Renato Moicano agrees to face Rafael dos Anjos in five-round catchweight bout at UFC 272

Less than a month after his big win at UFC 271, Renato Moicano will step in for a big opportunity.

Less than a month after his big win at UFC 271, [autotag]Renato Moicano[/autotag] has agreed to step in for a big opportunity.

With Rafael Fiziev forced to withdraw from Saturday’s co-main event after a positive COVID-19 test, Moicano and [autotag]Rafael dos Anjos[/autotag]  Moicano have agreed to fight each other Saturday at UFC 272 from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

MMA Junkie confirmed that verbal agreements are in place after an initial tweet by Moicano’s manager, Oren Hodak, who told MMA Junkie the five-round bout will take place at a 160-pound catchweight, as first reported by MMA Fighting. Moicano is currently in Brazil and will have to fly to the United States.

A perennial contender at 145 pounds, Moicano (16-4-1 MMA, 8-4 UFC) has quickly made an impact since moving up to lightweight, winning three of four fights. After suffering a stoppage loss to Rafael Fiziev, the 32-year-old Brazilian notched back-to-back second-round submissions of Jai Herbert and most recently Alexander Hernandez at UFC 271 this past February. He delivered an impactful post-fight interview after defeating Hernandez, asking for big checks and big money. Moicano put his hand up to step in against dos Anjos (30-13 MMA, 19-11 UFC), and the rising contender got his wish.

After losing four of his past five at welterweight, former UFC lightweight champion dos Anjos returned to his original home and edged out short-notice replacement Paul Felder in the main event of UFC Fight Night 182 in November 2020. Dos Anjos was then rebooked against Islam Makhachev at UFC 267 this past October, but the matchup fell apart again when he was forced to withdraw due to injury.

With the change, the UFC 272 lineup now includes:

MAIN CARD

  • Colby Covington vs. Jorge Masvidal
  • Rafael dos Anjos vs. Renato Moicano
  • Edson Barboza vs. Bryce Mitchell
  • Kevin Holland vs. Alex Oliveira
  • Greg Hardy vs. Serghei Spivac

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Jamie Mullarkey vs. Jalin Turner
  • Marina Rodriguez vs. Yan Xiaonan
  • Nicolae Negumereanu vs. Kennedy Nzechukwu
  • Mariya Agapova vs. Maryna Moroz

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Brian Kelleher vs. Umar Nurmagomedov
  • Tim Elliott vs. Tagir Ulanbekov
  • Ludovit Klein vs. Devonte Smith
  • Dustin Jacoby vs. Michal Oleksiejczuk

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Tony Ferguson says he was offered Rafael dos Anjos rematch at UFC 272: ‘We were more than ready’

Add Tony Ferguson to the list of fighters that are willing to step in against Rafael dos Anjos.

Add [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] to the list of fighters that are willing to step in against [autotag]Rafael dos Anjos[/autotag] at UFC 272.

After Rafael Fiziev was forced out from Saturday’s co-main event against dos Anjos (30-13 MMA, 19-11 UFC) due to a positive COVID-19 test, multiple fighters offered to replace Fiziev.

UFC president Dana White confirmed that a replacement is being sought for dos Anjos and Ferguson says he received the call. However, the former interim lightweight champion is suggesting that he wasn’t selected as a replacement. Ferguson (25-6 MMA, 15-4 UFC) also said he was willing to step in against Islam Makhachev this past weekend when Beneil Dariush withdrew from the UFC Fight Night 202 headliner due to injury

“We Were Offered To Fight @RdosAnjosMMA On Short Notice For #ufc272 We We’re Moar Than Ready To Step In And Save The Fight & Perform 📈 We Were Also Ready To Beat Fatheads Primo @MAKHACHEVMMA This Past Weekend But No Call Was Received, TUF🥇Times 💪😎 -CSO- 🇺🇸🏆🇲🇽 # 🥇”

Ferguson holds a win over former UFC lightweight champion dos Anjos in 2016. Ferguson outlasted dos Anjos in a “Fight of the Night” battle, which headlined UFC Fight Night 98. Currently linked to a matchup with Michael Chandler at UFC 274, Ferguson is enduring the roughest patch of his career.

After amassing an incredible 12-fight winning streak, including wins over dos Anjos, Anthony Pettis and Kevin Lee, Ferguson has dropped three straight to No. 1 contender Justin Gaethje, current UFC lightweight champion Charles Oliveira, and most recently Dariush at UFC 262 this past May.

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Islam Makhachev wants to step in at UFC 272, settle ‘unfinished business’ with Rafael dos Anjos

Islam Makhachev offers his services to step in on short notice and face Rafael dos Anjos at welterweight on Saturday.

Not even 48 hours removed from his latest UFC win, [autotag]Islam Makhachev[/autotag] already is thinking of getting back into the octagon this week.

The UFC lightweight contender suggested to step in on short notice and replace Rafael Fiziev in a bout against former UFC champion [autotag]Rafael dos Anjos[/autotag] on Saturday at UFC 272 in Las Vegas.

Fiziev was forced to withdraw from the bout Monday afternoon after he tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing symptoms. The UFC is currently seeking a replacement for dos Anjos.

Makhachev (22-1 MMA, 11-1 UFC), who defeated Bobby Green this past weekend with a first-round TKO in the main event of UFC Fight Night 202, is down to fight dos Anjos at welterweight.

“170??? Let’s do it,” Makhachev wrote on Twitter. “We have unfinished business RDA.”

Both Makhachev and dos Anjos have been scheduled to fight three times in the past – twice in 2020 and once in 2021.

The first time, dos Anjos tested positive for COVID-19, which canceled their UFC 254 meeting. The second cancellation came after Makhachev sustained an injury, which prompted Paul Felder to step in on days’ notice to headline a UFC Fight Night event. And the third was last October for UFC 267, but dos Anjos pulled out citing an injury.

Makhachev is on a 10-fight winning streak. The Khabib Nurmagomedov protege hasn’t lost since getting knocked out by Adriano Martins at UFC 192 in 2015.

Other UFC fighters have raised their hands at the opportunity to fight dos Anjos on Saturday. You can see those callouts below.

UFC 272 ‘Embedded,’ No. 1: Colby Covington, ‘the reflection of perfection’

Go behind the scenes with the big-name fighters of UFC 272 for the first time during fight week.

The UFC returns to Las Vegas on Saturday for its third pay-per-view of the year with UFC 272, which means the “Embedded” fight-week video series is back to document what’s happening behind the scenes.

UFC 272 takes place at T-Mobile Arena. The main card streams on ESPN+ pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and early prelims on ESPN+.

UFC 272 features a welterweight grudge match at the top of the bill as former best friends [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] and [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag] square off in the night’s headliner. And in the co-main event, former lightweight champion [autotag]Rafael dos Ajos[/autotag] takes on [autotag]Rafael Fiziev[/autotag] in a key matchup at 155 pounds.

The first episode of “Embedded” follows the featured fighters while they get ready for fight week. Here is the UFC’s description of the episode from YouTube:

“Bryce Mitchell tends to his farm. Colby Covington takes his upcoming bout personally. Rafael dos Anjos unwinds at a shooting range. Jorge Masvidal deplanes and onewheels in Las Vegas. UFC 272 is on Saturday, March 5.”

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Ukraine’s Maryna Moroz sends message to Russia president Vladimir Putin: ‘F*ck you, b*tch’

Maryna Moroz reacts to Russia’s invasion of her home country of Ukraine ahead of her UFC 272 fight.

[autotag]Maryna Moroz[/autotag] is not mincing words when it comes to her home country of Ukraine.

Ukraine was invaded by Russian troops this past week. Russian military forces have been targeting many major cities across Ukraine, prompting everyday citizens to take up arms as part of the defense effort.

“It’s a hard time for Ukraine,” Moroz told TMZ. “There’s a big war right now. I want to support my country, my president, the army in Ukraine, and I want to say that we don’t want war. I worry about my family right now in Ukraine.

“If you see (the) news, many, many people are dying right now and I don’t want something to happen with my family because it’s dangerous.”

Moroz, who was born in Vilnohirsk, told TMZ her family in Ukraine is safe for now, but she worries about what might come. She even said her father is making “home grenades” to help in the resistance effort against Russian troops.

Moroz (10-3 MMA, 5-3 UFC) fights Saturday at UFC 272 in Las Vegas against Mariya Agapova (10-2 MMA, 2-1 UFC).

“It’s really hard (to get ready for the fight), but I want to show that my Ukraine girl heart is strong and focused,” Moroz said. “I don’t step back. I will be fighting and I will show that the Ukraine people are strong. My flag will be in the octagon.”

Moroz said she hopes the fighting will come to an end. The 30-year-old is saddened by the current situation and didn’t hold back in sending a message to Russian president Vladimir Putin.

“I want to say: ‘F*ck you, b*tch,” Moroz said. “I love my country. Don’t touch Ukraine. This is my country, and I love Ukraine.”

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UFC 272: Kamaru Usman says Colby Covington, Jorge Masvidal might underestimate each other

Kamaru Usman thinks both Colby Covington and Jorge Masvidal could be in for surprises ahead of their UFC 272 main event.

[autotag]Kamaru Usman[/autotag] thinks both [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] and [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag] could be underestimating each other.

Welterweight champion Usman has beaten Masvidal (35-15 MMA, 12-8 UFC) and Covington (16-3 MMA, 11-3 UFC) twice each and will attend their UFC 272 main event grudge match in person Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Former friends Masvidal and Covington helped strengthen each other’s games while serving as main training partners at American Top Team. But it’s been years since they’ve hit the mats together and Usman thinks they both could be in for a surprise when trying to exploit what they think is the other’s weakness.

“In this fight, Colby’s going to realize that it’s harder to take Masvidal down in an actual fight than when they were in practice,” Usman told ESPN. “I know in his mind, he’s going to expect it to be like it was when they practiced. But they spent some time apart, and I think he’s going to realize it’s a lot harder to take him down in a fight than it is from practice.

“Masvidal, on the flip side, I think he’s going to realize that it’s a lot harder to strike with this guy now than back when ‘I was beating him up when he first came into the sport.'”

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The current odds at Tipico have Covington as a sizable favorite at -360. But with Masvidal’s dynamic striking, Usman says “Gamebred” has the ability to change the fight with one strike.

“I think he could potentially win the fight because one thing about Masvidal is he’s one of the only guys who in his stance, he’s so tall in his stance – but he’s able to defend takedowns from some of the best wrestlers,” Usman said. “He’s very, very good at striking – so relaxed – and is so fast and he’s able to touch you. He might not feel as hard, but he can touch that button to be able to shut the lights off.

“I mean, being able to run across the octagon in five seconds, land a knee like that (against Ben Askren) just shows a different level of athleticism. He’s an athlete. He’s a skilled striker. He’s a skilled fighter, and he definitely has the tools to be able to land that shot to steal this fight away from Covington. So I’m excited. I can’t wait. I will be there. I haven’t been to a fight in a long time.”

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Colby Covington not looking to finish Jorge Masvidal quickly at UFC 272: ‘I see a lot of pain’

It’s safe to say things have gotten pretty heated between Colby Covington and Jorge Masvidal.

It’s safe to say things have gotten pretty personal between [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] and [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag].

The former friends, now foes, will settle their grudge in Saturday’s UFC 272 headliner at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and early prelims on ESPN+.

Masvidal (35-15 MMA, 12-8 UFC) said he plans to leave Covington in “critical condition,” and Covington (16-3 MMA, 11-3 UFC) has similar bad intentions.

“I see a lot of pain,” Covington told TMZ. “I’m going to inflict so much pain on Jorge Masvidal. He’s not going to be the same person ever again. He keeps talking about a baptism. There’s not gonngoing to be a baptism. It’s going to be a funeral. It’s Jorge Masvidal’s career-ending funeral. It’s going to be violent, and I’m not going to finish it quick.

“I could easily finish it quick because I’d do it all the time behind closed doors when we used to train. But this one, I’m going to drag it out. I’m going to make him suffer and it’ll probably be the first time in UFC history you see a guy in a main event just verbally tap out and say he can’t take no more of a beating.”

Masvidal said he started distancing himself from Covington a while ago, but what set him off was when Covington allegedly didn’t pay his boxing coach, Paulino Hernandez, which Covington vehemently denies.

“To hold this kid accountable for all the reckless words he said to the media – he’s been lying to everybody the whole time,” Covington said. “I just can’t wait to expose him in front of the world next Saturday night.

“This is a blood feud. This goes back to a brotherhood. We were eight years together – every single day, side-by-side, couldn’t leave each other, best friends, and now we’re the biggest, bitter enemies. He’s the one person on earth that I don’t give a sh*t. Anytime I see him, I want to send that guy straight to hell, and luckily I get to do it in the UFC octagon and it’s going to be bad. I’m going to make him pay. I’m going to make him suffer for just backstabbing me and turning his back and trying to run this fake narrative to the media.”

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Jorge Masvidal, Colby Covington and the broken deal that turned best friends into enemies

Jorge Masvidal’s long-time striking coach, Paulino Hernandez, opens up about what sparked the feud with Colby Covington.

The UFC 272 showdown between [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] and [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag] has been years in the making. So much has been said and done to turn these former best friends into enemies. There is an origin story to all the bitterness, but depending on who you ask, the versions might vary.

It started with money, specifically an alleged unfulfilled payment from Covington to Masvidal’s long-time striking coach, Paulino Hernandez, an old-school Cuban exile and pioneer of kickboxing and taekwondo back in his homeland, and member of the national team.

Hernandez largely has stayed quiet about what happened, focused only on training Masvidal and a handful of other American Top Team fighters. But with Covington and Masvial set to square off in Saturday night’s pay-per-view headliner in Las Vegas, Hernandez opened up to tell his side of the story in a recent interview with MMA Junkie.

“I knew that he wasn’t going to pay what we had agreed to,” Hernandez said in Spanish as he recalled the moment things went south between Masvidal and Covington. “I knew it because he had already mentioned it to Jorge.”

It was 2018, and Covington was gearing up for an interim welterweight championship fight against Rafael dos Anjos at UFC 225. The opportunity was what Covington and Hernandez had been working toward, ever since Hernandez began training Covington part time when he moved from Oregon to South Florida as a 1-0 professional in 2012.

Once Covington got to the UFC, Hernandez became his full-time coach and cornerman. According to Hernandez, they agreed on Covington paying him 5 percent of his purse, not including sponsorship money. It was a verbal, gentlemen’s agreement with no official contract. Covington honored that agreement all throughout his UFC run, but then came the interim title fight with dos Anjos, which Covington won.

According to Hernandez, Covington’s purse for the bout was $350,000, which didn’t account for the $30,000 in Reebok pay Covington received. Hernandez said he was owed $17,500 for his services, but he only received $5,000.

It was something Hernandez could’ve seen coming – because Masvidal warned him.

“Jorge told me, ‘Hey, look. (Covington is) telling me that he’s going to be getting a lot of money and that it’s going to be too much money for you,'” Hernandez said. “(Masvidal) told me that (Covington) didn’t want to pay. I told him I’d still finish the job with him, that I’d do the final training. I wanted him to be champion.

“I mean, we’re talking about the same gym. The gym is always looking to add new champions. He’s a good fighter and had a good opportunity to put on a good showing. I knew he was going to win the interim title.

“We still worked with him, and we gave him the opportunity. When it came down to paying, to reflect and come with the agreed sum, he didn’t do it. So from there, that’s when things ended.”

Left to right: Jorge Masvidal, Mike Brown, Colby Covington, Dan Lambert, and Paulino Hernandez after UFC 225 in June 2018. (Photo courtesy of Paulino Hernandez)

Two sides of the story

Masvidal, who’s trained under Hernandez since his late teens, said that was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back in his friendship with Covington. However, he had already perceived certain things that didn’t sit well with him prior to not paying Hernandez in full.

“That’s definitely what fast-forwarded it,” Masvidal told MMA Junkie. “There’s numerous interviews with him calling me his best friend. I really wouldn’t do that because I would see signs in the way he treated his family, the way he talked about his sister, the way he talked about his mom. …

“I was already like, let me start separating myself from this guy little by little. And then, ‘Bam.’ Before I could even fully (separate), he betrayed my coach, didn’t pay him the money that was agreed upon, and I knew since then I’m gonna hurt this guy.”

That’s not how Covington recalls the situation. In a recent interview with ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith, Masvidal confronted Covington on the situation when asked what caused their rift.

“It’s fake news,” Covington said. “Anything Jorge says, it’s a lie. He’s all talk, no walk. … That night that I made that paycheck, I got half of what that said. The commission said I made double of what I said. I got paid half of that.”

How much Covington got paid at UFC 225 remains unknown officially since the Illinois State Athletic Commission, which regulated the event in Chicago, didn’t release disclosed payouts.

“He did win that money, but he denies it,” Hernandez said. “Look, even if he says he won what he won, he still didn’t pay me what he needed to pay me. Let’s say he only made $200,000. Then he still owes me $5,000. Remember, I only got $5,000.”

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Masvidal vouched for Covington when he first moved to South Florida. It was Masvidal who introduced Covington to Hernandez, which kickstarted everything.

“Well, I met Colby Covington through Jorge Masvidal,” Hernandez said. “He told me that he was a friend and a wrestler that was new and had good grappling. He said Colby was helping him a lot in the wrestling training and working with him in that area, and in that same way, he was helping (Covington) in the striking area.

“He brought (Covington) to me and said, ‘Look, this kid has a lot of potential. Train him because he’s missing the striking part.’ So I began to train him and, yeah, definitely they were friends – or at least apparently. After, they began to grow apart, and it was all a product of things that Covington was doing that Masvidal didn’t like.”

‘Don’t be saying that sh*t’

For his first eight UFC bouts, trash talk wasn’t really part of Covington’s routine. That changed in a big way after a win over Demian Maia in the UFC Fight Night 119 co-main event in October 2017. The event took place in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Hernandez remembers it clearly, in part because he and Masvidal were against what Covington had in mind.

“He wasn’t like that. He was another person,” Hernandez said. “He behaved well. He was well spoken and all that.

“When the fight against the Brazilian (Maia) came up, he told us that he was going to talk sh*t. So were like, ‘Listen, don’t be saying that sh*t. F*ck, man, don’t talk bad about a country.’ Yet, he did it. He told us he was going to let them have it. He had that plan. But, look, he’s not like that. There has to be someone telling him what to say. That’s not in him. That’s a character he invented.”

Following the infamous “filthy animals” post-fight speech and the interim title win against dos Anjos, things began to really spiral downward between Masvidal and Covington.

Paulino Hernandez (center) in between Jorge Masvidal and Colby Covington during training in August, 2016.

At the beginning stages, when the feud was just coming into focus to the public, many fans thought it was fabricated to generate interest and headlines. However, there truly was descent growing within the walls of American Top Team in Coconut Creek.

“Yeah, it got toxic,” owner Dan Lambert told MMA Junkie. “It got to the point where it was affecting the gym. We’ve had lots of fighters in this gym over the last 25 years. We’ve had people that love each other. We’ve had people who don’t like each other, but we’ve always been able to separate that, keep some professionalism in the gym and not let it affect the team.

“Their situation got to the point where it was affecting people inside the gym, and I couldn’t keep it under control. And at one point, we had to tell both of them to leave.”

Not long after his falling out with Masvidal, Covington began having issues with other team members because of his inflammatory comments about Masvidal and Brazilians, especially since ATT is home to many Brazilian fighters and coaches. Covington was rubbing specific prominent fighters the wrong way, such as Dustin Poirier and Joanna Jedrzejczyk. It all led to Covington parting ways with ATT and joining MMA Masters in nearby Miami.

‘I have nothing against him’

Hernandez feels no ill will toward Covington, but he’s still not OK with Covington allegedly breaking his word after UFC 225.

“I have nothing against him,” Hernandez said. “The only thing is that in his last fight that I trained him, which was for the interim title against Rafael dos Anjos, we agreed on a payment, and he didn’t live up to the agreement on the payment.

“I think that’s where the hostility from Masvidal came. After so much help was given to him from my part and (Masvidal’s), (Covington) didn’t honor his part, his deal.

“From there, I’ve never spoken to him again, and he’s never spoken to me. In fact, once I ran into him, and he looked me in the face and simply from there the friendship ended. Everything came to an end. He forgot all the things I did for him, all the time I invested in his life to teach him the technique.”

It’s inevitable that things will heat up between Covington (16-3 MMA, 11-3 UFC) and Masvidal (35-15 MMA, 12-8 UFC) as UFC 272 fight week rolls on. Covington speaks his mind with little regard for boundaries, while Masvidal isn’t one to back down from a confrontation.

Hernandez knows the bad blood runs deep and is well aware of the magnitude the fight has reached. For Hernandez, there is no feud, just a mission that needs to be accomplished Saturday night.

“My job as a trainer is going to be to find (Masvidal’s) focus and have him not get emotional,” Hernandez said. “He needs to focus on his fight and implementing the game plan. I’m not interested in the part with the cameras, what people say, what’s said. I’m working toward keeping his focus, helping him fight his fight, and forget everything else so he can be victorious.”

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Video: UFC 272 ‘Countdown’ for Colby Covington vs. Jorge Masvidal

Did you miss the debut of UFC 272 “Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the main event preview now.

Did you miss the debut of UFC 272 “Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the main event preview now.

The segment takes a special look at the welterweight grudge match between former friends, roommates and training partners [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] (16-3 MMA, 11-3 UFC) and [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag] (35-15 MMA, 12-8 UFC).

UFC 272 takes place Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and early prelims on ESPN+.

“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.

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Video: UFC 272 ‘Countdown’ for Edson Barboza vs. Bryce Mitchell

Did you miss the debut of UFC 272 “Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the featured bout preview now.

Did you miss the debut of UFC 272 “Countdown” or just want to watch it again? Check out the featured bout preview now.

The segment takes a special look at the featherweight fight between [autotag]Edson Barboza[/autotag] (22-10 MMA, 16-10 UFC) and [autotag]Bryce Mitchell[/autotag] (14-0 MMA, 5-0 UFC).

UFC 272 takes place Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The main card airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and early prelims on ESPN+.

“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.

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