole time. We tried to make the fight with Francis—nah.”

In 2021 Dana White’s problem was all Jon Jones

Of course, as much as White may be on message with the idea that Francis Ngannou is public enemy number one when it comes to recent UFC negotiating problems, fans don’t have to go back all that far to get a very different view of events. In 2021, when Jones was in the middle of his self imposed hiatus, White was ready to abandon Ngannou vs. Jones entirely due to what he viewed as Jones’ outrageous salary demands.

“We tried to work with Jon, and we eventually have to move on because realistically, and in all honesty, Derrick Lewis is the guy who deserves the fight,” White said at the time. “Derrick Lewis is a heavyweight, he beat Francis Ngannou, he’s looked good in his last couple of fights, he’s ranked in the top three, I think, and he deserves the fight. That’s the fight that should happen. We’ll just roll and do what we do. When Jon’s ready, he’ll let us know.”

When was Jones actually ready? It turns out he was only ready to fight again once Ngannou was already gone and the UFC needed to fill his vacated title. Suddenly, at that point, Jones had no trouble at all jumping into the Octagon against Ciryl Gane.

Francis Ngannou responds

Unsurprisingly, Ngannou himself hadn’t forgotten the UFC’s spat with Jones and the alleged “Deontay Wilder Money” that the former light heavyweight king was accused of going after. In response to the McAfee clip, the now PFL talent gave his view of events.

In the meantime, Ngannou looks as though he won’t be stepping back in the cage anytime in 2023. Having completed his free agency move to the Professional Fighters League, the 36-year-old is currently pursuing potential opportunities in the boxing ring instead. While he’s had consistent, public interest in a superfight with both Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury, there have been no signs that negotiations have gone pas the hypothetical chatter stage at this point in time.

For his part, Jones was expected to return to action against former heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic sometime this fall. Rumors have since surfaced, however, that the UFC is having trouble bringing Miocic to the bargaining table, which could mean that a top contender like Sergei Pavlovich is next in line. With Jones having recently stated that his next fight may be his last, it remains to be seen if he’d be willing to take on anyone that’s not at least a somewhat proven PPV draw.

UFC Fight Night cancellation – Top prospects off card

Two of the flyweight division’s best rising prospects have been removed from this week’s UFC Jacksonville fight card. The ABC broadcast event, featuring top ranked featherweights Josh Emmett and Ilia Topuria in the main event will have to go ahead with just thirteen fights after one athlete struggled hard with the scales on weigh in day.

Kleydson Rodrigues blows flyweight limit by 3 pounds

Top Brazilian flyweight prospect Kleydson Rodrigues had been all set to take on one of Japan’s best young talents on the undercard of this weekend’s UFC card in Jacksonville, FL. Unfortunately for Taira, Rodrigues hit the scales at 129 pounds, three pounds over the 126 pound non-title fight limit for flyweight bouts.

It’s not clear at this time whether Taira declined a catchweight, or whether the miss was potentially too big for the commission to allow the fight to move forward with the discrepancy. Whatever the case, with less than 24 hours before the fight, there’s no way that the UFC could find a replacement opponent. No word yet as to whether the fight will be re-booked for a new date, but it seems likely considering Rodrigues’ removal from the event was not due to injury.

Rodrigues not the only fighter to miss weight

The 27-year-old wasn’t the only fighter to struggle with the scales on Friday. Kill Cliff FC talent Loik Radzhabov missed the lightweight mark for his bout against Mateusz Rebecki as well. The ‘Tajik Tank’ came in at 157.25 pounds, just 11/4 pounds over the limit. Fortunately, in his case, the bout will go ahead at a catchweight, with Radzhabov fined 20% of his show purse as a result of the weight infraction.

Jamall Emmers had his own issues getting down to fight weight. The featherweight out of Pinnacle MMA came in at 147 pounds on his first attempt, for his bout against Australia’s Jack Jenkins. Fortunately, in his case, ‘Prettyboy’ was able to hit the mark on his second try, coming in right on the 146 pound limit. As a result, the bout will go ahead as planned with no fines and no catchweight agreement.

Full UFC Fight Night Jacksonville weigh-in results

All other fighters on the card made weight for their UFC on ABC 5 bouts. Check out the full results for the event below.

Main Card (3 p.m. ET) (ABC / ESPN+)

Preliminary Card (11:30 a.m. ET) (ESPN / ESPN+)

Dana White adds gas to ‘dead serious’ Elon Musk vs. Mark Zuckerberg fight

Two of the world’s richest men appear to be increasingly interested in proving that they’re also actually very tough guys. Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk have made billions of dollars off of their respective technological innovations and investments, but all the money in the world can’t buy someone legitimate street cred.

As such, the Facebook founder and Tesla CEO recently found themselves sparring over social media, with fans ready to rile both men up for the idea of a possible cage fight between them. After Musk claimed that he was “up for a cage match” if Zuckerberg was, the recent competitive BJJ grappler took to Instagram with a quote from MMA royalty.

“Send Me Location,” Zuckerberg wrote, aping former UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov.

Dana White backs up Mark Zuckerberg vs. Elon Musk cage fight idea

Although UFC president Dana White has long claimed that his promotion doesn’t do “gimmick fights,” the Power Slap CEO was quick to jump in on this gimmick in a recent interview with TMZ. In a video posted by the website, White claimed he had been in contact with both men and that they were “absolutely” serious about getting a fight booked.

“Talked with Mark and Elon last night, both guys are absolutely dead serious about this,” White told the outlet.

Despite his enthusiasm, however, it has to be assumed that there’s nothing more to this bout than pointless posturing. With the huge amount of money both men are already worth and the massive amount of value in both their reputations as heads of two publicly traded companies, the likelihood that either of them would actually step into a full contact professional MMA fight seems beyond slim.

That said, Mark Zuckerberg recently slid into a regional Jiu Jitsu competition unannounced, where he won gold as one of only two competitors in the Master 1 no-gi white belt division at 149 lbs. Despite that success, the lasting note from the event was one of mild controversy—after Zuckerberg lost a gi match that same day where the referee claimed that the Facebook CEO had been put to sleep by his opponent.

“At no point during the competition was Mark knocked unconscious,” Meta spokesperson Elana Widmann told The Daily Beast. “That never happened.”

If a match of that little consequence was able to trigger Meta into stepping in and making public statements on Zuckerberg’s behalf, it seems nigh impossible to imagine what reaction a potential cage fight might garner.

Dana White’s other gimmick

Of course, that’s not the only gimmick fight that White’s got cooking at the moment. Possibly even further from the scope of reality is the idea of an MMA match between heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury and current UFC heavyweight champ Jon Jones. The two men got to chirping at one another on Twitter recently, over claims of who would win what kind of fight in which sport, before the UFC boss jumped in the middle and claimed he was making Fury an official offer.

“I will make Jon Jones vs. Tyson Fury in the Octagon,” Dana White told media at UFC press conference. “And we’ll figure it out. We figured out how to pay Floyd [Mayweather], we’ll figure out how to pay you too, Tyson.”

For his part, Fury seems none to pleased to find himself still in the conversation with Jon Jones and the UFC. The ‘Gypsy King’ isn’t directing his ire at either ‘Bones’ or White, however, instead taking his rage out on Joe Rogan, who really kick-started the ‘what if’ conversation on an episode of his podcast.

“It was actually Joe Rogan, little shitbag, who [started this],” said Fury. “Just out of the blue, there was no talk of me or Jon even fighting. Jon’s a great guy, probably the GOAT of MMA. [Rogan] said, ‘Oh if Tyson Fury goes in a room with Jon Jones he’s going to get absolutely smashed to bits.’ Like, if someone goes in the room with me and it’s no holds barred, you’re going to have to kill me to stop me.”

NBA denies Conor McGregor sex assault hush money claim

The story surrounding sex assault accusations against Conor McGregor at an NBA finals game between the Miami Heat and the Denver Nuggets has taken another strange turn.

The UFC superstar and recent Ultimate Fighter coach has been accused of forcing himself on a woman he was seen with at multiple points throughout the night of Friday, June 9th during game 4 of the 2023 NBA finals. Alongside claims the 34-year-old former two-division champion forcibly kissed, elicited oral sex from, and attempted to sodomize his alleged victim in a bathroom at the Miami Heat’s home arena, a letter from the woman’s attorney claims that McGregor’s actions were aided by security staff for both the NBA and Miami Heat.

Attorney claims NBA offered $100k to stay quiet

As such, Ariel Mitchell—the alleged victim’s legal counsel—is seeking settlements not just with the ‘Notorious’ Irishman, but with the Miami-based NBA franchise and with the league itself. To bolster their claims of culpability, Mitchell recently told the Daily Mail that the NBA worked to keep the allegations against McGregor quiet—with a second, unidentified source claiming the league offered $100,000 to the unnamed woman to keep the story on the down low. Supposedly, the NBA retracted that offer once news of the incident became public.

Speaking to the Daily Mail, Mitchell explained why she felt the Miami Heat were liable in the case.

“Some of the security guards who stood by when this happened were not McGregor’s. They were hired by the Heat,” Mitchell claimed. “They decided to cater to a celebrity instead of protecting a young woman in trouble.”

NBA denies hush money claims

“This claim is categorically false,” NBA chief communications officer Mike Bass told the Daily Mail, denying that they had ever offered any money to McGregor’s accuser.

It’s not just McGregor, the NBA, or the Heat that are finding themselves in the crosshairs here, either. In the same Daily Mail article Ariel Mitchell also took the Miami Police Department to task, alleging that officers initially turned her client away—telling the woman she should contact an attorney before filing a report when she first went to the station to report the assault.

“They know what they did,” Mitchell responded, when asked if they intended to sue the department as well. “They turned her away. They turned away the victim of a sexual assault,” she added—furthermore claiming that she had to take her client back to the station and demand that clothing supposedly containing McGregor’s DNA be taken into evidence.

“We did open the case when the victim first came in [on June 11th],” Miami Police Department spokesman Michael Vega said. “As it happens in many investigations, she had to come back for additional information. I can’t imagine that any officer or detective in this department would turn away the victim of a sex crime.”

Video of McGregor with accuser after alleged assault

One of the more startling aspects of this case has been the publication of video showing Conor McGregor and his accuser together in public apparently after the alleged sexual assault incident. It’s footage that Mitchell claims bolsters her client’s story.

“My client has always stated that there would be video of before and after,” Mitchell said in a statement to TMZ alongside the video’s publication, “and in those videos she emphasized that the difference in the interactions between them would be visibly noticeable.

“This again is another video that supports what my client has been saying and supports what she told the police since the inception of this incident.”

McGregor’s legal team, however, has also claimed it as a key piece of evidence that the accuser is merely attempting to shake the fighter down for money.

“While the claimant’s story has changed yet again,” McGregor’s attorney Barbara R. Llanes said in a statement, “Our account of the evening has never changed. 

“This video only reinforces our position. We look forward to the swift conclusion of the investigation.”

McGregor and the UFC

In the meantime, the UFC has been non-committal regarding McGregor’s future with the promotion. The current season of the Ultimate Fighter, featuring Conor McGregor coaching alongside former Bellator champion Michael Chandler, continues to air as originally scheduled.

A fight between the two men had been planned for sometime later this year, however the certainty of that booking coming to fruition has been slowly fading, with seemingly unexplained delays to McGregor’s entry into the USADA drug testing pool. As for McGregor’s legal issues, the UFC is reportedly awaiting the conclusion of official proceedings before acting.

“The organization is aware of the recent allegations regarding Conor McGregor and will continue to gather additional details regarding the incident. UFC will allow the legal process to play out before making any additional statements.”

Aspen Ladd among top earning fighters at PFL 5

With another event down in the great state of Georgia, fight fans are getting another peak behind the curtain for just how well the Professional Fighters League pays their athletes. The PFL made major headlines this year, both with their signing of former UFC champion Francis Ngannou to a multi-million dollar contract, and for their reported deal with social media influencer and celebrity boxing sensation Jake Paul. While Paul’s contract appears to be principally as a ‘brand ambassador’ for the promotion, there’s also apparently room for him to compete in MMA as well, should he wish to do so.

So while the PFL is splashing out big on celebrity attractions, what’s the rest of the promotion pulling down? At PFL 4 2023, two fighters took home $100k paydays. That seems to be the high water mark here as well, but with a few more athletes getting their hands on six-figure purses.

Aspen Ladd among 5 fighters to grab $100k purses at PFL 5

Unsurprising among the list of fighters drawing top money for the latest PFL event are former tournament champions Larissa Pacheco and Ante Delija. Both athletes have had long tenures under the promotion’s banner, with Pacheco making her PFL debut in 2019, in just her second fight after getting released from the UFC four years before.

Pacheco lost to Kayla Harrison twice that year, before rattling off a 5-fight unbeaten streak capped by a win over Harrison to claim the 2022 women’s lightweight title. Pacheco is 2-0 in 2023, with wins over Julia Budd and Amber Leibrock.

Delija first made his debut with the PFL back in 2019 as well, but didn’t become a steady part of the roster until 2021, after a failed bid to sign with the UFC. ‘Walking Trouble’ played runner up that year to Bruno Cappelozza in the heavyweight tournament finals, but went 4-0 in 2022 to win the crown the following year. His victory over Maurice Green at PFL 5 was his first bout of 2023, after a cancelled April booking against Yorgan De Castro.

The other fighters making solid ends at PFL 5 were Denis Goltsov, Aspen Ladd, and Julia Budd. While none of those fighters are yet to make it to a tournament Finals in any of the past four PFL seasons, it’s not terribly surprising that any of them would be on higher earning contracts. Budd entered the PFL just two fights removed from losing her Bellator women’s featherweight title to Cris Cyborg in 2020. While Goltsov first hit the PFL cage in 2019, as a former ACB champion. While he’s only lost twice with the promotion in 11 fights since being signed, visa issues have notably hampered his ability to compete stateside.

As for Aspen Ladd, she has no titles to her name as a pro-fighter, but she and Budd were both key signings by the PFL in hopes of keeping Kayla Harrison with the promotion for the foreseeable future. Ladd made her PFL debut in November of last year, defeating Julia Budd by split decision. She followed that win with a majority decision loss to Olena Kolesnyk at PFL 2 back in April.

Complete PFL 5 salaries

Here’s a look at the complete list of salaries for PFL 5, as disclosed by the Georgia State Athletic Commission (h/t MMA Fighting).

  • Ante Delija – $100,000 ($50k/$50k | Show/Win)
  • Maurice Green – $21,000
  • Larissa Pacheco – $100,000 ($50k/$50k | Show/Win)
  • Amber Leibrock – $11,000
  • Renan Ferreira – $50,000 ($25k/$25k | Show/Win)
  • Matheus Scheffel – $25,000
  • Olena Kolesnyk – $40,000 ($20k/$20k | Show/Win)
  • Yoko Higashi – $10,000
  • Denis Goltsov – $100,000 ($50k/$50k | Show/Win)
  • Yorgan De Castro – $50,000
  • Aspen Ladd – $100,000 ($50k/$50k | Show/Win)
  • Karolina Sobek – $8,000
  • Marcelo Nunes – $30,000 ($15k/$15k | Show/Win)
  • Danilo Marques – $11,000
  • Julia Budd – $100,000 ($50k/$50k | Show/Win)
  • Martina Jindrova – $24,000
  • Marina Mokhnatkina – $44,000 ($22k/$22k | Show/Win)
  • Evelyn Martins – $13,000
  • Jordan Heiderman – $20,000 ($10k/$10k | Show/Win)
  • Patrick Brady – $10,000
  • Isaiah Pinson – $13,000 ($6.5k/$6.5k | Show/Win)
  • Denzel Freeman – $6,500

Note: As always, these payout numbers do not reflect any potential side letter agreements, locker room bonus, performance bonus, sponsorship deals, or other non-purse related income athletes may receive as part of their participation in PFL events. These numbers also do not include any fines, taxes, manager/coaching fees, or other witholdings that may be removed from a fighter’s income due to their participation in PFL events. These numbers are only the base fight purse information as relayed by the promotion to the state of Georgia.