UFC 249 ‘Fight Motion’: Justin Gaethje’s masterclass against Tony Ferguson slowed down

Justin Gaethje put on a spectacular performance against Tony Ferguson at UFC 249.

[autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] had his career highlight in a spectacular performance over [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] at UFC 249.

Gaethje (22-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) was crowned interim lightweight champion when he took out Ferguson (25-4 MMA, 15-2 UFC) in the fifth round of the UFC 249 main event, which took place last Saturday at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Fla.

Gaethje earned two bonuses for his efforts, his ninth in just seven UFC bouts. Gaethje battered Ferguson, breaking his orbital bone and inflicting a ton of damage. Ferguson showed incredible heart, taking every shot Gaethje threw at him and kept marching forward. He even stunned Gaethje with a beautiful uppercut at the end of Round 2 but wasn’t able to capitalize and build momentum from there.

You can see Gaethje’s masterclass performance play out in beautiful super-slow motion thanks to the UFC’s “Fight Motion” cameras.

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Also featured in UFC 249 “Fight Motion” is UFC bantamweight champion Henry Cejudo’s stoppage win over Dominick Cruz, as well as highlights from many other bouts on the card.

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Herb Dean refutes Dominick Cruz’s claim of UFC 249 ref Keith Peterson smelling like alcohol, cigarettes

“If any of us suspect that someone’s been drinking the day of the fight, there’s no way any official is gonna let that pass.”

Herb Dean does not agree with [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag]’s heavy accusations towards fellow referee Keith Peterson.

Cruz (22-3 MMA, 5-2 UFC) was stopped late in Round 2 of his UFC 249 bantamweight title fight with Henry Cejudo and was visibly unhappy with the stoppage last Saturday night. After Cejudo dropped Cruz with a knee, several unanswered punches forced Peterson to waive the fight off just as Cruz was about to make his way back up.

In his post-fight speech with Joe Rogan, Cruz accused Peterson of smelling like alcohol and cigarettes, adding that he wished he would have been drug tested. But Dean says he was around Peterson before the fight and didn’t sense that he was under the influence.

“I didn’t smell alcohol on Keith Peterson,” Dean told internet personality “The Schmo” on Tuesday. “Keith Peterson was around us all day, and I’ll tell you this: If any of us suspect that someone’s been drinking the day of the fight, there’s no way any official is gonna let that pass. We’re gonna call someone out. This is a very serious job we do.”

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In terms of the stoppage, Dean defended Peterson’s decision, chalking it up to a matter of unfortunate timing and a difficult spot to be in for both him and Cruz.

“I would just say it’s a very tough situation,” Dean said. “Because Dominick got hurt and when someone gets hurt, as a referee, your job is to manage the threat that’s coming after them while they’re trying to recover and get their facilities about them and be able to do the right things.

“And it was quite a while, and there were a lot of shots coming while he was trying to get it together. Keith Peterson made a decision based on what he saw, and I think it fits within the standards of a stoppage. The situation changed in that split second, and that’s a bad situation for anyone.

“So is that the situation we want? Of course not. But looking at it, can I see anything he did wrong that I would have done different? I don’t think so.”

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Tony Ferguson’s boxing coach breaks down why Justin Gaethje fight went wrong

Rashad Holloway’s assessment of Tony Ferguson’s performance at UFC 249 wasn’t without giving credit where credit is due to Justin Gaethje.

[autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag]’s boxing coach, Rashad Holloway, has opened up about his fighter’s recent loss to [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag].

Ferguson (25-4 MMA, 15-2 UFC) was dominated before suffering a fifth-round stoppage loss to Gaethje in last Saturday’s interim lightweight title fight at UFC 249, where he showed plenty of heart but suffered lots of damage.

Speaking to MMA reporter Helen Yee, Holloway broke down what he thought went wrong, while giving Gaethje plenty of praise in the process.

“Tony was not as sharp sometimes as we usually see, but Tony was active. He was busy. Justin Gaethje just fought a hell of a fight,” Holloway said. “He fought a hell of a fight. He was able to capitalize on some of the mistakes Tony made. Tony fought Tony’s fight in some significance, but at the same time there were a lot of things he didn’t do, and I think that was due to Justin Gaethje putting on a good performance, and it just is what it is some nights.”

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Holloway was happy with some of the things Ferguson did but ultimately would have liked to see more diversity in his offense.

“Our whole game plan was to stay on the outside, strike, stay long, move to our right at all times,” Holloway said. “Tony did that at times. He didn’t do it as much as I wanted him at times, but Tony’s Tony. Tony likes to engage, Tony likes to bang, and that’s what makes Tony Tony at the same time. He did a lot of that. I think I would have liked to see Tony use his feet a little bit more. Tony did some good things in the beginning of the fight, like when he stayed long. He did very well in keeping Justin off balance, a lot of good leg kicks.

“Of course, we all wanna see Tony on the ground more with Gaethje – more submissions, more jiu-jitsu – but at the same time, Gaethje makes it hard. You look at all of Gaethje’s fights, Gaethje doesn’t let anyone take him to the ground. He does a good job of that.”

The loss to Gaethje snapped Ferguson’s 12-fight winning streak and was his first blemish in over eight years. He suffered a broken orbital but has already been discharged from the hospital.

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Tony Ferguson fires back at ‘chump-champ’ Conor McGregor after UFC 249 criticism

Tony Ferguson wasn’t about to take Conor McGregor’s words lightly.

[autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] has fired back at [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag]’s criticism toward him in the wake of defeat.

McGregor, the former UFC two-division champion, went on a Twitter rampage Monday, taking aim at the lightweight division’s elite, including Ferguson’s fifth-round stoppage loss to Justin Gaethje last Saturday at UFC 249.

“I love Tony. We represented him amazingly at Paradigm sports [sic] and were betrayed for a promise of a baseball contract,” McGregor said in a tweet. “But frame and preparation here was just embarrassing. His methods and conversation are humorous/enjoyable but he was never the level perceived. Although tough.”

As McGregor noted, there was a time that he and Ferguson shared Paradigm Sport Management until Ferguson joined Ballangee Group early last year, citing years of mistreatment because of McGregor’s presence.

Ferguson caught wind of McGregor’s words and had this to say in response (via Twitter):

@TheNotoriousMMA You’re Still My Bitch. You Never Represented Me According To Audie,.. If So Then You Worked For Me, & Withheld Money From Me. Focus On Putting The Bottle Down Kid. @BallengeeGroup Is Gold Standard, Must Be Hard Watching From The Sidelines. Keep It Up Chump -Champ

Ferguson (25-4 MMA, 15-2 UFC) saw his 12-fight winning streak snapped at the hands of Gaethje; it was his first loss in over eight years. Ferguson took quite a bit of damage, suffering a broken orbital bone, and was eventually stopped in Round 5 while on his feet, showing incredible heart and toughness.

But McGregor (22-4 MMA, 10-2 UFC) was far from impressed, and continued to take jabs at Ferguson’s performance in his latest response.

Shut up and thank the nurses and doctors that plated back up your skull and stitched all those gashes up. It’s international nurses day! And learn how to box! Fumbling over your feet like a fucking Buffoon. We’d be embarrassed to represent that at Paradigm Sports. GPizzle Banknote with euro sign

McGregor and Ferguson were lined up to fight at one point after Ferguson first claimed the interim lightweight title in October 2017, two weeks after then champion McGregor lost his boxing showdown with Floyd Mayweather. But instead of unifying, McGregor was stripped of his belt because of inactivity.

McGregor last competed in January, when he stopped Donald Cerrone in just 40 seconds at UFC 246. While Dana White recently hinted that the UFC lightweight unification bout between champion Khabib Nurmagomedov and interim champ Gaethje could take place in July, McGregor has entered himself into the conversation.

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Drew Dober plans to perform ‘equally well’ to teammate Justin Gaethje at UFC on ESPN+ 29

Justin Gaethje’s interim title win provided Drew Dober with the perfect lift going into UFC on ESPN+ 29.

[autotag]Drew Dober[/autotag] got the perfect lift going into UFC on ESPN+ 29 when he saw his good friend and teammate [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] put on the performance of a lifetime.

Just four days prior to when Dober (22-9 MMA, 9-4 UFC) is set to compete against Alexander Hernandez (11-2 MMA, 3-1 UFC) in a lightweight bout on Wednesday’s card, Gaethje (22-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) won the interim lightweight title with a thrilling effort against Tony Ferguson at UFC 249 on Saturday that ended in a fifth-round TKO.

The training camps of Dober and Gaethje essentially were replicates, so seeing the way Gaethje performed gave a lift of self-belief.

“(It gave me) a ton (of confidence),” Dober said during Monday’s UFC on ESPN+ 29 virtual media day. “Him and I, he was originally helping me prepare for this original date of May 2, so him and I have been killing each other every week. So to see him go out there and be able to perform in the third, fourth and fifth round like that, it just gives me a whole lot of confidence I’m able to perform equally well.”

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Gaethje’s win over Ferguson set up a title unification bout with Khabib Nurmagomedov later this year. Dober is trying to climb the ranks at 155 pounds in his own right, but he sees Gaethje securing the top spot sooner rather than later.

“I think Gaethje’s wrestling is extremely underrated,” Dober said. “Khabib is a tough fight for anybody, but with Justin Gaethje’s power and his wrestling credentials … I think Justin Gaethje can definitely take advantage of the moments.”

If there ever comes a time when Gaethje is the champion and Dober is the top contender, the pair will cross that bridge then. They are focusing on living in the now, though, and for Dober that’s holding up his end of the bargain by following his teammate’s big showing with one of his own.

“I’m going to get in, get out and get my job done and celebrate my win in Colorado with Justin Gaethje,” Dober said. “I think he just sent me a note saying he’s got some fresh doughnuts prepared for him and I when I get back.”

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MMA rankings report: Sorting through an eventful UFC 249

Big-time MMA returned last Saturday with an eventful UFC 249. And now it’s time for the return of the MMA rankings report.

The UFC returned to action Saturday. And while the ramifications of running a show during COVID-19 won’t be fully known for awhile, we do know that UFC 249 was a heck of a night of great fights, no matter how you slice it.

[autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] (22-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) scored a fifth-round stoppage of a game [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] (25-4 MMA, 15-2 UFC) in the evening’s main event in Jacksonville, as he claimed an interim lightweight title and presumably set up a unification bout with undefeated champ [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC) later this year.

The result pushed Gaethje up to No. 2 on our lightweight list and also saw “The Highlight” debut at No. 11 on our pound-for-pound list.

But there’s so much more to ponder on a night with ramifications for several divisions. The return of fights also means the return of the MMA rankings report, so let John Morgan and “Gorgeous” George take you through all the updates to the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings.

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USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, May 12: Justin Gaethje pops up pound-for-pound list

The UFC made good on the promotion’s promise to return to live action ahead of other U.S. sports, and the card had quite an impact.

The UFC made good on the promotion’s promise to return to live action ahead of other U.S. sports, and the card had quite the impact on the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings.

In the main event of this past weekend’s UFC 249, [autotag]Justin Gaethje[/autotag] (22-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) scored a fifth-round stoppage of an incredibly game [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] (25-4 MMA, 15-2 UFC) to claim an interim lightweight title and set up a unification bout with undefeated champ [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] (28-0 MMA, 12-0 UFC) later this year.

The result pushed Gaethje up to No. 2 on our lightweight list and also saw “The Highlight” debut at No. 11 on our pound-for-pound list.

Of course, the lightweight division wasn’t the only division impacted by a card that had ranked athletes scheduled from the very first fight of the night, so take a look at the newest edition of the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, which finally featured some movement after two months of inactivity in the sport.

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Boxing gears continue to turn in preparation for restart

The powers that be continue to gear up for the return of live boxing – without spectators – amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The powers that be continue to gear up for the return of live boxing – without spectators – amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Stephen Espinoza of Showtime said he expects live boxing to return to the premium network in July, although no date has been set as safety precautions are finalized. Golden Boy Promotions has set July 4 – with young lightweight star Ryan Garcia as the featured fighter – as its tentative restart date.

And Bob Arum of Top Rank, who had already said he would begin staging four-fight shows early next month on ESPN’s platforms, said UFC 249 on Saturday was a decent first step back but his shows “will be a lot better” in terms of how precautions are handled.

Showtime’s last show was on March 13.

“We’re targeting sometime in July to return,” Espinoza told BoxingScene.com. “And, obviously, we’re spending a tremendous amount of time right now trying to make the environment as safe as possible. Keep in mind, that involves working with PBC as they set up protocols for the fighters and promoters. And it’s also working with our parent company (ViacomCBS) as we set up protocols for our employees and contractors. I think there’s a perception that young, healthy people are not affected. Number one, that’s not true for this particular virus.

“But more importantly, the vast majority of individuals probably have someone very close to them who is high risk. Whether it’s a grandparent they take care of, or a spouse or child who might have immune conditions. For someone in my position and the other senior people at Showtime, there’s a heavy responsibility toward asking employees and freelancers to come to an event and wanting to make sure they’re as safe as possible when they return to their families.”

Espinoza said a July restart will allow fighters more time to prepare.

“Practically speaking, we want the fighters to have a full camp,” Espinoza said. “For example, California is just starting to re-open. Texas is just starting to re-open within the last week, along with a lot of other states. That means that a lot of the fighters in California, Texas and elsewhere haven’t had regular access to a gym or to sparring. So, could we rush back in June? Sure. But that wouldn’t give the fighters the best opportunities to succeed.

“We want the fighters to have full camps. And for us, as we re-open now in mid-May, that means coming back in July. We’re not gonna come back just for the sake of coming back. There’s not particular value in saying, ‘We’re the first,’ or, ‘We’re the second.’ The value is coming back with fights that matter, with fighters who have had a fair opportunity to prepare. That’s the key. Nobody wants to see fights with unprepared fighters in meaningless tune-up fights. So, coming back in July is our target.”

Golden Boy President Eric Gomez said safety is his company’s first priority.

“We envision shows without fans and, at some point, with fans, but what the specifications are for a return to shows with fans I don’t know,” Gomez told BoxingScene.com. “We don’t know if that will be this year or not, but we’ll have to follow whatever the guidelines are from federal government, state government. They might say no shows with fans until there’s a vaccine. I don’t know.”

He went on: “We’ll be ready to jump into action as soon as the restrictions are lifted, as soon as there is some sort of path to do shows again. We want to do [July 4] in California. That’s where we are, that’s where Ryan is from. But if they’re not ready yet, we’ll look into Nevada, we’ll look into Texas, we’ll look everywhere. But most important is the safety of the fighters, the safety of the staff, that’s the most important thing. We would have to find an arena that everybody’s comfortable with and where we have safety guidelines, and they know it’s going to be a sterile place. It’s going to have to be an arena possibly next to a hotel, where the hotel is going to be safe as well. There’s a lot to it.”

One additional bit of news from Gomez: It’s possible that Canelo Alvarez will fight without spectators.

“We’re going to discuss it and start having talks about it with DAZN, with Canelo, with everybody involved,” Gomez said. “If it’s something Canelo would approve and he’s up for it, and we can make it work for everyone involved, we’re going to do it. What matters is if Canelo is in agreement with it and is willing to do it, and then we’ll go from there.”

Arum had suggested that UFC’s Dana White jumped the gun by staging his first show this month but, after the fact, he wasn’t as critical. However, he did mention the fact that one participant — Jacare Souza — and two of his cornermen tested positive for COVID-19 the day before the event.

UFC 249 took place behind closed doors at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida.

“As a first step, it wasn’t bad,” Arum said. “They were the first ones to come back [with a major sporting event in the United States], and with that will come certain mistakes. It wouldn’t be fair to criticize with it being the first one out the box, nor am I here to criticize them. As they do more shows, especially once they come back to Las Vegas, they will adhere to their policies and it will be a lot better. It will look more like ours.

He went on: “We knew all along what UFC’s plans were for these shows. Ours is better, and there’s was never going to determine how we handle our shows. There’s will be as good as ours once they start doing shows in Las Vegas. The Nevada officials have come up with a very good plan, and we’ve been working with a coronavirus task force in state along with [Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director] Bob Bennett and the MGM hotels, which will make a facility available for us.

“What happened on Saturday [with Souza] will never happen at our shows. It will be detected before they even get in the facility. That has to be done and will be done. We’re talking about four fights to start out — the fewer fights you have, the better you can control things.”

These beautiful UFC 249 highlights in super slow-mo are too good

Fight Motion is back and its as good as ever.

The UFC returned last Saturday night with UFC 249 finally taking place in Jacksonville, Fla. and it was a really good night of fights, which was capped off with Justin Gaethje beating Tony Ferguson for the interim lightweight belt.

There were many great finishes throughout the night, including another one by heavyweight star Francis Ngannou, who needed just 20 seconds to get a victory.

On Tuesday the UFC released its Fight Motion highlights from the night, which shows all of the best moments in slow-motion and does a great job of showing you just how beautiful and violent this sport is.

Check out these from the Gaethje-Ferguson fight:

You can watch the entire video here:

MMA Junkie Q&A replay: UFC 249 fallout with Conor McGregor Twitter rampage, Henry Cejudo’s retirement

The fallout of UFC 249 paired with a double fight week from UFC provided a lot of topics to discuss in the latest MMA Junkie Q&A.

After a nearly two-month hiatus, the UFC returned with UFC 249, and the event generated no shortage of headlines to discuss on the latest MMA Junkie Q&A.

The leading MMA promotion put on the first major American sports event since the coronavirus pandemic hit, and the card from VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, offered signature wins from Justin Gaethje, Henry Cejudo, Francis Ngannou and more.

The aftermath was just as compelling, especially when Conor McGregor brought himself into the fold by calling out pretty much every top fighter in the lightweight division.

It all set the stage for a busy week for the UFC, with two more events scheduled. UFC on ESPN+ 29 takes place Wednesday with an Anthony Smith vs. Glover Teixeira main event, while Alistair Overeem fights Walt Harris in Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 8 main event.

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Lead staff reporter John Morgan, who is onsite, staff reporter Nolan King, and senior reporter Mike Bohn, went over it all to Tuesday’s MMA Junkie Q&A.

Watch the video archive above.

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