Category Archives: Mmafighting.com


UFC 285: Jones v Gane
Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Jon Jones and Stipe Miocic are preparing to meet in the UFC 309 main event but there’s almost as much curiosity surrounding what happens afterwards as there is what’s going to happen in the fight.

There are longstanding rumors that both competitors might call it a career and it’s tough to fault that logic. At 42, Miocic doesn’t have age on his side while Jones isn’t far behind at 37. The two have accomplished more in their illustrious careers than most fighters could ever dream of.

While it’s highly unlikely any decision on retirement is announced prior to the event, Jones’ longtime coach Brandon Gibson is treating the current training camp like this is the last time he makes the walk with the reigning UFC heavyweight champion.

“Whenever Jon’s ready [to retire], I’m right there with him,” Gibson told MMA Fighting. “I’m approaching this one like it’s our last go, it’s our last rodeo.”

Just because the upcoming fight against Miocic might be the final time Jones appears in the UFC doesn’t mean he’s already got one foot out the door. Gibson insists when it comes to Jones’ actual skills and preparation, he’s never been sharper.

Jones has already accomplished so much in the sport, with fighters, fans, and pundits regularly discussing him as the greatest of all time, so there aren’t many more accolades that he could add to his résumé. Beating Miocic, the longest-reigning heavyweight champion in UFC history and also the record-holder for most defenses of that title (3), is definitely a checkmark that Jones wants before calling it a career, but Gibson acknowledges there has to be a finish line for every athlete at some point.

“I think physically, mentally, he could go in there and have five or six more great performances,” Gibson said. “There’s nothing left for Jon to prove. I think he really wants this fight with Stipe. I think this fight will help solidify Jon’s status as that great heavyweight champion but it’s not something we talk about every night at the gym. We’re definitely all eyes on Nov. 16. But each time I go to a practice, I’m approaching it as this is my last camp. I’m giving it my all.

“If we get one more after this, if we get two more, that would be a great blessing. I’m also ready to see Jon hang it up. Put the belt up. I’d prefer them to walk away obviously earlier than later. Out of all the fighters, Jon deserves to walk away any time he wants. I’m always going to support those guys.”

A huge part of the narrative leading up to UFC 309 is that Jones is facing an easier opponent in Miocic, as opposed to throwing down with Tom Aspinall. The interim heavyweight champion sports an 8-1 record in the UFC with all but one of his wins ending by first round knockout or submission and he has already defended his title once in Jones’ absence.

As much respect as Gibson maintains for Aspinall or any other potential opponent for Jones, he knows that there’s always going to be another challenge awaiting any champion in the sport. A couple of years ago Jones fighting Francis Ngannou was all anybody could talk about and now that attention has shifted dramatically towards Aspinall.

“There’s always going to be a next No. 1 contender,” Gibson said. “There’s never going to be a perfect time to walk out. Somebody will always say ‘but you didn’t fight that guy.’ To me, it doesn’t matter.

“Ten years from now we’ll have all the generational talks. How would [Muhammad] Ali have done against [Mike] Tyson? How would a Tyson done against Tyson Fury? There’s always going to be those types of discussions that will come down the road, too. There’s always a lot of what ifs in this game but what I do know is Nov. 16 we’ll be standing across the cage, across the octagon from Stipe and his great team. That’s what we’re focused on.”

By the time Jones competes on Nov. 16, he’ll be over 20 months removed from his most recent appearance in the UFC when he dispatched Ciryl Gane in the first round to claim the vacant heavyweight title. While he had to take time off to recover from a torn pectoral muscle, which is why the Miocic fight was pushed back from 2023 to 2024, Jones has continued to adapt his body to become the best heavyweight possible.

As impressive as his heavyweight debut was, Gibson expects even better out of Jones when he competes in the division for the second time against Miocic.

“He is getting stronger, faster, more skilled at heavyweight,” Gibson said. “Early on, to make that jump from light heavyweight, to get up to heavyweight was putting on a lot of size, a lot of mass. Now his body has gotten very accustomed to that size. You saw his recent photo how lean he’s getting for heavyweight and then we’ve just assembled this super team of training partners and coaches.

“Jon’s the greatest student in the game as well so he’s always learning. I think he’s already the most dangerous heavyweight there is and now you add in this plethora of new tools, oh it’s just terrifying. He would be a nightmare to coach against because there’s no path to victory against Jon Jones.”

If all goes well at UFC 309 and Jones beats Miocic to add that name to his résumé, he may decide right then and there to lay down his gloves and retire or perhaps he’ll call out Aspinall for a champion versus champion fight.

No matter what, Gibson plans to support the decision because he believes if anyone has earned the right to go out on his terms, it’s Jones.

“Jon’s been sacrificing his body for this game for a long time,” Gibson said. “He’s earned it.”

MMA Fighting – All Posts

Your daily UFC trivia game, Sunday edition

by Site Admin ~ November 3rd, 2024

Think you can figure out which UFC fighter we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

We’re back for another day of the SB Nation UFC in-5 daily trivia game, and we’re switching to a system of a new article each day for the game.

We tried using a single article for the game, updated with the latest game each day, but it was creating a bit of an unwieldy experience in the comments. So, we’ll have the current day’s game plus the previous three days in each new article. That way, you can catch up if you miss a day.

Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game!

What we need from you

  1. Play the game
  2. Share your result in the comments and on social media
  3. Provide feedback (Google Form or in comments below)

Today’s UFC in-5 game

Saturday’s UFC in-5 game

Friday’s UFC in-5 game

Thursday’s UFC in-5 game

The goal of the game is to guess the correct random UFC fighter player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED FIGHTERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. It will be a mix of well-known players and some “that guys” that we haven’t thought of in some time. The game will appear in slot #3 of the MMA Fighting layout each morning, with occasional movement later in the day.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Namajunas v Blanchfield
Amir Albazi and Brandon Moreno | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Brandon Moreno returned to form, and then some as he delivered a one-sided performance in the main event of UFC Edmonton.

The two-time UFC flyweight champ dominated Amir Albazi from bell-to-bell over five rounds to pick up a unanimous decision win, and snap a two-fight skid in the process.

Moreno swept two of the judges’ scorecards, while the third judge scored it 49-46 for “The Assassin Baby.”

The action started at a methodical pace with both fighters picking their shots. Moreno landed a big right hand halfway through that was the most significant strike of the opening round. The counter combinations began to land for Moreno as the round went on, along with a brutal leg kick that put Albazi to a knee. A short uppercut from Moreno closed out the stanza.

Moreno continued to pepper Albazi on the feet, but Albazi landed a perfectly timed takedown only for the former champ to shrug it off immediately and get back to work on the feet. Albazi landed a sneaky left hook to start Round 3, but Moreno opened up a cut under the right eye of Albazi seconds later. While Albazi showed a little improvement in the third, the momentum continued on the feet for Moreno, as he built a big lead heading into the championship rounds.

The dominance of Moreno continued through the fourth round, and after an Albazi eye poke to Moreno stopped the action briefly in the fifth. After a near takedown and a scramble, Moreno hurt Albazi with a huge punch. Albazi, bloodied and battered, was able to survive to the final horn, and the final 25 seconds was a slugfest that Moreno got the best of.

With the win, Moreno surpassed Demetrious Johnson for the most significant strikes landed in UFC flyweight history with over 1,100.

Albazi suffers his first UFC loss in his return to action for the first time since June 2023.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Shore v Zalal
Jack Shore and Youssef Zalal | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Youssef Zalal’s return to the UFC has been quite lucrative.

Zalal earned an impressive second-round submission win over Jack Shore after landing a picture-perfect knee at UFC Edmonton to improve to 3-0 in his second stint with the promotion. The incredible finish earned Zalal a Performance of the Night bonus for Saturday’s event — which makes it back-to-back bonus winning submission victories.

The UFC awarded four Performance of the Night bonuses for their latest Fight Night event, with no Fight of the Night honors on the list.

Dustin Stoltzfus took home an extra check for his brutal first-round knockout upset win against Marc-Andre Barriault in a main card middleweight contest. Canada’s own Jasmine Jasudavicius and Charles Jourdain also walked away with bonuses following their submission victories on the card.

Jasudavicius tapped Ariane da Silva in the third round to pick up her third straight win, and second career UFC post-fight bonus. Jourdain submitted Victor Henry in the second round to cap off a successful debut in the bantamweight division.

All four fighters earned an extra $ 50,000.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Moreno v Albazi
Brandon Moreno and Amir Albazi | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Brandon Moreno finally got back in the win column and he did it in style.

On Saturday night the UFC returned to Canada and in the main event, Moreno stopped a two-fight losing streak with a dominant unanimous decision victory over Amir Albazi in the main event of UFC Edmonton. Plus, earlier in the evening, Erin Blanchfield got back in the win column with a hard-fought decision over two-time strawweight champion Rose Namajunas.

Following Saturday’s event, MMA Fighting’s Jed Meshew and Alexander K. Lee react to the big outcomes that took place at UFC Edmonton and where Moreno and Blanchfield go from here. Plus, the crew discusses the rest of 13-fight card that very nearly broke the record for longest UFC event of all-time, and more.

Watch the UFC Edmonton post-fight show above, or an audio-only version of the show can also be streamed below and on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever else you get your pods.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Moreno v Albazi
Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Brandon Moreno has plenty left to offer in the division that he’s twice held a title in.

“The Assassin Baby” put on a classy five-round performance in the main event of UFC Edmonton on Saturday, thoroughly out-striking top contender Amir Albazi en route to a unanimous decision win. The victory snapped a two-fight skid for Moreno, who came out on the wrong end of a pair of razor-thin split decisions against Alexandre Pantoja and Brandon Royval.

Though Albazi hung tough with Moreno for the duration of the contest, he could never break the two-time flyweight champion’s rhythm. Moreno buzzed in and out with accurate strikes, bloodying Albazi’s face and handing him a loss in his first fight in over 500 days.

Fighters watching Saturday’s headliner marveled at Moreno’s performance, while also mentioning that the canvas was oddly slippery.

Check out the social media reactions to UFC Edmonton below.


MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Barriault v Stoltzfus
Dustin Stoltzfus and Marc-Andre Barriault | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

When UFC Edmonton needed a moment to reinvigorate the crowd, it was Dustin Stoltzfus who delivered it.

Stoltzfus faced Canadian middleweight Marc-Andre Barriault on the main card of Saturday’s Fight Night event in Edmonton, Canada. Stoltzfus looked great early, nearly submitting Barriault with a choke, but after Barriault managed to get the fight back to the feet, a frantic exchange began. Both fighters were landing, but it was Stoltzfus who scored an obliterating short right hand that knocked Barriault out cold.

Check out the wild finish in the video below.

After losing his first three octagon appearances, Stoltzfus is a winner in three of his past five outings, which includes a stoppage win over Punahele Soriano, and a decision win against Dwight Grant. Stoltzfus entered the fight as a significant underdog, but will likely take home a post-fight bonus for his incredible knockout.

Barriault has now lost three straight, and has been knocked out in the first round in back-to-back fights.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC Fight Night: Shore v Zalal
Jack Shore and Youssef Zalal | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Youssef Zalal is on one heck of a hot streak.

“The Moroccan Devil” made it three straight wins at UFC Edmonton since returning to the octagon this year, defeating Jack Shore with an arm-triangle choke submission that came moments after he cracked Shore with a devastating knee.

Watch the telling blow and finishing technique below.

After a competitive opening round, Zalal capitalized on a Shore mistake early in Round 2, blasting him with a knee up the middle that instantly rocked the Welshman. Though Shore was not knocked out by the sudden strike, he was unable to recover as Zalal swarmed and attacked from top position. It wasn’t long before Zalal locked in the arm-triangle submission and earned the tap.

The official time of the stoppage was 59 seconds into the second round.

Zalal (16-5-1) has shined in his second stint with the UFC, notching consecutive submission victories over Shore, Jarno Errens, and Billy Quarantillo. He went 2-3-1 in his first UFC campaign before returning to the regional scene where he fought his way back to the big show. Overall, Zalal has won six straight fights, all by knockout or submission.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


Carlos Condit and Michael “Venom” Page

Carlos Condit and Michael “Venom” Page put on a show for the fans as they have throughout their storied fighting careers.

The platform was certainly different for the MMA stars, who met on the mats to test their grappling skills in the main event of Polaris 30, which took place at Fairfield Halls in London. What hasn’t changed is their competitive fire as the two went back-and-forth for the duration of the bout, showing off wrestling, jiu-jitsu, and even a leglock attempt from Condit.

In the end, Page had his hand raised by decision.

Condit made his first in-competition appearance since stepping away from cagefighting in July 2021 following a loss to Max Griffin at UFC 264. “The Natural Born Killer” is a former interim UFC welterweight champion and WEC champion, and has been part of some of the most exciting fights of all time.

More known for his knockout prowess, Page looked comfortable going hold for hold with Condit, and can now claim a victory over the longtime fan favorite.

See the highlights from the bout below, courtesy of UFC Fight Pass.


Check out a live blog of the match by MMA Fighting’s Mike Heck:

Pre-Fight

Michael Page makes his way to the mat, and in the usual “MVP” way, doing his signature cobra pose, and being a showman.

Carlos Condit makes the walk to the Polaris mat to a nice ovation from the London crowd.

Rules

The bout will be one 10-minute round with judges scoring it mat-side should it get to the cards.

Match Rundown

Page faints and seems to be having fun early. After a tie-up, it goes beyond the setup area, and they need to be separated. MVP is very aggressive offensively, while Condit is staying calm and relaxed. As Page moves forward, Condit pulls guard and Page is on top. Condit looking for a hip-bump sweep, but Page does a nice job defending and staying in top position.

Condit getting his legs up for a triangle, now looking for an arm, but Page is able to escape, and they are back on the feet. Three minutes down. Page with a hard takedown on Condit, knocking him out of the required area. They return to the feet and Condit attacks the leg. They hit the mat, Condit trying to lock in a toehold, and MVP is able to work his way to the feet. Beautiful duck under from Page, and he takes Condit down. That was pretty sick.

Action has slowed down a bit, and they get back to the feet. Condit attacks the leg of Page again with just over three minutes to go, and it’s looking nasty. MVP does a nice job avoiding significant damage, sweeps, and Condit stays on top. 50-50 position now.

Condit decides to stand up and they tie up. Referee separates them with two minutes to go. Page defends a shot from Condit. The former WEC champ shoots a single again, Page able to stay upright. Another attempt from Condit, Page sprawls.

Final minute, Page with a duck-under takedown, Condit gets back up. Page shoots a single and forces Condit to the lighting systen, Condit falls over the lighting and disappears. Condit rushes back to the mat. They tie up again, Condit fakes a shot, they collide shoulders and the horn sounds. Super fun and competitive match. Now, to the scorecards we go.

Post-Fight

Page gets the win. Condit looked puzzled by the decision. Frankly, I scored it for Condit as well, but it was very, very close. Page looked solid in there and definitely was impressive.

Condit says he was disappointed he didn’t get the nod, and couldn’t get a submission. He says he wants to return to Polaris as soon as possible.

MMA Fighting – All Posts


UFC 304 Ceremonial Weigh-in
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Belal Muhammad doesn’t believe an interim title fight makes sense for Shavkat Rakhmonov at UFC 310 following the welterweight champ’s withdrawal, but he’d be OK with it if the UFC goes in that direction.

“Remember the Name” was set to defend his title for the first time against the undefeated Rakhmonov in the main event of the Dec. 7 pay-per-view event, but a bone infection on his toe scratched Muhammad from the bout. Muhammad was asked on his podcast with Jason Anik what he thinks the promotion will do to fill that empty slot, and whether it could be a fight between Rakhmonov and former champion Kamaru Usman.

“I can see them trying to do something with Shavkat,” Muhammad said on his podcast. “He’s calling for an interim title fight. Interim title fight, bro? It’s six weeks, not six months that I’m off. But even for myself, if they just want to do that just to make it a main event, I don’t really care about it if they want to make an interim title fight, regardless because they know who has the real belt.

“So for me, I know who my next opponent is going to be. If he wants to wait, it’s going to be us. If it’s going to end up being him, the only person that makes sense now would be Kamaru since Buckley and Garry are out… and I think [Jack Della Maddalena] is injured, so there’s really nobody else out there. … It really doesn’t [make sense], but it’s one of those — when you’re in the middle of camp, it’s hard, and when you’re like six weeks left, you’re locked in. So I can understand it for him that he’s like, ‘Bro, I want to fight.’”

Multiple people with knowledge of the promotion’s plans confirmed to MMA Fighting that the UFC is actively searching for a new main event, but as of now, nothing is set and “negotiations are ongoing.”

The news of Muhammad’s injury was a tough one for the new champ, and the MMA community as the fight between Muhammad and Rakhmonov was an anticipated one. Rakhmonov has finished all 18 of his opponents, while Muhammad is unbeaten in 11 fights, culminating with a championship win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304 in July.

Muhammad also revealed more details about why the infection spread the way that it did.

“They open it up and he’s like, ‘Bro, you had a broken toe, that’s what caused the infection to hit the bone much faster,’” Muhammad said. “He was able to fix the toe but the infection is still in there and [I] have to be on antibiotics for the next six weeks. And I’m shocked, I’m like, ‘Bro, are you kidding me right now?’ It was heartbreaking.”

MMA Fighting – All Posts

Copyright © 2010-2026 CombatSports.org All Rights Reserved.