Bellator Europe 6 highlights
Bellator Europe 6 highlights
Bellator Europe 6 highlights
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
Bellator Europe 6 highlights
Bellator Europe 6 highlights
To think Michael Page only wants to fight cans simply doesn’t add up, writes MMA Junkie’s Simon Head.
Bellator welterweight star [autotag]Michael Page[/autotag] is confident, talented and has the ability to produce the sort of finishes few can manage inside the cage, yet it seems a lot of people like nothing more than throwing shade at the man known for donning shades after his knockout wins.
After his most recent performance, a quick-fire finish of short-notice replacement Giovanni Melillo at Bellator Europe 6, the critics and haters were out in force once again, despite a near-flawless display inside the cage. But are those critics missing the point?
In truth, Page found himself on a hiding to nothing this past weekend in London. He was defeated by now-welterweight champion Douglas Lima in the semifinals of the welterweight grand prix, then bounced back with a one-round toying of Irish striker Richard Kiely in September.
Page’s next test was supposed to be against Derek Anderson, a more seasoned, battle-tested campaigner who had never been stopped with strikes in his career. But after he was ruled out through injury, Bellator officials needed to scramble to find a short-notice replacement. The installation of unheralded Italian Melillo was greeted by shrugs and rolled eye emojis across social media. “Another can for MVP” seemed to be the overwhelming view of the Twittersphere.
It meant Page found himself in a no-win situation. Lined up against a largely unknown opponent, on just over a week’s notice, whom he was expected to put away convincingly, meant that nothing short of a highlight-reel knockout would suffice on fight night.
Luckily, highlight-reel KOs are MVP’s specialty, and he duly delivered, courtesy of a peach of an overhand right that put Melillo into airplane mode long before he hit the canvas. It took him a grand total of 107 seconds. Under the circumstances, there really wasn’t too much more Page could have done. Melillo barely laid a glove on him and, when he did look to launch some serious offense, Page countered the Italian’s kick with the sledgehammer shot that knocked him out.
Despite his punch-perfect performance, the critics were falling over themselves to bury MVP after the fight. Page’s longtime rival, Paul Daley, was in prime position to fire the loudest shots via the Bellator broadcast desk, but he’s angling for a return fight with a man who defeated him in their first meeting, so his stance was understandable. And, while Lima justifiably pointed out that he’d like to see MVP defeat a ranked opponent before granting him a shot at his title, he didn’t directly criticize the Brit or his performance. Many on the internet did, however, suggesting that Page goes out of his way to choose easy fights.
The narrative of Page as some sort of career-controlling can crusher seems a little lazy. If he wanted to simply cruise along by taking easy bouts, he wouldn’t have entered the welterweight grand prix, where a murderers’ row of 170 pounders couldn’t wait to get their hands on him. Likewise, why would he have pursued a rivalry with Daley, the most ferocious 170-pound striker on the Bellator roster? And why does he want to jump straight back in the cage with the only man to not just beat him, but knock him cold?
Page only wants gimme fights? No, that just doesn’t pass the smell test.
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The truth is MVP is a promoter’s dream and, just as Bellator has looked to slow-play some of its other talented fighters, they’re utilizing Page in a way that helps maximize his star power for the promotion. That’s why they slow-played him early in his Bellator career. That’s why they booked him to face popular, but comparatively inexperienced, Kiely in Dublin. And it’s why, when they lost Anderson from the main event slot in London just over a week ago, they didn’t just pull MVP from the card and bump the eagerly-anticipated middleweight grudge match between Fabian Edwards and Mike Shipman up to the main event slot. Bellator needed Page at the top of the card, regardless of the opponent. Not many stars can pull a crowd without a named opponent, but MVP is one of the few.
Page sells tickets, puts bums on seats (and couches) and, more often than not, he delivers fireworks. And I’d be willing to suggest that one of the people most disappointed at the lack of a named opponent for MVP in London was Page himself. Usually he’d relish the chance to step in front of the cameras after a win and make sure everyone knows his thoughts, so his uncharacteristic absence from the post-fight press conference might have hinted at a little personal frustration, too. Maybe even he knew he couldn’t get too vocal after defeating an unheralded opponent, even if it was via a one-shot KO.
Page had little choice in his opponent on Saturday night. And, once he stepped into the cage, he turned in a performance that few, if any, welterweights on the planet could have matched. Other top fighters might’ve beaten Melillo, but who else would have finished him in such a clean, spectacular, social media-friendly way? Given the cards Page was dealt, what else could he seriously have done? One option could have been to simply pull out of the event, but that would have let down the thousands of fans who bought tickets to watch him fight. And, for a showman like MVP, letting fans down isn’t part of the gameplan, so he fought on – and got criticized anyway.
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Make no mistake, Page doesn’t want to fight so-called “cans.” He chased Daley, threw himself into the welterweight grand prix and now wants to jump back into the cage with the man who starched him. They’re not the actions of a man who simply wants to take easy fights. Instead they’re the actions of a man who actually wants big fights. But Page is also a company man, and that has seen him take fights the Bellator brass wanted him to have as they look to build their brand in Europe.
If Page doesn’t take the Kiely fight in Dublin, or if he pulls out of the London show, does that help his chances of getting the big fights he actually wants? Of course not. So he took the fights and extracted the most he possibly could from them by producing a pair of highlight-reel finishes to show he’s a class above. But then the criticism comes his way anyway for facing lower-level opposition. In short, he’s damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t.
Hopefully, after doing Bellator a solid in Dublin and again in London, he gets rewarded with a big fight next. He wants it, his fans want it and even his detractors want it.
And if you ask me, MVP vs Daley 2 in a London main event title eliminator next year makes a whole lot of sense.
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Check out the full list of medical suspensions from Bellator Europe 6 in London.
Bellator finished closed out its 2019 European series schedule Saturday in London with Bellator Europe 6, which took place at The SSE Arena, Wembley.
In the main event, [autotag]Michael Page[/autotag] ran through Italian newcomer [autotag]Giovanni Melilla[/autotag] by picking up another first-round knockout. The co-headliner saw [autotag]Fabian Edwards[/autotag] edge out a split decision win against [autotag]Mike Shipman[/autotag].
On Monday, MMA Junkie received medical suspensions from Mohegan Sun Tribe Department of Regulation president Mike Mazzulli, who oversaw regulation of the event. Among those facing lengthy suspensions is [autotag]Sam Sicilia[/autotag]. The Washington-based fighter was knocked out by fellow UFC veteran Robert Whiteford and will need neurological clearance to return. Whiteford was suspended indefinitely for a potential ankle/foot injury.
After his win over [autotag]Terry Brazier[/autotag], [autotag]Soren Bak[/autotag] was suspended indefinitely until his right knee is cleared by a physician.
Additionally, [autotag]Josie Blaber[/autotag] was suspended 180 days or until cleared by a doctor. Blaber was on the receiving end of brutal, dragged-out attack by [autotag]Charlotte McIntyre[/autotag] in the card’s curtain jerker.
Check out the full Bellator Europe 7 medical suspensions below:
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After Bellator London, Mike Shipman was frustrated with not only with the judging, but also with himself.
LONDON – The Bellator Europe 6 co-main event was close.
When the dust settled, [autotag]Fabian Edwards[/autotag] had his hand raised after a three-round bout with [autotag]Mike Shipman[/autotag]. However, not everyone agreed with the decision. The consensus among fans and media was the same as among the judges: split.
After the fight, Shipman (13-3 MMA, 4-2 BMMA) emphasized his frustrations not only with the judging, but with himself. According to Shipman, he believed he had a comfortable lead in the fight in the third round. As a result, he “coasted” instead of pressing the action.
“Yeah, obviously I’m going to have a biased opinion,” Shipman told MMA Junkie. “I need to watch the tape back. I thought I had won the fight. In the third round, I took my foot off the gas because I thought I won it. I coasted the third round, so (expletive) me for doing that.”
Third-round mental lapses aside, Shipman was unhappy with his performance altogether. If he did certain things differently, Shipman believes the fight would have gone his way even under these circumstances.
“I wasn’t totally happy with my performance,” Shipman said. “I should have done more damage in certain spots and taken advantage of the dominant positions I had. But I do think I did enough. But that’s the game.”
One judge, Ben Cartlidge, scored the contest 30-27 in favor of Edwards (9-0 MMA, 5-0 BMMA) – an outrageous ruling in the eyes of Shipman.
“I don’t understand the 30-27. I don’t understand what fight they were watching,” Shipman said. “But again, but I don’t want to be going to the judges anyways. And if I am going to the judges, I want a bloody mess in front of me.”
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The war of words between rivals Shipman and Edwards was well-documented entering Bellator Europe 6. The two fighters have not liked each other since their days competing on the regional scene for BAMMA. After the fight, Shipman put the bad blood aside and commended Edwards on the victory.
“Credit to Fabian as well,” Shipman said. “Obviously as you all know, I don’t like the guy. But he did show he’s the real deal. He’s a real fighter. He went out and tried to push the pace, tried to win the fight. I don’t think he did, but obviously two of them saw differently.”
Bellator Europe 6 took place Saturday at The SSE Arena, Wembley in London. The card streamed on MMA Junkie.
Check out MMA Junkie’s full Bellator Europe 6 post-fight interview with Mike Shipman in the video above.
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Will Michael Page face Douglas Lima or Paul Daley for a second time? The head of Bellator Europe weighs in.
LONDON – Saturday’s Bellator Europe 6 marked the final event of 2019 for the promotion’s European series.
For the head of Bellator Europe David Green, the inaugural year was a success. Events hosted in Newcastle, Birmingham, and London (twice), England; Milan, Italy; and Dublin, Ireland ran smoothly and set up the promotion for more European events in 2020.
After Bellator Europe 6, Green spoke to reporters about the series’ traction, as well as a host of other topics. One such subject was the evening’s headliner, Michael Page, who picked up a first-round knockout over Gianni Melillo.
Over the span of his 17-fight pro tenure, Page (16-1 MMA, 12-1 BMMA) has only lost to one man, Bellator welterweight champion Douglas Lima. Is a rematch between Page and Lima inevitable? Yes, Green said, but not quite yet.
“It might not be the next fight,” Green said. “But I imagine if he wins and Lima wins, that fight has got to happen sooner or later.”
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As for a rematch between Page and bitter rival Paul Daley, Green was less committal. Green pointed to the lackluster nature of their first meeting at Bellator 216 in February.
“Look, I think everybody was very excited about that fight before the last one,” Green said. “It obviously didn’t deliver what we all hoped for on the night. Whether there’ll be another one – who knows? Both guys are on a path. Maybe they’ll come across each other again.
“Of course if it does happen, I’d love to have it happen here. I think there is a potentially good fight there between those two guys. We just didn’t see it the first time.”
Bellator Europe 6 took place Saturday at The SSE Arena, Wembley in London. The card streamed on MMA Junkie.
Check out MMA Junkie’s full interview with David Green in the video above.
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Check out all the facts and figures from Bellator London, which took place Saturday and saw Michael Page win in the main event.
Bellator hosted its final European event of the years on Saturday with Bellator Europe 6, which went down at The SSE Arena, Wembley in London and streamed on the Bellator app following prelims on MMA Junkie.
England’s own [autotag]Michael Page[/autotag] (16-1 MMA, 12-1 BMMA) was triumphant yet again in the main event when he elevated his record with a first-round knockout of replacement opponent [autotag]Giovanni Melillo[/autotag] (13-5 MMA, 0-1 BMMA) in the welterweight matchup.
The finish by “MVP” etched his name further in the record books. For more on the numbers, check below for 25 post-event facts to come out of Bellator Europe 6.
* * * *
Betting favorites went 3-0 on the main card.
Betting favorites improved to 13-7 (with two no contests and one draw) in Bellator main events this year.
Total fight time for the three-bout main card was 31:47.
Page’s 12 victories in Bellator welterweight competition are third most in divisional history behind Andrey Koreshkov (13) and Douglas Lima (13).
Page’s nine stoppage victories in Bellator welterweight competition are tied with Lima for most in divisional history.
Page’s eight knockout victories in Bellator competition are third most in company history behind Lima (nine) and Patricky Freire (nine).
Page’s eight knockout victories in Bellator welterweight competition are tied with Lima for most in divisional history.
Melillo fell to 1-3 in his past four fights dating back to August 2018.
Melillo has suffered all five of his career losses by first-round knockout.
[autotag]Fabian Edwards[/autotag] (9-0 MMA, 4-0 BMMA) became the first fighter to earn four Bellator victories in 2019.
Edwards’ four-fight Bellator winning streak at middleweight is tied with Rafael Lovato Jr. for the second longest active streak in the division behind Anatoly Tokov (five).
[autotag]Mike Shipman[/autotag]’s (13-3 MMA, 4-2 BMMA) suffered consecutive losses for the first time in his career. He hasn’t earned a victory since November 2018.
Shipman suffered the first decision loss of his career.
[autotag]Terry Brazier[/autotag] (11-3 MMA, 1-1 BMMA) suffered the first decision loss of his career.
[autotag]Denise Kielholtz[/autotag]’s (4-2 MMA, 4-2 BMMA) four victories in Bellator women’s flyweight competition are tied for second most in divisional history behind Ilima-Lei Macfarlane (nine).
Kielholtz’s three stoppage victories in Bellator women’s flyweight competition are tied for second most in divisional history behind Macfarlane (six).
Kielholtz’s two submission victories in Bellator women’s flyweight competition are third most in divisional history behind Macfarlane (six) and Emily Ducote (three).
Kielholtz’s 32-second finish of Sabriye Sengul marked the fastest submission in Bellator women’s flyweight history.
[autotag]Charlie Ward[/autotag] (7-4 MMA, 4-1 BMMA) fell to 4-1 since he returned to the middleweight division in November 2017. He’s 6-1 overall in his career at the weight class.
Ward suffered the first decision loss of his career.
[autotag]Sam Sicilia[/autotag] (17-11 MMA, 2-3 BMMA) fell to 2-6 in his past eight fights dating back to November 2015.
Sicilia has suffered nine of his 11 career losses by stoppage.
[autotag]Kent Kauppinen[/autotag] (12-5 MMA, 2-2 BMMA) was successful in his return to the middleweight division.
Kauppinen has earned all 12 of his career victories by stoppage. He’s finished seven of those wins in Round 1.
[autotag]Alfie Davis[/autotag] (13-3 MMA, 4-0 BMMA) has earned three of his four Bellator victories by decision.
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Danish lightweight Soren Bak chats with the press after his promotional debut victory over Terry Brazier at Bellator Europe 6.
LONDON – [autotag]Soren Bak[/autotag] made a victorious start to life as a Bellator fighter, then threw a little shade at his opponent’s mat skills during the post-fight press conference.
Former two-division Cage Warriors champion Bak (14-1 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) defeated former two-weight BAMMA champion [autotag]Terry Brazier[/autotag] via unanimous decision at Bellator Europe 6 after three grueling rounds with the Londoner at the SSE Arena.
Bak’s grinding performance didn’t win him too many fans among the London crowd, most of whom were cheering on local boy Brazier (11-3 MMA, 1-2 BMMA). And Brazier’s frustration was there for all to see when he shouted “Boring, mother (expletive)” into the microphone on his way out of the cage.
Bak said he understood the frustration, but attributed it to the Englishman’s inability to hang with him on the ground.
“He’s welcome to come to CSA (Bak’s team in Copenhagen) and I’ll personally teach him some wrestling, maybe a few get-ups, I don’t know. It seems like he’d need it,” he said.
“I kinda get it, because the home crowd, they want to see their guy win. But sadly, if your get-ups are doing ground and pound from the bottom, you’re not going to get anywhere, and that’s kinda what we showed… It’s so frustrating not being able to get up when that’s what you want to do. I also feel I had the fight standing up, too.”
Bak played the role of out-of-town spoiler as he strode down the ramp, holding his trademark ax, and claimed the scalp of a local hero. He did the same in his last fight for Cage Warriors, when he defeated Paddy Pimblett for the promotion’s lightweight title in Liverpool.
“I kind of feed on it, I love it,” he admitted. “I could do without the beer throwing in Liverpool, but there was none of that here, it was just booing. I can live with that.”
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Bak’s performance gave him a clear victory on his Bellator debut and the 27-year-old said he was pleased in his new MMA home.
“I’m happy, definitely,” he said. “You kinda get used to things being in one promotion for such a long time, as I was with Cage Warriors. Obviously, there’s a few changes when you move to an organization like Bellator. So it’s just a bit of adjustment and I think it will be perfect next time.”
And now he’s settled with Bellator and has his first win for the promotion under his belt, Bak said he’s ready to take on the very best the Bellator matchmakers can throw at him.
“My gameplan for this career has always been to take the toughest opponent who wants to fight me, and I’m going to keep doing that, because that’s the way to get to the top.” he said.
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British middleweight Mike Shipman kept his sense of humor intact, despite his split-decision loss to Fabian Edwards, as he called out judge Ben Cartlidge in the post-fight press conference.
LONDON – Despite all of the bad blood and frayed tempers heading into his co-main event fight with [autotag]Fabian Edwards[/autotag] at Bellator Europe 6, [autotag]Mike Shipman[/autotag] came out of the fight with his sense of humor still intact.
Shipman (13-3 MMA, 4-2 BMMA) came out on the wrong end of a split-decision verdict at the SSE Arena, with the scorecards leaning Edwards’ way 28-29, 29-28, 30-27. And despite his defeat, the London Shootfighters man generously gave his time backstage to talk through his performance, and his take on the scores.
When asked his take on the individual scorecards, Shipman immediately latched onto the name of the judge who awarded all three rounds to Edwards (9-0 MMA, 5-0 BMMA).
“Say that name again,” Shipman said after the scorecards were read to him during his post-fight media scrum. “Let me get my Facebook up and see if I can find him.”
When Shipman was told that Cartlidge – an experienced judge and a well-respected staple of the British MMA scene – was “a very nice man,” Shipman joked: “He doesn’t sound like it! How’s his eyesight?”
Then, he pondered for a second, then declared with a grin: “Ben Cartlidge … I don’t want Fabian next fight. I want Ben Cartlidge!”
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Looking at the overall scorecard as a whole, which saw just one of the three judges, Dave Tirelli, score the fight in his favor, Shipman laughed: “I see that we have one sensible man out of three!” before admitting that, while he believed he’d done enough to win the fight, he wouldn’t allow himself to be bitter after a close defeat.
“I don’t want to be one of those bitter guys,” he explained. “You always see it after a close decision: ‘Ah, I won the fight, I won the fight!’
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“Obviously, I need to watch it back again. I think I won the fight. But, like I said, serves me right for trying to coast that last round. I thought I had it in the bag. That’s not my style, I want to be looking to finish fights right up until the last bell. So in a way, (it) serves me right. (But) at the same time, yeah, I think I won the fight. I need to watch it again.”
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.
Robert Whiteford was candid and emotional after his victory over Sam Sicilia at Bellator London.
LONDON – It was a long road to Bellator Europe 6 for [autotag]Robert Whiteford[/autotag].
The Scottish featherweight had a rough journey to Saturday’s event in London. Picking up a knockout win over [autotag]Sam Sicilia[/autotag] was the culmination of a tough stretch in Whiteford’s personal life.
In his post-fight scrum, which MMA Junkie attended, Whiteford (15-4 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) opened up about how much the win over Sicilia meant for him after struggling with divorce and alcoholism in the last couple of years.
“I’ve kept my private life private for the last two years,” Whiteford said. “I’m trying to not get emotional here. I just got married last year, and the strain that put on my marriage of not fighting – like women go shopping, and it’s therapy for them; guys fighting, that’s my therapy… ended up getting divorce in a year and ended up back to here. So it means a lot more than just fighting at the end of the night.
“Its just what I’ve kept back from. I’ve never drank in my life, and just this last year (expletive) I turned into an alcoholic. I was (expletive) drinking everyday and couldn’t get out of my house. If it wasn’t for my friends coming, dragging me out, and getting me back in here, f*ck who knows where I would be?
“I don’t want to go back and drink, (expletive) me. It cost me a fortune, as well.”
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Whiteford is happy to be in a better place in his mind and is very grateful to have friends who helped him out through the rough times. “The Hammer” offered advice to anyone dealing with similar issues.
“Just keep coming back. Nothing can keep you down as long as you come back up,” Whiteford said. “I got the best friends in the world, and you really find out who your friends are when you got nothing. … I was on my bed for three weeks. I couldn’t even lift my head off the pillow. I was in a bad place, but you just have to keep coming back and fighting those demons, and who knows where it can take you?”
Whiteford had retired earlier this year before un-retiring and signing with Bellator. The 36-year-old veteran plans on keeping active and continuing his MMA career with Bellator.
You can watch his entire post-fight scrum in the video above.
Paul Daley is back on the idea of a rematch with Michael Page.
[autotag]Paul Daley[/autotag] is back on the idea of a rematch with [autotag]Michael Page[/autotag] after Bellator Europe 6.
After their first fight ended in a lackluster decision for Page (16-1 MMA, 12-1 BMMA) that didn’t live up to the pre-fight animosity, Daley (42-17-2 MMA, 8-4 BMMA) was keen to run it back, as he felt he deserved the nod that night at Bellator 216 in February. Not long after, though, “Semtex” changed his tune.
Daley was so disappointed with the way the fight unfolded and how fans were let down, that he didn’t want to do it again. Months have passed, and both men have since picked up wins, though, and the time could be right to put it together.
And with Page fresh off his first-round knockout victory over Giovanni Melillo in Saturday’s headliner at The SSE Arena, Wembley in London, Daley pitched the possibility of a rematch, but this time he wants it in his native England.
“He couldn’t do what he normally does to everybody else (when we fought),” Daley said on the Bellator Europe 6 broadcast. “In my mind I thought I won that fight. The only way to make it more convincing to everybody else is to take him out before the judges. If that fight is going to happen it needs to be a big fight. It needs to happen here in 2020, at Wembley in 2020.”
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Although he was frustrated over the outcome of the first fight, Daley admits much of the blame falls on him. He did not engage in the stand-up war that was promised, but with the matchup taking place within the confines of the $1 million welterweight grand prix, he said strategy was priority.
“I approached that fight with the intention to win,” Daley said. “I kind of led people down the wrong path thinking it was going to be this brutal bloodbath when I knew I could beat him comfortably on the ground.”
It remains to be seen if Bellator would be interested in booking a Daley-Page rematch. Given the level of competition Page has seen through his career, Daley said he has his doubts.
“This is ridiculous,” Daley said after the fight. “You can’t continually beat these kind of opponents. Yes, he knocks them out, but he’s expected to knock them out. What does this prove, the fact that he knocked out a guy nobody will remember? It proves nothing. It proves nothing at all. Why didn’t he do that to me? Why didn’t he do that to Douglas Lima? Because he’s not of that caliber.
“I need to see more from Michael Page, in my opinion, whether it’s a rematch with me or a rematch with another top-tier fighter. Does a win over this guy warrant a title shot? In my opinion it doesn’t. Yes, he’s a star. Yes, people love him. But can he really fight? The two times he’s stepped up, on paper, he’s got a ‘victory’ over me. Most people, including me, thought he lost that fight. Second time he stepped up against the champion, who I went three rounds with, he gets knocked out cold. So he needs to fight solid opponents instead of feeding him these guys.”
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The Page rematch is on his radar after Bellator Europe 6, but Daley said he has his sights set on something even bigger. If given the option, he’d much rather rematch current champion Douglas Lima, who beat him by unanimous decision at Bellator 158 in July 2016.
“I think Douglas Lima is the more exciting fight for me,” Daley said. “We went three rounds, and now he’s the welterweight champion again, the grand prix champion, and one of the very best fighters in the world.
“If they give me the contract, and it’s the right contract (for Page), we don’t need the hype, we don’t need nothing. Let’s just fight. I know I’m better than him. I know I won the first time, and I can do it again. Do I hate the guy? All animosity? No. I just want to prove I’m better and that he’s not of the caliber that everybody thinks he his.”
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