ONE Championship overturns Eddie Alvarez DQ loss to no contest

An independent panel decided that Eddie Alvarez should have been given a warning for his punches to Iuri Lapicus.

[autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] got his wish.

Alvarez (30-8-2), who was disqualified for striking Iuri Lapicus in the back of the head in their ONE on TNT I fight earlier this month, will have his result overturned to a no contest, ONE officials said on Monday.

ESPN was first to report the news.

Alvarez, the former Bellator and UFC lightweight champion, got off to a great start when he secured top position and began raining down punches on what he thought was the side of Lapicus’ head. But referee Justin Brown ruled they were illegal strikes to the back of the head and, as a result, Alvarez was presented a red card.

A visibly distraught Alvarez was brought to tears backstage, asking for the fight to be overturned to a no contest. ONE CEO Chatri Sityodtong told MMA Junkie last week that the incident was under review and that the retraction of the red card would come down to Alvarez’s intent.

According to ONE officials, a panel of 15 independent industry experts and ONE Championship officials, judges, and referees reviewed the fight-ending sequence and decided that Alvarez should have been given a warning instead of a red card, thus overturning his disqualification loss to a no contest.

Alvarez is already set to return to action on Wednesday when he takes on Rae Yoon Ok (14-3) at ONE on TNT IV in Singapore.

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Video: Tougher to watch Demetrious Johnson KO’d or Eddie Alvarez DQ’d?

Both former UFC champions suffered heartache in their long-awaited returns at ONE on TNT I but in different ways.

ONE on TNT I last week saw the returns of [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] and [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] in their first fights since well before the COVID-19 pandemic, and it was a tough night to say the least.

In the main event, Johnson was finished for the first time in his career when he was knocked out by flyweight champion Adriano Moraes with a vicious grounded knee. And in the co-main event, Alvarez was hastily disqualified in his fight Iuri Lapicus for landing illegal punches that the referee deemed were to the back of the head just 1:02 into the first round.

Long waits to get back in action for both Johnson and Alvarez – 18 and 20 months, respectively – only to see the former UFC champions suffer heartache but in different ways. Alvarez was visibly distraught after his fight.

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And so, we ask: Was it more difficult to watch Johnson KO’d or Alvarez DQ’d? Our “Spinning Back Clique” panel of “Gorgeous” George Garcia, Brian “Goze” Garcia, Nolan King, and host John Morgan answer.

You can watch their discussion in the video above, and this week’s full episode below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5c9imTwPio

Demetrious Johnson lost fair and square, but grounded knees are still bad for MMA | Opinion

What’s so good about being able to knee a downed opponent who can’t defend himself?

[autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] has been vocal through the years that he’s in favor of grounded knees in mixed martial arts, and he let it be known again on the night Petr Yan lost his UFC bantamweight title by disqualification for delivering a brutal illegal knee to Aljamain Sterling’s head.

“Knees to a grounded opponent should be allowed!” Johnson tweeted after UFC 259 on March 6.

And so it’s ironic – isn’t it? – that the first stoppage loss of Johnson’s illustrious career would be caused by a grounded knee. They’re legal in ONE Championship, and he was on the receiving end Wednesday night at ONE on TNT I, where flyweight champion Adriano Moraes won by knockout in the second round of their title fight. With Johnson trying to get up off his back, Moraes pressed on his shoulders, posted him upright, and then blasted the former UFC champ in the face.

Johnson was done almost instantly, game over just like that.

You might think the fight-ending sequence would give Johnson cause to reconsider his stance on knees to a downed opponent, but no, it didn’t.

“I’m totally content with what happened. I’m not like, ‘That rule should be taken out,'” Johnson said afterward. “That’s what the rule was, Adriano used it to his advantage, and I was on the other end of the stick.”

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Credit to Johnson for being consistent, which is what we’d expect from one of the sport’s classiest fighters. But grounded knees – to put it in the simplest terms – are bad for MMA.

Let’s start with this: Of the notable disciplines that produce mixed martial artists – jiu-jitsu, boxing, wrestling, muay Thai, kickboxing, judo, karate, taekwondo – tell me which one allows knees to a grounded opponent. You can’t, because none of them do.

Why, then, would it make sense to have these athletes compete in MMA under a rule set that forces them to beware of strikes they’ve never had to defend? It doesn’t. The position Johnson was in against Moraes happens in MMA all the time, making grounded knees available at any moment when legal. And in this case, those years fighting for the UFC – which prohibits grounded knees under the Association of Boxing Commissions unified rules of mixed martial arts – likely played a factor in Johnson’s downfall.

But if the competition aspect isn’t compelling, what about the safety aspect? MMA is already dangerous enough without the ability to knee a downed opponent. Adding more danger to an already brutal sport is unnecessary.

Take it from UFC Hall of Famer Michael Bisping.

“I’m not for a guy being on his knees and kneeing him square in the head if you’re standing up,” Bisping told MMA Junkie. “Because you can generate so much power, so much power like that, and you can really hurt someone. We’ve been very lucky. We’ve never seen, like, a tragic accident in the UFC. We don’t want to do things that might encourage that one day. All this hard work the UFC has done in the media and making this sport as widely accepted as it is, all it needs is one f*cking death. And God forbid, you know what I mean? Things change.”

Nobody wants that.

So, yes, Adriano Moraes deserves credit for his win over one of MMA’s all-time greats. At the end of the day, those are the rules in ONE Championship.

But don’t get it twisted: Grounded knees still suck.

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Heartbreaking video shows Eddie Alvarez distraught after he was disqualified at ONE on TNT I

It was tough to see Eddie Alvarez hurting after he was disqualified for illegal strikes on Iuri Lupicus.

[autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] hadn’t fought since August 2019, and he entered ONE on TNT I rejuvenated and ready to make a run at another title.

Alvarez’s fight with [autotag]Iuri Lapicus[/autotag] was going well on Wednesday night, too. In the early going, the former Bellator and UFC lightweight champion had secured a dominant top position and began raining punches on Lapicus. The only problem is that, while Alvarez believed his punches landed to the side Lapicus’ head, the referee ruled they were striking the back of his head.

The result was a disqualification at the 1:02 mark of the first round. Not a warning, not a point deduction, the referee was quick to disqualify Alvarez.

Afterward, ONE Championship shared video of a Alvarez absolutely distraught backstage at Singapore Indoor Stadium (via Twitter).

It’s absolutely tough to see Alvarez in this emotional state, and we could only imagine the frustration and heartbreak he must’ve been feeling in that moment. To lose more than a year of his career because of the COVID-19 pandemic only to come back and have his first fight end in this fashion? Brutal. It also may not have helped to see Lupicus getting carted off on a stretcher. Being so emotional about the situation was understandable.

In his post-fight interview, Alvarez made it clear that he would like ONE Championship to overturn the result.

“I just need to sit down and talk to ONE, make sure they correct this,” Alvarez said. “It’s not right. What happened was not right.”

Hard to disagree.

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.

Demetrious Johnson still wants to see knees to grounded opponents despite knockout loss at ONE on TNT I

Demetrious Johnson still thinks the rule of kneeing a downed opponent should be legal despite being on the receiving end at ONE on TNT I.

Despite the clear damage one such strike did to him, [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] still thinks kneeing a downed opponent should be legal.

The rule is illegal in the UFC, where we recently saw Petr Yan lose his bantamweight title to Aljamain Sterling after he kneed him while he was grounded, resulting in a disqualification.

However, in ONE Championship, where Johnson currently competes, the strike is legal. “Mighty Mouse” tweeted his support of the ruleset right after the Yan vs. Sterling fight, suggesting that the strike should be allowed.

Ironically, Johnson (30-4-1) was on the receiving end of a knee to the head while downed when he was knocked out by ONE flyweight champion Adriano Moraes (19-3) at ONE on TNT I on Wednesday. It was the first time Johnson has been stopped in his career, but despite the loss, has no problems with ONE’s ruleset.

“I like these rules,” Johnson said following the fight. “Like I said, it’s a progression of a fight. I went down on my back. I was coming up for an underhook, Adriano had me posted, he blasted a knee, the fight’s over, it’s done, I don’t get anymore concussions. It’s just done, and it was a different position than I’ve been in. Adriano did a good job of using his length. He fully extended me and landed the knee.”

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He continued, “Like I said, it ended the fight. I wasn’t stalling one bit. I was trying to get up and fight, and I got blasted with a knee. My very first fight in ONE Championship, I did it to Yuya Wakamatsu and ended up getting the finish. The rule is meant to be there to keep the fight progressing and end the fight. So if Adriano wasn’t able to land that knee, yes, I would have still been in that fight, so he would have had to do something totally different. I’m totally content with what happened. I’m not like, ‘That rule should be taken out.’ That’s what the rule was, Adriano used it to his advantage, and I was on the other end of the stick.”

After the loss, Johnson expressed his interest in potentially dabbling in a kickboxing match. While he hasn’t necessarily given up on his quest for the belt, the former UFC flyweight king likes that he’s able to experiment with different alternatives at ONE.

“One of the reasons that I came to ONE Championship is that I have options,” Johnson said. “If I want to do a kickboxing match, I can do that. Obviously yes, I can go back into mixed martial arts and work my way back up to a title shot, but I’m just going to go home and just chill and relax and ‘What do I want to do next; would you like to try your hand at kickboxing?’

“Maybe I try kickboxing and I go out there and get the brakes blown off me, but at the end of the day, it’s about trying and exploring. You get one career. You get one career, and I want to make the best of it and to be able to say I’ve done a professional kickboxing under ONE Championship would be dope. So I’m going to go home, relax, let my body heal, and go from there.”

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MMA Junkie Radio #3147: Bellator president Scott Coker

Thursday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here and will be live on SportsCastr at noon ET.

Thursday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here and will be live on SportsCastr at noon ET.

On episode 3,147, the boys welcome in Bellator president Scott Coker to help preview this weekend’s big Bellator 256 event. Additionally, George and “Goze” will recap a historic ONE on TNT 1 event, while also looking ahead to this weekend’s UFC on ABC 2.

Stream or download this and all episodes of MMA Junkie Radio over at OmnyStudio. You can also catch it on Apple PodcastsSpotifyStitcher, and more. A new episode of the podcast is released every Monday and Thursday.

Eddie Alvarez wants ONE on TNT I disqualification overturned: ‘It was a bad call’

After taking time to review the tape of his fight at ONE on TNT I, Eddie Alvarez believes the result needs to be overturned.

After taking time to review the tape of his fight at ONE on TNT I, [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] believes the result needs to be overturned.

“I was able to watch the clip of the fight and see everything, and it was a bad call from the referee’s side,” Alvarez said following Wednesday’s event at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

In the opening round of the first ONE event to ever air in the U.S. live in primetime, Alvarez (10-3) took opponent Iuri Lapicus (15-1) to the canvas. Once there, Alvarez was able to take top position and control the legs, at which point Lapicus pressed his face against his opponent, leaving only the back of his head exposed.

Alvarez threw a few right hands that seemed to land to the back of the head, and referee Justin Brown issued a verbal warning. At that point, Lapicus fell back to the canvas, and Alvarez unleashed a few big hammerfists that ended the fight. However, rather than a TKO finish, Alvarez was issued a red card.

“If I was punching him in the back if the head, then you stand him up, right?” Alvaez asked. “And I get a point (deducted)? You don’t let me knock the guy out. I knocked the guy out. He turned his head, and they just let me keep hammerfisting him. Stand it up. If there’s illegal shots going on, stand the fight up.”

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Alvarez, who was clearly emotional immediately following the fight, said Lapicus’ health is really of primary importance for now, but once that’s settled, he believes there’s only one proper course of action to take.

“I just need to sit down and talk to ONE, make sure they correct this,” Alvarez said. “It’s not right. What happened was not right.

“It shouldn’t have been a DQ. It was a mistake. Whoever made the final decision made a mistake, and I’m going to respectfully try to get it reversed. That’s all. I don’t want to get in a fight with anyone. I don’t want to be mad at anyone. I just want everything to go back and get looked at. I just want the truth. That’s it. I just want the truth.”

To see highlights from Alvarez’s post-fight media scrum, check out the video above.

ONE on TNT I: Twitter reacts to Demetrious Johnson’s KO loss, Eddie Alvarez’s DQ loss

Check out the top Twitter reaction to Demetrious Johnson and Eddie Alvarez’s losses at ONE on TNT I.

ONE Championship made its debut on TNT on Wednesday with ONE on TNT I, and the event produced a pair of stunning outcomes.

First, [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] (30-8) was disqualified for illegal punches to the back of the head of Iuri Lupicas (15-1) just 62 seconds into their bout, then minutes later, former UFC champ and all time great [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] (30-4-1) was finished for the first time in his career when he was knocked out in Round 2 by Adriano Moraes (19-3) in their main event title bout at the Singapore Indoor Stadium.

The MMA world was left reeling after the show, and an outpour of reactions lit up social media. For more, check below for the top Twitter reactions to ONE on TNT I.

ONE on TNT I results: Eddie Alvarez disqualified for illegal punches

ONE Championship’s run on primetime in the U.S. got off to a rather frustrating start, with Eddie Alvarez disqualified in the first round.

ONE Championship’s run on primetime in the U.S. got off to a rather frustrating start, with [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] (10-8) disqualified in the first round of his lightweight contest with [autotag]Iuri Lapicus[/autotag] (15-1).

After a brief feeling-out process to start the fight, Alvarez shot inside for a takedown and was able to drag the action to the canvas in the opening minute. Seated near the cage and with his opponent in a dominant position, Lapicus turned his face toward the fence, leaving only the back of his head exposed. Alvarez threw a few right hands that landed to the base of the skull – and Lapicus screamed out before falling back to the canvas.

Referee Justin Brown immediately intervened as Alvarez turned to hammerfists. Following a brief moment of confusion, Brown presented Alvarez with a red card.

After the call was made, a clearly emotional Alvarez said he thought the blows were legal but apologized for the transgression and expressed concern for his opponent’s well-being as he was carted off in a stretcher.

“You guys put me in a cage,” Alvarez said. “The referee, he’s in there. Whatever call he makes, that’s it. I apologize. I hope Iuri is OK.”

ONE on TNT I took place at Singapore Indoor Stadium and aired live on TNT in the U.S.

ONE flyweight champion Adriano Moraes faces former UFC champ Demetrious Johnson in the night’s main event, which is still to come.

How to watch ONE on TNT 1: Fight card, start time, results, odds, live stream for Moraes vs. Johnson

Here’s how to watch the Adriano Moraes vs. Demetrious Johnson flyweight title bout from Singapore.

ONE Championship kicks off the most prolific month in its history this week with the first of four straight events on TNT.

Here’s how to watch the Adriano Moraes vs. Demetrious Johnson flyweight title bout from Singapore.