2024 MMA retirement tracker: A list of those who hung up the gloves

Here’s a list of every notable retirement announced by fighters from the UFC, PFL, Bellator, and more in 2024.

(This story was updated to add new information.)

MMA is a constantly evolving sport with a revolving door of athletes entering and exiting. Currently, fighters from the era who helped make the sport so popular are beginning to trickle away from competition and hang up their gloves in order to move on to the next chapter in life.

If there’s one thing that’s well known about combat sports retirements, though, it’s that they often don’t last long. The urge to compete, and perhaps more importantly get a payday, will continue to drive fighters back even well beyond their expiration dates.

2024 has already seen a number of notable fighters announcing they are done with the sport, and we have a list of those who have opted to walk away this year (the list will update as new retirements are announced).

Ex-UFC fighter Darren Stewart retires from MMA, cites financial struggles: ‘I’ve lost a lot to this game’

Former UFC fighter Darren Stewart expressed some regret as he announced his retirement from MMA.

[autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag]’s MMA journey has come to an end.

The former UFC and Cage Warriors veteran announced his retirement from the sport Tuesday in a post on his Instagram account. Stewart, 33, cited financial issues as the main reason why he’s walking away from the sport. Although likely done competing professionally in combat sports, Stewart (16-10) is leaving the door open for boxing.

Below is Stewart’s announcement:

“Yes everyone

It hurts me to write this, but I think it’s time to call it a day. Not by choice, but I’m forced too because I’ve lost a lot to this game trying to survive, and I can’t do it no more. When UFC let me go I should have invested something, but instead I put all my eggs in one basket AGAIN to get back to the top and life has gotten even worse. I’ve got family, and it’s not fair on them stressing just to keep food on the table. I love fighting, and I don’t want to call it as I’m only 33, but I’m not getting any help financially. Spoke about it a few times, so not going to go into it. Maybe I’ll get into boxing if it ever arises, but MMA? …..yeah I’m done. Brings tears writing this seriously, but it is what it is. I’ll still teach 1-2-1 or seminars and still do Jiu Jitsu here and there because I feel I can still pass knowledge on. But other than that, I need to go find the second job. Thanks for always supporting me those who have. Means a lot. I hope the next generation has learned a lot from me and my career.

That’s it from me,

THE DENTIST”

Stewart made his professional debut in the summer of 2014 and fought as recently as March. His 10-year MMA career included 11 fights under the Cage Warriors banner and 14 UFC appearances, where he went 5-7 with two no contests. He also won three $50,000 fight night bonuses – Performance of the Night bonuses for his finishes over Maki Pitolo and Eric Spicely, and a Fight of the Night award against Julian Marquez.

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UFC veterans in MMA, boxing, and bareknuckle MMA action Nov. 8-12

Check out which veterans of the UFC are competing in combat sports across the globe this weekend.

This week, the UFC returns to New York for a big pay-per-view event at Madison Square Garden.

UFC 295 features a pair of title fights in the light heavyweight and heavyweight divisions. In the co-feature, [autotag]Sergei Pavlovich[/autotag] takes on [autotag]Tom Aspinall[/autotag] for the interim heavyweight title, while [autotag]Jiri Prochazka[/autotag] meets [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag] for the vacant light heavyweight crown in the main event.

Elsewhere, many other combat sports events are taking place that feature a number of familiar names that have competed under the UFC banner.

Check out which veterans of the global MMA leader are competing in MMA, bareknuckle MMA and boxing Nov. 8-12.

Scroll below to see how the UFC veterans fared last week, and see the names and details of this weekend’s competitors.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

UFC veterans in MMA and boxing action June 30-July 2

Check out which veterans of the UFC are in combat sports action across the globe this weekend.

This week, the UFC returns to Las Vegas for UFC on ESPN 47.

The event at the UFC Apex features a middleweight matchup between [autotag]Sean Strickland[/autotag] and [autotag]Abus Magomedov[/autotag].

Elsewhere, many other combat sports events are taking place that feature a number of familiar names that have competed under the UFC banner.

This week, there are a total of 13 veterans of the global MMA leader competing in MMA and boxing this week from June 30-July 2.

Check out the names and details about their bouts below.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

UFC veterans in MMA action from Dec. 21-31

Check out which UFC veterans are in action over the holidays from Dec. 21-31.

The UFC is done for the year after UFC Fight Night 216 in Las Vegas.

However, there are other MMA promotions in action for their final cards of the year during holidays that feature a number of UFC veterans, including multiple former flyweight title challengers.

These 15 veterans of the UFC are competing across the globe from Dec. 21-31.

Check out the names and details about their bouts below.

With Askar Mozharov out, Darren Stewart steps in to face Dustin Jacoby at UFC Fight Night on Aug. 28

Darren Stewart will look to snap his losing skid when he steps in as a replacement opponent against Dustin Jacoby on Aug. 28.

[autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] will look to snap his losing skid when he steps in as a replacement opponent.

[autotag]Askar Mozharov[/autotag] has been forced out of the UFC Fight Night on Aug. 28 and Stewart (12-7-2 MMA, 5-6-2 UFC) will step in to face [autotag]Dustin Jacoby[/autotag] (14-5-1 MMA, 2-2-1 UFC) at an event that doesn’t have a publicly known location or venue at this time.

A person with knowledge of the matchup confirmed the booking to MMA Junkie but asked to remain anonymous since the promotion has yet to make an official announcement. Jacoby’s gym, Factory X, was first to report the news.

Stewart is winless in his past three octagon appearances. After his UFC Fight Night 187 matchup with Eryk Anders was ruled a no contest due to an illegal knee that rendered him unable to continue, the pair ran things back at UFC 263 in June. In his light heavyweight debut, Stewart fell short to Anders in the rematch. He’ll remain at the weight class when he steps in to face Jacoby.

Former GLORY kickboxer Jacoby is unbeaten since rejoining the UFC roster in 2020. After picking up two straight wins over Justin Ledet and Maxim Grishin, the Dana White’s Contender Series contract winner battled Ion Cutelaba to a split draw in May.

With the change, the UFC Fight Night lineup for Aug. 28 includes:

  • Gerald Meerschaert vs. Makhmud Muradov
  • Sara McMann vs. Ketlen Vieira
  • Joselyne Edwards vs. Zarah Fairn
  • Kevin Croom vs. Marcelo Rojo
  • Mario Bautista vs. Guido Cannetti
  • Jamall Emmers vs. Pat Sabatini
  • Dustin Jacoby vs. Darren Stewart
  • J.J. Aldrich vs. Tracy Cortez

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UFC 263 adds Eryk Anders vs. Darren Stewart rematch after illegal knee ended first fight

Eryk Anders and Darren Stewart will run it back at UFC 263 in hopes of getting a controversy-free result.

[autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] and [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] will run it back at UFC 263 in hopes of getting a controversy-free result.

After their first meeting at UFC Fight Night 187 in March ended in a no contest due to an illegal knee strike by Anders, a rematch has been confirmed for June.

UFC officials announced the matchup on Tuesday but revealed it will be contested in the light heavyweight division after the initial matchup took place at middleweight.

UFC 263 takes place June 12 at Gila River Arena in Glendale, Ariz., with a main card that streams on ESPN+ pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and ESPN+.

Anders (13-5 MMA, 5-5 UFC) was doing well in the initial clash with Stewart (12-5 MMA, 5-5 UFC). He landed some solid strikes and was putting the pressure on his opponent in the early minutes, but he got too overeager pursuing a stoppage and slipped up by landing a knee to a grounded Stewart, which left him unable to continue.

Both men handled the situation with class and apologized. Now they’ll get a chance at a redo.

With the addition, the latest UFC 263 lineup now includes:

  • Israel Adesanya vs. Marvin Vettori – for middleweight title
  • Deiveson Figueiredo vs. Brandon Moreno – for flyweight title
  • Nate Diaz vs. Leon Edwards
  • Demian Maia vs. Belal Muhammad
  • Paul Craig vs. Jamahal HillDrew Dober vs. Brad Riddell
  • Jake Collier vs. Carlos Felipe
  • Luigi Vendramini vs. Fares Ziam
  • Hakeem Dawodu vs. Movsar Evloev
  • Sijara Eubanks vs. Karol Rosa
  • Joanne Calderwood vs. Lauren Murphy
  • Frank Camacho vs. Matt Frevola
  • Chase Hooper vs. Steven Peterson
  • Eryk Anders vs. Darren Stewart

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UFC Fight Night 187 medical suspensions: Belal Muhammad faces 30 days after eye poke

Belal Muhammad isn’t facing a long time off after suffering a nasty eye poke against Leon Edwards at UFC Fight Night 187.

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Thankfully, [autotag]Belal Muhammad[/autotag] isn’t facing a potentially long medical suspension coming out of UFC Fight Night 187.

Muhammad’s first headliner vs. Leon Edwards was ruled a no contest after Edwards accidentally poked him in the eye 18 seconds into the second round of their welterweight fight. Visibly in pain, Muhammad was unable to continue and, as a result, the fight was stopped without a winner.

Muhammad (18-3 MMA, 9-3 UFC) was able to provide a positive update shortly after, stating that he suffered no permanent damage to his eye and was slowly starting to get his vision back. The medical report supports his claim as Muhammad will be prohibited from any contact for 21 days with no contest for 30 days, until he receives doctor clearance for his right eye.

MMA Junkie on Tuesday obtained the full list of suspensions from MixedMartialArts.com, the Association of Boxing Commissions’ official record keeper.

The full list of UFC Fight Night 187 medical suspensions includes:

  • [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • Belal Muhammad: Must have right eye cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 30 days; minimum suspension is 21 days.
  • [autotag]Misha Cirkunov[/autotag]: Suspended 60 days with 45 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Ryan Spann[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Gavin Tucker[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with 30 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Jonathan Martinez[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with 30 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Davey Grant[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with 21 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Manel Kape[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with 14 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Matheus Nicolau[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days.
  • [autotag]Angela Hill[/autotag]: Must have left eye cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 30 days.
  • [autotag]Ashley Yoder[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right ear is cleared by ENT.
  • [autotag]Marcelo Rojo[/autotag]: Must have maxillofacial bones fractures cleared by maxillofacial surgeon and left lamina papyracea cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 180 days.
  • [autotag]Charles Jourdain[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days due to left scalp laceration.
  • [autotag]Rani Yahya[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Ray Rodriguez[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]Nasrat Haqparast[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until left fibula X-ray is cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.
  • [autotag]Rafa Garcia[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right elbow X-ray is cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.
  • [autotag]Cortney Casey[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right foot and right hand X-rays are cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]J.J. Aldrich[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Gloria de Paula[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]Matthew Semelsberger[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Jason Witt[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.

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Spinning Back Clique: Illegal knees and eye pokes and more knees, oh my!

Check out the latest edition of “Spinning Back Clique,” in which our panel weighs in on illegal knees, eye pokes and more.

Check out the latest edition of “Spinning Back Clique,” in which our panel weighs in on illegal knees, eye pokes and more.

Welcome to “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a quick spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts. This week, host Simon Head is joined by panelists “Gorgeous” George Garcia of MMA Junkie Radio, as well as MMA Junkie’s Farah Hannoun and Nolan King. Let’s get into it!

  • The highly anticipated welterweight fight between [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag] and [autotag]Belal Muhammad[/autotag] ended in disappointment at UFC Fight Night 187 thanks to an accidental eye poke that took Muhammad out of the fight early in the second round. So what can the sport do about eye pokes, which have been a fairly consistent problem?
  • After the main event, Edwards was clear about what he wants next – and that’s a title shot, even though he didn’t beat Muhammad, and even though the fight was his first in more than 600 days. Muhammad thinks he’s crazy for thinking he deserves a shot at Kamaru Usman rather than a rematch of their fight. So what do we think should happen?
  • The eye poke wasn’t the only thing that stopped a fight early at UFC Fight Night 187. For the second straight week, a bout was stopped due to an illegal knee to the head of a grounded opponent. In the UFC 259 title fight between bantamweight champion [autotag]Petr Yan[/autotag] and challenger [autotag]Aljamain Sterling[/autotag], Sterling won the belt when Yan was disqualified for an illegal knee. But at UFC Fight Night 187, [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] simply had to endure a no contest when he hit [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] with one. Does the sport need to have a big reckoning with the rules and officiating so the end results will be a little more clear cut when things like that happen?
  • [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] and [autotag]Beneil Dariush[/autotag] are set to fight at UFC 262, and we’ve also got the potential for a [autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag] trilogy fight. The UFC’s lightweight division is a killer one, and with champion Khabib Nurmagomedov retired, but not officially retired, what kind of matchups do we want to see to get some kind of pecking order at the top of the weight class?

Hope you enjoy this week’s show. Watch Episode 71 of “Spinning Back Clique” above.

UFC’s Marc Ratner: Referees can’t view fouls through black-and-white lens; gray areas needed

UFC VP of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner explains why illegal knees ended Yan-Sterling and Anders-Stewart with two different outcomes.

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There’s always room for improvement, but UFC vice president of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner largely thinks the three UFC fight-ending fouls over the past two weeks were handled well by officials overseeing those bouts.

The parade of recent fouls between UFC 259 and UFC Fight Night 187 has placed MMA officiating and rules pertaining to fouls under the microscope, with fighters, fans, officials, coaches and media all varying in opinions. For Ratner, however, the final rulings on all three recent incidents were the correct calls.

So why did the two illegal knees end with different outcomes? At UFC 259, [autotag]Petr Yan[/autotag] was disqualified for illegally kneeing [autotag]Aljamain Sterling[/autotag]. One week later at UFC Fight Night 187, [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] hit [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] with an illegal knee that resulted in a no contest.

Ratner explained the major difference was the referee interpretation of intent: Was the knee accidental or not?

“What we start with is the referee’s judgment,” Ratner told MMA Junkie Radio on Monday. “That’s the most important thing. He’s going to determine, in his mind, whether it was intentional or accidental. It certainly changes the way the fight is scored or the outcome. In the Yan fight, Mark Smith was the referee, and he felt that the knee was intentional. And therefore, because Sterling couldn’t go forward, that became a disqualification.

“The difference from last Saturday’s fight was Herb Dean felt that maybe (Anders), who landed the knee, (and Stewart), who was putting his hand up and down, kind of baited him into that knee. He felt it was an accident. Therefore it became a no contest or a ‘no decision.’ If it would’ve (gone) two rounds full, we would’ve gone to the scorecards.”

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Every referee is going to have an opinion, but that doesn’t mean an off-the-board mistake can’t be made. However, the interpretation of Smith, who officiated his first title fight in Sterling vs. Yan, aligned with Ratner’s assessment of what transpired.

“I would say that Aljamain’s knee was down for, I don’t know, four or five seconds,” Ratner said. “There was no question it wasn’t coming up. He hit him in the head. He kneed him in the head. Right from the beginning, I knew it was going to be a DQ. I was thinking that way. That was the correct decision.”

With all that said, the question whether the rules can be improved or made clearer still looms. Without having the rule in front of him to break down word-for-word, Ratner explained why leaving room for interpretation is important.

“I think you have a gray area there,” Ratner said. “You’re always going to have a judgment call in any sport. To put it in black and white, to say, ‘This is going to be accidental … this is going to be intentional,’ can you read intent? That’s really the question. … I don’t think it’ll ever be clear. I don’t know how you can make it in writing that you wouldn’t be able to use judgment. That would be, I don’t know – I read those rules and there is some gray area there. I think it would be hard to say that you can definitively say that black and white, ‘This was intentional … this was accidental.”

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With fighters who are illegally kneed, Ratner would like to see more decisiveness from the safety net that’s in place to protect them. Doctors shouldn’t leave the decision up to the injured fighter. Instead, they should swiftly nix the possibility of a bout continuing if the athlete is potentially concussed.

“My belief is if a fighter is compromised with what I would call a ‘closed-head injury,’ possibly a concussion, that you cannot let the fighter go forward,” Ratner said. “I would like the doctor to make a really quick decision. Don’t ask the fighter if it can go on. A lot of fighters would say yes because they don’t want to go out that way. It doesn’t matter what the fighter says. I want the doctors to be more definitive. I’m certainly not an educated doctor, but when I see a person compromised, I just assume you stop the fight right away. Don’t vacillate and have him make a decision. ‘Can you walk? Can you fight?’ I think that’s wrong.”

As for the eye pokes, like the one that ended the UFC Fight Night 187 main event between Leon Edwards and Belal Muhammad, Ratner and the UFC is always looking for solutions to improve. With different glove models proving difficult to grapple with, Ratner thinks locker room rules meetings between teams and officials are vital and should be taken seriously by everyone involved.

“I do believe hard warnings should be given in the dressing room, saying, ‘I’m not going to warn you during the fight. I’m telling you right now. Don’t grab the fence. If you’re leading with your fingers out there, I can take a point. I want you to know that. This is a hard warning, so think about this stuff very clearly,'” Ratner said. “Sometimes you’ve got language barriers, hoping the Portuguese, that their interpreters tell them these things. Sometimes you don’t know. We have a lot of international fighters now, but there’s no excuse for breaking the rules. They all know the rules. You just have to enforce them. Not every referee is going to enforce them the same way.”

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