Bellator champ Johnny Eblen blasts Gordon Ryan for anti-doping stance: ‘There’s a reason your health sucks’

Johnny Eblen doesn’t like Gordon Ryan’s stance on anti-doping.

[autotag]Johnny Eblen[/autotag] and [autotag]Gordon Ryan[/autotag] couldn’t have more opposing views when it comes to anti-doping in combat sports.

The Bellator middleweight champion took to X (formerly Twitter) this week to challenge and criticize Ryan’s recent comments on the UFC’s decision to drop USADA and work with a new company, Drug Free International, to run its athlete anti-doping program.

Ryan, a decorated grappler, implied in an Instagram post that if the UFC was to ease down on drug testing, it would be good for the sport since performing-enhancing drugs would make MMA more entertaining, and it would raise the level of competition.

“If the UFC ‘regresses’ back to the old days, this is amazing news,” Ryan wrote on Instagram. “… The higher the testosterone, the more physical the athletes are, the less prone to injury they are, the faster they recover, the longer they can compete, and the more entertaining and high paced they are. The better they look, the more attention they draw, the more money they make.”

Ryan would go on a lengthier elaboration on why less drug testing is a good thing for sports, a stance Eblen took issue with.

“Not that I’m trying to stir up any unwarranted drama, but Ryan just stated that MMA should allow athletes to be on steroids because it would supposedly make it more entertaining,” Eblen wrote on X.

“Hey bro, there’s a reason your health sucks, and it has a lot to do with you wanting to be an “entertainer.” Athletes are humans too, and there’s a life after fighting. Steroids and other performance enhancers destroy the possibility of a good functioning life as you age. You took that shit, and now you’re stuck, and you want to bring the rest of us down with you. I really hope MMA organizations can see an obvious set of liabilities that come from more brain damage and body damage when athletes retire.

“One thing is taking steroids when you grapple, and another is when you’re getting punched, kneed, elbowed and kicked in the face. It’s convenient you say this shit about steroids while you’re grappling but not fighting.

“How can you be considered the goat if in order to train you had to be on steroids? You’re telling me the guy on the right really would know what he knows about grappling had he not been on the sauce? Don’t get me wrong, dudes (is) amazing at what he does, but literally can’t do anything without steroids.”

Ryan has long been accused of steroid use by his critics, given his muscular physique and stance on steroid. He’s also had a long history of issues involving his gut health.

The grappling star has fluctuated a lot in weight and has experienced chronic nausea and other symptoms that have forced him out of several grappling competitions. Ryan attributes these issues to an overuse of antibiotics to treat infections such as staph and other common issues often experienced by grapplers.

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Gordon Ryan explains involvement in Jon Jones’ UFC 295 camp ahead of Stipe Miocic title defense

How big of a role has Gordon Ryan played in Jon Jones’ camp ahead of UFC 295?

The link-up between [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] and [autotag]Gordon Ryan[/autotag] ahead of UFC 295 has many people talking. But how big of a role has he played in Jones’ training camp?

Ryan, a jiu-jitsu black belt and a multiple-time grappling world champion, has been training with Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) ahead of defending his UFC heavyweight belt against Stipe Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC) in the main event of UFC 295 on Nov. 11 at Madison Square Garden. Ryan clarified that he’s not a full-time coach for Jones, but he has been involved in the preparation – one Jones is very keen on.

“I’m not a coach. I’m not a full-time coach,” Ryan said in an interview on “Morning Kombat.” “When I go there, I go there to train him obviously just so he feels what it is like to train with good grapplers, but most of what I do, especially with his training regimen, is teaching.

“I’ll coach him, and he kind of learns differently than everyone else. It’s not like, ‘Hey, let’s work on this.’ His brain kind of fires from movement to movement. It’s not like, ‘Oh hey, let’s work on D’Arces the whole time and after D’Arces then we move on to something else. It’s like, ‘Hey, teach me a D’Arce. Now the turtle question. Now I have a guard question.’ So we kind of just bounce from situation to situation, and that’s how he learns best. So I just come in and if I feel like there’s something he needs to do then I’ll tell him we’re working on this today, but for the most part, I just let him run the practice and creatively have him run through what he wants to learn. He just gives me a general idea and direction, and I just run with that.

“I teach him most of the time that we’re there, and then we do some hand fighting, some wrestling, some groundwork, so he feels at different pieces what it is like. But most of what I do is that I’m there to teach him and to improve upon skill and knowledge.”

The partnership with Jones and Ryan has many thinking. Miocic is not a specialist in grappling, which had many people question Ryan’s involvement.

Ryan understands this criticism but regardless of who Jones is facing, he feels this is just part of the constant search of evolution for an all-time great.

“Stipe, there’s nothing really special that he does as an MMA grappler,” Ryan said. “He’s not bad, but it’s not like he has an amazing ability to hip heist up or an amazing triangle or armbar, or if he gets a mount on you, you can’t get out. He’s kind of just a good, generic, all-around guy. Obviously Jon studies a lot of tape on him, as well. I think Jon at this point is just interested in doing things to improve as an athlete himself. If there was one thing I saw that Stipe did that was dangerous to Jon or would give Jon problems, then I would force Jon to be in those positions. Stipe is not known as a super dangerous grappler. I think Jon is just trying to improve as an athlete.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 295.

Video: Jon Jones grapples with Gordon Ryan ahead of UFC 295 title defense vs. Stipe Miocic

UFC heavyweight champion Jon Jones is prepping with a decorated jiu-jitsu champ ahead of his first title defense.

UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] is prepping with a decorated jiu-jitsu champ ahead of his first title defense.

Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) faces Stipe Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC) in the UFC 295 headliner on Nov. 11 at Madison Square Garden. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims expected on ESPN and ESPN+.

Jones will be taking on one of the best wrestlers in the division in Miocic, and has sought help from three-time ADCC champion, IBJJF no-gi champion, and four-time Eddie Bravo Invitational champion [autotag]Gordon Ryan[/autotag].

Check out a short clip of them training courtesy of Jones’ Instagram.

Let the good times roll @gordonlovesjiujitsu.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cvq-n1JM1dt/

Jones, 36, captured the vacant heavyweight title with a quick submission win over Ciryl Gane at UFC 285 in March, in what was his first fight in more than three years. He will look to add another legend on his resume when he meets the consensus greatest heavyweight of all time, former two-time champ Miocic.

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 295.

Chael Sonnen offers $25K to any team who can beat Craig Jones, Gordon Ryan at Submission Underground

Whoever is up for the challenge, they’d better start drilling their leg-lock defense now.

So, you wanna be a submission fighter?

[autotag]Chael Sonnen[/autotag] hung up his MMA gloves earlier this year, but his days of issuing challenges are far from over.

Sonnen’s submission grappling promotion, Submission Underground, continues to go from strength to strength, with events streamed live on UFC Fight Pass and attracting big names from the worlds of both MMA and grappling.

This past weekend at Submission Underground 10, Sonnen engineered a callout of a different kind as he threw down the gauntlet for anyone to step up and challenge two of the planet’s very best submission specialists.

His promotion’s next event, Submission Underground 11, will feature a special tag-team matchup, with Australian ace [autotag]Craig Jones[/autotag] telling Sonnen he hoped to convince his teammate – and arguably the best grappler in the world – [autotag]Gordon Ryan[/autotag] to team up with him for the event.

“What’s next for me? Those tag-team matches look pretty fun,” Jones told Sonnen in the cage after submitting UFC welterweight contender Gilbert Burns.

“I’m going to try to twist Gordon’s arm, but that’s a hard thing to do!”

The prospect of facing a team of Jones and Ryan in submission-based competition is just about as daunting as it gets, so Sonnen offered up a sweetener.

“Should that happen I will personally give $25,000 to any tag team alive that can come in and beat these guys,” he announced.

And, after submitting former UFC heavyweight title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga later in the night, Ryan said he was happy to team up with Jones for action next year.

“Yeah, for sure. Tag-team matches have been picking up some steam, and there’s nobody better to do it with than Craig,” said “The Winner of Everything.” “So if everything works out properly then, yeah, I’m in for sure.”

Who’s up for the challenge? Whoever it is, they’d better start drilling their leg-lock defense now.

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.

Quintet Ultra: Full UFC, PRIDE, WEC, Strikeforce rosters revealed ahead of Thursday’s event

UFC vs. PRIDE vs. WEC vs. Strikeforce? The full rosters have been announced for Thursday’s event.

Who would have won a team battle between the UFC, PRIDE, WEC, and Strikeforce? Quintet is hopping in a time machine to take fans back to an era when this question could be answered.

On Thursday, one of the world’s most unique grappling tournaments will return with Quintet Ultra. The openweight elimination challenge takes place at Red Rock Casino Resort in Las Vegas and streams on UFC Fight Pass.

The event will see four teams compromised of five fighters – each team tied to a respective promotion. On Monday, full rosters and first-round team pairings were announced, with Team UFC taking on Team PRIDE and Team WEC vs. Team Strikeforce.

The teams are as follows:

Team UFC

  • [autotag]Anthony Smith[/autotag] (captain): former UFC light heavyweight title challenger, current UFC light heavyweight contender, WSOF veteran
  • [autotag]Anthony Johnson[/autotag]: former UFC light heavyweight title challenger
  • [autotag]Sean O’Malley[/autotag]: Dana White’s Contender Series signee, undefeated UFC bantamweight
  • [autotag]Clay Guida[/autotag]: 29-fight UFC veteran, current UFC lightweight
  • [autotag]Gilbert Burns[/autotag]: current UFC lightweight/welterweight, second-degree black belt

Team PRIDE

  • [autotag]Kazushi Sakuraba[/autotag] (captain): UFC Hall of Famer, competed in 27 fights under the PRIDE banner, UFC Japan heavyweight tournament winner
  • [autotag]Takanori Gomi[/autotag]: PRIDE lightweight champion, Pride 2005 lightweight grand prix winner, UFC veteran
  • [autotag]Gregor Gracie[/autotag]: grappling world champion, ONE FC veteran, member of the storied Gracie family
  • [autotag]Hector Lombard[/autotag]: former Bellator middleweight champion, Bellator Season 1 middleweight tournament winner, international judo federation gold medalist
  • [autotag]Yves Edwards[/autotag]: three-time PRIDE competitor, UFC and Strikeforce veteran, current PFL commentator

Team WEC

  • [autotag]Chad Mendes[/autotag] (captain): two-time UFC featherweight title challenger, most knockouts in UFC featherweight history (tied with Conor McGregor), two-time NCAA Division 1 All American
  • [autotag]Glover Teixeira[/autotag]: former UFC light heavyweight title challenger, current UFC light heavyweight contender, most submission victories in UFC light heavyweight history (tied with Jon Jones)
  • [autotag]Mark Munoz[/autotag]: two-time WEC competitor, 15-time UFC competitor, two-time NCAA division 1 All American
  • [autotag]Cub Swanson[/autotag]: former UFC featherweight title challenger, former WEC title challenger, 11-time UFC/WEC bonus winner
  • [autotag]James Krause[/autotag]: two-time WEC competitor, current UFC welterweight, currently riding a six-fight win streak

Team Strikeforce

  • [autotag]Gilbert Melendez[/autotag]: WEC lightweight champion, Strikeforce lightweight champion, UFC lightweight title challenger
  • [autotag]Jake Shields[/autotag]: Strikeforce middleweight champion, Elite XC welterweight champion, former UFC welterweight title challenger
  • [autotag]Muhammed Lawal[/autotag]: Strikeforce light heavyweight champion, Bellator 2013 “Summer Series” light heavyweight tournament champion, Bellator season 10 light heavyweight tournament finalist
  • [autotag]Gesias Cavalcante[/autotag]: two-time K-1 HERO’s middleweight grand prix champion, former Titan FC lightweight champion
  • [autotag]Renato Sobral[/autotag]: Strikeforce light heavyweight champion, former UFC light heavyweight title challenger

In addition to the team competition, Quintet Ultra will feature singles matches. [autotag]Gordon Ryan[/autotag] meets [autotag]Aleksei Oleinik[/autotag], while Cynthia Calvillo takes on [autotag]Danielle Kelly[/autotag]. A prelims single match between [autotag]Craig Jones[/autotag] and [autotag]Fredson Paixio[/autotag] also is set.

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