Francis Ngannou: Alexander Volkov is clearly dodging me, turned down two fights

Francis Ngannou has called out Alexander Volkov but believes he clearly wants no part of him.

[autotag]Francis Ngannou[/autotag] has been wanting to fight [autotag]Alexander Volkov[/autotag] for years now.

After Volkov defeated Greg Hardy this past weekend at UFC on ESPN+ 21 in Moscow, Ngannou called him out, but Volkov had other names in mind. He said he wanted to face either Junior Dos Santos, as originally scheduled, or Alistair Overeem next.

The way Ngannou (14-3 MMA, 9-2 UFC) sees it, it’s clear Volkov (31-7 MMA, 5-1 UFC) wants no part of him. In fact, Ngannou claims that Volkov has already turned down a fight with him before.

“Just for the record, Volkov turned down the fight against me twice,” Ngannou told MMA Junkie. “One was July 2017 and August 2018. He clearly denied to fight me.”

However, Ngannou did show praise towards Volkov’s performance vs. Hardy, crediting him for his composed approach throughout the fight. Volkov has won five of his six UFC appearances, with his lone loss coming to Derrick Lewis at UFC 229, in a fight he was clearly winning.

“I mean, it was a good fight,” Ngannou said of Volkov’s last win. “Fighting with some guy, big guy like Greg Hardy, of course he doesn’t have much experience, but he still hits very heavy and powerful. He handled the fight very well, very smart as always. He always fights very smart.”

[opinary poll=”how-interested-would-you-be-in-a-fight-b” customer=”mmajunkie”]

And when asked if he’s surprised that Volkov doesn’t want to fight him, considering his high position in the rankings, Ngannou said he feels like the gatekeeper of the division, since the UFC is refusing to give him a title shot.

“The UFC have made it clear for everybody that I’m who you have to fight if you want to fight for the title,” Ngannou said. “It seems like I’m just there to be, to go to the gate. That’s how it looks now. If they want to fight for the title, they have to fight me, but how about me fighting for the title? It doesn’t seem to be in the talk, so that’s exactly what the UFC has made me appear, to be the gate holder. And, yeah, I think Volkov is dodging me clearly. That’s not a secret that he’s dodging me.”

Ngannou went on to elaborate that his last three opponents, Curtis Blaydes and former champions Junior Dos Santos and Cain Velasquez, would have all received title shots had they beaten him. Instead, Ngannou took them all out in the first round, notching three straight wins, and he takes issue with not being awarded a title shot.

“I think all my three opponents, they had a title shot promise,” Ngannou said. “I think so, because Curtis Blaydes was title (shot) guaranteed. Cain Velasquez I think it was the same thing. Junior Dos Santos after three wins, it was the same thing. But they are just forgetting about me.”

[vertical-gallery id=418753]

Ex-UFC fighter Josh Grispi books first fight since 2014 domestic violence arrest

Josh Grispi will fight for a regional promotion title in his first booking since his 2014 arrest for domestic violence.

[autotag]Josh Grispi[/autotag] has been booked to compete in his first fight since his 2014 arrest for domestic violence.

A former UFC and WEC fighter, Grispi (14-5) will compete at “NEF 42: Symphony of Destruction” on Feb. 8 at Merrill Auditorium in Portland, Maine. At an event held Friday, the promotion announced Grispi, 31, will be taking on Bruce Boyington (17-11) for its lightweight championship.

In August 2014, Grispi was arrested after what the Taunton Daily Gazette reported as a “vicious beating” of his wife Kaitlyn Grispi. According to the report, a half-naked and bloody Kaitlyn ran to a neighbor’s house in attempt to escape from Josh. The blood was a result of a dog attack.

According to police, Josh trained the couple’s dog to attack Kaitlyn. Then, Josh would choke the dog unconscious. Local police were called, and Josh was arrested. He was held without bail on domestic abuse and assault charges. Middleboro police officer Richard Harvey called the attacks “the worst case of domestic abuse I’ve ever seen.”

When police entered the home, they found a marijuana farm, as well as numerous guns and ammunition unsecured, feet away from the couple’s 1-year-old child. Grispi did have the proper license for the eight guns found, according to police.

The arrest was Grispi’s second in three days. He had been arrested and released on $2,000 bail just prior.

In October 2014, the couple appeared on an episode of “Dr. Phil.” Kaitlyn expressed her love for Josh and largely dismissed concerns of Josh doing anything wrong. Grispi joined the panel via video from jail.

After a five-day trial in June 2017, a jury found Grispi guilty of seven charges. The seven charges were as follows:

  • seven counts of Improper Storage of a Firearm
  • five counts of Assault and Battery
  • two counts of Threat to Commit a Crime
  • eight counts of Intimidating a Witness
  • one count of Possession to Distribute Class D, Marijuana
  • one count of Malicious Damage to a Motor Vehicle
  • one count of Attempt to Procure Perjury

Grispi was sentenced to five-and-a-half years in the House of Corrections and five years probation.

In October 2017, Kaitlyn Grispi reappeared on Dr. Phil and claimed she did not accurately represent her situation with Josh. Kaitlyn said she only shrugged off Josh’s behavior in an attempt to get him out of jail.

“I was trying to get my husband out of jail and when I said he wasn’t abusing me, I was lying,” Kaitlyn said in a promo for the episode. “I was afraid of him. … Josh was using me to get out of jail. I felt duped. Josh is a phony and a con-artist. He twists things around to make him seem like some sweet, innocent guy. In the end, he’s not. I was definitely brainwashed by Josh.”

https://www.facebook.com/drphilshow/videos/10156023925423909/?__xts__[0]=68.ARA6tdCbIxcl0Bk4U7pxZHPw1B2rdshsFIoRI8VoGxhYF9OgNCNDQgMaHRpmkmFOczyq871NI5ByW3qwTM-Rv-gEtg2DGMWULjWGplWKY05CmkdxWucthxlxsGhwWqa7LWUMT9uOtWXIBJs5n-yyMCUKo9B2OjggFxbYmbcLSJ1TJJBqI4EfsdgSBjRln0xXi_qe8jtd0kJd7i8p9YF37v0y7geZXbcrmmr76WJVEOYAN8FJRtwctN4bt4oilVuag38zw3fXsSmxjZHzlCqd4vH-n8Pbw37kcUcG5TIs3Pg6EdEahvKtkTjxsfRbJ045k7i8-6LgCStFeDYWo-8xqq8eSDx7H2DUXg&__tn__=H-R

Grispi competed four times each for the UFC and WEC, respectively. Under the WEC banner, Grispi went undefeated with victories over the likes of Jens Pulver, Mark Hominick, L.C. Davis, and Micah Miller.

Grispi’s luck flipped when the UFC absorbed WEC. In four UFC outings, Grispi went winless against Dustin Poirier, George Roop, Rani Yahya, and Andy Ogle. He was released from the promotion in early 2013.

Nick Diaz’s ESPN interview the foundation for UFC comeback he may or may not want | Opinion

“You don’t realize it until they take the gun out of your face, and then you can go ahead and start to think like a normal person.”

[autotag]Nick Diaz[/autotag] voluntarily put himself back in the spotlight for the first time in a long time on Monday. Anyone who watched his nearly hour-long ESPN interview is sure to have mixed feelings about what unfolded.

In many ways, it was classic Diaz (26-9 MMA, 7-6 UFC). The former Strikeforce and WEC welterweight champion and UFC title challenger, who is eccentric but admittedly anxiety-ridden in interview settings, hardly allowed ESPN’s Ariel Helwani to finish forming his questions before issuing responses that lasted minutes and splintered in numerous directions, which may or may not have tied into what he was being asked.

Viewers didn’t even get to experience the full conversation, either. Helwani later revealed the interview was conducted around midnight on Nov. 6 and actually lasted roughly one hour and 45 minutes before being edited down under 60.

Diaz and his team clearly agreed to the rare talk with an agenda to push for a fight against Jorge Masvidal (35-13 MMA, 12-6 UFC), who beat his younger brother Nate Diaz at UFC 244 this month. In the footage that was published, however, Diaz’s discombobulated comments struggled to emphasize that point. Diaz threw some subtle and direct comments in Masvidal’s direction during his longwinded answers. In one breath he indicated he has an unresolved issue with “Gamebred,” while saying in the next that he was “definitely not” interested in fighting again.

[lawrence-related id=461967,461950]

The story published on ESPN.com minutes after the interview aired included additional information from Diaz’s manager, Kevin Mubenga, clarifying Diaz’s intent, which is to return against Masvidal in spring 2020 at AT&T Stadium in Dallas.

Diaz has never been shy about his love-hate relationship with fighting. He was incredibly active during his 20s, but once he got to the pinnacle of the sport for fights with Georges St-Pierre in 2013 and Anderson Silva in 2015, his pace came to a halt.

There were large paydays attached to the St-Pierre and Silva fights, but there was also the controversial drug test that came with the latter. Diaz tested positive for marijuana metabolites after fighting Silva at UFC 183 was originally handed a five-year suspension from the Nevada Athletic Commission (NAC).

Eventually Diaz’s penalty was significantly reduced and he’s been cleared to fight for some time. Still, though, he hasn’t made a return to fighting, and he doesn’t seem to be particularly keen to do so again unless the circumstances suit him perfectly. He eluded that comes down to the greater forces at play.

“It’s not up to me (if I fight again),” Diaz said. Do you want some? Generally I’ll go and I’ll (expletive) show somebody their life. It’s up to them whether they want to deal. That’s just what I (expletive) do. That’s my job. I was doing that to people when I was 15 years old to get them to go come with when I was going to deal with like – I was going to karate with little babies and little kids. Like karate chop. I was a real karate kid.

”I explained to you exactly what’s going on, so it’s on you folks. It’s on you Dana (White). It’s on you UFC. It’s on them. It’s in your hands now – Cowboy Stadium.”

[opinary poll=”do-you-believe-nick-diaz-will-fight-in-t” customer=”mmajunkie”]

Despite his absence from the cage, Diaz’s life is still often exposed to the public. His social media presence shows he frequently enjoys the Las Vegas nightlife, and it seems his growing distance from the fighter lifestyle has altered his psychology toward the sport even more.

“After a while you realize there’s more to life, but you don’t realize it until they take the gun out of your face, and then you can go ahead and start to think like a normal person,” Diaz said. “I had a good couple of times off. I don’t know to be hateful or grateful for the suspension I went through, because I served it anyways. The verdict was I’m not the bad guy in the end.

“I needed a little bit of separation before I could get a clear picture. But I did what I was supposed to have done and supposed to be doing, just the way I should’ve been doing it at the exact right time. Looking back I made no mistakes. I never have.”

Diaz was asked bluntly if he’s happy in his life and he said, “No.” That answer appeared to be tied into seeing his brother lose to Masvidal at UFC 244 more so than anything, but it’s clear Diaz is dealing with an inner conflict.

[lawrence-related id=460728,408572]

There were little shots from Diaz toward Masvidal over the entire course of the interview. He said he was “doing this backyard stuff way before anybody knew who ‘Kimbo Slice’ was,” and that he’s the true “BMF” champion. Diaz admitted fighting helps bring a certain structure to his life, and seeing his brother lose at UFC 244 re-lit a fire of sorts.

Only Diaz truly knows where he stands physically and mentally after so much time off and whether resuming his fighting career would positively impact his life. Returning after more than four years against Masvidal would be a tall order, but that seems to be what Diaz wants.

The rare interview was the set up for Diaz to step back in the octagon, and although it’s been a long time, he made it clear one thing has not changed: He will not bend to the UFC’s power.

“I think nobody else has any say in this besides me and the person that’s in the rightful position,” Diaz said. “But that (expletive), sometimes it’s harder than a five-round fight. When you’re (expletive) coming out of a hole. And I don’t care if I have to crawl back into that hole to crawl back out of that mother(expletive) again. So it ain’t on me. … You earn the right to fight the baddest mother(expletive), the pawns go first and that’s all I have to say about that.”

[vertical-gallery id=324412]

UFC on ESPN+ 22 free fight: Jan Blachowicz brutally shuts Luke Rockhold’s lights out

Relive Jan Blachowicz’s brutal second-round knockout of Luke Rockhold at UFC 239.

[autotag]Jan Blachowicz[/autotag] has defeated a number of notable names in his career, but perhaps none bigger than former middleweight champion Luke Rockhold.

In July, Blachowicz brutally knocked out Rockhold in the second round of their UFC 239 clash in Las Vegas. The matchup was Rockhold’s debut at 205 pounds in the UFC.

In the final seconds of the opening round, Blachowicz nailed Rockhold with a big left hand. The shot staggered Rockhold, who fell to the ground. However, Rockhold was saved by the bell.

The buzzer wasn’t able to save Rockhold in the opening two minutes of the second round, however. Blachowicz landed another massive left hand and finished Rockhold with a big follow-up punch at 1:39 of round 2.

The victory was Blachowicz’s fourth in five fights and placed him back in the win column after suffering a loss to future-UFC title challenger Thiago Santos. The defeat was Rockhold’s third time being finished by strikes in four fights.

[lawrence-related id=455538,441007]

Saturday night, Blachowicz (24-8 MMA, 7-5 UFC) will look to turn a win into a win streak when he takes on another light heavyweight newcomer Ronaldo Souza (26-7 MMA, 9-4 UFC) in the UFC on ESPN+ 22 main event.

UFC on ESPN+ 22 takes place Saturday at Ginásio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo. The card streams on ESPN+.

Check out Jan Blachowicz’s brutal knockout of Luke Rockhold at UFC 239 in the video above.

[vertical-gallery id=420365]

Six months after losing UFC title, Rose Namajunas gives update on fighting future

Former UFC strawweight champion Rose Namajunas says her head is back in the right place for her fighting career.

[autotag]Rose Namajunas[/autotag] isn’t done yet.

A former UFC strawweight champion, Namajunas (8-4 MMA, 6-3 UFC) said she has regained her passion for fighting and won’t retire, according to a recent interview with ESPN.

An emotional Namajunas detailed her motivational struggles before, during, and after her championship loss to Jessica Andrade seven months ago at UFC 237. The turning point came when she visited former coach Greg Nelson in Minnesota.

“I’ll fight again,” Namajunas said. “And you know it’s kind of one of those things where you get a little emotional. But it’s like I lost the passion for martial arts and fighting – mainly for fighting. I found my passion again.

“I went back to Minnesota to see one of my former coaches from earlier on in my amateur career, Greg Nelson. He’s just like a huge inspiration for me.”

[lawrence-related id=454926,412464]

As champion, Namajunas said, her career became everything she had hoped it wouldn’t. The pressure of being a champion weighed heavily and the enjoyment dwindled. Over the past few months, Namajunas has realized she doesn’t need a belt to feel comfortable.

“I made it into everything I didn’t want it to be,” Namajunas said. “I didn’t want the belt to define me and all I did was make it define me. That was all that was on my mind every day. Even though it was not even in my own house. It just consumed my every thought. It turned into a shackle and chain rather than just loving fighting.

“Do I want to be the best? Of course. But I don’t need a belt to tell me that I’m the best. I already know. It was like, weird. It was all of my fears and all of the things I didn’t want to happen ended up happening by just fearing it so much.”

Namajunas said she currently has a UFC bout offer on the table, but did not to give any details. Uncertain if she’s going to accept it, Namajunas said she’s aiming for a February or March return to the cage.

In Namajunas’ absence, a new 115-pound champion was crowned. In August, Weili Zhang dethroned Andrade with a swift first-round knockout. Namajunas is indifferent about facing the UFC’s first Chinese champion next.

“Weili looked great and I always want to fight the best,” Namajunas said. “Clearly, she is (the best) right now. But you know? I want to test myself against her. But at the same time, whether that be this next fight or get a win under my belt and go after that? I really have no preference at the moment. It doesn’t matter who I fight, but you should always have your eye on being the best.”

Namajunas also commented on how much fighting time she believes she has left. “Thug Rose” said she didn’t want to be held to a timetable, but predicted she has approximately three years left in her competitive MMA career.

“I definitely have always said I don’t really want to fight in my 30’s, so I have three more years on my clock, ” Namajunas said. “But at the same time, I’m not going to say that for sure. But I’d say I’ll have three more years where I’m interested in this.”

[vertical-gallery id=396620]

UFC releases former lightweight title challenger Gilbert Melendez

Gilbert Melendez is no longer a member of the UFC roster.

[autotag]Gilbert Melendez[/autotag] is no longer a member of the UFC roster.

Melendez (22-8 MMA, 1-6 UFC) was released from the promotion following five straight losses. The 37-year-old Melendez confirmed his release with ESPN on Monday night after an initial report by MMA Fighting.

A former Strikeforce lightweight champion, Melendez ran through most of his opposition in the well-regarded promotion. Melendez’s key wins in Strikeforce include Jorge Masvidal, Josh Thomson (twice), Shinya Aoki, and Tatsuya Kawajiri.

Upon the UFC’s purchase and subsequent absorbance of Strikeforce, Melendez was added to the roster. Holding the Strikeforce title at the time, Melendez was granted an immediate title shot at then-lightweight champion Benson Henderson.

In the five-round main event of UFC on FOX 7 in April 2013, Melendez lost a split decision to Henderson. The defeat was highly controversial among MMA fans and media alike.

[lawrence-related id=460516,421106]

In his return to the cage at UFC 166 in October 2013, Melendez and Diego Sanchez engaged in an instant classic. A spirited 15 minutes turned in by the two men resulted in a fight many MMA observers believe to be one of the most exciting in the promotion’s history.

After he picked up his first UFC victory, Melendez earned a second crack at the 155-pound title – this time against then-champ Anthony Pettis in December 2014 at UFC 181. Melendez lost the bout by second-round submission due to guillotine choke.

From 2015-19, Melendez competed four times. In that span, Melendez dropped decisions to Eddie Alvarez, Edson Barboza, Jeremy Stephens, and most recently Arnold Allen at UFC 239 in July.

[vertical-gallery id=420269]

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

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Nov. 4-Nov. 10.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels for news to break through, 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 and Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Nov. 4–Nov. 10:

UFC on ESPN+ 22: Nov. 16, Sao Paulo

Women’s flyweight: With Priscila Cachoeira out, Veronica Macedo (6-3-1 MMA, 1-3 UFC) steps in to fight Ariane Lipski (11-5 MMA, 0-2 UFC) (MMA Fighting)

UFC on ESPN 7: Dec. 7, Washington, D.C.

Heavyweight: With Walt Harris out, Jairzinho Rozenstruik (9-0 MMA, 3-0 UFC) steps in to fight Alistair Overeem (45-17 MMA, 11-6 UFC) (ESPN)

Middleweight: With Alonzo Menifield out, Makhmud Muradov (23-6 MMA, 1-0 UFC) steps in to fight Trevor Smith (15-9 MMA, 5-6 UFC)

Bellator Salute: Dec. 20, Honolulu

Heavyweight: Josh Barnett (35-8 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) vs. Ronny Markes (19-7 MMA, 0-0 BMMA)

Bantamweight: Erik Perez (19-6 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) vs. Toby Misech (11-7 MMA, 1-1 BMMA)(KHON2)

More matchups on next page:

Bellator 234 pre-event facts: Roger Huerta seeks first Bellator win since 2010

Check out all the facts and figures about Bellator 234, which takes place Thursday with a Sergei Kharitonov vs. Linton Vassell main event.

Bellator’s busy November continues this week with Bellator 234, which takes place Thursday at Menora Mivtachim Arena in Tel Aviv, Israel, but won’t air until Friday on Paramount via tape-delay.

A heavyweight matchup serves as the main event of the card. [autotag]Sergei Kharitonov[/autotag] (29-6 MMA, 3-1 BMMA) will look to inch close to getting a fight for Bellator gold, while [autotag]Linton Vassell[/autotag] (18-8 MMA, 7-5 BMMA) looks to get his first win since moving up to the heavyweight division earlier this year.

For more on the numbers behind the headliner, as well as the rest of the card, check below for 16 pre-event facts about Bellator 234.

* * * *

Main event

[vertical-gallery id=436059]

Kharitonov is 11-1 (with two no contests) in his past 14 fights dating back to September 2011.

Kharitonov’s five-fight Bellator unbeaten streak at heavyweight is tied for the third longest active streak in the division behind Cheick Kongo (nine) and Tyrell Fortune (eight).

Kharitonov has earned 27 of his 29 career victories by stoppage. That includes all three of his Bellator wins.

Kharitonov vs. Matt Mitrione at Bellator 215 marked the third shortest no contest in Bellator/UFC/WEC/Strikeforce/PRIDE combined history at just 15 seconds. Only Marius Zaromskis vs. Waachim Spiritwolf (6 seconds) at Strikeforce Challengers 12 and Kevin Casey vs. Antonio Carlos Junior (11 seconds) at UFC Fight Night 80 were faster.

[vertical-gallery id=392854]

Vassell’s three-fight losing skid is the longest of his career. He hasn’t earned a victory since May 2017.

Vassell was unsuccessful in his heavyweight debut when he lost a decision to Valentin Moldavsky at Bellator 218 in March.

Vassell’s seven victories in Bellator light-heavyweight competition are tied for fourth most in divisional history behind Liam McGeary (nine), Phil Davis (eight) and Emanuel Newton (eight).

Vassell’s three submission victories in Bellator light-heavyweight competition are tied with four other fighters for most in divisional history.

Co-main event

[vertical-gallery id=312925]

[autotag]Roger Huerta[/autotag] (24-11-1 MMA, 1-4 BMMA) is 0-2 since he returned to Bellator for a second stint in April 2018. He hasn’t earned a victory with the promotion since April 2010.

Huerta is 4-10 in his past 14 fights dating back to August 2008.

Remaining main card

[vertical-gallery id=422081]

[autotag]Olga Rubin[/autotag] (6-1 MMA, 4-1 BMMA) competes in her sixth Bellator women’s featherweight bout, the third most appearances in divisional history behind Arlene Blencowe (nine) and Julia Budd (seven).

[autotag]Sinead Kavanagh[/autotag] (5-4 MMA, 2-4 BMMA) is 1-3 since she moved up to the Bellator women’s featherweight division.

[autotag]Grachik Bozinyan[/autotag] (10-3 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) is the youngest of the eight scheduled main card fighters.

Bozinyan has earned all 10 of his career victories by stoppage. He’s finished seven of those wins in Round 1.

[autotag]Aviv Gozali[/autotag]’s (3-0 MMA, 3-0 BMMA) 11-second submission win at Bellator 225 stands as the fastest in company history.

Gozali, at 18, became the youngest fighter to earn a bellator win at Bellator 209 in November 2018.

UFC on ESPN+ 22: Make your predictions for Jan Blachowicz vs. Ronaldo Souza

We want your predictions for Saturday’s UFC on ESPN+ 22 event in Sao Paulo.

We want your predictions for Saturday’s UFC on ESPN+ 22 event in Sao Paulo.

Our staff picks feature includes the consensus picks from MMA Junkie readers. Simply cast your vote for each bout below, and we’ll use the official tallies that are registered by Thursday at noon ET (9 a.m. PT).

Those MMA Junkie reader consensus picks will be part of the UFC on ESPN+ 22 event staff predictions we release Friday ahead of the event. UFC on ESPN+ 22 takes place Saturday at Ginasio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo. The card streams on ESPN+.

Make your picks for all five main card fights inside:

Stipe Miocic wants to fight boxer Tyson Fury, not interested in Daniel Cormier trilogy

UFC heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic expressed an interest fighting former heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury.

Despite their series being tied at one fight apiece, UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag] isn’t interested in a trilogy against former champ [autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag].

Instead of facing Cormier (22-2 MMA, 15-2 UFC) for a third time, Miocic (19-3 MMA, 13-3 UFC) wants to taken on a different former champion – one outside of the MMA bubble.

In an interview with ESPN on Monday, Miocic made it clear he wants to fight boxing superstar Tyson Fury upon his return.

“I saw Tyson Fury is coming into the mix now here,” Miocic said. “I like a new challenge… With DC, I didn’t fluke knock him out – I beat him. I decisively beat him. Our first fight, congrats to DC. But he caught me with a punch in the first round.

“There was a lot going on in my mind that night. No excuses, but he beat me. The second fight I won. There’s no taking it away from me. I didn’t get lucky, I just straight outworked him.”

Throughout the interview, Miocic praised’s Fury’s abilities calling him a “good fighter” and a “good dude.” However, Miocic believes he has what it takes to defeated him inside the cage – or the boxing ring.

“He’s a talented fighter, so he’s definitely going to have good striking,” Miocic said. “But anyone can make a (30-second) highlight reel. It’s still good, but I can do that too.”

“… Definitely if he wants to step into the Octagon, I’ll love it. I’ll step in the ring. I’d love to box him. I would love to box him. He’s a great fighter. He’s a good dude and we’d put on a good show.”

[lawrence-related id=461781,460929]

In fact, Miocic said the prospect of fighting Fury inside the ring was more intriguing to him than inside the cage. A new challenge, Miocic said, is what he’s striving for.

“It’s something new – something different,” Miocic said. “In mixed martial arts, there’s a lot more to go with. You’ve got a bunch of martial arts to work with. In boxing, we’d just go toe-to-toe and slug it out.”

Since he defeated Cormier at UFC 241 in August, Miocic underwent eye surgery. Miocic said he procedure was done to repair a retinal tear as a result of eye pokes sustained in the first two matchups against DC. He’s not sure exactly when, but he’s planning on a 2020 return.

“Probably multiple eye pokes from my last two fights,” Miocic said of why his eye was damaged. “Yeah, I mean it didn’t help my cause, but getting punched doesn’t help either.

“I got done with the fight seeing spots in my eye. I (saw things) I’ve never saw before. It just didn’t feel right. We actually went to the retinal doctor. He’s like, ‘Yeah, you have a tear in your retina.’ A little procedure will fix it up, so hopefully it’ll heal up and stay that way.”

Monday’s interview wasn’t the first we heard of Miocic wanting Fury in MMA. After Fury posted a video training elbows, knees, and takedown defense alongside former UFC title challenger Darren Till, Miocic issued a statement on Twitter.

[vertical-gallery id=329844]