Marlon Vera isn’t buying Jimmie Rivera’s injury withdrawal from UFC 247: ‘He’s finding a way out’

“At this point, I don’t give two f*cks about that fool.”

[autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] is not buying it.

The rising bantamweight contender was scheduled to fight Saturday at UFC 247 in Houston but had his bout with [autotag]Jimmie Rivera[/autotag] fall through just a couple of weeks away from the event. Rivera pulled out due to an undisclosed injury. It was a fight long in the making, as Vera and Rivera were linked to fight three years ago, but “El Terror” didn’t accept the fight citing that Vera wasn’t high enough in the rankings at the time.

Now, Vera (15-5-1 MMA, 9-4 UFC) has a feeling there were other reasons behind Rivera’s withdrawal from UFC 247.

“The first time he had a bunch of excuses – that he’s too much, that he will hurt me and lot of dumb sh*t. I just feel he doesn’t want to fight me because he knows what’s going to happen,” Vera told MMA Junkie. “I mean, let’s be real, we all go injured into a fight. We have to do stupid weight cuts, we have to f*ck our body up, we have to spar, so nobody goes in healthy.

“I have a bunch of sh*t going on, but we live with that. I just feel he’s finding a way out. That’s how I feel.”

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Vera has caught the attention of many with his recent success. The Ecuadorian has compiled five wins in a row, all coming via submission or TKO. He also broke into the UFC official rankings and sits at No. 14 on the bantamweight ladder.

“Chito” revealed the UFC tried to find him a replacement opponent, but the promotion was only able to offer newcomers – something he’s no longer interested in doing.

“I was going for a big fight,” Vera explained. “They offered me newcomers, but I’m not going back. I’m at a point where I’m closing in on a title shot, so I’m not taking a step back. It’s not like I’m coming off a loss, so I was like, ‘No thank you. I’m not doing that.’”

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Vera hopes the fight with Rivera gets rebooked soon, but he admits he’s losing patience. He wouldn’t mind taking on another challenger just as long as it’s a name that can further his career and path to the title.

“Honestly, if they rebook it soon, I might take it, but I’m not chasing him anymore,” Vera said. “I’m not really looking forward to fight him because he’s looking for a way out. At this point, I don’t give two f*cks about that fool.

“I was supposed to fight No. 7, so I want something worth it.”

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Jimmie Rivera injured, out of UFC 247 fight vs. Marlon Vera

Jimmie Rivera has withdrawn from his UFC 247 bout against Marlon Vera due to an undisclosed injury.

[autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] has waited over three years to take on [autotag]Jimmie Rivera[/autotag] – and now he’ll have to wait a little longer.

Rivera (22-4 MMA, 6-3 UFC) has withdrawn from their scheduled UFC 247 bout due to an undisclosed injury. Two people with knowledge of the situation informed MMA Junkie of the withdrawal but asked to remain anonymous as the UFC has yet to make an official announcement. It’s not yet known whether Vera (15-5-1 MMA, 9-4 UFC) will remain on the card against a new opponent.

UFC 247 takes place Feb. 8 at Toyota Center in Houston. The main card airs on pay-per-view, following prelims on ESPN and ESPN+.

In January 2017, Vera was briefly linked to a fight against Rivera at UFC Fight Night 103. After Bryan Caraway pulled out of the event due to injury, Vera was aligned to step in.

However, Rivera declined the bout and cited Vera’s standing in the division. Rivera also said he didn’t want to hurt “Chito” or take money away from Vera’s daughter, who was struggling with health issues at the time.

In an October interview with MMA Junkie, Vera voiced his desire to finally fight Rivera. There’s some unsettled business there, and Vera likes the stylistic matchup.

“I want Jimmie Rivera – I want to run this back,” Vera said. “I feel of all the ranked guys it’s the perfect fight. We were supposed to fight. The fight was announced. He pulled out with some dumb sort of excuse.

“I’m not mad or upset, but I want to fight. I feel like that’s the easiest fight, not because the guy is easy. It’s easy to get because we already were scheduled to fight before. We can run it back.”

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Maybe someday the two will settle the score inside the cage, but Feb. 8 will not be that day.

With the withdrawal, the latest UFC 247 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Champ Jon Jones vs. Dominick Reyes – for light heavyweight title
  • Champ Valentina Shevchenko vs. Katlyn Chookagian – for women’s flyweight title
  • Juan Adams vs. Justin Tafa
  • Mirsad Bektic vs. Dan Ige
  • Ilir Latifi vs. Derrick Lewis

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Marlon Vera vs. opponent TBA
  • Antonio Arroyo vs. Trevin Giles
  • Dhiego Lima vs. Alex Morono
  • Andrea Lee vs. Lauren Murphy

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 6:15 p.m. ET)

  • Mario Bautista vs. Miles Johns
  • Journey Newson vs. Domingo Pilarte
  • Andre Ewell vs. Jonathan Martinez

UFC 247 lineup finalized: Jon Jones vs. Dominick Reyes leads championship doubleheader

Check out the official lineup and broadcast plans for UFC 247, which takes place Feb. 8 in Houston.

UFC 247 will feature a championship double-header as two of the promotion’s most dominant champions get top billing.

UFC 247 takes place Feb. 8 at Toyota Center in Houston. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and UFC Fight Pass/ESPN+.

The main event features UFC light heavyweight champ [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] (25-1 MMA, 19-1 UFC) putting his title on the line against yet another young and hungry contender in undefeated [autotag]Dominick Reyes[/autotag] (12-0 MMA, 6-0 UFC).

In the co-main event, UFC women’s flyweight champion [autotag]Valentina Shevchenko[/autotag] (18-3 MMA, 7-2 UFC) will attempt to make her third title defense, when she faces [autotag]Katlyn Chookagian[/autotag] (13-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC).

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The card also will feature [autotag]Ilir Latifi[/autotag]’s heavyweight debut vs. the “Black Beast” [autotag]Derrick Lewis[/autotag], a matchup between featherweight prospects in [autotag]Mirsad Bektic[/autotag] and [autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag], and bantamweights [autotag]Jimmie Rivera[/autotag] and [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag], who look to break into 135-pound title contention.

The full UFC 247 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Champ Jon Jones vs. Dominick Reyes – for light heavyweight title
  • Champ Valentina Shevchenko vs. Katlyn Chookagian – for women’s flyweight title
  • [autotag]Juan Adams[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Justin Tafa[/autotag]
  • Mirsad Bektic vs. Dan Ige
  • Ilir Latifi vs. Derrick Lewis

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Jimmie Rivera vs. Marlon Vera
  • [autotag]Antonio Arroyo[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Trevin Giles[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Dhiego Lima[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Alex Morono[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Andrea Lee[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Lauren Murphy[/autotag]

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 6:15 p.m. ET)

  • [autotag]Mario Bautista[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Miles Johns[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Journey Newson[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Domingo Pilarte[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Andre Ewell[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jonathan Martinez[/autotag]

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Jimmie Rivera hopes win over Marlon Vera at UFC 247 would lead to top-five opponent

Jimmie Rivera doesn’t see much upside to his next fight but still hopes to land a top-five opponent with a win.

[autotag]Jimmie Rivera[/autotag] doesn’t see much upside to his next fight, but he still hopes to land a top-ranked opponent with a victory.

At UFC 247 on Feb. 8 in Houston, Rivera takes on [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag], a fighter who’s ranked seven spots behind him in the official UFC bantamweight rankings.

“The ‘Chito’ fight, I think it’s more of, there’s a lot more cons to the fight,” Rivera told MMA Junkie. “There’s a lot more benefit for him than there is for me, but on the other hand, I gotta go in there and obviously not take the fight lightly but gotta go in there and get a win, and try to get someone in the top five after.”

“I’m looking (for) a win over Chito to get me someone in the top five. Obviously it depends on performance but I’m looking for that top five.”

Rivera (22-4 MMA, 6-3 UFC) originally wanted to compete at UFC 244 in Madison Square Garden, but fights with Cody Stamann and Rob Font fell through, which caused him to miss out on the opportunity to fight in one of the world’s most famous arenas.

Instead, he will compete in Texas, the same state in which he last picked up a win, when he defeated John Dodson via unanimous decision at UFC 228.

“I really wanted to fight close to home,” Rivera said. “I really wanted to fight at MSG. I never got to fight at MSG so I’m a little upset that I didn’t get to do it. I love Texas, I love going there and fight. ”

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The fight with Vera almost materialized almost three years ago, when Vera offered to step in on short notice after Rivera lost his initial opponent, Bryan Caraway, due to injury. But Rivera rejected the replacement offer, as he thought Vera was not ranked highly enough in the division.

Three years later, Vera is enjoying the best run of his UFC career. He has finished his last five fights as he draws his biggest opportunity to date in Rivera.

Despite the impressive streak, Rivera just doesn’t think that Vera has competed against the division’s best, or against anyone who possesses his style.

“I think he’s gotten better, but I’m not trying to be mean, but I’m not super impressed,” Rivera said. “When I look at his fights, I look at how he’s done, I also look at who’s styles are maybe similar to mine. I really look at the fights he’s had in the top 10 but one that pops up, I’ve watched a few times, is the Lineker fight.

“I gauge the competition a lot from who he fights, even though I’ve watched the other fights against Frankie Saenz, unfortunately the other guys I don’t remember their names, but I watched one fight and I believe it was a finish, but it was a lefty, so it’s a little different because I’m not a lefty.”

Rivera has lost three of his last four bouts, which followed a remarkable 20-fight unbeaten run that included wins over Pedro Munhoz and Urijah Faber.

His three losses came to top contender Marlon Moraes, where he suffered a quick knockout loss, a unanimous decision to Aljamain Sterling, and finally his most recent loss, a back-and-forth battle with Petr Yan at UFC 238.

While Rivera isn’t dwelling on the past too much, he proceeded to break down what he thinks went wrong in those losses.

“With that fight (Sterling), I think it’s really my fault,” Rivera said. “I went, I didn’t have the best weight cut and I never recovered from it well, and I could tell when I watched the fight again, it showed, and in the last fight with the Petr Yan fight, it was a tough fight to actually really swallow. I won 14 minutes and 30 seconds of the fight, and only lost 15 seconds in the first and 15 seconds in the second.”

“I mean obviously yeah, I got dropped, but I didn’t get rocked where I was out and laid back flat. I got hit with a good shot, which was a shot I didn’t see, and I got back up and kept scrambling so that fight was really tough. Really tough to kinda take in just because I lost a very little bit of the fight out of 15 minutes.”

Rivera has taken part in a few lackluster fights, but he puts that on his opponents, who he believes were often afraid to exchange. He’s had his fair share of entertaining wars though, with the likes of Munhoz, Iuri Alcantara and Thomas Almeida, who all stood in the middle and traded.

“All my fights, they’re either a war because the person wants to stay in the pocket and I like that, or they’re not as entertaining because it depends on who it is.”

With Vera, Rivera isn’t too sure what to expect, but he’ll be ready either way.

“I feel like it can go anywhere,” Rivera said. “If he wants to go down to the ground, I’m super comfortable there. If he wants to keep it standing, I’m super comfortable there so I feel like it really could go anywhere.”

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Marlon Vera believes win over Jimmie Rivera would catapult his career

Marlon Vera discusses the implications of his upcoming bout with Jimmie Rivera at UFC 247.

[autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] knows what’s at stake in his next bout.

In arguably the biggest fight of his MMA career, the Ecuadorian fighter will take on top bantamweight contender Jimmie Rivera at UFC 247 on Feb. 8 in Houston, Texas. Rivera is seventh in the UFC official 135-pound rankings, making him one of the highest-ranked opponents Vera (17-5-1) MMA, 9-4 UFC) has faced.

But more than fighting someone who’s high on the ladder, Vera also enters the bout with plenty of momentum. The 27-year-old fighter is on an impressive five-fight win streak with all victories coming via submission or technical knockout.

A win over a name like Rivera paired with five stoppage wins could put Vera in a very good position in the division. Of this, “Chito” is well aware.

“One hundred percent, this fight is the one that’s going to set me on the path to the belt,” Vera told MMA Junkie. “After winning this fight, I will be No. 7 in the world and from that point on there’s probably two more well-done fights to get to fight for the title.

“So there are a lot of things on the line here. I’ve been very focused, and nothing will change for this fight. Eat, train sleep and when there’s time, then that’s for the family. Sometimes we say family first, but first is work because one does it for the family. So once I’m in camp my wife knows, I try to explain to my kids, and everything is towards the fight because winning that fight is more valuable than anything in the world. My head is 100 percent in this game.”

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Rivera is not on the wild 20-fight win streak that had him as one of the most promising contenders in the UFC just a couple years ago. In fact, he’s 1-3 since 2018, but those defeats have come to the top of the division – fighters who are currently in title contention.

Despite the recent loses, Vera still sees Rivera as a threat at 135 pounds and considers him to be among with the best.

“MMA math is never clear,” Vera said. “But what I do know is that watching the fight between Jimmie and Petr Yan, Jimmie was winning the entire time. He was hurting him, but he let Yan hurt him at the end of the first two rounds and that gives the advantage to Petr because a knockdown is worth more than leg kicks and volume striking. So he (Yan) had one knockdown in each round, that’s why he lost the fight.

“The fight with Marlon was a quick fight and in those quick fights it’s hard to gauge how good a person is. And we’ve seen that if Marlon doesn’t KO you in the first round, he slows down a bit, so it’s true he’s coming off two losses, but the loses are coming against the top five. It’s no easy defeats so that let’s me know he’s still tough.

“I’m working on improving and being stronger than him. And when the cage closes, I’m going to be the one with my hand raised. But I’m not only going to win, I’m going to finish him. I’m going to do what Sterling and Yan couldn’t do.”

Both Vera and Rivera were linked to fight years ago in early 2017 when Rivera’s original opponent for UFC Phoenix, Bryan Caraway, pulled out of their scheduled fight due to injury. Vera was offered as a replacement option for Rivera, but “El Terror” opted out, claiming Vera wasn’t good enough to fight him.

Now in the UFC’s rankings and on an impressive streak, Vera believes now is the perfect time to fight Rivera.

“I already proved that the ones who are lower on the ladder I finished, so it’s time to take on a bigger challenge and it’s now that I have to prove myself,” Vera explained. “With words everyone can, everyone can talk until they fall. I’m going to hell everyday so the day I step on the cage I’m comfortable. I’m training in a way that they can’t train. I’m going to my limits and then surpassing them.

“I know it’s not just words because you guys have seen how I train already. I think this is the fight that’s going to catapult me. It’s on a good time for me and a bad time for him. When we were first going to fight, it would’ve been much milder for him. The “Chito” that he’s getting now will make him cry.”

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Jimmie Rivera vs. Marlon Vera in the works for UFC 247

Jimmie Rivera and Marlon Vera have some unsettled business to settle at UFC 247.

Thirty-two months after the fight was originally offered, a bout between [autotag]Jimmie Rivera[/autotag] and [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] is in the works.

The bantamweight matchup between Rivera (22-4 MMA, 6-3 UFC) and Vera (15-5-1 MMA, 9-4 UFC) is targeted for UFC 247 on Feb. 8 in Houston, two people with knowledge of the situation informed MMA Junkie. The people asked to remain anonymous because the promotion has yet to make an announcement.

In January 2017, Vera was briefly linked to a fight against Rivera at UFC Fight Night 103. After Bryan Caraway pulled out of the event due to injury, Vera was aligned to step in.

However, Rivera declined the bout and cited Vera’s standing in the division. Rivera also said he didn’t want to hurt “Chito” or take money away from Vera’s daughter, who was struggling with health issues at the time.

In an October interview with MMA Junkie, Vera voiced his desire to finally fight Rivera. There’s some unsettled business there and Vera likes the stylistic matchup.

“I want Jimmie Rivera – I want to run this back,” Vera said. “I feel of all the ranked guys it’s the perfect fight. We were supposed to fight. The fight was announced. He pulled out with some dumb sort of excuse.

“I’m not mad or upset, but I want to fight. I feel like that’s the easiest fight, not because the guy is easy. It’s easy to get because we already were scheduled to fight before. We can run it back.”

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After winning five straight fights to kick off his UFC tenure, Rivera has been on a skid. The Tiger Schulmann’s product has dropped three of his past four fights. In June, Rivera dropped a unanimous decision to Petr Yan.

Vera is riding a lengthy winning streak entering UFC 247. Victorious in his past five, Vera has finished as many opponents. In his most recent outing at UFC on ESPN+ 19 in October, Vera finished Ewell with ground-and-pound in the third round.

With the addition, the UFC 247 lineup includes:

  • Champ Jon Jones vs. Dominick Reyes – for light heavyweight title
  • Champ Valentina Shevchenko vs. Katlyn Chookagian – for women’s flyweight title
  • Ilir Latifi vs. Derrick Lewis
  • Mirsad Bektic vs. Dan Ige
  • Ovince Saint Preux vs. Ryan Spann
  • Andrea Lee vs. Lauren Murphy
  • Juan Adams vs. Justin Tafa
  • Dhiego Lima vs. Alex Morono
  • Jimmie Rivera vs. Marlon Vera

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Nathaniel Wood has good reason for wanting Marlon Vera at UFC London

Nathaniel Wood wants to return to action at UFC London against the man who retired his mentor Brad Pickett: Marlon Vera.

In a crowded MMA landscape, where it’s easy to be swamped by the sheer number of fights on offer, a bout with a real back story can prove crucial to help pull in the fans and attract additional interest leading into an event. And English bantamweight [autotag]Nathaniel Wood[/autotag] thinks he has the perfect matchup in mind for UFC London on March 21.

“[autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] is the fight I’m pushing for,” Wood (16-3 MMA, 3-0 UFC) told MMA Junkie. “As of yet, I’ve got no fight booked. They haven’t even said that I’m definitely on the London card or not. So it’s something I’m pushing for, and hopefully they’ll give it to me.”

The choice of Vera (17-5-1 MMA, 9-4 UFC) is no accident. The Ecuadorian bantamweight is currently on a tear, riding a five-fight, five-finish, win streak. He’s never been stopped and he’s currently listed at No. 14 in the UFC’s official 135-pound rankings.

But besides the statistical challenge of facing a ranked opponent riding an impressive win streak, Wood has another reason for wanting to face Vera. He retired his coach.

Retiring a legend

March 18, 2017 was supposed to be a red-letter day for [autotag]Brad Pickett[/autotag]. The beloved Londoner had announced that his fight at UFC Fight Night 108 in his home town would be his last, and fight week was packed with special tributes to the man known throughout the MMA world as “One Punch.”

Walking out to songs from Cockney pub band “Chas n’ Dave,” wearing his suspenders and trademark trilby hat – a nod to his grandfather, a bare-knuckle boxer back in the 1920s – Pickett was instantly recognizable. And his all-action performances inside the cage often left a lasting impression, too as he became one of the most popular fighters to come out of the U.K.

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For his final fight, Pickett was all set to face Henry Briones, but when the Mexican pulled out of the contest just a week away from the fight, there was real concern that Pickett’s dream farewell at The O2 Arena would be scrapped. But a replacement was found in the form of Vera, who flew in to London and ensured the English veteran had the opportunity to compete for the final time in front of his own fans.

“I haven’t watched it for some time. I’ll probably go back and watch it again soon,” Pickett told me. “But I was winning that fight the whole time. And also, without wanting to sound too flash or whatever, I was really comfortable in the fight. If anything, I was taking it quite easy. I was just making sure I didn’t do anything crazy and making sure I won my last fight.”

Then, with just over a minute remaining, the unthinkable happened. Vera produced a picture-perfect head kick that connected flush to Pickett’s temple, sending him crashing to the canvas. Clearly scrambled, the “One Punch” tried to rally, but Vera swarmed the downed Brit with strikes to force the stoppage with just 70 seconds of the bout remaining.

In an instant, the electric atmosphere inside The O2 evaporated and was replaced by stunned silence. Eventually, the crowd rose to salute their fallen hero as he laid down his famous hat in the center of the octagon and left for the final time as a professional MMA fighter.

One of those stunned bystanders was Wood, who at the time was a rising star on the UK domestic scene and part of Pickett’s London gym at Team Titan. “Vera came in on short notice, and as far as I was concerned, Brad was doing perfectly fine,” he remembered. “Then, in the final round, he got caught with a head kick, which knocked him out.”

The rise of “The Prospect”

In the months that followed, Wood, with Pickett in his corner, went on to win four fights for European promotion Cage Warriors. All four were by KO, with the last three coming in the first round, as he captured the bantamweight title and made two spectacular title defenses. It saw him earn a contract with the UFC where, after his submission victory over Johnny Eduardo on his octagon debut, Wood gave an interesting angle to his preferred career progression.

“I got signed by the UFC, got my fight, and I had my little hit list – just a little bit of fun – where I said I wanted to avenge all my coach’s losses,” he said.

“Vera was one of the only ones to get back (to me). You could tell he didn’t find it that funny. He got really upset about it and started saying things like: ‘I knocked your coach out! I’ll do the same to you!’ and all that sort of stuff, which to be honest I found quite funny. It’s all fun and games to me.”

But now, after following his four successive knockouts in Cage Warriors with a hat-trick of consecutive submission finishes in the UFC, Wood is ready for ranked opposition and sees Vera in London as the ideal bout to catapult himself toward the division’s big names.

A no-brainer for UFC London?

Wood’s interaction with Vera after his UFC debut planted the seed for a matchup that both he and Pickett think would make a perfect booking for UFC London in March 2020.

It would take both Vera and Pickett back to the scene of their dramatic meeting back in 2017, while giving Wood the opportunity to take on the man who sent his mentor into retirement on a knockout loss.

“I’ve got no hatred towards the guy, but that makes it an exciting fight now,” said Wood. “Obviously every fight is important to me – I always train my hardest. But having that little bit of back and forth and the story behind it where he beat my coach, that would definitely make me get up out of bed quicker for training. For me, there’s a story to it, the student avenging his master. It’s just cool. It’s something you could imagine seeing in a movie. So I really like that idea.”

Pickett agrees, but stopped short of saying that revenge was a major aspect of the matchup. He just thinks it’s a slam-dunk matchmaking opportunity for the UFC.

“Revenge is a very powerful word that can be thrown around and used in the wrong context,” he explained. “I have nothing against Marlon Vera in any way whatsoever – I wish him all the best.

“In a weird way, when he beat me I was happy for him because he got some extra money for his family, and we know the backstory that he’s had with his children. It was very moving. So it’s not revenge, but it is a good fight. And if you make fights, you sometimes need ones that have an added story behind them to help make them even more exciting.”

And given the form of both men, plus the fact that Vera responded to Wood’s original comment about avenging Pickett’s losses, “The Prospect” says the fight works from both a divisional standpoint and a fan interest perspective.

“I’ve never had an opponent talk (expletive) to me before, so the fact he has makes for an exciting fight,” he explained. “I definitely think that he’s been doing well – I believe he’s on a five-fight win streak – so he’s definitely a step up in competition. But the guy he’s just beat (Andre Ewell), I had already beaten a year ago. So to me, it’s not an unrealistic matchup. We’re ranked around the same sort of level and he’s always game to fight, so I’d like to think he’d come to London and we could get it on.”

“I think Marlon Vera, just the story behind everything, it’s a no-brainer,” said Pickett. “It’s an easy fight to promote for the UFC. With the story of Vera coming in and beating me in my retirement fight, and Nathaniel coming up and fighting him, I just think it’s a really good selling story. I’m a matchmaker for my shows, and, for me, this just makes so much sense. It won’t be a hard sell, and it could easily go very high up the card, like a co-main underneath someone like Darren Till, for example.”

Passing the torch

If the fight does get made, it will put Pickett in an unusual position. As Wood’s coach, he will work with his fighter to put together a gameplan for the fight, and will spend hours pouring over fight footage to identify tendencies and openings. The difference for this fight would be that Pickett would have to relive one of the most emotional moments of his career. But the former UFC and WEC fighter said he is happy to put his own career in the rear-view mirror to help further the career of the fighters he now trains.

“I’ve had my time and I’ve had my limelight, so if I can help anyone else achieve what they want to do, I’ll always do that above myself,” he said. “You see some coaches get into the cage and it sometimes looks like they want to get on the canvas more than their fighter! It’s not about that for me. I’ve had my time, I’ve enjoyed my time and it’s my job to pass the torch now.”

And “One Punch” said that if Vera agrees to return to London for the fight, he thinks Wood has the skills, and the temperament, to defeat “Chito” and move toward the best of the bantamweight division in 2020.

“I’ve felt this guy, I know this guy a lot, and I know what he’s capable of,” he said of Vera. “And, of course, I know what Nathaniel’s capable of. And I 100% believe Nathaniel has everything he needs to beat this guy.”

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