The hype surrounding Mauricio Ruffy is real, with Conor McGregor comparisons flying.
[autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag] has another opponent locked for UFC 309 after the withdrawal of [autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag].
Stepping in on short notice is Peru’s [autotag]James Llontop[/autotag], a Dana White’s Contender Series alum who is in search of his first UFC victory. The lightweight clash is penciled in to be the featured prelim Nov. 16 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Two people with knowledge of the matchup recently confirmed the change to MMA Junkie but asked to remain anonymous as the promotion has yet to make an official announcement. Te La Canté MMA first reported the new matchup Tuesday.
Ruffy (10-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) has struggled to find and keep opponents since a scintillating promotional debut knockout of Jamie Mullarkey in February. He was targeted for fights at UFC 303 and UFC 307 prior to his final arrival at UFC 309.
Llontop (14-4 MMA, 2-0 UFC) entered the UFC on a 12-fight winning streak, which was snapped when he was submitted by Chris Padilla in April. Llontop returned in August and lost a split decision to Viacheslav Borshchev.
Check out the full UFC 309 lineup below:
MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)
Champion Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic – for heavyweight title
Michael Chandler vs. Charles Oliveira – five-round bout
Viviane Aruajo vs. Karine Silva
Paul Craig vs. Bo Nickal
Eryk Anders vs. Chris Weidman
PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPNews, 8 p.m. ET)
Mauricio Ruffy vs. James Llontop
Nikita Krylov vs. Azamat Murzakanov
Jonathan Martinez vs. Marcus McGhee
Damon Jackson vs. Jim Miller
EARLY PRELIMINARY CARD
Lucas Almeida vs. David Onama
Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Mickey Gall
Oban Elliott vs. Bassil Hafez
Veronica Hardy vs. Eduarda Moura
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
With UFC 308 in the books, the promotion’s attention turns to its yearly New York pay-per-view.
UFC 309 takes place Nov. 16 at Madison Square Garden and is headlined by a highly anticipated heavyweight title fight between champion [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] and former champion [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag].
During the UFC 308 broadcast Saturday, the promotion officially announced the full 13-fight lineup with five main card fights and eight prelims. The main card takes place on ESPN+ pay-per-view after prelims on ESPNews and ESPN+.
In the co-main event, lightweight stars [autotag]Michael Chandler[/autotag] and [autotag]Charles Oliveira[/autotag] throw down in a five-round bout. The main card rounds out with [autotag]Viviane Araujo[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Karine Silva[/autotag], [autotag]Paul Craig[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Bo Nickal[/autotag], and [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Chris Weidman[/autotag].
The featured prelim is currently half-unknown with [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag] in need of a replacement for the withdrawn [autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag].
Other notable prelims include [autotag]Nikita Krylov[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Azamat Murzakanov[/autotag], [autotag]Jonathan Martinez[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Marcus McGhee[/autotag], and [autotag]Damon Jackson[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jim Miller[/autotag].
Check out the full UFC 309 lineup below:
MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)
Champion Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic – for heavyweight title
Michael Chandler vs. Charles Oliveira – five-round bout
Viviane Aruajo vs. Karine Silva
Paul Craig vs. Bo Nickal
Eryk Anders vs. Chris Weidman
PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPNews, 8 p.m. ET)
Mauricio Ruffy vs. TBA
Nikita Krylov vs. Azamat Murzakanov
Jonathan Martinez vs. Marcus McGhee
Damon Jackson vs. Jim Miller
EARLY PRELIMINARY CARD
Lucas Almeida vs. David Onama
Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Mickey Gall
Oban Elliott vs. Bassil Hafez
Veronica Hardy vs. Eduarda Moura
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
Mauricio Ruffy once again needs an opponent after Charlie Campbell withdrew from their UFC 309 bout due to injury.
The sage of booking [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag]’s second UFC appearance continues.
Ruffy (10-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) is once again opponent-less for UFC 309 after [autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag] (9-2 MMA, 2-0 UFC) withdrew. The search is once again on to find a willing opponent for the Nov. 16 event at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Two people with knowledge of the situation recently informed MMA Junkie of the change but asked to remain anonymous since the promotion has yet to make an official announcement.
The Fighting Nerds’ Ruffy dazzled fight fans in his UFC debut in May as he stalked and knocked out seasoned veteran Jamie Mullarkey inside the first round. Since then, the promotion has tried to book Ruffy for at least three different pay-per-view events (UFC 303, UFC 307, and now UFC 309) but have not found an opponent to make it to the cage.
With the change, the UFC 309 lineup includes:
Champ Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic – for heavyweight title
Michael Chandler vs. Charles Oliveira
Viviane Araujo vs. Karine Silva
Paul Craig vs. Bo Nickal
Eryk Anders vs. Chris Weidman
Mauricio Ruffy vs. TBA
Nikita Krylov vs. Azamat Murzakanov
Damon Jackson vs. Jim Miller
Veronica Hardy vs. Eduarda Moura
Jonathan Martinez vs. Marcus McGhee
Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Mickey Gall
Bassil Haffez vs. Oban Elliot
Lucas Almeida vs. David Onama
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
Mauricio Ruffy’s UFC debut had some fans speculating if he’ll be “the Brazilian Conor McGregor.”
A lightweight banger is set for New York.
[autotag]Charlie Campbell[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag] has been added to UFC 309, the Nov. 16 event at Madison Square Garden.
Two people with knowledge of the matchup recently informed MMA Junkie of the booking but asked to remain anonymous as the promotion has yet to make an official announcement. The bout was first reported Monday by Ag.Fight.
Campbell (9-2 MMA, 2-0 UFC) steps into a slot on the promotion’s matchmaking schedule opposite Ruffy (10-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) that’s been vacant for a while.
The promotion has sought to book Ruffy since UFC 303 in June, but has struggled to find him a willing opponent. Ruffy was listed on the fight card graphic for the initial UFC 307 announcement but did not end up competing on the Oct. 5 card.
There’s much hype surrounding The Fighting Nerds‘ Ruffy, who teed up an electric promotional debut when he pummeled Jamie Mullarkey at UFC 301 in May. The win was his fifth in a row. Given his flashy style and 100 percent TKO rate in wins, Ruffy has drawn comparisons by many fans to Conor McGregor.
New York’s Campbell will fight in his home state as he looks to extend his winning streak to four. In his two UFC appearances to date, Campbell knocked out Alex Reyes and won a unanimous decision over Trevor Peek.
With the addition, the UFC 309 lineup includes:
Champion Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic – for heavyweight title
Michael Chandler vs. Charles Oliveira
Paul Craig vs. Bo Nickal
Eryk Anders vs. Chris Weidman
Viviane Araujo vs. Karine Silva
Nikita Krylov vs. Azamat Murzakanov
Charlie Campbell vs. Mauricio Ruffy
Veronica Hardy vs. Eduarda Moura
Jonathan Martinez vs. Marcus McGhee
Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Mickey Gall
Bassil Haffez vs. Oban Elliot
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
Led by Caio Borralho and coach Pablo Sucupira, Nerds are taking over the UFC – and they’re looking for revenge.
[autotag]Caio Borralho[/autotag] sat in the corner of a São Paulo gym and glanced up at the clock on the wall. The time for the meetup was near, but there was no sign of his man yet.
Fighters filed in, ready for their training sessions. Behind them entered a smaller man. He didn’t strike Borralho as a fighter. Borralho wasn’t sure exactly who he was looking for, but this couldn’t be the guy.
“Are you Caio? Are you here to train?” he asked.
Borralho nodded and replied, “Yeah, I came to train.”
“Oh, yeah,” the man responded without hesitation. “Let’s go. You’re going to train with me.”
Borralho followed the man, questioning the decision making that led him to this point.
“With this guy?” Borralho thought to himself.
It was 2014 and a few weeks prior to the meetup with the man who would change the course of his life, Borralho asked friend and fellow fighter Bruno Murata how he could fast-track his striking game.
At that time, Borralho was solely a grappler. His standup game was novice, so Murata recommended a mutual friend, Pablo Sucupira, a muay Thai competitor and boxing specialist.
“What the f*ck? OK, I’m not going to go hard with this thin guy. I’m not going to hurt him his first day,” Borralho remembers thinking.
Wrong.
What surprised Borralho more than Sucupira’s unassuming appearance was the beatdown he dished out during their first training session. Borralho remembers peeling himself up off the mat, depleted after just a few minutes.
“Man, that was the biggest ass beating I’ve ever gotten in my life,” Borralho recalled.
Nerds unite
The hard training session that day marked the start of a beautiful bond between teacher and pupil. Initially, Sucupira had one foot in the boxing world and Borralho cross-training with Demian Maia’s team. But as time passed, Sucupira became Borralho’s go-to coach, and Borralho became Sucupira’s star student. Eventually, Sucupira turned his full attention to MMA and decided to start his own gym. Borralho, of course, went with him.
The Fighting Nerds team now consists of one dozen coaches and dozens more fighters. But at the start, there was just two men.
“The name of the fighter who started all of this was Caio Borralho,” Sucupira told MMA Junkie. “When he arrived in the team, he was very raw, yes. I started to work with him. I always had a different vision of the fight. He was one of the guys who truly believed in myself and my vision. He paid the price doing the different things that I proposed to him and the different way of fighting. Then things started to pay off.”
Their gym, formally named Combat Club São Paulo, was literally built with a hammer and a nail by Sucupira.
“I painted the walls,” Borralho told MMA Junkie, laughing. “We built a big ring. We put a big octagon, the same size as the UFC octagon. We built that inside the gym. We actually built that together.”
The team slowly gained more members. Maia’s grappling coach, Wagner Mota, jumped on board, but Sucupira wanted an MMA-centric mind too. So he sought out Flavio Alvaro, a Brazilian legend with more than 70 fights.
“He said, ‘Oh, Pablo. I don’t know. Maybe if you pay me a lot,'” Sucupira recalls. “I didn’t have any money. I said, ‘No, no, no, brother.’ I don’t have money. If you want to come, you have to believe in what we’re doing here. Because it’s going to be a bet. I promise you’ll have something. But now, we just have the athletes.’
“He went to our gym, and I spoke with him a lot about my vision. He met Caio and the other guys. By the end, he said, ‘Hey, I’m here for free. I don’t want any money. Let’s make those guys big stars and then I get some money.'”
Classroom mentality
The MMA landscape is full of “Pitbulls” and “Lionhearts.” Sucupira and Borralho refused trying to fabricate faux street cred. They were unapologetically nerdy.
Growing up, Borralho loved school. He taught math and chemistry to peers for money. Sucupira worked a desk job as a copywriter.
“Nobody (at work) gave me credit,” Sucupira said. “They said, ‘You’re too crazy. Your ideas are too wild.’ This hurt me a lot. I quit the marketing and just started fighting. But one day I needed to use that.”
One day he did use that marketing background in a monumental way. Brainstorming team names, he blurted out “The Fighting Nerds.” It was an instant selection.
“I was (immediately) like, ‘That’s the name. That’s the name that consumes everything,'” Borralho remembers.
Of all the Fighting Nerd branding angles, none is more distinct than the signature glasses sported by the fighters and corners, and even occasionally in-cage interviewers Joe Rogan and Daniel Cormier. Even the UFC, with its generally restrictive policy against props, approved the glasses after some convincing by Sucupira.
“In the beginning, they said no,” Sucupira said. “But what I told them is I’m not making any money. I’m not selling glasses. I don’t have a sponsorship with glasses. It’s just the logo of our team. It’s the wig of Paddy Pimblett or Khabib. It’s the same as the big wig that they use. So it’s the same. I just put the glasses on.”
Unanimously, the glasses were a hit.
“This is an easy gift to give to people and attach people to our team,” Sucupira said. “So The Fighting Nerd glasses show to the world that the fighters are smart, because they think when nobody can think. When you’re inside a fight, inside a cage, with another fighter trying to kill you, it’s hard to think inside there. The adrenaline is too strong. If you’re able to think in that situation, you are one of the smartest guys in the world. This is what the glasses represent, that we think when nobody can think. We think when bullets are being fired.
“The Fighting Nerds are the most intelligent guys in the world, because they think when they are throwing kicks, throwing punches inside the cage.”
Sucupira buys hundreds of pairs of lens-less black plastic glasses at a time. The signature piece of tape on each pair, Sucupira adds by hand.
“Just for this fight, I brought 350,” Sucupira said with a big grin. “… We make them. I bought just the glasses and then put the tape here. We keep the whole day doing it. It’s like therapy.”
The best thing about the glasses, explained Borralho (who admits he wore taped glasses in high school), is how it’s shown them how much they are respected across the globe after years being ridiculed for their name and appearance on the Brazilian regional scene.
“When I am in the (UFC Performance Institute), guys from other teams go, ‘Oh, give me a glasses,’ and they put the glasses on,” Sucupira said. “The most impressive thing, in Brazil, we had a fight. We fought, and our fighter won the fight, but the other guy went to our locker room and asked for a glasses, a Fighting Nerd glasses. He said, ‘I lost the fight, but can I have a Fighting Nerd glasses?’
“I thought, ‘This is bigger than the team.'”
Not f*cking leaving
The Fighting Nerds breakthrough moment finally came in 2021. Seven years after the journey began, Borralho received an offer to compete for a UFC contract on Dana White’s Contender Series.
In Sucupira’s coaching methodology, fighting is a problem needing to be solved. A proponent of formulating game plans specific to individual opponents, Sucupira instilled in Borralho a mentality of fighting smarter, not tougher.
“You have to find the best way to solve any problem,” Sucupira explained. “A fight is a big problem to solve.”
When Borralho fought Aaron Jeffery on the series, he solved the equation … but only part of it. The fight wasn’t exciting enough for Dana White, who passed on extending a contract offer.
The shuttle ride back to the hotel was quiet until Borralho perked up.
“Pablo, I’m not coming back,” Borralho said.
Sucupira replied, “How’s that, Caio? You have to come back.”
“No, I’m not coming back. I’m just coming back with the contract,” Borralho argued back. “I’m just going to train here.”
Sucupira texted Mick Maynard to inform him of the impromptu decision.
The response dots appeared. Maynard was typing.
“Awesome,” Maynard wrote back.
The gamble paid off. Maynard circled back a few weeks later and offered Borralho a short notice fill-in spot, up a weight class vs. Jesse Murray.
It was an easy yes. This time, however, the approach needed tweaking. Excitement was a necessary part of the equation.
“We knew that we needed to put on a show,” Sucupira said. “That was the way to solve that problem – and he did that. He put on a show.”
Borralho finished Murray in Round 1, and the UFC contract came, a massive moment for the entire squad of Nerds.
“I felt it was really hard to burst onto the scene,” Sucupira said. “But when we did that, it was a takeover.”
Nerd World Order
Three years later, it’s another milestone. Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 62 headliner between Borralho and Jared Cannonier will mark the team’s first main event.
The Nerds enter with a tremendous amount of momentum. Although Borralho is the unofficial captain, other clubhouse leaders have emerged. Fans have become attached to the fighters – and their personalities.
“Everyone is different,” Borralho said. “We see [autotag]Carlos Prates[/autotag]. He smokes cigarettes and all this sh*t. He drinks a lot and other stuff. But when it comes about fighting, about studying, about putting a serious thing on the line, he’s one of the best. He trains his ass off. He’s very into it. Then we have [autotag]Jean Silva[/autotag], who is a crazy motherf*cker that barks, that talks sh*t a lot and other stuff. But when it comes about training, about fighting, about studying, he’s one of the hardest workers that I’ve ever seen.”
More than the glasses or their in-cage success, the team is tied by the message they want to send. It’s time for nerds to get their revenge – and inspire.
“When you think about a nerd guy, you always see a guy who wants to be the best in the class room,” Borralho said. “The nerd, if he’s going into a test and he took a B+, he would be upset. Like, ‘I wanted my A+.’ …We have a big message to inspire people. We’ve seen a lot of bully things happening in the world. A lot of this sh*t happening, it’s bully payback time.
“… Imagine a guy who suffers bullying all the time for being a nerd or wearing glasses or anything like that, and he sees big nerds fighting on the biggest stages of the world, fighting the baddest guys in the world and beating their ass. It’s really bully payback, so that really inspires them, not just to fight but just to be whoever they want. They have this powerful thing inside of them, just to overcome everything that happens in their life about bullying and other sh*t.”
Sucupira echoed, “We prove that you don’t need to be a bully to win fights. You don’t need to be angry to beat a guy. You don’t need to vibe in a bad way. We knock people out. We do bonus performances. But we do it in a love vibe. We do it liking each other.”
Beyond Borralho and the cigarette-smoking sniper Prates and the barking Silva, there’s [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag], a powerful striker who already has fans buzzing after just one UFC appearance. There’s [autotag]Bruna Brasil[/autotag], who recently beat Molly McCann. There’s veteran [autotag]Thiago Moises[/autotag], who joined the team after years at American Top Team. There’s UFC lightweight [autotag]Kaynan Kruschewsky[/autotag].
Sucupira and Borralho say to also keep an eye out for unsigned prospects Icaro Brito, Geovanis Palacios, Natalia Alves, Felipe Douglas, and Fabricio Azevedo, who could make a splash in years to come.
“I’m more hungry. I’m more pumped,” Sucupira said. “I like to be the best that I can. Now we are in the UFC, I think we have the structure to go one step ahead also. You can expect a better Fighting Nerds each year, more guys, more performances, and you can count on that. In one or two years, you can count on a Fighting Nerd champion.”
Sucupira and Borralho constructed a gym. They crafted a mentality. They formed a team around them and built a culture. Borralho gets emotional reflecting on the journey now that it’s paying off.
“I’m always thankful because when we started this sh*t, we were like, ‘Maybe we’re just crazy guys who believe a lot in ourselves. Let’s see if this works.’ We didn’t know. We already knew, but we didn’t know,” Borralho said. “To see it all the way through and all that we have already accomplished and to see all that we will accomplish, because it’s just the beginning of the takeover.
“… Seeing everything changing: money perspective, fame perspective, sparring perspective. It’s crazy. It’s weird to think about how far we’ve come and how far we’re still going. It’s the first headliner, the first of many. I’m top 12 in the world, soon to be top five.”
And perhaps someday, Sucupira and Borralho will break out the hammers and nails once more – to hang up something special.
“We’ll put a big belt on the wall for sure,” Borralho said.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
First Mauricio Ruffy sent a stern message with his performance in his UFC debut, then with his words after an impressive win.
First [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag] sent a stern message with his performance in his UFC debut, then with his words after the win.
Ruffy (10-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) brought the violence at UFC 301 as he defeated Jamie Mullarkey by first-round TKO on Saturday at Jeunesse Arena in Rio de Janeiro. Ruffy, making his promotional debut after earning a UFC contract last year on Dana White’s Contender Series, finished the fight with a flying knee and an arsenal of strikes at the 4:42 mark.
Even though it was just one fight in the UFC for the 30-year-old Brazilian, that didn’t stop Ruffy from putting lightweight champion Islam Makhachev on notice during his post-fight interview with Daniel Cormier.
“I have a message for Islam Makhachev, a nice message: Hey, enjoy your days at the top,” Ruffy said. “I know you’re upset because I beat your friend, but enjoy your days because a new king is coming.”
Ruffy’s win on DWCS came against Makhachev training partner Raimond Magomedaliev by third-round TKO last October.
Including that fight and his UFC debut, Ruffy is on a five-fight winning streak. Ruffy no doubt is facing a long road before even being considered for a fight with Makhachev, but he’s at least on the right track.
Fighters from Saturday’s UFC 301 took home UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay totaling $280,000.
RIO DE JANEIRO – Fighters from Saturday’s UFC 301 event took home UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay totaling $280,000.
The program, a comprehensive plan that includes outfitting requirements, media obligations and other items under the fighter code of conduct, replaces the previous payments made under the UFC Athlete Outfitting Policy.
UFC 301 took place at Rio Arena. The main card aired on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN2 and ESPN+.
The full UFC 301 UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance payouts included:
Under the UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance program’s payout tiers, which appropriate the money generated by Venum’s multi-year sponsorship with the UFC, fighters are paid based on their total number of UFC bouts, as well as Zuffa-era WEC fights (January 2007 and later) and Zuffa-era Strikeforce bouts (April 2011 and later). Fighters with 1-3 bouts receive $4,000 per appearance; 4-5 bouts get $4,500; 6-10 bouts get $6,000; 11-15 bouts earn $11,000; 16-20 bouts pocket $16,000; and 21 bouts and more get $21,000. Additionally, champions earn $42,000 while title challengers get $32,000.
In addition to experience-based pay, UFC fighters will receive in perpetuity royalty payments amounting to 20-30 percent of any UFC merchandise sold that bears their likeness, according to officials.
Full 2024 UFC Promotional Guidelines Compliance payouts:
Mauricio Ruffy made quite the violent first impression at UFC 301 as he bloodied and battered Jamie Mullarkey before a mercy stoppage.
[autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag] brought the violence to UFC 301 when he brutally beat down veteran lightweight [autotag]Jamie Mullarkey[/autotag].
On Saturday’s prelims at Jeunesse Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Ruffy (10-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) hit Mullarkey (17-8 MMA, 5-6 UFC) with an arsenal of strikes for a TKO stoppage at 4:42 of Round 1.
[lawrence-related id=2738100]
A Ruffy right hand stumbled Mullarkey before a flying knee connected. A second right hand from Ruffy put Mullarkey down and follow-up punches rained down. Mullarkey rose to his feet, but Ruffy beat the brakes off him again. The second time Mullarkey toppled to the canvas was enough for referee Mike Beltran to wave off the fight.
Ruffy, 30, has won five fights in a row. All five of those victories were stoppages due to strikes. Saturday was his promotional debut after he earned his UFC deal with a Dana White’s Contender Series win by TKO against Raimond Magomedaliev.
Mullarkey, 29, has lost two fights in a row and three of his most recent four. All three of those defeats were knockout/TKOs.
Up-to-the-minute UFC 301 results include:
Mauricio Ruffy def. Jamie Mullarkey via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 4:42
Check out the best photos from Mauricio Ruffy’s first-round TKO win over Jamie Mullarkey at UFC 301.
Check out the best photos from [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag]’s first-round TKO win over [autotag]Jamie Mullarkey[/autotag] at UFC 301 at Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro. (Fight and venue photos by Jason Silva, USA Today Sports)