Noche UFC post-event facts: Alexa Grasso, Valentina Shevchenko fight to rare title draw

Check out all the facts from Noche UFC, which saw Alexa Grasso vs. Valentina Shevchenko join the shortlist of title bouts to end in a draw.

The inaugural Noche UFC event proved to be a massive success for the company, with the Mexican Independence Day celebration going down Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Although she didn’t get the victory, Mexico’s [autotag]Alexa Grasso[/autotag] (16-3-1 MMA, 8-3-1 UFC) still left as women’s flyweight champion after she battled [autotag]Valentina Shevchenko[/autotag] (23-4-1 MMA, 12-3-1 UFC) to a split draw in their main event rematch.

It was a rare result for a title bout, and for more on the numbers, check below for MMA Junkie’s post-event facts from Noche UFC.

Noche UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay: 2023 total passes $6 million

Noche UFC fighters took home UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay, a program that continued after the UFC’s deal with Venum.

LAS VEGAS – Fighters from Saturday’s Noche UFC event took home UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay totaling $185,500.

The program, a comprehensive plan that includes outfitting requirements, media obligations and other items under the fighter code of conduct, replaces the previous payments made under the UFC Athlete Outfitting Policy.

Noche UFC took place at T-Mobile Arena. The entire card streamed on ESPN+.

The full Noche UFC UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance payouts included:

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[autotag]Alexa Grasso[/autotag]: $42,000
vs. [autotag]Valentina Shevchenko[/autotag]: $32,000

[autotag]Jack Della Maddalena[/autotag]: $6,000
def. [autotag]Kevin Holland[/autotag]: $16,000

[autotag]Raul Rosas Jr.[/autotag]: $4,000
def. [autotag]Terrence Mitchell[/autotag]: $4,000

[autotag]Daniel Zellhuber[/autotag]: $4,000
def. [autotag]Christos Giagos[/autotag]: $11,000

[autotag]Kyle Nelson[/autotag]: $6,000
def. [autotag]Fernando Padilla[/autotag]: $4,000

[autotag]Loopy Godinez[/autotag]: $6,000
def. [autotag]Elise Reed[/autotag]: $6,000

[autotag]Roman Kopylov[/autotag]: $6,000
def. [autotag]Josh Fremd[/autotag]: $4,500

[autotag]Edgar Chairez[/autotag]: $4,500
vs. [autotag]Daniel Lacerda[/autotag]: $4,500

[autotag]Tracy Cortez[/autotag]: $4,500
def. [autotag]Jasmine Jasudavicius[/autotag]: $4,500

[autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag]: $4,000
def. [autotag]Alex Reyes[/autotag]: $4,000

[autotag]Josefine Knutsson[/autotag]: $4,000
def. [autotag]Marnic Mann[/autotag]: $4,000

Under the UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance program’s payout tiers, which appropriate the money generated by Venum’s multi-year sponsorship with the UFC, fighters are paid based on their total number of UFC bouts, as well as Zuffa-era WEC fights (January 2007 and later) and Zuffa-era Strikeforce bouts (April 2261 and later). Fighters with 1-3 bouts receive $4,000 per appearance; 4-5 bouts get $4,500; 6-10 bouts get $6,000; 11-15 bouts earn $11,000; 16-20 bouts pocket $16,000; and 21 bouts and more get $21,000. Additionally, champions earn $42,000 while title challengers get $32,000.

In addition to experience-based pay, UFC fighters will receive in perpetuity royalty payments amounting to 20-30 percent of any UFC merchandise sold that bears their likeness, according to officials.

Full 2023 UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance payouts:

Year-to-date total: $6,130,000
2022 total: $8,351,500
2021 total: $6,167,500
Program-to-date total: $20,719,000

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

Noche UFC play-by-play and live results

Check out live play-by-play and official results from Noche UFC in Las Vegas, featuring Alexa Grasso vs. Valentina Shevchenko 2.

LAS VEGAS – Noche UFC took place Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

Women’s flyweight champion Alexa Grasso (16-3-1 MMA, 8-3-1 UFC) took on former champ Valentina Shevchenko (23-4-1 MMA, 12-3-1 UFC), whom she submitted earlier this year to win the title, in the main event rematch. In the co-feature, Jack Della Maddalena (16-2 MMA, 6-0 UFC) put his unbeaten UFC record on the line against Kevin Holland (25-10 MMA, 12-7 UFC) at welterweight.

Check out full results and play-by-play below.

Charlie Campbell def. Alex Reyes at Noche UFC: Best photos

Check out the best photos from Charlie Campbell’s first-round TKO win over Alex Reyes at Noche UFC at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Check out the best photos from [autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag]’s first-round TKO win over [autotag]Alex Reyes[/autotag] at Noche UFC at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. (Photos by Stephen R. Sylvanie, USA TODAY Sports; MMA Junkie; and UFC)

Noche UFC pre-event facts: Can Alexa Grasso overcome Valentina Shevchenko’s greatness – again?

The best facts and figures about Noche UFC, which features an Alexa Grasso vs. Valentina Shevchenko title rematch in the main event.

The first Noche UFC in history is set to take place Saturday with the Mexican Independence Day fight card slated to go down at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas and stream on ESPN+.

An anticipated championship rematch will serve as the main event. After pulling off a stunning upset in March, women’s flyweight titleholder [autotag]Alexa Grasso[/autotag] (16-3 MMA, 8-3 UFC) will attempt to prove her submission victory over [autotag]Valentina Shevchenko[/autotag] (23-4 MMA, 12-3 UFC) was no fluke when they run it back for the belt.

For more on the numbers behind the title fight, as well as the rest of the card, check below for MMA Junkie’s pre-event facts about Noche UFC.

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Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Sept. 4-10)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were first reported or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

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 your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC or Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie or officially announced by the promotions from Sept. 4-10.

Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Aug. 7-13)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were first reported or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

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 your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC or Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie or officially announced by a promotion from Aug. 7-13.

Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Jan. 2-8)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were first reported or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

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 your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC or Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Jan. 2-8.

UFC Fight Night 220 adds Trevor Peek debut vs. Alex Reyes, who returns after 1988 days between fights

After over five years away, Alex Reyes returns to action to battle newcomer Trevor Peek.

When [autotag]Alex Reyes[/autotag] walks to the UFC cage, it’ll be 1988 days since his previous one.

After nearly five years away from professional MMA competition, Reyes (13-3 MMA, 0-1 UFC) will return at UFC Fight Night 220 when he takes on surging newcomer [autotag]Trevor Peek[/autotag] (7-0 MMA, 0-0 UFC) in a lightweight battle. The card takes place Feb. 25 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas with the main card on ESPN+ after prelims on ESPN/ESPN+.

Two people with knowledge of the booking recently informed MMA Junkie of the bout but asked to remain anonymous as the promotion has yet to make an official announcement.

Reyes, 36, has one UFC bout on his resume to date. It was a short-notice bout, up a weight class against Mike Perry. Reyes was finished with strikes early in Round 1. The fight was perhaps the toughest of his career to date, but pales in comparison to the unexpected fight ahead. He was booked to fight Nasrat Haqparast in March 2018, but withdrew when a stem-cell injection caused a spinal infection – and eventually rendered him unable to walk.

The health struggles were serious and over the next four-plus years Reyes had good days and bad ones, as he detailed in an interview with MMA Junkie on Friday. With his fight future in question – or even in doubt, for much of his time off – Reyes rehabbed until he was finally ready to make his return.

Standing across from him Feb. 25 will be a stiff test, as Peek put on one of the most memorable performances of this past season of Dana White’s Contender Series. Against Malik Lewis, Peek displayed a granite chin, fantastic cardio, and a high-paced offense en route to a UFC contract-earning knockout. The comeback victory maintained his perfect 100 percent knockout/TKO rate.

With the addition, the UFC Fight Night 220 lineup includes:

  • Nikita Krylov vs. Ryan Spann
  • Jordan Leavitt vs. Victor Martinez
  • Hailey Cowan vs. Ailin Perez
  • Denys Bondar vs. Ode Osbourne
  • Cortney Casey vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius
  • Darrius Flowers vs. Erick Gonzalez
  • Lucas Almeida vs. Andre Fili
  • Don’Tale Mayes vs. Augusto Sakai
  • Brendan Allen vs. Andre Muniz
  • Yohan Lainasse vs. Mike Mallott
  • Trevor Peek vs. Alex Reyes

Back on track: Alex Reyes defies odds of spinal infection for UFC return after five-year layoff

Doctors told UFC lightweight Alex Reyes in 2018 he may never walk again. Nearly six years after his UFC debut, Reyes has defied the odds and is booked for his second bout.

[autotag]Alex Reyes[/autotag] was told in 2018 he may never walk again. Fast forward over five years later, and see him walk straight to the UFC cage.

Willingly fighting in a cage against another trained combatant is already a semi-superhuman feat. For Reyes, however, the accomplishment extends beyond that, considering the depths from which he’s risen. The comeback is emotional, perhaps improbable, and very unusual.

A bit of a forgotten member of the UFC roster, Reyes is 13-3 as a professional with one UFC fight under his belt. The bout came in September 2017, up a weight class vs. Mike Perry on short notice. He hasn’t fought since, but not due to his own volition.

When Reyes spoke to MMA Junkie in November 2019, his life was monotonous, filled with intravenous injections and uncertainty. It wasn’t easy to be positive after osteomyelitis flipped his world upside down, but he tried his best.

The world was moving around him and he felt stuck. He regained his ability to walk, but life was still a bit of a struggle.

“Mentally, I feel like the train has left without me,” Reyes said. “Where I could be, right now in the UFC, and where I should be, compared to where I am. That’s the hardest part – trying not to let that get me down.”

Nearly six years after his most recent in-cage competition, Reyes is finally back aboard the express engine and beams positivity as it pulls out of the station and toward the UFC Apex for a Feb. 25 bout vs. [autotag]Trevor Peek[/autotag] (7-0 MMA, 0-0 UFC).

“Doctors were telling me I wasn’t going to walk again, that I wasn’t going to hold my kids, that I needed to change careers,” Reyes told MMA Junkie on Friday. “I had a lot of supporters around me. I had my family, my wife, coaches, management, staff at the UFC. They believed in me and I gave it my best shot and I beat the infection. I didn’t need the surgery. Here I am, man, five years later. My mind never left the sport.”

Health issues began for Reyes when he contracted E. coli through a stem cell injection. The infection caused severe osteomyelitis and a host of other symptoms. Reyes was bedridden and in severe pain.

Meanwhile, the company allegedly responsible for the injection, Genetech, apparently vanished after a warning from the FDA.

“Going from a high-level athlete, leader, and provider to having to be cared for like an infant because I couldn’t take care of myself?” Reyes said in 2019. “Mentally, that was extremely hard to accept.”

Now, Reyes views his life through reverse lenses, as he looks at the distance he’s traveled from disarray to normalcy to high-level professional fighter.

“I’m just blessed that I’m at this point and I’m just fortunate to be at this point in my life and my career to step back in there at the highest level of the sport and compete,” Reyes said Friday. “My body is ready. My mind is ready. I’ll tell you what. The things that I went through, the things I felt were taken from me, the mental toughness that I gained from it – I’m not going to break, man. I’ll take all this adversity I’ve been through and use it as fuel in the fire and know that I can do anything.”

That’s the moral of the story Reyes wants to drive home: Anyone who has spent time around martial arts knows that sometimes fighting mirrors life.

“A lot of things can happen that you don’t account for,” Reyes said. “When those things happen, stay calm, stay patient, stay in the pocket, keep rolling, keep coming forward. Just take it day by day. Stay positive. Surround yourself with good people.”

One person Reyes directly attributes motivation to is fan-favorite UFC lightweight Bobby Green. Training partners from years past, Reyes and Green reunited in recent years. Reyes cornered Green in the UFC. Being an arm’s distance away from the action made Reyes even hungrier to return.

“His positivity and helping me and getting me back to the shape that I need to be in to be at this level, timing and range, he’s been a big help and a big inspiration or motivation for me,” Reyes said.

https://www.instagram.com/p/ClHsdUeP1Wt/

The walkout will be different, admits Reyes, who was already inactive for over two years when the promotion entered the COVID-19 pandemic-induced UFC Apex era. The smaller show vibe, however, will be a fraction of what’s on his mind.

Reyes, now 36, expects everything he’s been through to cross his mind at once. But when it’s time to fight, Reyes says fans can expect he picks up perhaps even further along than where he left off – 1988 days later.

Owner of his own gym, Cage Combat Academy, Reyes has continued to absorb and dish knowledge over the past six years – even if the physical work was delayed.

The biggest fight of his life has been won, but there are still bigger victories sought. From here on out, Reyes isn’t interested in participation trophies. His goal is the highest peaks of the sport.

“(I’ll) get back on that train – and keep riding it the top.”

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