Did you miss the debut of “UFC 252 Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the co-main event preview now.
Did you miss the debut of “UFC 252 Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the co-main event preview now.
The segment takes a special look at the night’s bantamweight co-main event, which sees fast-rising contender [autotag]Sean O’Malley[/autotag] (12-0 MMA, 4-0 UFC) taking on Ecuadorian veteran [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] (17-6-1 MMA, 9-5 UFC), who hopes to stop an undefeated prospect with a massive amount of hype.
UFC 252 takes place Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN/ESPN+.
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“Countdown” goes behind the scenes with the two fighters, and you can watch the full segment above. And don’t miss the entire episode in the video below.
Did you miss the debut of “UFC 252 Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out a preview of a key clash now.
Did you miss the debut of “UFC 252 Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out a preview of a key clash now.
The segment takes a special look at a featured heavyweight clash, with former UFC champion [autotag]Junior Dos Santos[/autotag] (21-7 MMA, 15-6 UFC) taking on the hard-hitting veteran kickboxer [autotag]Jairzinho Rozenstruik[/autotag] (10-1 MMA, 4-1 UFC) in a bout that will have big implications on the division’s rankings.
UFC 252 takes place Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN/ESPN+.
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“Countdown” goes behind the scenes with the two fighters, and you can watch the full segment above. And don’t miss the entire episode in the video below.
Ahead of their rubber match on Aug. 15, relive Daniel Cormier’s finish over Stipe Miocic at UFC 226.
[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] made history at UFC 226 when he joined a select few athletes who have held two UFC titles simultaneously.
Then-light heavyweight champion Cormier challenged heavyweight champ [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag] in July 2018, and it didn’t take “DC” long to achieve his goal, stunning Miocic in the first round of their main event title fight at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Miocic was the aggressor early as the two engaged in a clinch. Little was thrown in that position, and Miocic disengaged, throwing a knee off the break.
Miocic then pushed forward with a combination as he backed up the challenger, but Cormier enjoyed successes of his own, thanks to his consistent jab and some hard leg kicks. An eye poke by Cormier caused a break in the action, but when the fight resumed, both fighters started throwing heat.
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Cormier then initiated the clinch and threw a short right hand that dropped Miocic. “DC” then followed up with two heavy ground-and-pound shots that knocked out Miocic and saw Cormier crowned a double champion.
“DC” notched his first heavyweight title defense later in the year by submitting Derrick Lewis at UFC 230. He then faced Miocic for a second time, where the Ohio native gained revenge by stopping Cormier in the fourth round to reclaim the title at UFC 241.
Now Cormier (22-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC) will look to write a fairytale ending for his career when he takes on Miocic (19-3 MMA, 13-3 UFC) in a rubber match in the main event of UFC 252 at UFC Apex on Aug. 15.
Before he faces Miocic for a third time, relive Cormier’s championship-winning performance in the video above.
Longtime veteran Jim Miller has figured out how to stay active in 2020.
Despite 2020’s unforeseen challenges, [autotag]Jim Miller[/autotag] is staying active.
On Aug. 15 at UFC 252, Miller (32-14 MMA, 21-13 UFC) will return to action and take on [autotag]Vinc Pichel[/autotag] in a lightweight bout at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The promotion announced the booking Wednesday.
Miller, 36, has won three out of his past four fights entering UFC 252. Most recently, Miller bounced back from a loss to Scott Holtzman with a first-round submission win over Roosevelt Roberts on June 20.
Pichel (12-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) returns to action for the first time since June 2019, when he defeated Roberts by unanimous decision. Pichel was scheduled to fight Alexander Yakovlev in November but he withdrew for unknown reasons. Pichel has won five of his most recent six outings.
UFC 252 takes place Saturday, Aug. 15 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Streaming information has not been announced at this time.
With the addition, the UFC 252 lineup includes:
Stipe Miocic vs. Daniel Cormier – for the UFC heavyweight title
On Aug. 15, three large men will stand in a small cage.
On Aug. 15, three large men will stand in a small cage.
Nevada Athletic Commission officials today assigned veteran referee Marc Goddard the task of overseeing the UFC 252 heavyweight tile fight between current champ Stipe Miocic (19-3 MMA, 13-3 UFC) and former dual-division title holder Daniel Cormier (22-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC).
NAC officials today approved the assignment at the commission’s monthly meeting following a recommendation from NAC executive director Bob Bennett.
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Goddard is a U.K.-based official who has seen plenty of work in recent weeks, handling over a dozen bouts during the UFC’s recent trip to “Fight Island,” including the UFC 251 welterweight title fight between Kamaru Usman and Jorge Masvidal, as well as the UFC on ESPN+ 30 flyweight title fight between Deiveson Figueiredo. He will receive a fee of $1,900 for his work in Las Vegas.
Judges for the UFC 252 title fight will include Derek Cleary, Sal D’Amato and Junichiro Kamijo. Each will receive $1,600 for their work on the night.
UFC 252 takes place at UFC Apex in Las Vegas, where the organization uses a 25-foot cage rather than the standard 30-foot octagon that hosted Miocic and Cormier’s first two meetings. The night’s main card airs on pay-per-view.
A pair of of debuting heavyweights will meet at next week’s UFC 252 in Las Vegas.
[autotag]Chris Daukaus[/autotag] was expected to challenge for the CFFC heavyweight title next week. Instead, he’ll be making his UFC debut against fellow newcomer [autotag]Parker Porter[/autotag].
MMA Junkie today confirmed with multiple people with knowledge of the booking that Daukaus (8-3 MMA, 0-0 UFC) and Porter (10-5 MMA, 0-0 UFC) have agreed to meet at next week’s UFC 252, which takes place at UFC Apex in Las Vegas.
Daukaus, the older brother of UFC middleweight Kyle Daukaus, was expected to headline next week’s CFFC 82 event in Philadelphia in a rematch with current CFFC heavyweight champ Shawn Teed. Instead, he’ll make his UFC debut on a little more than one week’s notice. Daukaus comes to the UFC with a record of 6-1 in his past seven contests, with the lone loss in that stretch coming to UFC and Bellator veteran Azunna Anyanwu.
Meanwhile, Porter has been competing professionally since 2007, including a pair of appearances under the Bellator banner and four fights for CES MMA. Eight of his 10 career wins have come via stoppage, and Porter is currently 4-1 in his past five appearances.
With the addition, the latest UFC 252 lineup includes:
Champ Stipe Miocic vs. Daniel Cormier – for heavyweight title
“I think if I can complete this task, it’s as big as anything I’ve ever done.”
[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] has left no stone unturned going into the final bout of his storied career.
No matter how his heavyweight title fight trilogy with champion [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag] unfolds at UFC 252, Cormier knows he’ll have done everything right as he closes the door on high-level athletic competition.
Retirement has been a topic of discussion with Cormier (22-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC) for the better part of three years. After taking the heavyweight title from Miocic (19-3 MMA, 13-3 UFC) in their first bout in July 2018 at UFC 226, he viewed the rematch at UFC 241 in August 2019 as the perfect moment to ride off into the sunset.
Then he lost the belt.
Cormier has pushed his retirement timeline back to accommodate one final meeting with Miocic. UFC president Dana White has said the Aug. 15 headliner, which takes place at UFC Apex in Las Vegas, will determine the greatest heavyweight in MMA history.
There’s already talk from the likes of White that Cormier could continue beyond UFC 252 if he so chooses. DC doesn’t deny that notion but said his time has come. Cormier knows a truly special opportunity sits before him, and he won’t allow himself to succumb to any temptation.
“I just believe that, at a point, I have to say money is money, and I’ve made a lot of it, and there’s going to always be more money,” Cormier told MMA Junkie. “If it’s in my heart that this is it then I have to stand firm in that knowing there’s going to be opportunities. You can be the best in the world, and you can always be the best in the world until you’re not. Eventually some time and someone will catch up to you, and I’m just making sure I get the chance to go out on top.
“I’ve won a lot. I’ve been a lucky guy in the sport, and the ability and opportunity to go out on top is unheard of. We see Georges St-Pierre constantly getting asked to come back and just the other day he says, ‘I went out on top. People don’t get that.’ I have that opportunity, and I think if I can complete this task, it’s as big as anything I’ve ever done.”
Renewed focus
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Although the coronavirus pandemic has forced adaptation to the sports world as a whole, Cormier said his preparation for UFC 252 actually has been immaculate. He’s surrounded himself with a combination of familiar coaches and some new faces in the year since he last shared the octagon with Miocic, and that’s allowed him to make the necessary adjustments to win.
Cormier stopped Miocic by first-round knockout in the original meeting, and the rematch was going his way, too. Well, until it wasn’t.
After Cormier controlled the opening three rounds, Miocic made a brilliant adjustment in the fourth and started attacking the body. The strikes quickly added up, and Cormier’s protection of his head weakened. Miocic went upstairs and finished the fight, becoming the first man to beat Cormier in heavyweight competition.
In late 2019, Cormier teamed up with boxing legend George Foreman to address defensive issues. More recently, he’s spent time with noted coach Mark Henry to dissect tactics. Those new relationships only complimented the work Cormier’s longtime coaches at American Kickboxing Academy, such as Javier Mendez, Bob Cook and Rosendo Sanchez, have put into setting him up for success in the trilogy.
At 41, Cormier said he’s well aware his body isn’t what it used to be. He’s far removed from the back surgery he feels hindered him in the rematch and said the goal was to push himself as hard as possible in preparation for UFC 252. If his body failed him along the way, he would take it as a sign.
“When we went into this training camp, I told Bob Cook: ‘If we go into training camp, and the back starts to get tight and I get hurt and I can’t get through this training camp in the way we need it to be, then we just won’t fight,'” Cormier said. “It’s not going to be, ‘Let’s cut back on this, or if it’s hurting let’s stop. Let’s not do that.’ Let’s go and try to do a training camp in the way that we’ve always done, and if the body holds up, the body holds up. If it doesn’t, then it doesn’t. I think things are as good as they’re ever going to be, and it’s the perfect time for a trilogy fight.”
Summer blockbusters
The trilogy between Cormier and Miocic is truly and uniquely special. For Miocic, he becomes the first fighter in UFC history to face the same opponent in three consecutive bouts. Cormier, meanwhile, is essentially in the same boat, sans a short-notice title defense against Derrick Lewis at UFC 230 in November 2018.
Spending three consecutive years directing physical and mental energy to one person can be both taxing and tricky. Cormier relishes the uncommon elements of it all, though, and he said the in-depth understanding he’s gained about Miocic has changed his perspective on his rival.
“It’s odd,” Cormier said. “I remember when I was first asked about fighting Stipe Miocic I never would’ve thought that it would’ve turned into this. Three straight summers I’ve spent preparing for him. I feel very familiar with Stipe and the things he wants to do. I feel very familiar with his approach and honestly, over the course of three years you gain – I’ve got a bigger level of respect for him and his abilities today opposed to when I first took the fight or going into the second fight.
“You learn a lot about a person when they become your sole focus for so long. I think when you train for someone for three years, and the fights are going the way that they go, obviously your relationship changes. I think Stipe and I before were pretty cordial, maybe even friends. But now it’s a little bit different. I do believe when it’s all said and done I will not harbor any bad emotions toward him.”
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Throughout his career, Cormier has been part of some of the biggest moments in MMA history. The portion of his career involving Jon Jones will go down as one of the most venomous feuds the sport has ever seen, and the trilogy with Miocic is shaping up to stand alongside the greatest three-part series of all time.
The fights with Jones might have been bigger and resonated deeper with fans because of the hatred and talent level of the two athletes. The “competitive animosity” with Miocic runs deeper for Cormier, though, and he expects this series to be the defining period of his career.
“I think (this is career defining),” Cormier said. “We had three fights, and I intend on winning the third fight and the trilogy. It will be difficult for me to ever be completely free of that rivalry with Jones because it was so big. We sold so much pay-per-view, and the rivalry was so nasty. We were so nasty with each other, and the general public paid attention. But competitively this is the one that I love, because I’m fighting a guy that has done and stood for the right things and has competed in the right way. Jones is a fantastic competitor, and I feel like still, he brought the best out of me in terms of my preparation. But I believe Stipe Miocic has done the same thing now.”
The previous fights between Cormier and Miocic have offered two different looks. The first bout ended in a flash, with Cormier surprising Miocic with a massive punch off a clinch break that sent him crashing to the canvas. In the rematch, Cormier struck well and used more wrestling in the early going, but then his conditioning abandoned him, and Miocic tweaked his strategy to capitalize for the knockout.
Cormier said he doesn’t necessarily expect the rubber match to look like either previous bout. He’s vowed to put his wrestling background to use and believes the smaller sized octagon at the UFC Apex plays tremendously to his benefit.
Although closing his career with a spectacular finish would make for something of a fairy tale moment, Cormier said he’s anticipating the most grueling scenario.
“I think it goes 25 minutes if both of us are as prepared as we say we are,” Cormier said. “I’m going to do more things. I think Stipe did a fantastic job making those adjustments, but the reality is I was so tired in that second fight the exhaustion got me. Obviously getting hit by a guy like that does ware on you, but I couldn’t even think to do the correct defenses I was so exhausted, and that’s sad. I just need to do what I’m supposed to do out there, and that’s what I’m going to do.”
What about retirement?
Cormier has made no secret of his plan to retire from MMA. It didn’t unfold under the circumstances he’d originally intended, but it’s finally happening at UFC 252 – win, lose or draw. It’s going to be an emotional night for Cormier, he said, but he’s not thinking about the minutiae of it all.
There’s a strong level of tunnel vision, Cormier said, and anything outside of executing his game plan is trivial. He doesn’t know if he’s going to laugh, cry, leave his gloves in the center of the octagon, hand the belt back to White or any other little moments that could come with retiring in that particular instance.
All Cormier cares about is achieving that final moment of glory that’ll allow him to enter the next stage of his life – as a father, husband, coach, media personality, and more – with complete peace of mind.
“I’m so focused on the fight,” Cormier said. “I’m not thinking about the aftermath. I’m not thinking about the theatrics and all the things that go into making a moment that will play (forever). I’m not thinking about that. I’m just thinking about the most joyous thing, is getting the belt wrapped around my waist. That’s it. The way that I’ve spent so much of my career, I want it to happen one more time, and that’s all I can really think about.
“I’m not really thinking about if my gloves are going to come off. I’ve never even thought about that for a second. It’s just go win the fight and you do that, everything else is just icing on the cake.”
“This victory with another one or one or two more, I’ll be fighting for the title again.”
[autotag]Junior Dos Santos[/autotag] thinks it’ll only take a few more wins to get back into the title picture.
Dos Santos (21-7 MMA, 15-6 UFC) faces [autotag]Jairzinho Rozenstruik[/autotag] on Aug.15 at UFC 252, which takes place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Despite coming off two straight stoppage losses to Francis Ngannou and Curtis Blaydes, the former UFC heavyweight champion thinks a win over Rozenstruik (10-1 MMA, 4-1 UFC) will put him in a strong position to vie for another crack at the title.
“I’ve been fighting for a long time already. I’ve fought all these guys. I’m ready to fight with all of them again,” Dos Santos told MMA Junkie. “I don’t really care who’s gonna be next. Of course the goal is the belt, and I don’t think it’s gonna take very much long for me to be fighting for the title. This victory with another one or one or two more, I’ll be fighting for the title again.”
Interestingly enough, Dos Santos and Rozenstruik both have been preparing at American Top Team, but that hasn’t affected Dos Santos at all. He even suggested that he and Rozenstruik spar with each other, which Rozenstruik turned down, and the two have pretty much gone their separate ways.
“He’s here. Sometimes I see him at the gym,” Dos Santos said. “I say hi, but it’s the first time I’m living something like that. It’s been interesting, and I don’t see that as a negative side actually. I don’t see his training, I never trained with him before.”
He continued, “We are kind of doing a separate work for each other, so sometimes we can see each other, but it doesn’t change anything.”
Dos Santos’ last win came in March 2019, when he picked up a second-round TKO over Derrick Lewis. Dos Santos has recently trimmed down, looking in remarkably lean shape, and is ready to make another run at the title with a finish of Rozenstruik.
“It couldn’t be different. I expect a knockout,” Dos Santos said. “Somebody’s going down with a knockout, and I really believe this guy will be him. I’m feeling great, and I feel in great shape, and I’m ready to go there and put things in the right place again.”