Twitter Mailbag: Why rush Tony Ferguson at UFC 249, and how does Conor McGregor fit in?

Imagine if Tony Ferguson loses at UFC 249 and what that could mean for Conor McGregor’s future. That and more in this week’s Twitter Mailbag.

Questions on your mind about recent happenings in MMA or the sport in general? MMA Junkie’s Twitter Mailbag is here – and this week it’s @Farah_Hannoun to answer:

  • What’s the point of the UFC rushing [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] considering fans have been waiting for him to fight [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] for half a decade now?
  • Do you think [autotag]Georges St-Pierre[/autotag] vs. Khabib will ever happen, and what advantages does each fighter have over the other?
  • Who are the top five UFC fighters to never win a championship belt?
  • If [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] beats Ferguson to claim the interim title at UFC 249, is it a guarantee he’d unify vs. Khabib? OR Could [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag] potentially be next in that scenario?

Those are answered in the video above.

To ask a question of your own, follow @MMAjunkie on Twitter and let us know.

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Dana White: Khabib to make fall return against Ferguson vs. Gaethje winner

It looks like UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov will be limited to just a single bout this year.

It looks like UFC lightweight champion [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] will be limited to just a single bout this year.

After Nurmagomedov (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC) was forced to withdraw from his planned UFC 249 title defense against Tony Ferguson originally set for April 18, the division is set to move on. The UFC has an interim 155-pound title bout between Ferguson (25-3 MMA, 15-1 UFC) and Justin Gaethje (21-2 MMA, 4-2 UFC) lined up for the re-purposed UFC 249 event on May 9 in Jacksonville, Fla.

That matchup is about as good as it gets on paper, but it’s not the highly anticipated clash between Nurmagomedov and Ferguson the MMA world has been clamoring for. All hope is not lost, though, as UFC president Dana White said the Ferguson-Gaethje winner will fight Nurmagomedov next.

“The Ferguson vs. Gaethje fight is one of the most violent fights you will see,” White told ESPN on Instagram Live. “I can guarantee that. This fight is going to be incredible. The winner will fight Khabib for the title. This is for the interim. 100 percent (the winner fights Khabib).”

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On top of the multitude of issues brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, Nurmagomedov wouldn’t have been able to fight any time beyond April 18, anyway. He just began observing Ramadan, which takes “The Eagle” away from fighting for roughly the same timeframe each year.

Nurmagomedov has said previously he could be ready to fight as early as August, but White said he doesn’t anticipate getting him in the octagon that soon.

“Khabib will be back in September or October,” White said.

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Justin Gaethje won’t consider himself UFC champion until he beats Khabib Nurmagomedov

Justin Gaethje is fighting for interim gold at UFC 249, but won’t consider himself a true UFC champion until beating Khabib Nurmagomedov.

[autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] isn’t one to take short notice fights, but he made an exception for a shot at UFC gold.

Gaethje (21-2 MMA, 4-2 UFC) faces Tony Ferguson for the interim lightweight title at UFC 249. With a win would come an opportunity to face the division’s undefeated champion, [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag].

The way Gaethje sees it, a win over Ferguson (25-3 MMA, 15-1 UFC) on the May 9 card (which does not have an official location) is a one-way ticket to Nurmagomedov (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC). The interim strap is merely a receipt, because Gaethje consider himself the true UFC champion until he dethrones “The Eagle.”

“When they wrap that belt around me, it won’t be a destination, it will be a map – a map to the top,” Gaethje told ESPN. “That’s how I’m looking at it. It will be nice to have a belt wrapped around you, but for me, it won’t mean the same. It won’t mean that I’m a world champion in the UFC.

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“When I beat Tony, I’m fighting Khabib next because that’s what I’m here for. I’m here to try and be the best in the world and when I fight him, I want him to try and kill me because I won’t respect him if he doesn’t.”

If Gaethje beats Ferguson, he would be the roadblock and spoiler to arguably the most highly-anticipated bout in UFC history – a fight between Nurmagomedov and Ferguson.

That fight has fallen through five times already, and Gaethje said he’d happily derail that matchup and extend Ferguson’s wait to face Nurmagomedov a little longer.

“I want to see that fight just as much as anybody, but to put food on my table, I have to go,” Gaethje said. “I really don’t care about that. I will feel a little bit bad because I know how bad people want it, but for me to act like it’ll bother me, that would be a lie. I’ll be very happy to royally screw that up.”

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Video: Relive the most iconic UFC octagon interview callouts

Watch the most iconic UFC octagon interview callouts, including when Nate Diaz took aim at Conor McGregor.

Ask and you shall receive.

Some of the greatest UFC matchups have been set up in post-fight octagon interviews, where fighters took control of their fates by calling their shots.

Just like [autotag]Nate Diaz[/autotag] did, when he defeated Michael Johnson in 2015 and proceeded to take aim at Conor McGregor in one of the most iconic callouts in UFC history.

Diaz eventually got his wish when he stepped in on short notice to face McGregor at UFC 196, shocking the world with a second-round submission win to hand McGregor his first promotional loss.

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From the Diaz brothers to Chael Sonnen, check out the latest video compilation published by the UFC showing the most iconic octagon interview callouts in promotional history.

  • Nate Diaz calls out Conor McGregor – UFC Orlando (Dec. 19, 2015)
  • [autotag]Chael Sonnen[/autotag] calls out Anderson Silva – UFC 136 (Oct. 8, 2011)
  • [autotag]Daniel Cormier [/autotag]calls out Brock Lesnar – UFC 226 (July 7, 2018)
  • [autotag]Nick Diaz[/autotag] calls out Georges St-Pierre – UFC 137 (Oct. 29, 2011)
  • [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] calls out Conor McGregor – UFC 205 (Nov. 12, 2016)
  • Daniel Cormier calls out Jon Jones – UFC 173 (May 24, 2014)
  • [autotag]Georges St-Pierre[/autotag] calls out Matt Hughes – UFC 63 (Sept. 23, 2006)
  • [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] calls out Conor McGregor – UFC 216 (Oct. 7, 2017)
  • [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] calls out Michael Bisping – UFC 205 (Nov. 12, 2016)
  • Nate Diaz calls out Jorge Masvidal – UFC 241 (Aug. 17, 2019)

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Ali Abdelaziz wouldn’t stand in way of Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Justin Gaethje UFC title unifier

“I don’t think it’s fair for a manager or a promoter to stop a guy from having his dreams come true of becoming the undisputed UFC champion.”

Ali Abdelaziz won’t be the one to stand in the way of a potential [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] fight, if that’s how the UFC lightweight title picture pans out.

Abdelaziz’s Dominance MMA management company represents many of the biggest names in the sport. Both UFC lightweight champion Nurmagomedov (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC) and top contender Gaethje (21-2 MMA, 4-2 UFC), are among his roster and it’s entirely possible that the pair could face off in a lightweight title clash later this year.

Gaethje is currently scheduled to fight Tony Ferguson (25-3 MMA, 15-1 UFC) for the interim lightweight title on May 9 after Nurmagomedov was unable to defend against Ferguson in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. If Gaethje wins, it will set up a championship unification bout with Nurmagomedov and could place Abdelaziz in a potentially awkward position.

Abdelaziz has been in this exact position in the past, however – most notably when Henry Cejudo defeated Marlon Moraes for the vacant bantamweight title last year. Back then the manager decided to handle it by taking himself completely out of the equation and not attending the fight. That same scenario could potentially occur again if Nurmagomedov vs. Gaethje ever came to fruition.

“You saw (what happened when) Henry Cejudo fought Marlon Moraes before,” Abdelaziz told MMA Junkie. “If (Gaethje is) going to be interim champion, he’s going to fight Khabib for the undisputed lightweight championship. These guys work all their lives to become a champion. Who am I to step in the way to making that happen? I know Tony (Ferguson) had a problem before with (having the same management as Conor McGregor), but that’s not how I do business.

“I don’t think it’s fair for a manager or a promoter to stop a guy from having his dreams come true of becoming the undisputed UFC champion. If Justin wins, it’s a fair fight. Him and Khabib will fight.”

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Abdelaziz said Gaethje “jumped all over” the chance to fight Ferguson at the scratched UFC 249 event on April 18, and remained on board for the subsequent rescheduled date of May 9. Nurmagomedov’s misfortune may have been Gaethje’s opportunity, but the situation puts the long-desired bout between Nurmagomedov and Ferguson at significant risk.

An argument exists that Ferguson shouldn’t have received a new opponent and instead should have waited until Nurmagomedov was prepared to compete to book the fight for a sixth time. Abdelaziz said wants to see the two rivals fight as much as anyone, but said it’s not his position to demand that Ferguson skip out on a payday.

“I don’t think it’s right for me to ask that, because especially Tony hasn’t fought in a long time,” Abdelaziz said. “I’m sure he has responsibilities, he has family and he needs money. If it was up to him he could’ve said yes to Justin or said he’s going to wait for Khabib. He chose to take Justin. It’s good for everybody. He gets to fight, Justin gets to fight.”

Regardless of what happens between Gaethje and Ferguson, it’s certain that Nurmagomedov will be waiting in the wings for the winner. “The Eagle” is set to begin observing Ramadan on April 25 and only after that period will he be able to train to the point of preparing for a fight.

Although the UFC’s annual stop in Abu Dhabi in September would be a logical fit for Nurmagomedov’s next fight, Abdelaziz said that timeline is a flexible one. If the UFC deems it best, Nurmagomedov could potentially be ready to unify the 155-pound belts as soon as the start of August.

“I think he can be back in August,” Abdelaziz said. “He told me originally the UFC had scheduled a San Francisco fight, I think it was August 1. He can fight there, it’s no problem. It doesn’t have to be September. But, as you know, (in) September they always have this Abu Dhabi card and I’m sure the UFC wants him to fight there.”

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Georges St-Pierre: UFC denied Khabib Nurmagomedov fight to avoid ‘the risk of me winning’

Georges St-Pierre says his fight with Khabib Nurmagomedov never materialized because the UFC may have seen him as a threat to the Russian’s undefeated record.

For [autotag]Georges St-Pierre[/autotag], seeking a fight with [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] was never about adding another championship to his collection. But he understands why the UFC opted not to book the matchup, regardless.

Former two-division UFC champion  St-Pierre (26-2 MMA, 20-2 UFC) had previously expressed interest in facing UFC lightweight champion Nurmagomedov (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC), but the promotion was never on board.

St-Pierre returned after an almost four-year layoff in 2017, and defeated Michael Bisping to capture the UFC middleweight title. However, he vacated the title shortly after and retired from competition once again.

As a result of that move, St-Pierre thinks the UFC likely didn’t want to book the Nurmagomedov fight, considering that he would have no intention of defending the title if he won. But, St-Pierre says, fighting Nurmagomedov was never about the belt. It was about competing with the best.

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“I know Khabib wanted to have that fight, I want it, but the thing is, if you look from the UFC’s side, I think it’s normal if I put myself in their shoes,” St-Pierre told ESPN. “They didn’t want to take the risk of me winning the title and then after vacating again. I didn’t even want it for the title, I would rather do it not for a title. For me, it was because I considered Khabib, right now, the best fighter in the world, and he wanted to fight me as well so I thought it was a good fan fight.”

Instead of a super fight with St-Pierre, the UFC booked Nurmagomedov to face Conor McGregor in Las Vegas in October 2018, then Dustin Poirier in Abu Dhabi in September 2019 as the undefeated Russian retained his lightweight belt with a pair of submission finishes.

“They had other plans for Khabib and I understand that,” said St-Pierre. “They had a lot to lose and if they invest into that fight and their investment goes out after, it’s not a good move.

“In a way, I could take that as a compliment because maybe they saw me as a threat for them. That means maybe they thought I could win the fight. If they let me fight him, it’s because they think I would have lost. So that’s why.”

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Spinning Back Clique: Where does the UFC go from here?

A complete halt of UFC action means plenty of decisions to make once cleared to again start hosting live events. We discuss many of them.

Welcome to “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts. In this week’s episode,  John Morgan, “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” break down what the UFC’s upcoming schedule might look like once the promotion returns to action.

SHOW RUNDOWN:

    • [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] recently hinted at a potential September return to action. If he’s right, what do you want to see happen in the UFC’s lightweight division in the meantime? Should [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] wait, or should he fight [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] in between? And what about [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag]?
    • [autotag]Jose Aldo[/autotag] was supposed to challenge [autotag]Henry Cejudo[/autotag] for the UFC bantamweight title before the travel ban ruled him out, at which point [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] agreed to step in. With the schedule currently on hold, the UFC has options, so who should get the fight Cejudo?
    • With UFC 249 scrapped, most discussion has centered around Nurmagomedov vs. Ferguson. But outside of that, what other fights need to stay together when cards are rescheduled?
    • Most major sports leagues right now are talking about coming back without a live audience. The UFC had one closed door event in Brazil, but what impact will several months worth of shows like that have on the sport?
    • It might seem entirely impossible to predict, but let’s answer the big question on everyone’s mind: When will we see another live UFC event, and where will it be?

For answers to all of those questions, watch Episode 24 of “Spinning Back Clique” above.

Khabib Nurmagomedov hints at timeline for UFC return, but skeptical pandemic will be over by then

UFC lightweight champ Khabib Nurmagomedov hints at a potential timeline for his MMA return – though he admits he’s still skeptical.

[autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] has September on his mind.

In an Instagram post Sunday, the UFC lightweight champion Nurmagomedov (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC) hinted at September as a potentially important month. Though skeptical, Nurmagomedov said he is still training in anticipation of a UFC return.

Nurmagomedov wrote in Russian (translated through Instagram translate function), “But until September, it’s not too far, though it’s hard to believe that everything will end by September, but yet one serious person said: that in the peaceful time you have to prepare for war – And how are your days going?”

Nurmagomedov was scheduled to be one half of the UFC 249 main event on April 18. However, due to coronavirus travel restrictions, Nurmagomedov was unable to leave his native Russia. Ultimately, Nurmagomedov was removed from his fight against Tony Ferguson. Although Justin Gaethje replaced Nurmagomedov, the event was eventually canceled.

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Outside of UFC 249, all upcoming events have also been indefinitely postponed. The UFC has not given a timetable to resume events, though UFC president Dana White has hinted at “fight island” being a possibility for mid-May. Nurmagomedov recognizes the muslim holiday of Ramadan, which limits months he can fight in. This year, the month of fasting runs from April 23 to May 23.

The most recent time Nurmagomedov competed was in September 2019 at UFC 242. The undefeated Russian fighter defeated Dustin Poirier by third-round submission.

Check out Nurmagomedov’s Instagram post below:

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Silver linings: 5 reasons why UFC shutdown isn’t all bad | Opinion

There’s still hope for Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Tony Ferguson.

Although the fight game is on hold due to the global coronavirus pandemic, it’s not all doom and gloom.

We all want to see UFC, Bellator and other major MMA promotions in business and putting on fights. Some saw the extreme efforts to pull off UFC 249 and beyond as a beacon of hope, while others deemed it foolish. Ultimately, putting on events was just not realistic during this time of global crisis, and that concept was reinforced Thursday when ESPN and Disney executives, at the urging of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, did what Dana White wouldn’t and pulled the plug on the April 18 show.

All announced events in the aftermath of UFC 249 are indefinitely suspended, as well, and there’s no telling when fights will resume. White insists it could happen as soon as a month from now on the private island he says he’s secured, but it remains to be seen if he can successfully execute that plan.

Assuming the pandemic doesn’t worsen to a more critical degree, the assumption is sports will eventually return, even if in a limited manner. The attempts to salvage UFC 249 threw the entire promotion into a loop, but the fallout of its postponement wasn’t all bad.

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Below are five silver linings to the UFC temporarily halting operations.

* * * *

There’s still hope for Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Tony Ferguson

The end product in the UFC 249 hoopla would have been an interim lightweight title fight between [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] and [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag]. It’s an incredible matchup that very much needs to happen at some point, but it’s not the fight the world was promised or wants to see most. We all want Ferguson to finally get in the octagon with unbeaten champion [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag].

The need to scramble for a new UFC 249 main event when Nurmagomedov fell off his matchup with Ferguson for a fifth time was out of sheer desperation. If “El Cucuy” had lost, it would have truly been a shame. Now it’s absolutely necessary to go back to the Nurmagomedov vs. Ferguson well.

The matchup is arguably the most important fight that can be made. It’s something of a blessing it didn’t happen at UFC 249, because we wouldn’t have gotten the best version of either fighter under these conditions anyway. Now the UFC will have the time to make sure it happens in a manner where both athletes are properly prepared.

Conor McGregor vs. Justin Gaethje can happen now

Before everything got thrown into chaos, there was growing discussion that Gaethje was the leading candidate in the sweepstakes for a summer showdown with [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag]. Gaethje stepping into UFC 249 temporarily threw that idea into disarray, because a win over Ferguson would have made Gaethje the interim champion and set up a title unifier with Nurmagomedov.

Maybe the matchup with McGregor would’ve come after that and been even sweeter with a title, but I’d prefer to see it now, with one man using the win as the trajectory to a legitimate title shot. Gaethje is a fascinating test for McGregor with his kill-or-be-killed approach, and it’s the right time to make such a fight.

If UFC 249 went forward, it would’ve left McGregor in a weird spot and as something of an outside man in terms of lightweight contenders. But now he has a matchup that makes perfect sense, and hopefully it’ll get made.

The chance for bantamweight clarity

One of the cards that fell victim to the UFC indefinitely suspending events is UFC 250, which originally was set for May 9 in Sao Paulo, Brazil, with a bantamweight title headliner between Henry Cejudo and Jose Aldo. The matchup was heavily criticized from the outset, as Aldo would receive a title shot coming off back-to-back losses in a division where he holds exactly zero career wins.

Aldo basically was given the title shot because A) White thought he beat Marlon Moraes in his 135-pound debut at UFC 245; B) He remains a draw in Brazil, and the UFC needed someone with his name value to headline in the country, and; C) For his resume and the fact his run as featherweight champion was one of the great title reigns in UFC history.

Still, though, Aldo didn’t deserve the shot, especially when bantamweight is one of the deepest divisions in the UFC right now. Aljamain Sterling, Petr Yan, Cory Sandhagen, and Moraes are all more worthy of getting that fight, and hopefully this break provides a chance to hit the reset button and make a more legitimate title bout for Cejudo’s first defense.

We’re going to get some insanely stacked fight cards

When the time does come for events to start happening in full swing again, the UFC is going to have quite a few fights to make up. White insists every athlete on the roster will get the fights owed on their contract, and surely the more notable names will be pushed to the front of the queue.

That should mean some incredibly deep fight cards going forward. Multiple title fights, matchups that would typically headline or co-headline a card filling out a main card or prelims; expect some real depth for at least the first few months once things reset.

Much-needed time off for UFC employees

The UFC staff is a collection of unsung heroes who don’t get nearly enough praise for the week-to-week effort it takes to make events happen. I’m not talking about White, the matchmakers, or other high-level executives. These are the media relations workers, the production staff, the stagehands, and more.

It takes an army to pull off events at the level the UFC does, and it happens near-flawlessly every time. I’ve covered other major sports from NBA to NHL to MLS, and the UFC has as tight an operation as any of them. Compared to other MMA promotions? It’s night and day.

The people who make that happen work tirelessly and to the bone. With 42 events per year, how could they not be exhausted? It’s a ruthless grind, and while it’s not what everyone wants, the time to rest, recovery and recharge will certainly be appreciate by those who bounce from location to location around the world to help satisfy the endless UFC calendar.

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