Conor McGregor vs. Mike Perry? | Fights to Make

Even going in to this weekend it was clear that the UFC was not going to own the show on Saturday night. There were no major boxing PPVs, Bellator and the PFL were taking a break. There was no obvious competition. Just a strange sideshow called BKFC, and their ongoing attempt to bring bareknuckle boxing back to the main stream with a fight between Mike Perry and Luke Rockhold.

They haven’t quite hit that mark yet, but BKFC 41 went a long way toward the goal. Especially with UFC superstar Conor McGregor showing up to cut a (seemingly) free promo for the event and square up with Mike Perry fresh off Perry’s detonation of a former UFC champ.

What is Conor McGregor doing?

I’m not going to try and spin my way through matching up the whole BKFC 41 roster. After all I can’t pretend to know who the obvious next contender for Christine Ferea might be, or why Conor McGregor had a belt over his shoulder when neither he nor Mike Perry are title holders. What I do know, however, is that Conor McGregor has about as much chance of fighting in the BKFC ring as a graham cracker has of making it through a sandblaster. What I also know is, after Saturday night, that is suddenly a fight I absolutely want to see.

I may not have any special love for Mike Perry, or Conor McGregor, and I may find BKFC’s matchmaking worryingly predatory. But good promotion supersedes sense. And that was good promotion. If only I could believe it would come to anything.

Now let’s get to the rest of it.

Song Yadong

Heading into fight night, this seemed very much like a fight Ricky Simon was ready to win. Much was made about his extreme cut to bantamweight and—given how much a volume takedown game was a part of Cory Sandhagen’s win over the Team Alpha Male fighter—Simon’s size, wrestling, and impossible pace, felt like they should give him the edge. They didn’t. Trouble started immediately with Song’s kicking game, but more than that he was able to punish the predictability of Simon’s entries to shut down the bulk of the wrestling before it even had a chance to get started.

The end result was a 5th round TKO, and another chance for Song to take a stab at the very elite of bantamweight. After this win, he called for a possible rematch with Marlon Vera, or maybe a bout against Sean O’Malley. That O’Malley fight seems entirely unlikely, assuming that ‘Sugar’ Sean is still primed for the winner of Cejudo/Sterling next week. The Vera fight’s not a bad idea. A little strange considering it’s a fight he’s already won before.

In part, of course, all this will depend on what actually happens at UFC 288. If Henry Cejudo wins, that puts Merab Dvalishvili in a better spot to take a swing at the belt. If the Georgian isn’t about to get that chance, however, I’d be very happy to see him fight someone like Song Yadong. Or, there are fights with Rob Font and Pedro Munhoz. I’d previously suggested Munhoz for this booking after his last fight. But the way everything stands now, I’ll say Song Yadong vs. Rob Font seems like an exceptionally fun action bout. It’s also much more likely to get booked than Song suddenly getting another crack at a title contender.

Ricky Simon

If this was a solid (mild) underdog performance from Song Yadong, it was also something of a disappointment from Ricky Simon. The Team Oyama talent hit one blast double late in the second round and landed some solid GnP as a result, but even that ended with Song scrambling quickly to his feet—it wasn’t a success Simon was ever able to repeat. He’s put a lot of work into his boxing, made real, tangible improvements there, but that doesn’t mean he’s a natural kickboxing talent who can rely on his strikes alone to take over a fight at the highest levels. Song was a hard reminder of that fact.

Still, bantamweight being the constant sharktank that it is, there’s no shortage of men for Simon to fight in contests that should prove every bit as thrilling. Song Yadong called out Marlon Vera, but ‘Chito’ is coming off a loss. As is Dominick Cruz, Adrian Yanez, Chris Gutierrez, and Said Numagomedov. To my knowledge, none of them has a fight booked. Do any of them sound like the right fight? I’m not so sure.

In this case, I’m going to go winner/loser instead. Give Simon a chance to jump back in against someone with a little momentum to their name. Pedro Munhoz didn’t exactly thrill in his bout against Gutierrez, but he did prove that he’s still awfully dangerous. He’s also been a tough fighter to tangle with on the mats for years. Munhoz vs. Simon feels like it could turn into something very cool.

Caio Borralho

For a moment or two it seemed like Michal Oleksiejczuk might know exactly what to do with Caio Borralho. He kept on the front foot, countered any and all of Borralho’s aggression, and threw punches in volume. He even stuffed some early takedowns. But once ‘Hussar’ started to lose just a little pep in his step, those takedown entries from Borralho began working with much greater frequency. The Brazilian may not have proven any kind of submission machine in his UFC career to date, but there’s always time to start changing the narrative. That’s what he did in the second round with a rear-naked choke.

That puts Borralho at 4-0 in the Octagon, and seems like it will likely start shoving him into deeper waters in a hurry. Edmen Shahbazyan has a bout next month against Anthony Hernandez, seeing Borralho against the winner of that fight feels like it would answer some important questions about his ability to be a contender. There’s also fights with Bruno Silva, or hot prospects like Joe Pyfer or Christian Leroy Duncan. But I like the idea of Borralho vs. the Shahbazyan/Hernandez winner. Get that W and he’s knocking on a spot in the rankings.

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‘It’s a left or a right, it’s not that confusing’ – Mike Perry claps back on Luke Rockhold’s enigmatic boxing

Mike Perry and Luke Rockhold are set to share the cage at BKFC 41 this weekend. For the former UFC middleweight champion, this fight will mark his boxing debut. It also marks another stage in a long and unsettled series of late-career moves for the noted AKA talent and current Henri Hooft trained fighter.

Now 38-years-old, Rockhold is clearly no longer the competitor he once was when he captured the Strikeforce middleweight title and then went on a five-fight unbeaten streak in the Octagon—following a shocking KO loss to Vitor Belfort in his UFC debut—to capture gold there as well. He’s been plagued by recurring injuries, dogged by durability issues, lost a step or two of speed. More than any of that, though, the confidence and fire that marked his biggest successes seems to have been difficult to find.

That’s likely largely due to two brutal knockout losses at the hands of Michael Bisping and Yoel Romero, the latter of which, coupled with a nasty shin injury, pushed Rockhold out of competition for more than a year. When he returned—at light heavyweight against Jan Blachowicz in 2019—he looked nowhere near the dynamic, hard-nosed competitor he had once been. A short-lived retirement seemed to recapture some of that fire for his 2022 bout against Paulo Costa, but along with time and wear, it wasn’t enough to see Rockhold on his way to victory.

Luke Rockhold making boxing debut

Now out of the UFC, and looking to make his mark on the free agent combat sports market, Rockhold has landed with BKFC to try his hand in a whole new sport: Bare Knuckle Boxing. His opponent? Another familiar face to MMA fans, former UFC welterweight action-fight talent Mike Perry.

Having left the world’s largest MMA promotion behind in 2021, Perry was an instant fit in the increasingly common crossover world to boxing and bare-knuckle fighting. He’s currently 2-0 in the BKFC ring, with victories over Julian Lane of “Let me bang, bro!” TUF fame, and feature Bellator attraction Michael ‘Venom’ Page. Mike Perry and Luke Rockhold are set to clash this Saturday at BKFC 41 in Broomfield, CO.

Mike Perry and Luke Rockhold exchange barbs

Ahead of their fight, they got on a chance to do a little verbal sparring in a video conference call hosted by the MMA Hour. That’s where Rockhold revealed what he believes will be his big edge over his opponent.

“Mike, I know who you are,” Rockhold said, while speaking of his own enigma (transcript via MMA Fighting). “I’ve seen who you are and everyone knows what you bring to the table. You’ve been doing your thing for a while. You’ve been boxing. Yeah, it’s apparent you can box. You’re a little f dog and you like to come forward. No one’s ever seen me box. No one’s ever seen me isolated in this spectrum and no one’s ever seen me move like this. You don’t know what to expect. I know what to expect.”

Perry, for his part, was not all that impressed by the idea that BJJ black belt might be bringing something special to the table as a boxer.

“It’s a left or a right, it’s not that confusing,” Perry responded. “It’s a left or a right hand, footwork, some head movement. You’re southpaw, I’m orthodox. You’re rangy, I’m an inside fighter. It’s not that confusing. But it will be when I’m out there in front of you. I’m better than everybody who trained with. Every boxer you trained with for this, I’m better than them.”

Despite Perry’s insistence that he’s got Rockhold’s number, the California native is confident he’ll be able to outsmart his opponent in the ring.

“I feel like people are underestimating me like they always do,” Rockhold added, speaking of his game. “Mike’s in this game, he’s done his thing. I’ve handicapped myself. He’s moving up. It’s a perfect f-cking storm. We’re going to fight. He’s coming forward and I’m going to f-cking [outsmart] him all over that f-cking ring. That’s all he’s got. He’s going to come forward swinging for the fences, I’m going to f-cking stick, I’m going to move, I’m going to crack, I’m going to come forward, I’m going to back up. I’m going to do everything. I’m going to do it.”

“That’s not how I fight, man,” Perry responded. “I don’t f-cking swing for the fences. I’m pretty calculated.”

BKFC 41 goes down on April 29th at the 1stBank Center and airs live on iPPV. Here’s a look at the full fight card:

BKFC 41 fight card

  • Mike Perry vs. Luke Rockhold
  • Eddie Alvarez vs. Chad Mendes
  • Bec Rawlings vs. Christine Ferea
  • Chris Camozzi vs. Dan Spohn
  • Brandon Girtz vs. Christian Torres
  • Jessie Stadler vs. Roderick Stewart
  • Matthew Maestas vs. Dillion Winemiller
  • Mike Alvarado vs. James Brown
  • Ben Rothwell vs. Josh Copeland
  • Mitch Seybold vs. Jack Willoughby
  • BJ Lawrence vs. Wayna Reid
  • Marcus Edwards vs. Jay Jackson