UFC star Justin Gaethje tussles with ‘bodyguard,’ gets tapped at the club

UFC 294 went down this past weekend in Abu Dhabi. As with every major UFC event, a number of high profile celebrities and fighters were on hand. In the case of UFC BMF champ Justin Gaethje, the ‘Highlight’ was there to corner friend and training partner Kamaru Usman.

The former UFC welterweight king served as a late notice replacement for Paulo Costa, facing Khamzat Chimaev on just 10 days notice. Usman put together a shockingly successful performance against the Chechen, losing a majority decision. But just because he and his team were there for business didn’t mean they couldn’t have a little fun too.

Video: Justin Gaethje wrestles Nelk Boys security, loses

Among the celebrities on hand for UFC 294 were longtime friends of Dana White and podcast influencers, the Nelk Boys. Known as much for their publicity stunts as their media content, it seems at some point someone must have had the idea to get UFC star Justin Gaethje into an impromptu scuffle. That, or maybe the Trevor Wittman-trained fighter just decided he was feeling restless.

Either way video is circulating online of Gaethje and a man only identified as a “Nelk Boys security” engaged in a friendly tussle. At first, Gaethje seems to be handling things just the way fans might expect. That is, right up until he gets caught in a surprise kimura and has to tap his way out of trouble.

Kamaru Usman pranks Justin Gaethje

That wasn’t the only bit of goofiness that the 34-year-old Arizona native found himself at the center of during his trip to Abu Dhabi. At some point during their stay in the Middle East, Usman caught Justin Gaethje sleeping, and did what any warm blooded American man does in that situation, drew a penis on his forehead in sharpie.

It’s unclear at this point what might be next for Gaethje (other than some rubbing alcohol). UFC 294 witnessed the second defense of Islam Makhachev’s lightweight title, potentially setting Gaethje up for his own crack at the Dagestani champ. However, since the bout was supposed to feature Charles Oliveira taking on Makhachev, before a last minute injury sidelined the Chute Boxe Diego Lima fighter, it may just be that Gaethje will be stuck on the sidelines waiting for his turn in line.

Gaethje and Usman at center of pre-fight injury speculation

Earlier in fight week, both Justin Gaethje and Kamaru Usman found themselves at the center of a less entertaining bit of headline news. During Usman’s open workout for UFC 294, the ‘Nigerian Nightmare’ hit a big double leg takedown. After hitting the mat, right next to a camera recording the session, it sounded like Usman told Gaethje something “popped.”

Usman seemed to get up slowly, but walked off the mat under his own power and reportedly went on to hit mitts with Cosmo Alexandre. Both men firmly denied that there was anything wrong with Usman’s knee, but it didn’t put a rest to fans speculating ahead of the event.

Eventually, even the most skeptical observers had to be satisfied, however. Usman fought seemingly without reservation or encumbrance for 15 hard minutes against Chimaev. If there was any trouble with his left knee, he certainly didn’t show it on Saturday.

Dana White not wowed by new UFC super prospect

UFC 294 saw a number of notable story lines converge for the world’s largest MMA promotion. Alexander Volkanovski’s rivalry with Islam Makhachev was put to bed; Khamzat Chimaev’s path to a UFC title belt finally seems to have come to fruition; and Magomed Ankalaev had another strange and unsatisfying outing that seems to have kept his career in the same limbo he’s been in for the past year.

Further down on the undercard, however, there was another story of note unfolding. The UFC debut of long-anticipated super-prospect Sharabutdin Magomedov. ‘Shara Bullet’ as he’s commonly known, hit the Octagon with a perfect, unbeaten 11-0 record, and a whole lot of hype as the next great talent out of Dagestan.

Dana White feels Shara Bullet has work to do

The 29-year-old former kickboxer walked out of UFC 294 with his hand raised, picking up a unanimous decision victory over Brazilian slugger Bruno Silva along the way. Despite that success, it was hard to overlook some major struggles that the GOR MMA talent had getting his first Octagon win. Most notably, a defensive wrestling game that looked more sieve than steel.

The takedowns came easily enough for ‘Blindado’ that even UFC CEO Dana White couldn’t help noting it in his post event presser.

“I don’t know if he’s the future of the sport, but he’s definitely got a future here,” Dana White responded when asked about Magomedov’s performance (transcript via MMA Mania). “He’s got to work on his takedown defense. In UFC you have to have the full game. Obviously, his kickboxing is nasty. And leg kicks, head kicks, elbows. But, he’s gotta tighten up that wrestling game or he’ll get beat here very quickly.”

Magomedov talks wrestling defense

Asked about his fight by Daniel Cormier after beating Silva, Magomedov was defiant about the idea that wrestling was a major problem for his game.

“… this problem, wrestling,” Magomedov explained. “What problem I’m wrong? Elbow, elbow, I win! I win! No problem strike, takedown. I am strike, dangerous,” he continued, emphasizing the damage he did with his elbows off his back with Silva on top of him in guard.

Next for Shara Bullet?

If Sharabutdin Magomedov has some problems that need fixing, it doesn’t seem like he’s about to take too much time off to try and address them. After UFC 294, Magomedov made it clear that he’s looking for a quick turnaround, asking the UFC to book him for their December cared in Shanghai.

“I lived in Shanghai for a long time,” he explained. “I’m 10-0 in Shanghai. I’ve never lost a fight in Shanghai. I have a lot of fans in Shanghai. So, I would love to go out there to China and show a great fight. Dana White says it’s going to work, so next month I will see you in Shanghai.”

That card was set to be headlined by a bantamweight bout between Song Yadong and Petr Yan. Unfortunately, an injury to the Russian has left the UFC searching for a replacement to take on the standout Team Alpha Male talent. As of yet no new booking has been officially announced. Currently, the card is set to feature a middleweight bout between Andre Muniz & Park Jun-yong, along with a lightweight fight between Nasrat Haqarast & Jamie Mullarkey.

UFC 294: A big night marred by wild officiating

The UFC did their best to stack the deck for UFC 294. The promotion was heading back to one of their major international hubs, the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi. For the occasion they pulled out all their Caucasus stars. Islam Makhachev, Khamzat Chimaev, Magomed Ankalaev, and rising talents like Ikram Aliskerov, and Muhammad Mokaev all pushed into the limelight for a potential to showcase their skills in front of a partisan crowd.

Unfortunately, much of the narrative outside the main and co-main events was marred by an officiating crew that didn’t seem all that up to the task of what a massive PPV required. There were missed fouls, inexplicable medical decisions, and every indication that pre-fight screening was notably lax.

The worst part of all of it though? Unlike stateside shows, where the UFC is governed by an athletic commission, the UFC brings their own officiating to international events. The men and women working UFC 294 are there because the promotion selected them specifically.

It has to be wondered, then, why it seems like the crew on hand felt so inexperienced. Issues first started to come up between Muhammad Naimov and Nathaniel Wood down on the early prelims. Following some early success for Naimov, the Tajik fighter proceeded to land multiple low blows, grab the fence, and his opponent’s gloves. The result? A couple of healthy warnings, and a 29-28 unanimous decision loss for Wood.

It was shortly after that, that things got worse.

Early issues

Javid Basharat vs. Victor Henry was supposed to be a major highlight on the UFC 294 prelims. A streaking prospect against a seasoned veteran, two exciting styles between two fighters dreaming of a run to the belt. The result? After a simmering first round, Basharat landed a kick to the groin that left Victor Henry entirely disabled and unable to fight.

Henry’s pain was clear for all to see as he writhed on the mat clutching his groin. It seemed absolutely obvious what had happened to all and sundry, even though video replay of the actual foul was obscured by the Octagon padding and by the two men’s bodies. Despite Henry nearly dry heaving inside the cage, however, the cageside doctor wanted more proof.

“It wasn’t your balls,” the doctor told Henry as the fighter sat stunned on the canvas. “He didn’t kick your balls.”

“It was all dick and balls,” Henry replied, unbelieving.

Was Henry about to lose via TKO for what should have been an obvious foul? Thankfully cooler heads intervened among the officiating crew and bout was eventually declared a ‘no contest’. But the doctor involved was just getting started.

The big mistake

Later that night, during a PPV bout between Magomed Ankalaev and Johnny Walker, the Dagestani top contender landed a clear illegal knee with Walker down on the mat against the cage. The blow was ruled unintentional (which is the start of an argument in its own right), but things got a lot more complicated in a hurry when the referee determined that the doctor should be brought in to perform an ad-hoc concussion test on Walker to ensure that he was okay to fight.

On the surface, this seems like a perfectly laudable approach that we rarely see in combat sports. Many fans and pundits have long wished that officials would act with a greater abundance of caution in a culture ruled by its cozy relationship with violence. Tonight we got a sterling example of why that may not always be the best idea.

After stepping in to examine Walker, the doctor asked the fighter a pair of questions. Reportedly consisting of “What country are you in?” and “What round is it?” Walker gave the doctor a dismissive shrug and went back to focusing on his opponent across the Octagon. That’s all it took for the bout to be waived off.

It might be argued as a mark against Walker that, even then, he didn’t seem to have a clue what was going on. It took several minutes of firm explanation after the fight had been cancelled for Walker to understand that they weren’t about to just go restart the bout. But it seemed a lot more indicative of a lack of clear communication in the first place than a sign the Brazilian was too concussed to continue.

By all appearances Walker’s English isn’t especially good. And he seemed so focused on re-starting his fight that his dismissal of the doctor’s questions carried much more firmly the air of someone who simply doesn’t care about the nonsense happening in front of him, rather than someone who can’t clearly respond or answer questions. If the man didn’t understand what the doctor was trying to do from the jump, it’s not all that surprising that he didn’t give the responses the doctor needed.

Does that entirely absolve Walker of fault here? No, of course not. He needs to be at least aware enough of his surroundings to understand that if a fight has been stopped due to an illegal strike, and officials are talking to him, his attention goes to them first and foremost. But it very quickly became apparent to all and sundry that Walker could have kept competing were it not for this over-eager bit of Q&A.

Why is the UFC leaning on inexperience?

Things got bad enough that Dana White had to enter the Octagon to calm it all down. After the event the UFC CEO told reporters that the doctor was inexperienced. But, of course, that only raises more questions.

It’s on the UFC to put together, or at least vet, the staffing for these international events. If they knew this doctor didn’t have the kind of experience needed to be a ringside physician, why did they let him have the job? Alongside the other moments of poor officiating and oversight it’s hard not to feel the world’s largest MMA promotion is running a much more slapdash operation than should be expected of a multi-billion dollar company.

Mixed in with the mid-fight medical mishaps, UFC 294’ spectacularly inexperienced ref team stumbled over a number of fouls and seeming fouls. One referee issued warning after warning in a messy fight where a single point deduction would have dramatically altered the outcome, while another called multiple illegal knees in a single bout only to reverse his decision each time via live replay, taking huge amounts of momentum away from the fighter who delivered said knees on both occasions.

Most egregiously, however, were reports of hidden pre-fight illnesses and one athlete competing with fresh stitches in a lacerated eyebrow. The wound opened up mid-bout, leaving a flap of skin dangling precariously for the bulk of two rounds. The fact that fighter (Mike Breeden) went on to win by KO doesn’t really change the question how any physician could have screened him pre-fight and not seen an injury clearly still in the process of healing.

As for the illnesses? Breeden also admitted to carrying a potentially still active staph infection with him into the Octagon, alongside Victoria Dudakova, who made a repulsive admission to reporters after her win over Jinh Yu Frey.

“My butt is completely bloodied up right now,” Dudakova said in her post-fight media scrum. “I have staph infection in places that it’s not necessarily okay to announce to the whole world.”

Is the UFC disinfecting the Octagon between fights? Because the Russian also admitted that her cyst ruptured mid-fight. And it’s not like Staph isn’t notoriously infectious or anything.

Jump back to the last time the UFC was in Abu Dhabi—for UFC 280 in October of 2022—and while it wasn’t as pronounced, that card also featured notable promotional chicanery. Former champion TJ Dillashaw revealed after his loss to Aljamain Sterling, that he had gone through his entire training camp with a severe shoulder injury. One that rendered him almost entirely uncompetitive once he stepped into the Octagon to challenge for the bantamweight title.

UFC employees told officials between rounds that they had preexisting knowledge of the injury, ensuring that the fight wouldn’t get waived off automatically. But it has to be said, at that point the whole thing starts to feel a bit more like a fix than simple incompetence, at least to my ears.

The real shame to all of this is, that UFC 294 was a fun card. Islam Makhachev got a huge win over a legend in his own time, Alexander Volkanovski. Kamaru Usman showed up and had a fun back-and-forth fight with Khamzat Chimaev. Ikram Aliskerov looked fantastic, as did Said Nurmagomedov and Muhammad Mokaev.

The promotion shouldn’t have to be cutting corners to make good events happen, and the appearance that they’re doing so only raises fears that future international cards will be plagued by more unpredictability and lack of oversight. I know this is cage fighting and all, but that’s the way people really get hurt.

Title shot?! Khamzat Chimaev decisioned a welterweight off the couch, argues UFC champ Strickland

UFC 294 was a big moment for the promotion’s talent from the Russian Caucuses. Islam Makhachev shown bright in the main event with a head kick KO over featherweight great Alexander Volkanovski, while Ikram Aliskerov, Muhammad Mokaev, and Said Nurmagomedov all picked up fantastic additions to their highlight reels.

In the co-main event, prodigy talent Khamzat Chimaev snagged a hard fought decision victory over former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman. Despite neither of them holding a spot in the middleweight rankings—or even having competed in the division over the last three years—the bout was announced as a de facto top contender’s fight, with a chance to face champion Sean Strickland going to the winner.

MMA: UFC 293 - Adesanya vs Strickland Sep 9, 2023; Sydney, NSW, AUSTRALIA; Sean Strickland (blue gloves) celebrates after defeating Israel Adesanya (not pictured) during UFC 293 at Qudos Bank Arena. Sydney Qudos Bank Arena NSW AUSTRALIA, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY 20230909_kab_ou2_168
Jasmin Frank / USA TODAY Network, IMAGO

UFC champ Sean Strickland doesn’t see Khamzat Chimaev as a deserving contender

To that end, Chimaev walked away with his hand raised, and with the UFC clearly intent on matching him up with the Xtreme Couture trained title holder.

“Khamzat, the winner of this fight was billed as the next title challenger for the middleweight championship,” Daniel Cormier told ‘Borz’ in the Octagon after his victory. “Sean Strickland is the champion. What does it mean to you to look down the line and see that you’re potentially going to get a title fight?”

More later on what Chimaev thought, but for the moment Sean Strickland had his own take on the idea. Notably that while he wouldn’t turn down a fight with Chimaev, he didn’t see it as a very logical booking.

“The only thing I like about Chimaev is that he sells fights,” Strickland said in an interview shortly after the event . “For some reason, people f—ing like him or don’t like him. I don’t know. To me, he’s a f—ing paycheck. He sells a lot of fights. People pay to watch.

“But, f—ing he hasn’t earned it, he doesn’t f—ing deserve it. But here we are. Give it to him. He sells a lot of fights. I’ll go f—ing fight the man for five rounds. But no, he has not earned it, he doesn’t f—ing deserve it, and getting a decision with a welterweight off the couch does not f—ing earn it.”

Sean Strickland has ‘true story’ about Khamzat Chimaev

Speaking to Sean Strickland Extra Rounds host TJ De Santis highlighted recent quotes by the longtime Allstars Training Center athlete about how Chimaev has said that he’s not very impressed with the champion’s skills. Quick to defend his reputation, Strickland recalled an incident that he had with Chimaev when they were both working out of the same gym.

“Let me tell you about Chimaev, you guys,” Strickland continued after his title shot rant. “This is a f—ing true story. And, you know, since we’re going to talk about training: One day I made fun of the Chechnyan and he misunderstood what I said. It was more of, like, a compliment to the fighter, and he sent me a message talking shit. And I said, ‘Chimaev, you misunderstood, but I will see you tomorrow, at 3 o’clock. Gloves or no gloves, turn up. And then, guess what? No show, no answer. We talked it out. He said, ‘No no no, it’s okay. We talk about it.’

“There’s a thing about Chimaev: The man can f—ing fight. The man can fight, we all know that. He beat Usman to a decision, you know. Usman will retire, but whatever. He still did it. But, me and him are f—ing different. Chimaev can be right here [points at floor]; I will fight that man to the death right here, knowing I’m gonna die. That ain’t f—ing Chimaev, dude.”

Does Khamzat Chimaev even want to fight for the belt?

As aforementioned, Khamzat Chimaev’s response to Daniel Cormier’s question is as worthy of note as Strickland’s reaction to the whole situation. The UFC commentator seemingly put the 29-year-old on the spot for an easy promo to announce himself as the clear and obvious next contender for middleweight gold. But given that option, Chimaev sounded more reluctant than anything.

“I don’t know, man, what to say. I’m just—I didn’t come here for the titles. I just make money and be happy, fight somebody. And the guys: Dana [White], Hunter [Campbell], thank you for everything… Because of these guys I am who I am today.”

That may be in part because Chimaev has his mind on other, bigger issues than just fighting. Alongside talking about his win over Usman and a future fight against Strickland, Chimaev also gave an impassioned plea for peace amid the ongoing war between Israel and Palestine. While his words in English were clearly heartfelt and impassioned, he had another message for Chechen dictator Ramzan Kadyrov as well.

“Chief, may Allah be pleased with you, it is not difficult to perform here and fight for you here,” Chimaev said in his native Chechen. “If you give me permission, I swear by Allah, I will be the first to go there [to Palestine]. For God’s sake, give me weapons so I can go to Palestine. I swear, I wasn’t raised to fight in shorts. I swore allegiance to our chief and I swear, if he gives me the right, I am the guy who will go and die there. I don’t worry about my own death as much as I worry about [the death of] my Muslim brothers.”

It may be that Chimaev is less than interested in fighting for UFC gold because he sees his next battle outside the Octagon. If that’s the case, it seems unlikely that any trash talk from Strickland or fight offers from the UFC would be likely to sway him.

ufc 294 Khamzat Chimaev
Joe Camporeale / USA TODAY Network, IMAGO

Joe Rogan in awe of Islam Makhachev

UFC 294 came with a few notable asterisks. The main and co-main events especially, saw former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman and current UFC featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski step into major, difficult bouts on just a few days notice. In Usman’s case, the result was a highly entertaining and competitive 15 minutes of action against ‘Borz’. In Volkanovski’s case, the ‘Great’ found himself on the wrong end of a KO loss just 3 minutes into the opening round.

Even if there’s a solid argument that the City Kickboxing talent put himself in position to take a hard loss inside the Octagon, that doesn’t change the fact that his opponent, lightweight champion Islam Makhachev, put on one hell of a performance. With the victory, the Dagestani, notched his first KO due to standing strikes since a 2018 win over Gleison Tibau.

Joe Rogan wowed by Islam Makhachev’s striking skills

Longtime UFC commentator Joe Rogan wasn’t in attendance for UFC 294. The world famous podcast host stopped traveling with the UFC for international events way back in 2016. Paul Felder took over his duties this last Saturday in Abu Dhabi. But, that doesn’t mean the former Fear Factor host wasn’t still watching the fights. Instead, Rogan hosted a ‘Fight Companion‘ watch party for the event. That’s where fans got to see his live reaction to Makhachev’s thrilling win.

“Oh my God! He head kicked him,” Joe Rogan enthused (transcript via MMA Junkie). “Wow! What a shocker. Who would have saw that coming? It was amazing. Shin to the dome, opened up a cut. It was perfect. Islam, man. He showed a bunch of new sh*t. That front kick, and he was throwing that kick to the body, and then he threw the same kick to the head.”

“I’m just so impressed that he won that way,” Joe Rogan added. “He showed so much improvement. He really made adjustments because they must have trained for Volkanovski again,even though he wasn’t fighting Volkanovski (originally).

“I’m sure they went over all the different things that Volkanovski did, and what are the counters to those things, and he shut a lot of it down. He shut down that switch kick to the outside leg, throwing that front kick up the middle, set up the head kick.”

“He knocked (down) Oliveira in the last fight – remember, his striking was his weakest point. Now it’s f*cking as dangerous as anybody in the division. You knock out Volkanovski? Sh*t.”

Makhachev reacts to KO & cautions Volkanovski over quick turnaround

Alongside Makhachev’s extreme display of skill, one of the other major storylines to come out of UFC 294 was Alexander Volkanovski’s desire to stay busy. Speaking to fans in the Octagon and media after the event, the City Kickboxing star made a plea to UFC bosses. Notably, don’t use his loss here to deny him a chance to defend his belt against Ilia Topuria this coming January.

“You just need to keep busy. That’s why I asked the UFC to keep me busy,” he said at his UFC 294 post-fight presser. “I need to be keeping busy, I need to be in camp. Otherwise, I’m gonna do my head in.”

But if that’s Volkanovski’s hope, Makhachev would caution against it. After his win, Makhachev gave his thoughts on Volkanovski’s desire to jump right back into fight camp. To his way of thinking, the kind of loss Volkanovski suffered on Saturday should require much more rest and recovery.

“He has to (take a break),” Makhachev said of Volkanovski (transcript via MMA Junkie). “He has a big cut on his eye. He (took) a very good kick. That’s why he has to take some rest—100 percent.

“If he’s smart, if his team is smart, he has to take a couple of months rest because this is not like I choked him or body kick. This was a head kick. Not just his coach, but his doctor and his team have to make (that) decision.”

At the moment, the UFC has the 35-year-old Aussie penciled in to face Islam Makhachev at UFC 297 on January 20th in Toronto, Canada. That card is also expected to play host to a featherweight top contender’s bout between Arnold Allen and Movsar Evloev, as well as a middleweight bout between Chris Curtis and Marc-Andre Barriault.

Did UFC 294 see the worst low blow in MMA history?

One of the big highlights on the undercard of UFC 294 was supposed to be a prelim fight between Javid Basharat and Victor Henry. A fast rising prospect, Basharat has looked like a possible future contender in the bantamweight division so far. Henry, on the other hand, is a battle tested vet with years of experience on the regionals and a well put together, high volume striking game. All the right pieces for a great war in the Octagon.

Unfortunately, that’s not what fans ended up with. After one back and forth round of simmering action, Basharat came out early in the second and aimed a low kick at Henry’s upper thigh. Only ‘La Mangostra’ was stepping forward at the time. Longtime MMA fans will know how that ended.

Victor Henry unable to recover after brutal low blow at UFC 294

Despite getting a full five minutes in the cage to try and get his bearings back, UFC 294’s Victor Henry couldn’t come close to recovering. His reaction surprised some, given that there were no clear angles that caught the full force of Basharat’s blow on video, but the aftermath couldn’t be denied.

Doctor creates confusion

Despite the seemingly obvious extreme pain that Henry was in, it wasn’t necessarily clear what officials were going to do about it. It wasn’t even necessarily just a choice between a No Contest and a DQ win for Henry, but maybe even a chance for a TKO loss. At least that was the worry when the ringside doctor tried to tell Henry he didn’t get hit low.

“It wasn’t your balls,” the doctor told Henry. “He didn’t kick your balls.”

Josh Barnett gives update

Despite the doctor’s confusion, the fight was eventually declared a no contest, as it should have been. Henry was carried from the cage by his cornerman, former UFC champion Josh Barnett. Shortly afterward, the UFC broadcast crew gave an update that Henry was vomiting in the back and had been taken to the hospital. Barnett continued to provide updates from the road.

Remembering the UFC’s worst groin shot

Is it the worst low blow reaction we’ve ever seen inside the Octagon? It’s definitely way up there, but maybe not quite on par with former Brock Lesnar training partner Chris Tuchscherer’s horrible groin shot suffered against Gabriel Gonzaga back in 2009.

“I kind of remember getting kicked, and then basically I was out,” Tuchscherer told MMA Junkie in a 2017 interview. “I just sort of blacked out and came to on the mat. I think I actually grabbed the ref or the doctor’s leg, thinking I was fighting. After that is when I started to get sick.”

UFC 294: Khamzat Chimaev almost got title fight

UFC 294 has been through the ringer over the past couple weeks. A planned title fight between Islam Makhachev and Charles Oliveira fell to the wayside due to a training injury late in the Brazilian’s fight camp. That news, however, was followed quickly by the news that the co-main event between Khamzat Chimaev and Paulo Costa had also been cancelled. Costa picked up a nasty infection following recent elbow surgery, forcing him out of the event.

Fortunately for fans, the UFC got a couple top quality last minute replacements. Stepping in for Oliveira is none other than current featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski, looking to avenge the single loss of his Octagon career to date. And in for ‘Borrachina’? Former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman. That should ensure that fans still get a couple of thrilling battles at the top of the card, but we almost had something much more unexpected.

UFC asked Sean Strickland to fight Chimaev

In a recent exposé article from ESPN detailing the behind the scenes machinations of creating these new bookings for UFC 294 fans got a closer look at the promotion’s thought process when finding replacement opponents for major bouts. Among the things revealed were that the UFC did toy with the idea of putting Mateusz Gamrot in for Oliveira, but that his ‘backup’ role was meant to serve as a potential last-second replacement during fight week, rather than the first guy the promotion calls when they need to change things up further out from the event.

Justin Gaethje was top choice for Makhachev

The article also noted that Justin Gaethje was the first choice to replace the Brazilian, but that he was too heavy to be able to make weight in time. On the Costa side of things, it turns out the UFC had a lot more time to figure out a potential new booking for Chechen sensation Khamzat Chimaev. As far as a month out from UFC 294 the promotion knew they likely had a problem on their hands.

After learning that Costa was suffering from an elbow infection that would require surgery, one of the first people the UFC turned to apparently was none other than newly crowned champion Sean Strickland.

Strickland turned down the fight

According to ESPN’s sources, Strickland turned the fight down, being just a week or so removed from his win over Israel Adesanya. Honestly, though, it’s crazy that the UFC even asked. A newly minted title holder getting just a month to turn around for his first title defense, against a dynamic, dangerous opponent in front of a likely heavily partisan crowd? It’s hard to think of a champion in the promotion’s long history that would have taken that kind of risk.

Instead, apparently, Jared Cannonier was set to step in for Costa. Dana White had reportedly even recorded promos announcing the new fight, before Cannonier caught the injury bug himself. That’s when Karmau Usman stepped in.

Usman vs. Chimaev will be top contender bout

Accompanying the news of Usman’s opportunity, is the report from his manager Ali Abdelaziz that a key part of the negotiation for Usman to step up to middleweight and fight Chimaev would be that a title shot against Strickland is on the line for whoever wins.

Strickland and Usman fought once before, way back in 2017 at UFC 210. Usman won that fight via unanimous decision.

Strickland recalls Usman loss

“I’ll never forget that camp,” Strickland said, recalling his fight against Usman in a 2020 interview, “I never wrestled, I was a black belt in Jiu-Jitsu and I was like, ‘I’m a Jiu-Jitsu guy, f*ck wrestling. I’ll do stand-up and if he takes me down, yeah, I’ll tap him out,’ Like a stupidass. This was like f*cking four years or however long ago.

“So then I bring a bunch of high-level wrestlers into my camp. And dude, I am just getting f*cked up all camp. The whole eight weeks, bro. These high-level wrestlers are just beating me into the ground while I’m like, ‘I’m gonna f*cking lose this fight,’ I remember walking out there and I had these wrestlers in my corner warming me up. And they were taking me down in the backroom! I had no chance because if these guys are taking me down, he’s gonna take me down.”

To Strickland’s credit, Usman only ended up securing two takedowns, but banked eight minutes of control in the three round fight, out-landing Strickland 117 to 30, largely off a ton of clinch work against the cage. But if Usman had it all his own way then, even he feels like Strickland isn’t the same guy he fought the first time.

Usman thinks Strickland has improved

“I think since that fight [Strickland has] grown a lot,” Usman said in a recent interview. “He’s gotten a lot better and I think he’s just settled into who he is as a fighter. And I look forward to that matchup because as he’s grown, as have I. I’ve grown a lot as well. So, I think that’s gonna be a highly anticipated matchup for everyone to see. And I can’t wait.”

UFC 297: Volkanovski vs. Topuria is still a go

The last couple weeks have been chaos for the UFC and their planned high profile UFC 294 PPV in Saudi Arabia. First reports surfaced that headliner Charles Oliveira had been injured in training and would need to be pulled from his title fight with Islam Makhachev. Shortly on the heels of that news, word broke that Paulo Costa’s recent surgery had left him battling an infection in his elbow and that he would be out of his co-main fight against Khamzat Chimaev as well.

In a surprise move, former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman decided to make the jump up to 185 lbs to take on ‘Borz’ and save the co-main. And current featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski leapt at the opportunity to rematch Makhachev in the main event.

“I didn’t hesitate at all,” Volkanovski told the assembled media at a UFC 294 press event (transcript via MMA Fighting). “There was probably a smile on my face straightaway and it was, ‘Oh, we’re going to do it,’ let the manager do his part with negotiations. He’s asking about the weight, ‘We’ll get it done, don’t worry about that.’ But I had a smile on my face.

“The next day, or couple of days, I literally just was laughing thinking how crazy this is, but happy at the same time. I think I needed this, to be honest.”

Volkanovski still wants Ilia Topuria in January

If that all seems like miraculously good news for the world’s largest MMA promotion given the circumstances, there was a word of caution in it as well. Shortly before news Oliveira’s withdrawal, top featherweight contender Ilia Topuria revealed that he was already in talks to fight Alexander Volkanovski in January. With the ‘Great’ now set to fight at UFC 294 this week, it seemed almost certain that the UFC 297 booking in Toronto would need to be rescheduled.

But that’s not what Volkanovski is telling reporters. Speaking to ESPN’s Marc Raimondi, the 35-year-old was bullish on the idea that he would have no trouble fighting again in just a few months. To hear him tell it, this is exactly the kind of schedule he’s been aiming for.

“Yeah?” Volkanovski responded when asked if he could make the turnaround to fight Topuria. “A lot of people are saying that, I don’t see how they think that I wouldn’t do that. Well, how long is it? It’s over three months away, isn’t it?”

“November, December, January! Yeah, three months [pshhh]. That’s what I want to fight, every three months. I didn’t even have to do a camp, you know what I mean? So, I’m fresh mentally and physically going into this camp—going into this fight. So, straight after it—you know what I mean? Enjoy this crazy victory—enjoy me shocking the world—maybe for a week or two, then we get back to business.”

It’s not the fastest title fight turnaround in UFC history. Certainly, way back in the day some of the promotion’s early champs used to fight at a shocking pace compared to their modern counterparts. Heck, even Jon Jones, in his second LHW title run, beat Anthony Smith just two months after winning the vacant title over Alexander Gustafsson. But it’s still a hell of a schedule to keep. Especially when odds seem high that Volkanovski won’t be walking away from UFC 294 with his hand raised.

Sounds like Volk got paid for rescuing UFC 294

Fortunately for the Aussie, whether he wins or loses this Saturday in Abu Dhabi, he’ll likely be walking away with a smile on his face. In a recent interview uploaded to UFC Asia, Alexander Volkanovski talked about the process of getting the fight offer and deciding to take the UFC up on it—during which he also alluded to some brief negotiations.

“My manager hit me up and I was like, ‘Yeah, I guess we can,'” Volkanovski recalled, on being asked to take the fight. “I go, ‘You do your part, I’ll do mine.’ It was pretty much that easy. Obviously, we had to go back and forth. That was more on the negotiation sides. But, me taking the fight was pretty much straight away. Yeah, we did that and then they did the rest. But, yous don’t need to know that.”

Volkanovski hasn’t had a publicly disclosed UFC payday since UFC 245 back in 2019, when the now-champion picked up a reported $250,000 for his victory over Max Holloway to secure the featherweight title. Since that featherweight fight, the City Kickboxing star has competed six times, with his only loss coming against Islam Makhachev at UFC 284 back in February.

UFC 294 is set to go down at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi on October 21st. Alongside the lightweight main event and middleweight co-main, the card will feature a light heavyweight top contender fight between Magomed Ankalaev and Johnny Walker. Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for more news and updates.

‘Dead man walking’ Khamzat Chimaev has promise for Paulo Costa

Khamzat Chimaev vs. Paulo Costa is finally official… finally. The two men have been jawing at each other for the better part of year while at the same time remaining decidedly inactive when it comes to actually taking fights inside the Octagon. A bout between them has been rumored for months, but seemed entirely off the table when the UFC announced that Costa would be taking on newcomer Ikram Aliskerov at UFC 291 this weekend.

For reasons still unknown (perhaps that Costa never actually signed a contract for the fight), that bout ended up getting scrapped. And instead, fans will get the bout they should have had all along. Costa vs. Chimaev, in Abu Dhabi, at UFC 294. Safe to say both men are ready to get at one another.

Khamzat Chimaev weighs in for UFC 279.
Khamzat Chimaev weighs in for UFC 279. IMAGO/Icon Sportswire

Khamzat Chimaev wants to make Paulo Costa cry

Now that they’ve actually got a contract in place, Chimaev and Costa are already ramping up the trash talk. In a recent interview with TNT Sports, the Chechen-born Allstars talent out of Sweden revealed his plans for defeating ‘Borrachinha’ most notably, he wants to beat Costa badly enough that the Brazilian breaks down in the Octagon.

“Smash, make money,” Chimaev told TNT Sports (transcript via MMA Junkie). “I make that guy cry, go home, be in Brazil. Nobody likes him. All Brazilians like me, support me. That guy is not Brazilian. I’m going to go, smash this guy and make him cry.”

While Chimaev has seemingly yet to bring anyone to the brink of tears, the 29-year-old has been nothing if not a destructive force inside the cage. At least, whenever he can be seen inside the cage.

Unbeaten through 12 fights, Chimaev made a big splash in the UFC back in 2020, rushing out to three quick finishes in the first three months of his Octagon career. Things have slowed down significantly since, however. With Chimaev competing just once in 2021, following a terrible bout of COVID-19, and then twice in 2022 before being sidelined due to weight management problems and rumors of “personal problems” and potential travel restrictions. ‘Borz’ hasn’t competed since defeating Kevin Holland via first round submission at UFC 279 in September of last year.

Paulo Costa has his own message

If Chimaev plans to make Costa quit and cry it doesn’t sound like his proposition is being met with any lack of confidence on the Brazilian’s side. In a recent video posted to his social media, the 32-year-old revealed plans of his own—namely, to “f—k [Khamzat Chimaev] in [his] f—king house.”

“Gourmet Chen Chen has no chance, zero, no chance,” Costa announced in a short video message. “I’m going to destroy him; dead man walking. Dead man walking right there in Chechnya. I come to f*ck you in your f—king house, motherf—ker. Training hard every single day, I have no days off. Look at this face, look at this face. Look right here, gourmet Chen Chen: the man who is going to kill you.”

Much like Chimaev, Costa has spent a lot more time talking about fights than actually taking them lately. The former middleweight title challenger has competed just two times since failing in his bid to take UFC gold from Israel Adesanya back in September of 2020. The Fight Ready talent followed that fight with a loss to Marvin Vettori at light heavyweight, in which his general lack of motivation seemed to be a significant factor, before returning again in August of 2022 for a bloody war with Luke Rockhold that saw Costa win a unanimous decision. The months since that bout have been marked by prolonged contract negotiations for the Brazilian.

Daniel Cormier thinks this is a title eliminator… for Khamzat

Since his very first fight inside the world’s largest MMA promotion, the one question on everyone’s mind has been, how long before we see Khamzat Chimaev fight for a belt? After beating Gilbert Burns back in April of last year, Chimaev seemed on the cusp of a shot at then-welterweight champion Kamaru Usman.

Instead, Leon Edwards got the nod, and Chimaev got a stay busy fight against Nate Diaz… for which he blew the weight cut so badly that he had to be reassigned to a new weight class afterward.

Having already been poised for contention at 170 lbs, does that mean Chimaev should be near the front of the line at middleweight? If he beats Costa, former double champion DC doesn’t see any reason that Chimaev wouldn’t be right there in the mix.

“If he beats Paulo Costa, Khamzat Chimaev will have earned himself a title fight at 185 pounds,” Cormier said in a recent video on his YouTube channel (transcript via BJPenn.com). “And I don’t think anyone can disagree with that. I don’t believe that beating Gilbert Burns, going up, and now beating Paulo Costa doesn’t get you a championship opportunity. It makes you the No. 1 contender between Israel Adesanya and Dricus Du Plessis.”

If DC is right, however, the question quickly becomes, does Chimaev jump ahead of Du Plessis in line? Or are we just getting set up for another long stretch of inactivity for the Chechen. By all accounts, the bad blood between Du Plessis and Adesanya seems serious enough that—assuming Izzy beats Sean Strickland—it’s very hard to imagine that fight not getting booked in the immediate future. Of course, should Strickland win, it also seems unlikely that Adesanya doesn’t get an immediate chance at revenge.

Chimaev vs. Costa is definitely a big fight, and the stakes absolutely feel high going into it. But hopefully the outcome won’t just be another long stretch of inactivity for either man once they get on the other side of it.

Dana White brings clarity: Khamzat Chimaev to fight Paulo Costa at UFC 294

Finally it seems like we have some solid answers, at least provided that the UFC president isn’t just doing that thing where he leans on fighters by announcing bouts before they’re finalized.

Paulo Costa and Khamzat Chimaev have been circling each other for almost a year now, with a whole lot of talk about the fight that they might have, and even a heated confrontation at the UFC performance institute, but no actual official date when both men planned to face one another across the Octagon. Earlier this year multiple sources revealed that the UFC’s new plan was to do Chimaev vs. Costa in Abu Dhabi, but when fight announcements finally came down the pipeline, Chimaev was nowhere to be seen.

Instead the UFC announced Costa would be taking on Dagestani newcomer and heavily hyped Islam Makhachev training partner Ikram Aliskerov at UFC 291 in Salt Lake City. Chimaev was, supposedly getting set to face former welterweight champion Kamaru Usman.

UFC president Dana White.
UFC president Dana White. IMAGO/ZUMA Wire

Paulo Costa removed from Aliskerov bout

Earlier this week, all that changed and the rumor mill started spinning again. News broke that ‘Borrachinha’ had been removed from his fight at UFC 291, although no reason for his exit was given and rumors that Roman Dolidze would fight Aliskerov quickly turned out to be false.

Shortly afterward, another rumor surfaced, that Costa vs. Chimaev had finally been booked. The obvious fight that seemed like the most exciting bout for everyone involved was going to get made, at UFC 294, just like had been originally intended. Of course, MMA being what it is, both men were quick to issue cryptic statements on social media that sounded like they were headed to anything other than a fight against one another.

Dana White makes Costa vs. Chimaev official

Far be it from me to take anything UFC president Dana White says as gospel, but at the very least his voice lends credibility to the idea that the promotion actually intends to have Costa and Chimaev fight one another on October 21st. The rumor mill didn’t have to spin for long before White came forward with several fight announcements for their big Abu Dhabi PPV event, including a title fight rematch between Islam Makhachev and Charles Oliveira.

Along with the lightweight main event, came the announcement of the middleweight action bout.

Alongside the official news that Chimaev and Costa was finally really on (for real this time, guys). The UFC also has a new official booking for Aliskerov. The AKA talent won’t be facing Dolidze as originally suggested, instead he’s got a bout booked against no. 13 ranked contender Nassourdine Imavov.

Imavov will enter this bout fresh off back to back disappointing performances. Most notably, a loss to Sean Strickland in the main event of the UFC’s January 14th Fight Night card, followed by a no contest due to head clash against Chris Curtis back in June. This fight will mark Aliskerov’s second trip to the Octagon, after defeating Phil Hawes on the prelims of UFC 288.