Aaron Pico, Daniel Carey verbally agree to scrap at Bellator 238

Aaron Pico has verbally agreed to face Daniel Carey at Bellator 238 in Inglewood, Calif.

[autotag]Aaron Pico[/autotag] has his next fight in his sights.

Pico (4-3 MMA, 4-3 BMMA), a 23-year-old featherweight,  has verbally agreed to face [autotag]Daniel Carey[/autotag] at Bellator 238. MMA Junkie confirmed the targeted bout after an initial report from ESPN.

Pico will look to rebound after back-to-back knockout losses. At Bellator 214 in January, Pico appeared to be on the verge of victory early against Henry Corrales. On the attack, Pico had Corrales in trouble, but left himself open for a brutal punch by the MMA Lab product. Pico was knocked out cold on impact.

At Bellator 222 in June, Pico was knocked out once again. In that bout, he fell victim to Hungarian featherweight Adam Borics, who nailed Pico with a flying knee before finishing him off with punches.

As for Carey (7-3 MMA, 3-2 BMMA), the 29-year-old Californian is coming off of an upset victory against Gaston Bolanos at Bellator 226 in September. A 7-1 underdog, Carey submitted the Peruvian by guillotine choke in the first round.

Bellator 238 takes place Saturday, Jan. 25 at The Forum in Inglewood, Calif. The main card streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie.

The current Bellator 238 lineup includes:

  • Julia Budd vs. Cris Cyborg
  • Daniel Carey vs. Aaron Pico
  • Khonry Gracie vs. Hector Saldana
  • Mario Navarro vs. Jay Jay Wilson
  • Brandon Bender vs. Gabriel Green
  • David Pacheco vs. Craig Plaskett
  • Tyler Beneke vs. Jarrett Conner

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Video: Watch UFC on ESPN+ 22 ceremonial weigh-ins on MMAjunkie

Check out a live video stream of the UFC on ESPN+ 22 ceremonial weigh-ins.

UFC on ESPN+ 22 ceremonial fighter weigh-ins take place Friday, and you can catch a live video stream of the proceedings here on MMAjunkie at 4 p.m. ET (1 p.m. PT).

The weigh-ins take place at Ginásio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo. The same venue hosts Saturday’s event, which streams on ESPN+.

In addition to the video stream above, you can check out the early and official UFC on ESPN+ 22 weigh-in results from earlier in the day.

Brazil commission issues correction: Tracy Cortez, Vanessa Melo make weight for UFC on ESPN+ 22

Hours after Tracy Cortez and Vanessa Melo missed weight, CABMMA changed its ruling due to a scale it said wasn’t properly calibrated.

It looks like [autotag]Tracy Cortez[/autotag] and [autotag]Vanessa Melo[/autotag] were under the bantamweight limit after all.

Friday morning, Cortez (6-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) and Melo (10-6 MMA, 0-1 UFC) weighed in heavy at 136.5 pounds for their bantamweight bout at UFC on ESPN+ 22.

But hours after the weight miss, the Comissao Atletica Brasileira de MMA (CABMMA) issued a correction. The scale was not correctly calibrated, according to a CABMMA release. For that reason, Cortez and Melo’s official weights have been changed to 136 pounds – the bantamweight limit.

At the official weigh-ins, UFC matchmaker Mick Maynard told reporters neither fighter would be penalized for the weight miss since they were fighting each other and came in equally over the limit. But now that’s moot.

In a statement acquired by MMA Junkie, CABMMA executive director Cristiano Sampaio said:

“CABMMA reviewed the incident between the athletes Vanessa Melo and Tracy Cortez. Both were checked by the commission with 20 minutes left to the ending time of the official weigh-ins. Scale used by the commission was 0.7lbs above the official scale, which indicated that the athletes could not lose any more weight in the remaining time. Athletes were then withdrawn from the cutting process.

“CABMMA physicians evaluated the athletes and considered both in well conditions but were not given the extra hour, which per guideline is only for main event and title bouts.

“Considering the fact that (i) fighters were checked in a scale which was not calibrated as the official one; (ii) commission was misguided by the wrong weight and conducted their guideline on an incorrect data; and (iii) since the difference between the scales was off by 0.7lbs and both athletes made the exact weight on the official scale, CABMMA will consider their official weight as 136lbs.

“In that sense, the athletes will not suffer any fine (or) penalty, and have their records maintained. To CABMMA’s understanding, weight classes are designed for safety and fairness, not a strict rule that prevents these goals.”

Isabella de Padua (5-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) also came in heavy for her fight against Ariane Lipski (11-5 MMA, 0-2 UFC), which she accepted on just hours’ notice. But her weight miss was roughly four pounds heavy, even with the scale correction.

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

Rich Franklin: Not fighting Michael Bisping, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira two of biggest regrets

Rich Franklin says Michael Bisping and Antonio Rogerio Nogueira are two fighters he would have liked to face during his UFC career.

UFC Hall of Famer and former middleweight champion [autotag]Rich Franklin[/autotag] has fought a who’s-who in MMA.

But despite being satisfied with his star-studded resume, Franklin (29-7 MMA, 13-7 UFC) said if there were two fighters he could have competed against, it would be fellow former UFC 185-pound champ [autotag]Michael Bisping[/autotag] and [autotag]Antonio Rogerio Nogueira[/autotag].

Franklin, who now works as an executive with ONE Championship, was scheduled to fight at UFC 133 in 2011, but Nogueira was forced off the card due to injury and the fight was scrapped.

“There’s some fun people – there’s some people that would have been a fun matchup, for sure,” Franklin told MMA Junkie. “I think Bisping and I would put on a really entertaining match. There was talk about that for some time. I was, at one point in time, matched up with Nogueira and he got injured. I think that would have been a fun fight to watch, as well.”

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But few have accumulated the fight resume of Franklin, who’s been in there with the likes former UFC middleweight king Anderson Silva, former UFC light heavyweight champ Chuck Liddell, Wanderlei Silva, Vitor Belfort and an array of other legends and champions.

“When you look at my career, from the moment I stepped into the big stage there in the UFC, my first match in the UFC was Evan Tanner,” Franklin said. “He was 8-1 at the time and his only loss was to Tito Ortiz. So from the moment I stepped into the big league, I was really swimming with the sharks.”

Franklin was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame this past July. Throughout his UFC career, only two of his fights weren’t part of pay-per-view events.

“After I won the title, from that moment on, this sport in particular, you don’t get any tomato cans,” Franklin said. “Everybody that you’re matched up against in mixed martial arts is the No. 1 contender every single time. And even after I lost my title, I still maintained main event status all the way till the end of my career. I was always fighting either top-five guys or former champions from the UFC or some other organization. My entire career was swimming with the sharks.”

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Jared Cannonier open to fighting Darren Till, believes he’s one good win away from title shot

Jared Cannonier thinks he’s one big win away from a UFC title shot and is open to fighting Darren Till next.

[autotag]Jared Cannonier[/autotag] has emerged as a top middleweight contender, and thinks he’s one impressive win away from a UFC title shot.

Speaking to Helen Yee, Cannonier (13-4 MMA, 6-4 UFC) said he’s open to face [autotag]Darren Till[/autotag] (18-2-1 MMA, 6-2-1 UFC), who recently made good on his middleweight debut, defeating Kelvin Gastelum by split decision at UFC 244.

“I’ll fight him,” Cannonier said. “I’ll fight Darren – that’s a good fight. He just beat Kelvin. He’s ranked No. 5. I think I’ll fight pretty much everybody. I think a win over anybody in the top five, an impressive win over anybody in the top five – an impressive, dominant win over anybody in the top five – constitutes a title shot.

“He looked good. He looks very smart – intelligent fighter. He just shut Kelvin down at every turn. Any type of game plan Kelvin tried to implement, Darren Till shut it down and came out victorious.”

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Cannonier, who was serving as a standby alternate for the Till vs. Gastelum fight, has won three straight since dropping down to 185 pounds. He took out former dual WSOF champion David Branch, former UFC middleweight king Anderson Silva, and notched a “Performance of the Night” over Jack Hermansson in his most recent outing in September.

He knows his position in the talent-filled middleweight division, which is why he wants to make sure he takes the right fight moving forward. With UFC middleweight champ Israel Adesanya rumored to take on Yoel Romero next, Cannonier thinks he needs one more impressive showing to be next in line for a title shot.

“I’ll take a fight as long as it gets me a title shot,” Cannonier said. “I don’t want to say I won’t take a fight. I used to say I’ll take any fight. But at this point in my career, I have to be smart. I can’t just take any fight, so I have to listen to my managers and my coaches in that regard and take the best fight. So hopefully the UFC gives me the right fight. I’m thinking anybody in front of me – anybody who gets me a title shot.”

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Anthony Smith: Dominick Reyes is an easier fight for Jon Jones than Corey Anderson

Anthony Smith believes UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones picked an easier fight in Dominick Reyes over Corey Anderson.

[autotag]Anthony Smith[/autotag] thinks [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] actually picked the easier opponent in [autotag]Dominick Reyes[/autotag].

UFC light heavyweight champion Jones tweeted that he picked Reyes over [autotag]Corey Anderson[/autotag] because he believes he’s the more dangerous fighter, but Smith said he thinks Anderson presents more problems overall.

“I honestly think Jon probably chose the easier opponent between Corey Anderson and Dominick Reyes,” Smith said on UFC Unfiltered. “I think that Reyes is absolutely more dangerous, as far as explosiveness and size and his length. I think he may give Jon some problems on his feet a little bit and Jon will have to dodge some bullets. But look at everybody Jon’s beat – they’re one-dimensional, and that’s what Jon wants.”

The undefeated Reyes (11-0 MMA, 6-0 UFC), is coming off a first-round knockout over Chris Weidman at UFC on ESPN 6 in Boston. Anderson (13-4 MMA, 10-4 UFC) is coming off a first-round finish of his own, taking out top prospect Johnny Walker at UFC 244.

Both were in the running for a title shot, but Jones ultimately chose Reyes. However, Smith said that Reyes’ split decision win over Volkan Oezdemir in March exposed some holes in his game that he can see Jones exploiting in the fight.

“Like we’ve seen in the Volkan Oezdemir fight, Dominick Reyes isn’t necessarily dominant on the ground and his takedown defense isn’t that great,” Smith said. “Even though he was able to stuff some of Weidman’s (takedowns) … he did have some improvements there, but Volkan Oezdemir took him down several times and Jon Jones is a much better wrestler than Volkan Oezdemir, that’s for sure.”

In Anderson, Smith sees a more skilled fighter overall who could present more issues to Jones, considering his wrestling ability.

“I think Corey is more well-rounded,” Smith said. “He’s got fundamental boxing. His kicking game isn’t super high level, but he keeps his hands in the right spot. He moves his head well. His wrestling is good. His takedown defense is really good. His top pressure is good. His cardio is phenomenal. Corey presents a lot more problems than Dominick Reyes does, so I do think that Jon picked the easier fight.”

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Alexander Hernandez calls out Anthony Pettis, declares 2020 his ‘year of fornication’

Alexander Hernandez has officially declared 2020 his ‘Year of Fornication.’

[autotag]Alexander Hernandez[/autotag] has officially declared 2020 his ‘Year of Fornication.’

A tough 2019 saw Hernandez (11-2 MMA, 3-1 UFC) suffer his first UFC loss, sustain an injury which required surgery, and only compete three times – a non-ideal rate by his standards.

Now in the final stages of recovery from shoulder surgery, Hernandez is itching to return and he has his sights set on a former UFC lightweight champion.

Thursday morning, Hernandez tweeted at [autotag]Anthony Pettis[/autotag], challenging him to a fight in February. When speaking to MMA Junkie on Thursday afternoon, Hernandez explained the callout was the first step to him to make up for lost time.

“I’m entering 2020 ready to fornicate,” Hernandez said. “That’s the name of the game. I’m trying to blast off and make this year my year. I think Anthony Pettis is the spark to ignite the rocket for my 2020 ‘Year Of Fornication.’ I just feel like he’s just another good jumping pad for me. I think I’ve got a vast amount of ground to make up for in a short amount of time.”

Throughout his recovery, Hernandez said he’s been in close contact with the UFC. Recently, Hernandez was offered a fight against Pettis in December, but was forced to turn it down as he had not fully recovered from his procedure. The offer set his mental wheels in motion.

“When I had the opportunity to fight him in December, I had to turn it down because of my shoulder,” Hernandez said. “That’s just been my target. I got really excited when they offered me that. I’ve been thinking about nonstop since.

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“He’s the candidate to choose, because he’s right on my mind and I’m motivated. He’s obviously an exciting opponent. I’ve watched him forever. The public has watched him forever. He’s made his name in this business and this game for a reason. Just the thought of it is a huge thrill for me.”

Not only does Hernandez view the matchup as stylistically favorable, he wants the world to know he’s not a gun shy, “play it safe and eke out a decision” kind of fighter. The lightweight killer who flattened Beneil Dariush at UFC 195 is still present, Hernandez believes. A fight against Pettis would prove it.

“I definitely want to eradicate the idea that I’m scared or that I’m humbled to a degree that I don’t fight my fight any more,” Hernandez said. “With a fight like this and this kind of opponent, I plan to go out there and starch. I want to bring that murk wagon back around and go toe-to-toe and take Pettis out. There’s not a position or facet in this game that I think he’s better than me at. He breaks. He’s very breakable. And I break things.”

Hernandez perceives the public’s doubt comes from his lone UFC loss. After talking smack to Donald Cerrone in their lead-up to UFC on ESPN+ 1 in January, Hernandez was TKO’d by “Cowboy” in round 2.

Hernandez views the Pettis matchup as being similar to Cerrone. The difference? Hernandez believes he’ll be able to merge his killer instinct and discipline – something fight fans have yet to see from him in the UFC.

“Now having the experience that I have to slow down and breathe to appreciate that wounded animal, I can make the kill,” Hernandez said. “I think that’ll make all the difference. I won’t be so excited by the name or the lights or by the stage. I think that his type of game is really his willingness to throw, his ability to do it, and the flashy style. That’ll make it an exciting fight.

“We both will say we’re going in there to put each other’s heads out, but I guarantee I’ll be the only one going for it. ”

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UFC on ESPN+ 22 weigh-in results: Blachowicz-Souza official, but three of four women miss marks

Check out the results from the official UFC on ESPN+ 22 fighter weigh-ins.

The official weigh-ins for UFC on ESPN+ 22 are in the books, and three of the four women on Saturday’s card missed their marks.

In the main event, Jan Blachowicz (24-8 MMA, 7-5 UFC) takes on longtime middleweight standout Ronaldo Souza (26-7 MMA, 9-4 UFC), who moves up to light heavyweight for the first time.

Souza weighed in first and was 205 pounds on the nose. Blachowicz weighed in shortly after and was 205, as well. Blachowicz is as much as a 2-1 favorite in the fight at some sports books.

In the co-feature, Paul Craig (12-4 MMA, 4-4 UFC) meets former 205-pound champion Mauricio Rua (26-11 MMA, 10-9 UFC). Craig was 205 when he stepped on the scale. “Shogun” Rua weighed in about 55 minutes into the two-hour window and was 206.

Isabella de Padua (5-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) stepped up on just hours’ notice to take on Ariane Lipski (11-5 MMA, 0-2 UFC) when Veronica Macedo was forced to withdraw. But de Padua came in at 130.5 pounds for the women’s flyweight bout. Lipski was on point at 125.5. UFC matchmaker Mick Maynard told reporters at the weigh-ins that no decision had been made yet if the fight will take place at a catchweight.

In the first fight on the prelims, promotional newcomer Tracy Cortez (6-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) takes on Vanessa Melo (10-6 MMA, 0-1 UFC). Both fighters weighed in with only about 10 minutes left in the window. Cortez was first and was 136.5 pounds with the use of the hoop. Melo weighed in immediately after and was 136.5, as well. Maynard told reporters the fight will go on, and neither fighter will be fined since their weight misses effectively canceled out.

The early weigh-ins took place at the UFC host hotel in Sao Paulo. UFC on ESPN+ 22 takes place Saturday at Ginásio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo. The card streams on ESPN+.

The full UFC on ESPN+ 22 weigh-in results included:

MAIN CARD (ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Jan Blachowicz (205) vs. Ronaldo Souza (205)
  • Paul Craig (205) vs. Mauricio Rua (206)
  • Jared Gordon (156) vs. Charles Oliveira (155)
  • Antonio Arroyo (185) vs. Andre Muniz (186)
  • Markus Perez (186) vs. Wellington Turman (186)

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 5 p.m. ET)

  • James Krause (170.5) vs. Sergio Moraes (171)
  • Eduardo Garagorri (145.5) vs. Ricardo Ramos (146)
  • Bobby Green (156) vs. Francisco Trinaldo (155)
  • Warlley Alves (171) vs. Randy Brown (171)
  • Renan Barao (146) vs. Douglas de Andrade (145)
  • Isabella de Padua (130.5)* vs. Ariane Lipski (125.5)
  • Tracy Cortez (136.5) vs. Vanessa Melo (136.5)**

*De Padua missed the women’s flyweight limit. She accepted the bout just hours before the weigh-ins as a replacement for Veronica Macedo.
**Both Cortez and Melo missed the women’s bantamweight limit. They will not be fined percentages of their purses and the fight will go on. 

Mick Foley talks MMA’s influence on the art of pro wrestling, and ‘Peanut Butter Falcon’

Don’t think MMA influences wrestling and vice versa? Consider how an armbar looked in wrestling back in the day and how it does now.

Back in [autotag]Mick Foley[/autotag]’s day, an armbar was primarily a move used to fill time during the beginning of a pro wrestling match. 

If someone placed Foley’s alter ego Cactus Jack in an armbar back in the 1980s, Foley would slap the mat with his free hand to register the pain, kick his legs repeatedly so the people in the cheap seats could see how the move affected him, and give the camera his best agonized grimace.

He wouldn’t do much to defend against the hold, and certainly wouldn’t submit to it. Eventually, Foley and his opponent would transition to something else, ideally before the crowd started chanting “boring.”

“People really didn’t know back then,” the WWE Hall of Famer and best-selling author told MMA Junkie. “Maybe some of the more hardcore fans did, but the people weren’t educated on something like what a real armbar looked like, so we took it and used it to fit the style of the time.”

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These days? Due to mixed martial arts’ influence, a generation has grown up knowing what an armbar can do in a real fight. Thus, they know that if it is properly applied, a fighter has a window of a few seconds to come up with a line of defense, otherwise their options are to tap or snap. 

In that way, MMA has spilled over into pro wrestling. If you watch WWE or AEW these days, an armbar is a finishing maneuver, perhaps played up a bit more for dramatic effect than what you’d see in the UFC, but it’s made an impact on the art of wrestling performance all the same.

As Foley himself notes, [autotag]Ronda Rousey[/autotag] made millions of dollars in MMA off the strength of her real-life submission skills during her pioneering UFC run, then transitioned to headlining WrestleMania in large part on the strength of her public persona as a real-life badass.

“Look at what Ronda accomplished,” Foley said. “The people these days know what’s real in a fight, and wrestling is constantly evolving and adapting, and so now you’re seeing more of that. Just look at the way wrestlers throw kicks and elbows now compared to how they used to. There are more similarities between wrestlers and fighters, and the wrestling business and MMA, than you’d think.”

That goes for the movie business, too. While Foley still has a hand in wrestling and continues to do a successful touring one-man stage show called “Have a Nice Day,” which chronicles his life’s exploits, he’s also dabbled in the film realm.

His most recent Hollywood exploit was a part in the surprise hit “Peanut Butter Falcon.” The critically acclaimed film starring Shia LeBeouf, which was recently released on Blu-Ray, DVD, and digital, resonated with audiences. It’s became 2019’s highest grossing indie film, topping the $20 million mark, according to The Hollywood Reporter, and has an approval rating of 95 percent on the website Rotten Tomatoes.

Foley plays the role of a wrestling referee in the climactic scene in which Zak (Zack Gottsagen), a 22-year old with Down syndrome, lives out his dream of doing a backyard pro wrestling match against Sam, played by another wrestling legend in Jake “The Snake” Roberts. And Foley believes the film’s success has come about due to it’s earnest and authentic tone. 

“Zack was just so genuine,” Foley said. “His character was so well thought-out and portrayed. That really shined through, and it spilled over onto everything else, and I think it resonated with people of all ages because you can tell when you’re seeing something authentic, and that’s why audiences responded as they have.”

While the Long Island native’s first love was wrestling, he’s grown to become an MMA fan over the years. Foley noted he’ll be in attendance at the PFL’s Dec. 31 championships at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden, where friend and former WWE ring announcer Lilian Garcia will serve in a similar function.

Which leads to the question: Would Foley have given MMA a chance if it was a thing back in his day?

“Nah,” Foley said with a laugh. “Look, I can take punishment, and MMA fighters can take punishment, too, but they’re world-class athletes. What we do is athletic, too, but I was a performer, and that’s what I was drawn to.” 

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.

Michael Page draws newcomer Giovanni Melillo as Derek Anderson’s replacement for Bellator Europe 6 main event

After Derek Anderson’s withdrawal, Michael Page will now face newcomer Giovanni Melillo in the Bellator Europe 6 main event.

[autotag]Michael Page[/autotag] will go from facing a veteran to a newcomer.

Bellator officials announced Friday that [autotag]Giovanni Melillo[/autotag] (13-4 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) will step in for [autotag]Derek Anderson[/autotag] (16-3 MMA, 7-3 BMMA) to take on Page (15-1 MMA, 10-1 BMMA) in the Bellator Europe 6 main event.

Bellator Europe 6 takes place Nov. 23 at The SSE Arena, Wembley in London. The event will simulcast on tape delay in the U.S. on Paramount and DAZN. The Bellator Europe 6 portion of the card will stream live in the U.S. on MMA Junkie.

After Anderson was forced to withdraw due to injury, a replacement opponent was quickly found. The 34-year-old Melillo, from Italy, gets his biggest career opportunity. The Cage Warriors and ACB veteran is coming off a unanimous decision win over Will Chope at Fight Clubbing 24 in May.

Page was able to rebound from his first pro loss to current Bellator welterweight champion Douglas Lima with a flying knee knockout win over Richard Kiely at Bellator 227.

The Bellator Europe 6 lineup now includes:

  • Michael Page vs. Giovanni Melillo
  • Fabian Edwards vs. Mike Shipman
  • Terry Brazier vs. Soren Bak
  • Denise Kielholtz vs. Sabriye Sengul
  • Kent Kauppinen vs. Andy Manzolo
  • Kevin Fryer vs. George Tokkos
  • Charlie Leary vs. Tim Wilde
  • Damian Frankiewicz vs. Aiden Lee
  • Daniel Crawford vs. Robert Whiteford
  • Alfie Davis vs. Myles Price
  • Walter Gahadza vs. Lewis Long
  • Tom Green vs. Akonne Wanliss
  • ‘Super’ Shane Campbell vs. Raphael Uchegbu
  • Chris Bungard vs. Mario Saeed
  • Harry Hardwick vs. Nathan Rose
  • Tom Mearns vs. Jeremy Petley
  • Pietro Penini vs. Charlie Ward

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