Fight booking wire (April 19-25): UFC 261 loses Jamey Simmons vs. Johnny Munoz

Use our fight booking wire throughout the week to keep tabs on all the latest matchups in the UFC, Bellator, PFL, ONE Championship and more.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels available, it’s nearly impossible to organize.

But here at MMA Junkie, we’ve got you covered.

Each week, we’ll compile all the new fight bookings right here – in one spot. Worried you missed a UFC or Bellator matchup, a playoff pairing for the PFL, or a title fight scheduled for ONE or LFA?

Our fight booking wire will keep tabs on it all and will update any time we’ve got new matchups – so you’ll want to come back throughout the week to see the latest.

Here are fight announcements that have been broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie for this week, April 19-25:

How to watch ONE on TNT III: Fight card, start time, live stream for John Lineker vs. Troy Worthen

ONE Championship continues the most prolific month in its history this week with the third of four straight events on TNT.

ONE Championship continues the most prolific month in its history this week with the third of four straight events on TNT.

Here’s how to watch the [autotag]John Lineker[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Troy Worthen[/autotag] bout from Singapore.

ONE on TNT II results: Champ Christian Lee stuns Timofey Nastyukhin with first-round TKO

While challenger Timofey Nastyukhin promised a first-round finish, it was Christian Lee who delivered that result at ONE on TNT II.

While challenger [autotag]Timofey Nastyukhin[/autotag] (14-5) promised a first-round finish, it was [autotag]Christian Lee[/autotag] (15-3) who delivered that result at ONE on TNT II.

The 22-year-old Lee retained his lightweight title with the impressive victory, which took place at Singapore Indoor Stadium and aired Wednesday on TNT.

Lee was cautious in the face of the aggressive Nastyukhin early staying on the outside and moving well. But as the challenger leaped forward to strike, Lee clipped him with a clean counter left that sent Nastyukhin to the canvas.

Lee pulled back on a takedown that was coming after the clean left and instead started to rattle off right hands. Some 15 shots followed, and as Nastyukhin tried to tripod and stand, they continued to land clean, opening up a cut near the challenger’s right eye. Lee didn’t show any signs of slowing down, and the referee called off the fight just 73 seconds after it began.

“I couldn’t have asked for a better story, really,” Lee said before dedicating the fight to his pregnant wife. “This was the most important fight of my life.”

For his part, Nastyukhin protested the result, but it was difficult to paint his attempted recovery as intelligent defense in the face of relentless punches. The result served as Lee’s second successful title defense.

“Speed and accuracy beats power, and that’s what happened tonight,” Lee said.

ONE on TNT II’s MMA results included:

MAIN CARD

  • Christian Lee def. Timofey Nastyukhin via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:13 – to defend lightweight title

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • [autotag]Yoshiki Nakahara[/autotag] def. [autotag]Shinechagtga Zoltsetseg[/autotag] via disqualification (illegal kick) – Round 2, 4:53
  • [autotag]Wang Shuo[/autotag] def. [autotag]Kim Kyu Sung[/autotag] via knockout (elbow, punches) – Round 3, 1:51
  • [autotag]Shuya Kamikubo[/autotag] def. [autotag]Mitchell Chamale[/autotag] via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 2:13

Eddie Alvarez: ‘Serious talks’ for Oscar De La Hoya boxing match ongoing

It appears Eddie Alvarez could be the frontrunner to welcome boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya back in the ring.

It appears [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] could be the frontrunner to welcome boxing legend [autotag]Oscar De La Hoya[/autotag] back in the ring.

De La Hoya, who held 11 titles throughout his 16-year boxing tenure, recently announced that he will be making a comeback on July 3 at a Triller Fight Club event. Reports have indicated that De La Hoya would like to face an MMA fighter. The 48-year-old hasn’t competed since a 2008 loss to Manny Pacquiao.

Alvarez, on the other hand, is coming off a disqualification loss to Iuri Lapicus at ONE on TNT I, in which the referee penalized Alvarez for illegal punches. Though Alvarez said he plans on making a quick turnaround, possibly later this month, he has something else in the works. Alvarez revealed Wednesday that De La Hoya’s team reached out, and he’d be more than excited for the opportunity to box him.

“Recently we’ve been hearing from Oscar De La Hoya’s guys,” Alvarez said on “Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show.” “Look, I’m fixated on the ONE Championship belt. I’m laser, laser-focused on making history and getting my world title, but I feel like there’s going to be a lull. The champion (Christian Lee, who fights Wednesday night at ONE on TNT II) is going to sit for a little bit. I think he’s having a baby.

“If that happens, Oscar De La Hoya and them guys have been reaching out and, hell, I’d love to get in there and mix it up with him. That would be a hell of a fight. I’ve got everybody here in Philadelphia backing me, and the whole of Philadelphia boxing to back me up to get in there and mix it up with that guy. It would be a dream come true, and I actually think I’d do pretty damn good against him. So I’d be crazy excited about that if them guys figured that out.”

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Alvarez said that De La Hoya’s team has actually reached out multiple times after they couldn’t come to an agreement with their initial choices, and they could get a deal done as soon as this week.

“Oh, they’re serious talks,” Alvarez said. “They’re serious, like wanting to get a deal done this week serious. … I believe they tried to get some larger names and the larger names kind of outbid themselves, or they’re under contract. For me, I’ve been boxing in and out of Philly boxing gyms my whole career with pro boxers.”

He continued, “The last time De La Hoya went against a Philly guy, he got knocked out by a body shot. Bernard Hopkins executed him. So if he wants that to happen again, keep messing with another Philly guy.”

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Christian Lee: I’ll ‘exploit a weakness’ vs. Timofey Nastyukhin, finish him to retain ONE title

A confident Christian Lee is expecting a short night against Timofey Nastyukhin at ONE on TNT II.

[autotag]Christian Lee[/autotag] is expecting a short night against [autotag]Timofey Nastyukhin[/autotag] at ONE on TNT II.

Lee (14-3) defends his ONE Championship lightweight title against Nastyukhin on Wednesday at Singapore Indoor Stadium. The main card airs on TNT following prelims on B/R Live.

Having only gone the distance once in his career, Lee will be in search of his second title defense when he meets fellow finisher Nastyukhin (14-4), who picked up a first-round TKO over former UFC lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez in the ONE grand prix quarterfinal.

But Lee is confident that he’ll have the edge wherever the fight goes.

“Timofey and I, we are similar in a sense that we both go for the finish,” Lee said. “However, I feel that my skills are much greater in every area, so what I’m going to do is mix it up, play through the full range of mixed martial arts, and I feel that my game will match up with his, and I’ll be able to exploit a weakness.”

He continued, “I’m very confident to defend my work title. I train every day, and I push myself so extremely hard. I know I’m the best fighter in the world.”

A 22-year-old soon-to-be-father, Lee is not only anticipating a finish over Nastyukhin, but he expects to make quick work of him.

“I think the fight is going to start very quickly,” Lee said. “There’s going to be a lot of action early on, and I’m going to end the fight in the first round with a finish.”

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Video: Tougher to watch Demetrious Johnson KO’d or Eddie Alvarez DQ’d?

Both former UFC champions suffered heartache in their long-awaited returns at ONE on TNT I but in different ways.

ONE on TNT I last week saw the returns of [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] and [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] in their first fights since well before the COVID-19 pandemic, and it was a tough night to say the least.

In the main event, Johnson was finished for the first time in his career when he was knocked out by flyweight champion Adriano Moraes with a vicious grounded knee. And in the co-main event, Alvarez was hastily disqualified in his fight Iuri Lapicus for landing illegal punches that the referee deemed were to the back of the head just 1:02 into the first round.

Long waits to get back in action for both Johnson and Alvarez – 18 and 20 months, respectively – only to see the former UFC champions suffer heartache but in different ways. Alvarez was visibly distraught after his fight.

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And so, we ask: Was it more difficult to watch Johnson KO’d or Alvarez DQ’d? Our “Spinning Back Clique” panel of “Gorgeous” George Garcia, Brian “Goze” Garcia, Nolan King, and host John Morgan answer.

You can watch their discussion in the video above, and this week’s full episode below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5c9imTwPio

Fight booking wire (April 12-18): Newcomer Dakota Bush steps in at UFC on ESPN 22

Use our fight booking wire throughout the week to keep tabs on all the latest matchups in the UFC, Bellator, PFL, ONE Championship and more.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels available, it’s nearly impossible to organize.

But here at MMA Junkie, we’ve got you covered.

Each week, we’ll compile all the new fight bookings right here – in one spot. Worried you missed a UFC or Bellator matchup, a playoff pairing for the PFL, or a title fight scheduled for ONE or LFA?

Our fight booking wire will keep tabs on it all and will update any time we’ve got new matchups – so you’ll want to come back throughout the week to see the latest.

Here are fight announcements that have been broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie for this week, April 12-18:

Sage Northcutt withdraws from ONE on TNT IV bout vs. Shinya Aoki; Eduard Folayang steps in

Sage Northcutt has withdrawn from ONE on TNT IV due to lingering effects from COVID-19.

[autotag]Sage Northcutt[/autotag]’s highly anticipated return to ONE Championship has been delayed.

Northcutt (11-3) is out of his April 28 welterweight fight vs. [autotag]Shinya Aoki[/autotag] (46-9) at ONE on TNT IV due to lingering effects from COVID-19, officials announced on Monday morning after an initial report from ESPN.

Northcutt, who tested positive for COVID-19 in January, hasn’t competed since May 2019 when he suffered a 29-second knockout to kickboxer Cosmo Alexandre at ONE Championship 96. The damage sustained in the knockout loss to Alexandre was heavy, forcing Northcutt to undergo surgery to repair eight facial fractures.

Stepping in for Northcutt to face Aoki will be [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-10), who was scheduled to fight Yoshihiro Akiyama on the same card, but Akiyama was forced out due to injury.

Aoki and Folayang have already competed against each other twice, splitting their two appearances. Folayang captured the ONE lightweight title from Aoki in November 2016 when he scored a third-round TKO win. But Aoki exacted his revenge less than three years later when he took his title back by submitting Folayang in the first round at ONE Championship 92 in March 2019.

Aoki would go on to lose his title to Christian Lee, but has since won three straight, most recently submitting James Nakashima in the first round in January. Meanwhile, Folayang dropped four of his past five, including stoppage losses to Aoki and former UFC lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez.

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How to watch ONE on TNT II: Fight card, start time, odds, live stream for Lee vs. Nastyukhin

Here’s how to watch the Christian Lee vs. Timofey Nastyukhin ONE Championship welterweight title bout from Singapore.

ONE Championship continues the most prolific month in its history this week with the second of four straight events on TNT.

Here’s how to watch the [autotag]Christian Lee[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Timofey Nastyukhin[/autotag] welterweight title bout from Singapore.

 

Demetrious Johnson lost fair and square, but grounded knees are still bad for MMA | Opinion

What’s so good about being able to knee a downed opponent who can’t defend himself?

[autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] has been vocal through the years that he’s in favor of grounded knees in mixed martial arts, and he let it be known again on the night Petr Yan lost his UFC bantamweight title by disqualification for delivering a brutal illegal knee to Aljamain Sterling’s head.

“Knees to a grounded opponent should be allowed!” Johnson tweeted after UFC 259 on March 6.

And so it’s ironic – isn’t it? – that the first stoppage loss of Johnson’s illustrious career would be caused by a grounded knee. They’re legal in ONE Championship, and he was on the receiving end Wednesday night at ONE on TNT I, where flyweight champion Adriano Moraes won by knockout in the second round of their title fight. With Johnson trying to get up off his back, Moraes pressed on his shoulders, posted him upright, and then blasted the former UFC champ in the face.

Johnson was done almost instantly, game over just like that.

You might think the fight-ending sequence would give Johnson cause to reconsider his stance on knees to a downed opponent, but no, it didn’t.

“I’m totally content with what happened. I’m not like, ‘That rule should be taken out,'” Johnson said afterward. “That’s what the rule was, Adriano used it to his advantage, and I was on the other end of the stick.”

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Credit to Johnson for being consistent, which is what we’d expect from one of the sport’s classiest fighters. But grounded knees – to put it in the simplest terms – are bad for MMA.

Let’s start with this: Of the notable disciplines that produce mixed martial artists – jiu-jitsu, boxing, wrestling, muay Thai, kickboxing, judo, karate, taekwondo – tell me which one allows knees to a grounded opponent. You can’t, because none of them do.

Why, then, would it make sense to have these athletes compete in MMA under a rule set that forces them to beware of strikes they’ve never had to defend? It doesn’t. The position Johnson was in against Moraes happens in MMA all the time, making grounded knees available at any moment when legal. And in this case, those years fighting for the UFC – which prohibits grounded knees under the Association of Boxing Commissions unified rules of mixed martial arts – likely played a factor in Johnson’s downfall.

But if the competition aspect isn’t compelling, what about the safety aspect? MMA is already dangerous enough without the ability to knee a downed opponent. Adding more danger to an already brutal sport is unnecessary.

Take it from UFC Hall of Famer Michael Bisping.

“I’m not for a guy being on his knees and kneeing him square in the head if you’re standing up,” Bisping told MMA Junkie. “Because you can generate so much power, so much power like that, and you can really hurt someone. We’ve been very lucky. We’ve never seen, like, a tragic accident in the UFC. We don’t want to do things that might encourage that one day. All this hard work the UFC has done in the media and making this sport as widely accepted as it is, all it needs is one f*cking death. And God forbid, you know what I mean? Things change.”

Nobody wants that.

So, yes, Adriano Moraes deserves credit for his win over one of MMA’s all-time greats. At the end of the day, those are the rules in ONE Championship.

But don’t get it twisted: Grounded knees still suck.

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