USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, Aug. 10: Ciryl Gane still has room to move

Just two years after making his way to the UFC, Cyril Gane is now an interim champion – but where does that leave him in the rankings?

Just two years after making his way to the UFC, undefeated [autotag]Cyril Gane[/autotag] is now an interim champion – but where does that leave him in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie heavyweight rankings?

The short answer is No. 3.

Following his UFC 265 win over Derrick Lewis, Gane climbs up one spot and now sits at No. 3, just behind the man many consider the greatest UFC heavyweight of all time, Stipe Mioic.

Reigning UFC champion Francis Ngannou holds on to his No. 1 spot.

Gane’s career run has been spectacular, and he can call himself a champion, but Miocic’s sustained run of greatness keeps him just ahead – at least for now. Gane will have a chance to make a major statement and ascend to the top of the list when he meets Ngannou in a unification bout at a date still to be determined.

Heavyweight wasn’t the only division to get a new look following UFC 265. Check out the changes in each weight class by using the dropdown menu above.

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How to watch ‘ONE Championship: Battleground II’ – Fight card, start time, live stream

Here’s how to watch the ‘ONE Championship: Battleground II’ card from Singapore, which includes Zhang Lipeng vs. Eduard Folayang.

ONE Championship is back Friday with a key lightweight bout atop the bill.

Here’s how to watch the card from Singapore, which includes [autotag]Zhang Lipeng[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag].

ONE Championship – Battleground results: Aung La N Sang, Victoria Lee impress in stoppage wins

Check out recaps and results from ONE Championship: Battleground, which featured big wins for Aung La N Sang and Victoria Lee.

A former two-division champion and a 17-year-old prodigy and younger sibling of two champions were the key winners at ONE Championship: Battleground on Friday.

Check out the MMA results below from the event at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

Aung La N Sang hopes Leandro Ataides comes to fight: ‘My last couple of fights felt like a grappling match’

Aung La N Sang didn’t get to show much at all in his most recent setbacks.

[autotag]Aung La N Sang[/autotag] didn’t get to show much at all in his most recent setbacks.

Frustrated from getting heavily out-grappled in his two straight losses to Reinier de Ridder, former dual-champion N Sang (26-12-1) hopes he gets to bang it out with [autotag]Leandro Ataides[/autotag] (11-4) when they square off in the co-main event of ONE Championship: Battleground, which takes place July 30 at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

“This is one of the ones that it’s not gonna go to a decision,” N Sang told MMA Junkie Radio. “He’s explosive, and I hope he comes to fight because last couple of fights felt like a grappling match, but this one is gonna be different. I’ve been working on things to negate it and also he likes to throw down to hopefully the judges won’t be involved in this fight.”

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N Sang had no answer for de Ridder’s wrestling but remains undeterred despite the lopsided loss. History has shown N Sang’s ability to bounce back strong from losses and that’s exactly what he plans on doing starting with Ataides.

“That fire in me is still there and it’s burning deep,” N Sang said. “Stylistically with a taller guy you have to close distance and this is a one-trick pony who’s a high-level grappler, and so I had issues there and he was tall. But you always gotta learn from your losses, and I like to learn and grow from my losses and every time I’ve had a loss, I’ve always come back and gotten into a good winning streak, and hopefully, that happens again. It really doesn’t matter to me, I just want to go out there and put on a show for the fans and put on an exciting finish.”

Watch the full interview with N Sang in the video above.

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USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, July 20: Welcome back, Miesha Tate

After more than four years in retirement, Miesha Tate is once again a part of the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie women’s bantamweight rankings.

After more than four years in retirement, [autotag]Miesha Tate[/autotag] is once again a part of the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie women’s bantamweight rankings.

This past weekend, the former UFC champion returned to action for the first time since 2016, taking on Marion Reneau on the co-main event of UFC on ESPN 26. While Reneau was hoping for a memorable performance in her retirement bout, Tate was dominant from the start before scoring a third-round TKO win.

With the result, Tate re-enters the rankings at No. 11, where she will begin her quest to regain the UFC title.

Of course, the women’s bantamweight division wasn’t the only one to experience some changes after a busy weekend that included UFC on ESPN 26 and Bellator 262. Take a look at the updated rankings across all divisions using the dropdown list above.

When will we see ONE heavyweight champ Arjan Bhullar in pro wrestling?

If Arjan Bhullar turns out to be a dominant MMA champion, perhaps his dream of crossing over will come true.

Back in May, [autotag]Arjan Bhullar[/autotag] became the first fighter of Indian descent to win a major MMA title when he claimed the ONE Championship heavyweight belt with a second-round TKO of Brandon Vera. Afterward, Bhullar stated he’d be willing to make his first title defense against Kang Ji Won, but that’s not what stood out about his post-fight interview.

It was this sign-off message.

“Before my next fight, I do want to say one thing: I have reached the pinnacle of this sport,” Bhullar said. “Now I want to attack the pro wrestling industry. AEW, WWE, I’m coming for you guys next. Consider this a warning shot.”

To viewers, that might’ve sounded fake, but it was real – as in, the possibility exists for Bhullar to cross over into pro wrestling. According to him, there’s language in his ONE Championship contract that makes it so.

“It was serious from the get-go, and it is serious,” Bhullar told MMA Fighting. “I’m picking a fight with these guys, with the entire industry. AEW, WWE, it doesn’t matter. When I actually signed over from the UFC, we had language in our contract that would open the door to this. So we had some foresight on this.

“Both industries, there’s a blend there in terms of crossover and like I said, I want to pick a fight with these guys. They think they’re tough guys in the industry; I think I’m tougher. For the WWE, India’s the biggest market, they had over 20 million people tune in to (a recent event). You want India, we want India in terms of MMA. It all works.”

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WWE could be an option, sure, but AEW makes more sense given that ONE Championship also has a TV deal with TNT. One thing is clear: Bhullar loves pro wrestling, and he wants his shot, and he’s been trying to catch anyone’s attention on social media.

Calling out Baron Corbin

Calling out Bobby Lashley

Calling out Jake Hager

Celebrating nWo week

You’ve got to hand it to Bhullar for trying. Will there be any takers? We’ll see, but perhaps building his name as a dominant champion is Step 1 to a crossover.

The Blue Corner is MMA Junkie’s blog space. We don’t take it overly serious, and neither should you. If you come complaining to us that something you read here is not hard-hitting news, expect to have the previous sentence repeated in ALL CAPS.

USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, July 6: UFC 264 looms large

Following a relatively slow holiday weekend in the sport, UFC 264 is set to make a major impact on the sport’s landscape.

Following a relatively slow holiday weekend in the sport, UFC 264 is set to make a major impact on the sport’s landscape.

The night’s featured attraction takes place at 155 pounds, with former UFC lightweight interim titleholder [autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] (27-6 MMA, 19-5 UFC) taking on former two-division champ [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag] (22-5 MMA, 10-3 UFC) in a key trilogy fight. Poirier enters the contest ranked No. 2 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie lightweight rankings, while McGregor is just behind at No. 4.

Both reigning UFC lightweight champion Charles Oliveira, as well as top contender justin Gaethje, will certainly be interested in the result of that contest, as well as how the top of the 155-pound ranks will shuffle given the result. But that’s certainly not the only meaningful fight at UFC 264.

In the night’s co-feature, a pair of former UFC welterweight title challengers collide with [autotag]Gilbert Burns[/autotag] (19-4 MMA, 12-4 UFC) vs. [autotag]Stephen Thompson[/autotag] (16-4-1 MMA, 11-4-1 UFC). Burns currently sits at No. 3 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie welterweight rankings, with Thompson just behind at No. 4.

It seems Colby Covington has the inside track at current UFC champ Kamaru Usman, but the winner of the Burns vs. Thompson matchup will be in an enviable position in the division.

[autotag]Irene Aldana[/autotag] (12-6 MMA, 5-4 UFC) vs. [autotag]Yana Kunitskaya[/autotag] (14-5 MMA, 4-2 UFC) will also have a real impact in the women’s bantamweight division, as well, so expect quite a bit of resolution from this weekend’s big event, which takes place at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Ahead of that massive card, check out the full rankings across every division using the drop-down menu above.

Examining the ignorance of MMA’s weigh-in process | Opinion

Veteran MMA manager Alex Davis thinks the current weigh-in system in MMA is failing the athletes it is intended to protect.

Another week of MMA means another set of weigh-ins, and we all know what to expect.

It’s always the same – the same haunting expression on these fighters’ faces. The same suffering. I always find myself wondering: When are we going to realize the ignorance of what we are doing?

We make these fighters go through extreme dehydration 24 hours before an incredibly tough sporting event – before a mixed martial arts match, where the opposing participant will do absolutely anything and everything in his or her ability to knock us out cold or apply some other technique that will render us unable to continue. And this will happen for 15 or even 25 minutes. It is a fight, you know! This has to qualify as Ignorance 2.0.

I think a parallel is when the tobacco industry marketed menthol cigarettes for asthma: “Just what the doctor ordered.”

We are simply stuck here, and there is not enough significant realization or discussion to try to change anything.

For example, in many places, we are using mechanical scales at official weigh-ins rather than precise digital ones. I have asked around for a reason for this, but no one seems able to give me one.

A few weeks ago in Houston at UFC 262, there was a difference between the precise digital scale backstage and the mechanical one out front. Several times, a fighter got up on the mechanical scale and showed a weight above what he had just weighed on the digital one backstage. These poor guys were already dehydrating and suffering. They had to take all their clothing off, or in some cases even go back and lose another two-tenths of a pound, which was the difference that was showing on the two scales. It might not seem like a big deal to you sitting there reading this, but it’s a really big deal when you have just spent the last few days dieting hard – and the last 24 hours dehydrating yourself.

The officials overseeing the weigh-ins sure did not seem to care. It’s a complete disconnect between the participants and the regulators. Of course, they are not the ones dehydrating. Mechanical scale? Come on. It’s 2021. We can do better.

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There is simply no logical reason for us to keep on measuring weight in this way. It’s detrimental to everyone involved. It’s bad for the athletes because they don’t only suffer on the day of weighing in – they suffer through the whole process, and that’s not even mentioning their overall health.

It’s bad for the promotions. How many fights get canceled due to missed weight?

It’s bad for the fans. A fight between two athletes who did not just go through dehydration to make weight will be a hell of a lot better than a matchup between two fighters who just went through this insane process 24 hours earlier, obviously.

Objectively speaking, there is a better system, and it is being used successfully in ONE Championship. It does not permit dehydration in order to reach a specific weight. Both weight and hydration (using a simple device called a refractometer, which measures density of a liquid) are measured twice in the two days prior to the fight. The weights are one division above what they would be here, for the simple reason that is about what fighters are dehydrating in order to reach the current weight divisions.

What athletes are doing, in reality, is dropping 10 or 15 pounds and then putting it back on in the next 24 hours. If you step back and think about it, you will realize that this makes absolutely no sense. After 24 hours, the weights between two fighters will be different, anyways. One person will tend to put more weight back on – in this case, liquid – than the other, so it completely defeats the entire purpose of limiting weight advantage between the fighters.

In the other system, this doesn’t happen as much because the two participants did not dehydrate to reach a certain weight threshold in the first place, which also means that they will not tend to add a lot of weight back on afterward, either. It would just make them slower and heavier than they need to be.

I do not pretend to own the truth here. All I can tell you about is what I have seen and experienced myself. But what I can attest to is that we are not discussing this topic frequently enough. We are not trying to evolve, to improve. We are just doing the same thing over and over and over again. Who cares, right? It’s not us who is doing the suffering.

We must do better.

Alex Davis is a lifelong practitioner of martial arts and a former Brazilian judo champion. A founding member of American Top Team, Davis currently oversees the careers of a number of prominent Brazilian fighters, including Edson Barboza, Antonio Carlos Junior, Rousimar Palhares, Thiago “Marreta” Santos, Antonio Silva and Thiago Tavares, among others. Davis is a regular contributor to MMAjunkie, sharing his current views on the sport built through his perspectives that date back to the Brazilian roots of modern MMA.

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UFC, MMA notables celebrate 4th of July on social media

UFC and MMA fighters’ patriotism was in full force in a variety of ways for Independence Day in the U.S.

UFC and MMA fighters’ patriotism was in full force for Independence Day in the U.S.

Typically, personalities from throughout the sport chose to celebrate the holiday in a variety of ways. Some opt to enjoy time with friends and family. Others keep trapped in the gym to focus on upcoming fights. There’s a mix of all that going on in 2021.

Check below for a collection of the top social media reactions to the Fourth of July holiday.

Demetrious Johnson supports social media influencers fighting: ‘These guys are training like full-time athletes’

You won’t hear Demetrious Johnson hating on the celebrity boxing world.

You won’t hear [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] hating on the celebrity boxing world.

Johnson, who’s perhaps one of the most underappreciated fighters in the history of the sport, has no issues with social media influencers engaging in boxing matches.

The former UFC flyweight king and ONE Championship contender says a lot of these celebrities such as Jake Paul and Logan Paul are actually putting the work in and deserve the credit for garnering such a massive interest to their fights.

“When you have unlimited money, when you have millions of dollars and you don’t have to do a 9-5 job, you have the best access to the trainers, you have the best access to nutrition, you train for eight weeks for somebody, you are gonna become the product of something,” Johnson said in an interview courtesy of ONE Championship. “So people think that Jake Paul, Logan Paul, they just got off the couch playing video games, that’s not the f*cking case. These guys are training like full-time athletes. These guys train better than some of the professional athletes that have been in the game for five or 10 years.”

Johnson gets why MMA fighters are irked by the celebrity boxing world and their massive paydays, but from his experience of being an under-the-radar champion in the UFC despite his dominance of the flyweight division, he understands that building your brand will pay off.

“I support the YouTubers, the TikTokers and the thing is, at the end of the day it’s about making money,” Johnson said. “Those guys have such a big following and a lot of the athletes complain how Jake Paul, Logan Paul, those guys are making million-dollar paydays and us athletes have been in this sport for years and will never see a payday like that. The reality is your brand and your likeness or your following is what sells, and I’ve learned that from when I was in a North-America-based promotion and it’s proven to this day.”

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