‘Is Jon Jones that same guy?’: Daniel Cormier says heavyweight champion’s form untested in divisional debut

Daniel Cormier has questions surrounding both Jon Jones and Stipe Miocic ahead of their heavyweight title clash.

[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] has questions surrounding both [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] and [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag] ahead of their heavyweight title clash.

Heavyweight champion Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) is expected to make his first title defense against Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC) upon his return from injury. Jones was booked to face Miocic in the UFC 295 headliner, but withdrew after tearing his pectoral tendon. He also underwent surgery on his left elbow.

Cormier has doubts on both Jones and Miocic’s form after an inactive past few years. Miocic hasn’t competed since losing his heavyweight title to Francis Ngannou by knockout in March 2021. Jones returned from a three-year long layoff to quickly submit Ciryl Gane to claim the vacant heavyweight title in March 2023.

Although Jones competed a lot more recently than Miocic did, Cormier wonders if we’ve seen enough from “Bones” to gauge how well he’ll do at heavyweight.

“I fought at 41 and I knew how different I was from 39 to 41,” Cormier told MMA Junkie Radio. “Stipe hasn’t fought in four years. I don’t know how you get back in that octagon and fight as effectively as you need to be. One thing though – and we don’t know because Ciryl Gane didn’t test that as much as we thought he would – is Jon Jones that same guy?

“We don’t know that. We don’t know if Jon Jones is the guy that he was back when he was beating all those great fighters. We really didn’t get a sample size of who Jon Jones is as a heavyweight, and can you make a judgment based off that? I don’t know.”

Cormier fought Jones twice and Miocic three times. Both Jones and Miocic hold two wins over Cormier – with Jones’ second knockout victory getting overturned after he tested positive for a turinabol metabolite.

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Daniel Cormier ‘past betting against Alex Pereira,’ wouldn’t rule out heavyweight success

Daniel Cormier is done doubting UFC light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira.

[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] is done doubting UFC light heavyweight champion [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag].

Cormier marveled at the heights Pereira has reached without solidified wrestling ability. “Poatan” notched his first title defense when he knocked out Jamahal Hill in Round 1 of the UFC 300 headliner and teased a potential move to heavyweight in the future.

Looking at the upper echelon at heavyweight, Cormier sees Pereira (10-2 MMA, 7-1 UFC) facing difficulties with strong grapplers such as interim champion Tom Aspinall. However, he wouldn’t be surprised if Pereira found success at heavyweight, too.

“He can be successful at heavyweight,” Cormier told MMA Junkie Radio. “I think he can do whatever he wants. I’m past betting against Alex Pereira. I’m past saying that he can’t do something. I think time and time again, Alex Pereira has proven he can do whatever he wants. Every challenge has challenges, and every great thing will be hard.

“Him at heavyweight, there would be some issues. But there are still issues at 205. When you get to heavyweight, especially for him, he will have guys like Tom Aspinall or Curtis Blaydes – guys who truly can cause him some problems with their size and their wrestling ability. But it’s not impossible. To think that Alex would not find success would be a massive mistake.”

Cormier was the first fighter to successfully defend two titles as UFC dual champion. Pereira, a former middleweight champion, would have an opportunity to win a third UFC title if he moved up to heavyweight – a feat that has never been achieved before in the octagon.

“If Alex can be a guy that wins a third belt, that dude better be in the conversation as greatest of all time,” Cormier said. “And hell, he’s only got like (12) fights in his entire career.”

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After resting his body and brain, UFC’s Beneil Dariush targets end of summer return

Having to listen to his body following back-to-back knockout losses wasn’t easy for Beneil Dariush.

[autotag]Beneil Dariush[/autotag] just started easing his way back into contact training, and he’s ready to book a fight.

In 2023, Dariush (22-6-1 MMA, 16-6-1 UFC) suffered back-to-back first-round knockout losses to Charles Oliveira in June, then Arman Tsarukyan in December. The setbacks forced Dariush to take some time off to let his brain heal, which he took seriously by only undergoing light training in the past few months.

“The whole goal was to be patient and to rest my body and most importantly my brain,” Dariush told MMA Junkie Radio. “Everybody around me was telling me to rest. So, I said I wouldn’t do anything too crazy.

“Just grappling and hitting mitts for six months and then I would slowly start to put on the small gloves and do small-glove sparring, really focused on grappling still. That started in May, as in now. I had one session so far, I think, and it was really fun. I missed it quite a bit.”

Dariush is always eager to compete, so having to listen to his body wasn’t easy. Ideally he’d like to return in summer when he’ll be receiving the 2024 Forrest Griffin Community Award at the UFC Hall of Fame ceremony as part of International Fight Week.

“The issue with me is I’m going to have to kill the competitor inside of me one day,” Dariush said. “My desire is always to fight. That’s actually the problem. It gets in my way sometimes, but also it’s brought me where I am. I can’t complain about it too much. That being said, obviously I want to fight, but I’m also a person who believes that God has his plans, and they’re better plans.

“If his plan is I’m done, I’m done, but currently I don’t think that’s the situation. I think I’ll be back soon. If it was up to me, it would have been yesterday. But obviously I’m trying to be patient, listening to my coaches, my wife, my family, and hopefully either end of summer or early winter or something. I definitely want to get a fight in before the year ends is what I’m trying to say.”

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Bellator Champions Series: Archie Colgan wants return to finishing ways against Thibault Gouti in France

That Archie Colgan still is unbeaten reasonably early in his career is not that rare. But lately, the heat has been turned up a bit.

That [autotag]Archie Colgan[/autotag] still is unbeaten reasonably early in his career is not that rare.

But lately, the heat has been turned up a bit, and the results have been mostly the same. Well, the part that’s been the same – the most important part – has been the wins at the end. But the most recent two have taken a little more work.

Colgan (9-0 MMA, 6-0 BMMA) had six finishes in his first seven fights, including stoppages in his first four Bellator wins. But this past year, the level of opponent was stepped up for him big time and he took a pair of decisions from former featherweight title challenger Emmanuel Sanchez and Pieter Buist.

Instead of opponents with his similar level of pro experience, he was fighting two guys with four times his experience. The finishes were traded for 15-minute decisions.

“My past two fights have been a big step up in competition,” Colgan told MMA Junkie Radio. “These guys had 25 (fights), and I’ve come away with dominant decisions. But I want to get back to that finishing way.”

Next week, Colgan will be in Paris for a Bellator Champions Series fight against French foe Thibault Gouti (17-6 MMA, 2-1 BMMA), who has gotten back on track of late after a tough 1-5 run in the UFC six or so years ago.

He knows to get a win, he’ll have to take some verbal punishment from Gouti’s home fans, but it’ll be worth it.

“(The goal is) coming out there, facing some adversity with the crowd, going through that pretty easily, dominating my way to a finish, and proving to everybody that I can do to this level as I believe I could – to the level that was maybe a step behind (before).”

Colgan said he’s never really felt the pressure that goes with being unbeaten, and he doesn’t plan on starting now, even if the level of competition stays high like with Gouti. But it no doubt will be increasingly difficult to keep that 0 at the end of his record.

“It wasn’t like I was like, ‘Hey man, I just want to get to 10-0 one day’ or 5-0 or 15 or any of that,” Colgan said. “It was really just like, ‘I just want to not lose. I just don’t want to lose. I just want to win.’ Every single fight was not about trying to hold on to an undefeated record. It was just like, ‘Man, I just don’t want to lose.’ That’s it. I just more than wanting to win.

“I just didn’t want to lose. I just had to go out there and perform my best and the next thing you know, it’s like, ‘Dang, I’m 5-0 – that’s pretty cool.’ And then, ‘Oh, I’m 9-0, going for 10 now.’ Perfect scenario to me is that I go out there, I want the adversity of being booed in (his) home crowd. … Then I go out there and impose my will and I go back to my finishing ways.”

UFC 301: Pantoja vs. Erceg watch-along live stream with MMA Junkie Radio

Join MMA Junkie Radio’s “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” for a live-streamed watch-along of UFC 301 in Rio de Janeiro.

The UFC is back in Brazil with UFC 301 on Saturday, headlined by a flyweight title fight and the return of a legend, and MMA Junkie Radio’s “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” will host a live-streamed watch-along right here, which kicks off at 8 p.m. ET.

In the main event, Brazilian flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja (27-5 MMA, 11-3 UFC) puts his title on the line against Steve Erceg (12-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC). And in the co-main event, former featherweight champion Jose Aldo (31-8 MMA, 13-7 UFC) ends his retirement for one more fight in Rio against Jonathan Martinez (19-4 MMA, 10-3 UFC).

UFC 301 (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) takes place Saturday at Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro.

Below is the lineup of fights included in the watch-along:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Champ Alexandre Pantoja vs. Steve Erceg – for flyweight title
  • Jose Aldo vs. Jonathan Martinez
  • Vitor Petrino vs. Anthony Smith
  • Michel Pereira vs. Ihor Potieria
  • Caio Borralho vs. Paul Craig

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN/ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Joanderson Brito vs. Jack Shore
  • Karolina Kowalkiewicz vs. Iasmin Lucindo
  • Elves Brener vs. Myktybek Orolbai
  • Drakkar Klose vs. Joaquim Silva

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 301.

Tatiana Suarez confident she could impose her will against Zhang Weili: ‘My grappling is very, very good’

Tatiana Suarez thinks she has what it takes to dethrone UFC strawweight champion Zhang Weili.

[autotag]Tatiana Suarez[/autotag] thinks she has what it takes to dethrone UFC strawweight champion [autotag]Zhang Weili[/autotag].

Weili (24-3 MMA, 8-2 UFC) notched her second title defense when she defeated Yan Xiaonan at UFC 300 earlier this month. The champion has been cruising to victories as of late, and Suarez (10-0 MMA, 7-0 UFC) looks forward to the challenge if she’s next in line.

“I’m really excited to fight Weili when given the opportunity because she’s had a couple of dominant performances, and I really want to test myself,” Suarez told MMA Junkie Radio.

Although Weili won four of the five rounds against Xiaonan, Xiaonan had her moments on the feet and was credited with three takedowns. However, that didn’t necessarily make Suarez grow in confidence. The undefeated standout wrestler already believed she had the style to beat Weili.

“I think prior to that matchup, I kind of know how I would do,” Suarez said. “It showed just a little bit more of her game and things like that. I thought she did well. She was able to capitalize like I knew she would. I knew she would win in the grappling department just because Yan is just not good at all on the ground. I have nothing against her but she’s – I mean she’s a phenomenal striker, but she’s not good on the ground at all.

“So I knew that Weili would be able to outgrapple her, and Yan not being a wrestler, actually got a couple of takedowns if I can remember. …S he didn’t mean to. I think they just engaged and she threw her to the ground or something. Just seeing that just shows me that I think I could impose my will against her, and my grappling is very, very good. I think I’d do well just like I’ve always known.”

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Vanessa Demopoulos prepared to get used to familiarity with UFC opponents like Emily Ducote

UFC women’s strawweight Vanessa Demopoulos has another big opportunity in front of her next month.

[autotag]Vanessa Demopoulos[/autotag] has another big opportunity in front of her next month, and from here on out when those happen, they might seem a little more personal.

Demopoulos (10-5 MMA, 4-2 UFC) takes on Emily Ducote (13-8 MMA, 2-2 UFC) at UFC Fight Night 241 on May 11. For Demopoulos, a win would give her five in six fights – which would put her in great position in the women’s strawweight division.

But it will have to come against someone she’s got some familiarity with.

“Not only do I know a lot about her – Emily’s a sweetheart,” Demopoulos told MMA Junkie Radio. “She came here to Las Vegas. She trained over at Xtreme (Couture) and, in fact, me, her and Hannah Goldy all went hiking together over at Red Rock. So we’ve spent a little bit of time together. It was nice to kind of get to know her on a little bit of a personal level.”

Demopoulos has been training in Las Vegas, where she utilizes not only Xtreme Couture, but the UFC Performance Institute. She said that has been a game-changer for her, especially when it comes to nutrition.

Then there’s the consistency in her coaching, which she thinks was missing earlier in her career.

“I feel like everybody’s really on the same page,” she said. “Being a part of the PI and being able to have access to my food, have access to recovery, have access to the strength and conditioning, the PT, the facility – it just makes my life so much easier being in fight camp and being able to be here in Las Vegas.”

This fight camp, though, for Ducote was for someone she’s spent time with. And even looking down the road, her division’s champion, Zhang Weili, spends a lot of time at the PI, herself.

In a division that isn’t the biggest in the UFC, and given her training in Las Vegas where so many fighters come through at one point or another, Demopoulos is confident this situation will happen again.

“When we got the fight contract, it’s not like I (called) her out. She didn’t hit me up, either,” Demopoulos said. “We both knew that it might happen even while she was here. It’s OK. It’s going to happen. I feel like for being here in Las Vegas, we see so many people, it would be almost impossible for me not to fight somebody that I knew.”

Demopoulos got back in the win column this past October with a decision over Kanako Murata in a fight in which Murata was a decent favorite. Earlier in the year, she had a three-fight winning streak snapped by Karolina Kowalkiewicz.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 241.

Max Holloway’s point-to-the-canvas UFC 300 moment was deja vu for Ricardo Lamas

You might have someone to thank you wouldn’t expect for that crazy Max Holloway vs. Justin Gaethje result at UFC 300.

If you’re among the masses who thinks the “BMF” title fight earlier this month was one of the greatest fights in history, you might have someone to thank you wouldn’t expect.

When [autotag]Max Holloway[/autotag] (26-7 MMA, 22-7 UFC) pointed to the canvas to invite Justin Gaethje (25-5 MMA, 8-5 UFC) to swing for the fences in the final 10 seconds at UFC 300, it set in motion what will go down as one of the most dramatic moments in MMA history. Holloway, who already was winning the five-round fight on the scorecards, connected with Gaethje and put him out cold – with one second left in their 25-minute fight.

That it was for the “BMF” title, and between a pair of fighters known for getting into proverbial wars, made it all the more perfect. But one of Holloway’s past opponents wants to flip through the history book for a moment.

When [autotag]Ricardo Lamas[/autotag] fought Holloway at UFC 199 nearly eight years ago, Holloway did the same thing. He was up on the scorecards, on his way to a sweep, and he pointed at the floor in the closing seconds and started slinging with Lamas. And that, Lamas says, laid the groundwork for the moment that will be etched in MMA history.

“I just want to say you’re welcome to everyone because I was the one that coaxed that moment out of Max Holloway,” Lamas recently told MMA Junkie Radio. “You can listen to Max talk about it. He actually did an interview with Demetrious Johnson, and even though he threw a little shade at me – but he said he loved me, so it’s OK; I love you, too, Max – he was saying that in the third round of our fight, I kept waving him in and waving him in. And then finally in the last 10 seconds, that’s why he decided to point to the ground and give me that chance to duke it out.

“But he made it seem like I did that because I didn’t think we were really fighting. I knew I was down on the scorecards. I knew I was losing that fight. And in my head, in the last half of that third round, I’m like, listen, only chance I’ve got right now is to kind of coax him into a brawl and hopefully I catch him with something, which is what he did to Gaethje. That’s what I was hoping for, but it didn’t work out.”

That win for Holloway was his ninth straight. It led him to an interim featherweight title fight with Anthony Pettis later in 2016, which he won. The next year, he unified the 145-pound title when he knocked out Jose Aldo, and when he beat him again in a rematch he became at the time arguably the best featherweight of all time.

And not that Lamas thinks Holloway wouldn’t have gotten there absent their closing 10 seconds in 2016, but he’s not sure why it doesn’t happen more often.

“We created that epic moment and it took – let’s see, that was 199, so it took 101 UFC pay-per-views to recreate it,” Lamas said. “But they finally did it, and he did the perfect ending to it. I couldn’t think of any better ending to a fight for the ‘BMF’ title than what happened.”

Lamas said a situation like the one he got into with Holloway led to an interesting sensation in the fight, as well.

“It’s definite tunnel vision,” he said. “I didn’t hear the crowd till after, like when we’re done in the end. The bell rang, the crowd kind of erupted, but it’s definitely tunnel vision and there’s not much going through my head except for, ‘I hope I don’t fall down and I hope my punch lands.’

“… I’ll be waiting patiently for my 10 percent finder’s fee for creating that moment with Max. So Max, if you need my address, just hit me up in the DMs and I’ll send it to you.”

Holloway won a Performance of the Night bonus, as well as Fight of the Night, at the historic UFC 300 – on a show at which the bonuses were raised to a symbolic $300,000 each instead of $50,000. His $600,000 in bonuses in one night took him well over the $1 million mark in bonus money in his UFC career.

Lamas had three bonuses in his UFC career, including one for a submission of future lightweight champion Charles Oliveira in his bounce-back from his loss to Holloway. Lamas retired after a 2020 win over Bill Algeo.

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Cody Brundage thinks main card spot vs. Bo Nickal at UFC 300 is appropriate

Cody Brundage defended his placement on the UFC 300 main card against Bo Nickal, who has just five MMA fights.

[autotag]Cody Brundage[/autotag] is in an interesting position.

He’s about a week out from the biggest opportunity of his MMA career: a spot on the UFC 300 main card against a highly touted wrestling standout who will go into the fight as one of the biggest betting favorites in UFC history.

Brundage (10-5 MMA, 4-4 UFC) opens the UFC 300 main card at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas against Bo Nickal (5-0 MMA, 2-0 UFC), who is about a 25-1 favorite in the middleweight fight – and can be found as much as 30-1 at one online sportsbook.

But he also thinks even if he pulls off what would be a historic upset, the focus still will be on Nickal.

“No matter what, you won’t ever prove those people wrong (who think I don’t deserve it),” Brundage told MMA Junkie Radio. “I’ll go knock out Bo Nickal in the first round and everybody will be like, ‘Well, Bo was just too green. He didn’t have the experience. It was a fluke. There’ll be a ton of reasons. It won’t be that ‘Cody Brundage is way better than we thought … Cody Brundage is the next champ. Cody Brundage is’ all these things that they’re saying about Bo Nickal now. It’ll be more, ‘Well, it was a fluke’ or ‘Bo Nickal isn’t as good as we thought.’ I kind of am at peace with that. What other people say and the odds and things like that, it doesn’t really bother me. It doesn’t really influence my motivation.”

Brundage acknowledged the elite college wrestler is the reason their fight is on the main card, and that his popularity in his prior athletic pursuits help the cause of his placement on the pay-per-view ahead of the likes of former champion Jiri Prochazka, former champ Aljamain Sterling and the UFC debut of two-time PFL winner and two-time Olympic gold medalist Kayla Harrison.

Their placement has drawn the ire of a segment of the MMA fan base that thinks a card as prestigious as UFC 300, with as much star power as it has, features matchups more deserving of a main card slot. Even UFC lead play-by-play voice Jon Anik said the interest in Nickal seems to bear it out, and Brundage seems to agree.

“I know I’m on the main card. I could joke and be like, ‘You know, I carried Bo Nickal to the UFC 300 main card.’ But I know that’s not the case,” Brundage said. “I know he’s the reason we’re on the main card. I’m happy to be on the main card, obviously. All the fans complaining, at the end of the day, what that means is you get one fight that you really want to watch (for free), because if our fight sucks so bad it shouldn’t be on the main card, that means one fight that you think should be on the main card, you’re going to get for free.”

Brundage said Nickal might be experiencing the same phenomenon recently seen when Alex Pereira made the transition from elite kickboxer to MMA. He quickly rose up to beat Israel Adesanya for the middleweight title and now holds the light heavyweight belt.

Pereira headlines UFC 300 in a 205-pound title defense against former champ Jamahal Hill.

“I do think (Nickal) has a lot of star power,” Brundage said. “… Bo’s kind of similar to (Pereira). He has a ton of prestige and it’s a big following from his success in college wrestling, and those guys are going to tune in and watch him when he’s fighting. He had a huge following, and that always is what the UFC cares about. They want eyes on their pay-per-view. They want people to buy.

“Kayla Harrison-Holly Holm, that’s a great fight – former champ vs. other organization’s champ and Olympic champion. But if you ask me who’s going to get more eyes, Kayla Harrison or Bo Nickal, I think it’s probably going to be Bo Nickal. At the end of the day, it’s a business decision, and I think the lineup they put up for the main card is what they think would get the most buys.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 300.

Linton Vassell on entering 2024 PFL season: ‘I can’t be waiting around’ for Ryan Bader

Linton Vassell expected Ryan Bader next but explains why he ended up entering the 2024 PFL season instead.

[autotag]Linton Vassell[/autotag] expected [autotag]Ryan Bader[/autotag] next but ended up entering the 2024 PFL season instead.

Vassell (24-8) was scheduled to challenge Bellator heavyweight champion Bader (31-8) this past October but withdrew due to lingering effects of COVID. In the meantime, Bader faced 2023 PFL champion Renan Ferreira in February but was knocked out in just 21 seconds.

Vassell still thought he’d get to run things back with Bader but ended up accepting an offer to join the 2024 PFL season when he was told Bader isn’t ready yet.

“I was supposed to fight Bader, which didn’t happen,” Vassell told MMA Junkie Radio. “I got sick in October. So, me and my manager were saying I’m going to fight him depending on what happens with him and Ferreira. Obviously he lost the fight, so I’m expecting I’m going to fight Ryan next. I get a phone call saying that fight is not happening. ‘Do you want to go into the PFL tournament?’

“This was about maybe four weeks ago. That’s exactly what happened. I didn’t even get a chance to really decide what I wanted to do, but I wanted to fight. I’ve been training, so I thought why not? It’s a year pretty much when I fought (Valentin) Moldavsky. I can’t be waiting around for Ryan or whatever fight could be lined up later.”

Vassell meets Denis Goltsov in Thursday’s 2024 PFL 1 (ESPN2, ESPN+) co-main event, which takes place at Boeing Center in San Antonio. The 40-year-old is enjoying his best career run having won five straight, and despite his age, is ready for the strenuous tournament format.

“I know what I’ve put myself into,” Vassell said. “How would I know unless I tried? I could always be like, ‘Oh, I’m not ready,’ but I could be like, ‘I’m 40 now, I’m not going to fight,’ but I feel I’m at my best right now. I’ve won my last five fights. It’s not like I’m winning and it’s going the distance. Out of five fights, one fight went the distance, and I’ve beaten the top guys.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for 2024 PFL 1.