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UFC 274: Namajunas v Esparza
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Carla Esparza already had an idea that the end of her career was coming soon — even before she defended her UFC strawweight title against Zhang Weili back in 2022.

The former two-time UFC champion may have announced that her return fight against Tecia Pennington at UFC 307 serves as her final UFC appearance, but retirement was already on her mind long before she took the past two-plus years off to start a family with her husband. With an MMA career that dates back to 2010 — and wrestling competitions that go back even further — Esparza felt like the time was right to hang up her gloves for good.

“This decision took a lot of thought,” Esparza told MMA Fighting. “I always said that when this sport stopped being fun for me and I lost my passion, that would be the time to hang it up. But that hasn’t happened. I still go to training like hungry to learn. I’m still so passionate about learning and growing in this sport and evolving. It wasn’t that for me. It’s so many things.

“I wish my body was where my mind is at. I think I’ve heard a lot of my teammates say once you hit 30 in the room, you start to feel it, and that’s definitely true. I’ll be turning 37 the week after the fight, so it’s definitely put a lot of years on this car, and the attention it takes to be a parent for me — and everyone does it different but I feel that being a parent is the most selfless thing I’ve ever done, and being a fighter is the most selfish thing I’ve done. The focus is all on me and what do I need to do to be the best and whatever. That’s the No. 1 for me. Now, priorities have just changed a little bit.”

Esparza always intended to have children, but the birth of her son changed her perspective on the future, at least as far as fighting is concerned.

There was also the non-stop pace required to stay active in the UFC — she’d routinely spend months in a training camp, fight, take a little bit of time off, and then start that same cycle anew all over again. That’s a harder schedule to maintain with a baby at home, and for Esparza, it’s important to be present as a parent.

“I’m really enjoying just being home with my son,” Esparza said. “I feel very fortunate to be able to be here for all the little moments and appreciate them. For me, it’s been a cycle of fight, rest, get back to training — it’s kind of been like a cycle, but a little bit different with pregnancy and everything.

“Since we decided to start a family, I’ve been like a year-and-a-half in the making for this fight. I never stopped lifted weights, moving around, running. I was doing my physical therapy because it’s almost this traumatic labor and pregnancy, a big hit on your body. Just like any big injury, just kind of slowly building myself back to being in the best shape and mental place I can whenever I chose to fight again.”

Esparza also understood the wear and tear she puts on her body from training and fighting in MMA would eventually catch up, but that was even more evident after she gave birth.

That also played a deciding factor in the timing for her retirement in October.

“It’s been in the works since even before my last fight,” Esparza explained. “I knew that potentially my last fight could have been my last fight ever. I really wanted to come back, but there’s a lot of stuff that happens with women’s bodies and pregnancy and labor, and people can have traumatic experiences to their bodies.

“So I didn’t know what the future held, but I had to be mentally in a place to let it go if I had to. I knew I wanted to take one or two more fights, and it turns out with actually being in the mix and seeing everything, I’m feeling like this last fight makes the most sense for me just to do one more.”

Considering she was a champion in her most recent UFC appearance, Esparza never doubted that she could still hang with the best fighters in the world at 115 pounds.

But she also knows the long-running stereotype that fighters just don’t know when to retire — and more often than not, many legends of the sport end up leaving on their backs rather than walking out on their own two feet.

“We’ve seen it time and time again, the sport kind of forces you out,” Esparza said. “You have devastating loss after devastating loss, and honestly, I’ve seen a lot of my heroes fighting over the years and it’s hard to watch that. I never wanted to be that to my fans. We all lose and have bad losses, I’ve been finished and come back. I don’t necessarily think my body’s putting me out to a place where I’m just going to plummet, I’m going downhill. I still think I have a good amount of fight left in me, but just being older and the amount of time it takes to recover and to prepare for each training session and to avoid injury, and it’s a lot.

“I wish I could show up to training and leave, but the amount of commitment that it takes to be at this level and to train smart is a lot. I don’t want to half-ass this sport. If I do it, I want to be all-in and I want to give this sport the attention and the time that it deserves.”

After initially reaching out to inform UFC that she’s ready to book another fight and then informing the promotion about her pending retirement, Esparza appreciated that she’ll get the chance to go out in front of a crowd at UFC 307 rather than appearing at the UFC APEX.

Because she’s already announced that this is her final fight, Esparza plans on leaving everything she has in the cage and then walking away on her own terms.

“I don’t want to get pushed out,” Esparza said. “This is a natural progression. Nobody can stay on top forever, but it is nice to go out on my own terms and not be forced out by injury after injury or just a bad performance. I didn’t want to go out like that. I wanted to go out still as seen as one of the top fighters.”

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Misfits Boxing 17 Results: Aarons vs. Simpson

by Site Admin ~ August 31st, 2024

Danny Aarons and Danny Simpson at Misfits Boxing 17
Danny Aarons and Danny Simpson will clash in the main event of Misfits Boxing 17 on Saturday. | Misfits Boxing

MMA Fighting has MIsfits Boxing 17 results for the Aarons vs. Simpson fight card and more from the 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland, on Saturday afternoon.

Influencer Danny Aarons and Danny Simpson, a former defender for English clubs Leicester City, Newcastle United and more, will clash in the main event. Aarons will be given Simpson’s Premier League championship medal with a win, while Simpson will get Aarons’ gold YouTube plaque.

Anthony Taylor, a former Bellator MMA fighter, will square off against Gabriel Silva, UFC legend Anderson Silva’s son, for the Misfits Boxing light heavyweight title on the main card.

Check out Misfits Boxing 17 results below.

Main Card (DAZN PPV at 1 p.m. ET)

Danny Aarons vs. Danny Simpson

Deen the Great vs. Dave Fogarty – lightweight title fight

Anthony Taylor vs. Gabriel Silva – light heavyweight title fight

HSTikkyTokky vs. George Fensom

Sami Hamed vs. Jesse Clarke

Ben Williams vs. Warren Spencer

Mike Edwards vs. Jake Cornish

DTG vs. Minikon

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Todd Welle | @UFCFightPass, Twitter

Welcome to the latest edition of Missed Fists where we shine a light on fights from across the globe that may have been overlooked in these hectic times where it seems like there’s an MMA show every other day.

After a lovely two-week break, I am back in action and judging by the excellent work done by my pal, Jed Meshew, it looks like the MMA world continued to churn out the hits.

Did you see that sweet Contender Series KO?

Have you ever seen the rain… make a complete mess of a cagefighting show?

While nothing quite so wacky happened this week, to say we weren’t blessed with a menagerie of memorable images would be false, starting with maybe the most gruesome knee knockout of 2024 from Anthony Pettis’ latest event.

(Big thanks as always to @Barrelelapierna for their weekly lists of the best KOs and submissions, and to @Grabaka_Hitman for uploading many of the clips you see here. Give them a follow and chip in on Patreon if you can.)

Elvin Romero vs. Todd Welle

Elvin Romero hit the switch 90 seconds into his fight with Todd Welle, sizing him up against the cage and delivering a knee to the head that not only knocked Welle for a loop, but immediately opened a bloody cut on his head.

GROSS. Who wants to watch this kind of thing?

Oh, here’s another angle, courtesy of Pettis himself.

I don’t know what Romero has been doing to prepare his knees for these situations, but if you’ve got some 2x4s that need to be broken, I now know a guy who can do it for cheap.

Anthony Pettis FC 12 is available for replay on UFC Fight Pass.

Alexis Pacheco vs. Gerardo Xango Ochoa
Paulina Vargas vs. Rosselyn Chavira

Check out this beautiful setup at Supreme Fight Night 6 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Alexis Pacheco didn’t just have opponent Gerardo Xango Ochoa biting on this takedown fake, he downright chomped down on it before being served the real entree: A jumping knee knockout. Unsurprisingly, Ochoa looked dazed after the stoppage, probably because he’s still waiting to stuff that takedown attempt.

No tricky stuff needed for Paulina Vargas, who wrapped up a third-round knockout by walking down Rosselyn Chavira.

SFN 6 is available for free replay on YouTube.

Kameron Shamsi vs. Josh Gomez
Rogerio Matias vs. Martin Farley
Anderson Ferreira vs. Rogerio Matias
Lucas Barros vs. Bruno Dantas

How about some more free MMA?

At a Melee Combat Championship event (watch here) in Leander, Texas, amateur featherweight Kameron Shamsi planted Josh Gomez with this spinning backfist.

One could argue that the referee stepped in a tad early, but I saw at as him rewarding Shamsi for a stylish strike. Sorry Mr. Gomez, sometimes you just get cracked and it’s better to live to fight another day.

Over in Sao Paulo at Centurion FC 22 (watch here), Rogerio Matias was somehow both the hammer and the nail in the same night.

In his first fight of the night, Matias scored a massive KO of Martin Farley to advance in a one-night tournament.

All good, right?

Wrong. Very wrong.

Matias ran into Anderson Ferreira in the final and despite his unwavering confidence, he discovered that swagger alone isn’t the best defense when your opponent is lobbing haymakers at you. Let’s hope Matias remembers the good times more than the bad (assuming he remembers anything from that night at all).

Elsewhere in non-tournament action, Lucas Barros added to the pile of knockout knees this week, launching one right up the middle to end Bruno Dantas.

Henerson Duarte vs. Jeferson Costa
Andre Miranda vs. Raimundo Costa

There’s no good place to get knocked out, but Sao Paulo was apparently particularly bad this past weekend as Jungle Fight 129 also saw its fair share of nasty finishes.

Henerson Duarte unleashed the HELLbow to cause Jeferson Costa to sink sleepily to the canvas.

And Andre Miranda shined in the main event, annihilating Raimundo Costa’s liver to claim a vacant heavyweight title.

Vinicios Santana vs. Wanderlly Lino

Heading north to Soldado Combat 3 in Brasilia, we find one more spectacular KO as Vinicios Santana appeared to juuuuuuuuuust catch Wanderlly Lino with the tips of his knuckles.

More than enough to flatten Lino, that’s for sure.

Lerryan Douglas vs. Javier Reyes
Luis Francischinelli vs. Victor Kuiks
Eduardo Chapolin vs. Igor Siqueira
Xie Bin vs. Masuto Kawana

Hope you kept that Fight Pass handy, because we’ve got two more stops to make, first at LFA 190 in Commerce, Calif.

Lerryan Douglas continued to make his case for a UFC callup, rattling off a third-straight knockout victory with this power left hook against Javier Reyes.

The win made Douglas the interim LFA featherweight champion and if he can’t at least get a Contender Series nod, it feels like we’re doing this wrong.

Luis Francischinelli showed off a heavy left hand as well, but not before rocking Victor Kuiks with a knee first.

He put a serious exclamation point on that one.

In the main event, Eduardo Chapolin secured his first defense of his flyweight title, needing less than 90 seconds to put Igor Siqueira down.

That’s three straight wins and eight in the past nine for Chapolin, who could also step into even brighter lights soon.

One man we know will see octagon action soon is Road to UFC hopeful Xie Bin, who punched his way to a featherweight tournament final this past weekend at UFC APEX in Las Vegas.

Two monster right hands, one win away from officially joining the UFC. Xie fights for a contract on Nov. 23 at UFC Macau, where he faces Zhu Kangjie.


If you know of a recent fight or event that you think may have been overlooked, or a promotion that could use some attention, please let us know on X — @AlexanderKLee — using the hashtag #MissedFists.

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Raffael Cerqueira | Photo via Brave CF

Light heavyweight prospect Raffael Cerqueira is heading straight to UFC after losing two potential opponents for a Contender Series card in September, the promotion announced. Cerqueira now faces Ibo Aslan at UFC 308, which takes place Oct. 26 in Abu Dhabi.

A teammate of Jailton Almeida at Brazil’s Galpão da Luta, Cerqueira (11-0) was previously paired up against Uran Satybaldiev at DWCS on Sept. 10, however Satybaldiev eventually withdrew and was replaced by Patryk Grabowski, who later stepped down as well. Cerqueira was then expected to fight Francesco Mazzeo before the promotion changed plans and signed him for UFC 308.

Aslan (13-1) returns to the octagon following a Fight of the Night victory in March, which saw him knock out Anton Turkalj in the third round of their UFC Atlantic City bout. “The Last Ottoman” is currently riding a five-fight finishing streak that includes a first-round knockout over Paulo Renato Jr. at DWCS in august of 2023.

Cerqueira has been calling for a UFC shot since late 2023. In a December interview with MMA Fighting, he asked UFC CEO Dana White and matchmaker Mick Maynard, “What else do I need to do to prove my worth and show I’m ready to fight in the world’s biggest organization?”

“Every fighter says they deserve to be in the UFC, but I’m proving it,” Cerqueira said at the time. “If you watch my fights, they’re not taking long. … I’m just waiting Mick and Dana White to look at me and give me an opportunity to show my value in the world’s biggest organization so I can make history in the UFC.”

UFC 308 takes place at Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Arena and features Ilia Topuria vs. Max Holloway in a five-round battle for the featherweight title as the headlining attraction. Check out the updated lineup below.

  • Ilia Topuria vs. Max Holloway
  • Ciryl Gane vs. Alexander Volkov
  • Robert Whittaker vs. Khamzat Chimaev
  • Magomed Ankalaev vs. Aleksandar Rakic
  • Lerone Murphy vs. Dan Ige
  • Geoff Neal vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Marcos Rogerio de Lima vs. Kennedy Nzechukwu
  • Abus Magomedov vs. Brunno Ferreira
  • Rinat Fakhretdinov vs. Nursulton Ruziboev
  • Ibo Aslan vs. Raffael Cerqueira
  • Myktybek Orolbai vs. Mateusz Rebecki

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Dana White’s Contender Series: Finney v Rowston
Torrez Finney | Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Torrez Finney hopes the third time is the charm when it comes to getting into the UFC.

On Thursday, following an initial post from Finney, MMA Fighting confirmed “The Punisher” will face Abdellah Er-Remy on episode eight of Contender Series, which takes place on Oct. 1.

This will be Finney’s third time on the show and second this season. In 2023, Finney scored a submission win over Yuri Panferov but failed to receive a contract offer. He tried again earlier this month on the second episode of the current Contender Series season, defeating Cam Rowston by unanimous decision, but once again UFC CEO Dana White declined to extend an offer and instead berated Finney for his performance in a clip that garnered headlines for its harshness.

“Finney, now you were here last year and my recommendation to you was to go out and get some experience,” White said after the event. “You’re young, you’re obviously talented, you’re now 9-0, [but] you got one fight. You went out in one year and fought one fight. I’m always brutally honest with this stuff, you’d get absolutely decimated in the UFC with the performance that you put on tonight. Your performance last year was better than this performance. You’re 25 years old, kid. You’re obviously a talented athlete. Go out and get three or four fights this year, then come back to us and talk about the UFC.

“You gassed out tonight. You had a tough time getting through three rounds. You’re not ready for the UFC. When I said go out and get some experience, I didn’t mean one fight. I meant get some fights. We’ll see you soon.”

After White’s rant, Finney revealed that part of the reason he did not compete more often after his first attempt at Contender Series was that he was supposed to take part in the latest season of The Ultimate Fighter until a series of events got in the way. White actually addressed this at the most recent episode of Contender Series, acknowledging that perhaps he was too harsh on Finney.

“So what happened was, I guess he got picked to do The Ultimate Fighter, and then they told him he couldn’t fight for X amount of months, and then he ended up not getting picked,” White said. “I didn’t know that until tonight. He had a rough year.”

Finney is currently 9-0 in his MMA career with seven stoppage wins. Er-Ramy is 7-1 and most recently competed at PFL Europe in 2023, where he scored a first-round TKO win.

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Gabriel Silva | Photo via Misfits Boxing

Gabriel Silva, son of UFC legend Anderson Silva, returns to the boxing ring Saturday to challenge Anthony Taylor for the Misfits light heavyweight title at X Series 17 in Dublin, Ireland, and dreams of the day he will hold world titles as well.

Silva has been victorious in three boxing matches so far between both professional and exhibition contests, and wants to “expand” his father’s name to a different sport after “The Spider’s” historic success in mixed martial arts.

“That’s my final goal, to be world champion [in boxing],” Silva told MMA Fighting. “I’ve trained with world champions before, I’ve tested myself against world champions, and I know I have what it takes to be a world champion one day. That’s the final goal, to fight for world titles in this sport and bring our name to the sport of boxing and not only in MMA, to kind of expand it to other horizons.”

Silva grew up watching his father defend the UFC middleweight title — and was in the arena for many of his wins — but doesn’t plan on starting a career in mixed martial arts.

“Growing up with my father and my family, I’ve always had this martial arts mindset and knew a bit of everything,” Silva said. “I’ve fought kickboxing and Muay Thai, I plan on competing in jiu-jitsu at some point, and maybe fight MMA as well, but not like starting a career. Just for the experience, really. I’ve trained MMA and followed many of my father’s camps, and legends like [Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira] ‘Minotauro’. I think it would be kind of stupid not to be part of this world as well. I think it’s really interesting, but my focus is on boxing.”

Silva said sharing the ring once with WBO and IBF middleweight champion Janibek Alimkhanuly (15-0) and WBO Global super welterweight champion Slawa Spomer (19-0) at Brickhouse Boxing Club has given him the confidence to pursue gold.

“[Alimkhanuly] is a tough guy, very skilled, and it was good training,” Silva said. “We did six tough rounds, so it was great experience. I’ve also sparred with champions from Germany as well, Slawa Spomer, who’s also very tough. We did good sparring at Brickhouse in North Hollywood. I have great training at the gym, very high-level athletes, so you can get experience from all of them.”

Silva revealed that Misfits considered holding an event in Brazil earlier this year and tried to add “The Spider” to the card as well, but it didn’t come to fruition. The UFC veteran ended up competing in an exhibition match against Chael Sonnen at Spaten Fight Night in June, and Kalyl Silva was featured on the card. Gabriel was approached with an offer to be on the card, but the deal wasn’t closed.

Silva leaves the door open to possibly share a card with his father one day, and has one familiar name in mind his dream match for “The Spider” in boxing.

“Fighting is air for my father, he can’t live without it,” Silva said. “There are several opponents, but the one I personally would like to see is Roy Jones Jr. They are both super technical and it would be super cool to watch despite the age. I think it would be very interesting. That’s a fight [Anderson] has asked for so long and it never happened.”

For now, the 27-year-old Silva focuses on clinching his first title belt in the world of boxing live on DAZN PPV, and respects Taylor as an opponent. The five-fight Bellator veteran, who once faced Tommy Fury in boxing, is undertaking a quick turnaround after defending his Misfits belt earlier this month with a second-round stoppage of Samuel Ericsson.

“He has kind of adjusted a few things in his game,” Silva said. “He was doing more clinch work before, and ended up finishing the guy. He has changed a bit, coming more aggressive, but we’re ready for this. I have the best coach, I’m training at the best gym, so we’re ready for whatever comes.”

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Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall have been ramping things up on social media as of late, with shots being taken on both sides. Does that mean we are any closer to getting this UFC heavyweight title unification bout than we were at the beginning of this year?

MMA Fighting’s Mike Heck and Jed Meshew take a look at the week that has been in the Jones vs. Aspinall rivalry, and discuss Aspinall calling Jones the “fight dodging” champion at the beginning of the week, Jones’ NSFW response to his comments, Aspinall throwing shade at Jones’ past failed drug tests, Jones saying he would whip Aspinall’s ass in a fight, who is winning the beef thus far, Dana White’s optimism he can get the fight done, if Jones vs. Aspinall will at least be on the books by this time next year, and more.

If you missed the show live, you can still watch above, or listen to the podcast version, which can be found below and on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your pods.

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@MF_DAZNXSeries, Twitter

Misfits Boxing’s latest weigh-ins saw some mixing of the martial arts ahead of Saturday’s boxing event in Ireland.

Love Island star George Fensom couldn’t wait another day to get his hands on opponent HSTikkyTokky, instead deciding to attempt a takedown on the influencer at Friday’s official Misfits Boxing 17 weigh-ins.

Watch footage of the altercation below.

HSTikkyTokky got under Fensom’s skin when he accused him of being too nervous to speak. Shorly after, Fensom ducked down for a single leg that HSTikkyTokky successfully stuffed (with plenty of security rushing in to break up the altercation). It took some time for the boxers to be broken up and at one point HSTikkyTokky could be heard shouting, “Get off me!”

Afterwards, HSTikkyTokky and Fensom were given a brief moment to address each other.

“Shoot or be shot,” Fensom said, prompting HSTikkyTokky to try to push past security.

“His name’s ‘Gorgeous’ George Fensom, but this is a fight, not some f*cking beauty pageant,” HSTikkyTokky said. “Weird guy.

“I’ll do you in the first 60 seconds of this fight. No talking, no running. I’m going to do you, straight up.”

HSTikkyTokky and Fensom are both making their boxing debuts. The bout is a four-round exhibition.

Misfits Boxing 17 takes place at 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland, on Saturday. In the main event, former Premier League standout Danny Simpson takes on influencer Danny Aarons.

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Misfits Boxing 17 weigh-in video

by Site Admin ~ August 30th, 2024

Misfits Boxing

At the Misfits Boxing 17 weigh-ins, all 16 fighters competing on Saturday’s card at 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland, will step on the scale Friday.

In the main event, former Leicester City standout and Premier League champion Danny Simpson steps into the Misfits ring for the first time to take on fellow debutant Danny Aarons. The weight limit for Saturday’s headliner is set at 160 pounds.

Also on the card, 175-pound champion Anthony Taylor squares off with rival Gabriel Silva, the son of MMA legend Anderson Silva.

Check out Misfits Boxing 17 weigh-in results below.

Main Card, 3 p.m. ET, DAZN PPV

Danny Simpson vs. Danny Aarons

Deen the Great vs. Dave Fogarty – lightweight title fight

Anthony Taylor vs. Gabriel Silva – light heavyweight title fight

HSTikkyTokky vs. George Fensom

Sami Hamed vs. Jesse Clarke

Ben Williams vs. Warren Spencer

Mike Edwards vs. Jake Cornish

DTG vs. Minikon

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

The feud between Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall is growing into one of the best in MMA.

The UFC heavyweight champion unleashed a flood of tweets Friday morning as he answered trolls and fans on social media. It was triggered by Aspinall responding to Jones’ vulgar response on Instagram, questioning Jones’ legacy because of his checkered past with PED use.

This caused Jones to answer these legacy questions directly on X.

“Yep, worked my ass to prove my innocence,” Jones wrote in a reply to a Twitter user. “Now picograms are legal in our sport. Honestly, none of that will matter a few years from now when I’m covering my kids tuition. You guys still laughing about what happened at the office, I’m outside on a golf cart.”

Jones has a long history with failed drug tests, most notably for his failed tests surrounding UFC 200 in July 2016, which resulted in his removal from the card just days in advance. In that incident, Jones tested positive for two banned substances which he successfully argued he ingested through a contaminated product.

A year later at UFC 214, Jones tested positive for turinabol which he again argued was the result of a contaminated product. He then tested positive for the same metabolites ahead of UFC 232, but doctors deemed that to be the result of a long-term “pulsing effect” of the metabolite, and not a separate incident. In 2019, USADA then set new threshold levels for certain drugs, which Jones argued “exonerates him” from his previous testing issues.

Jones then turned to questions claiming that he is avoiding a showdown with UFC interim heavyweight champion Aspinall by likely facing Stipe Miocic at UFC 309.

Bro, absolutely. I’m getting close to being in fight shape and I’m weighing in at 245 now. He probably cuts weight to get down to heavyweight. The night we fought he would probably weigh a solid 25 pounds more than me, seven years younger, and I would still whip his ass like I’ve done everyone else. You guys can go ahead and believe the hype, I’ll keep doing what I’ve always done, win

Maybe I’ll leave you with blue balls, but my legacy will be just fine. I’ve done way too much work in this game. There’s people around the world that’s been watching me fight since they can remember. He would have to go on and win like 10 championships at least in order for that to happen. The work I put in, that body of work ain’t getting touched no time soon.

Aspinall surely won’t miss his chance to respond in the coming days.

Jed Meshew contributed to this report.

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