MMA Junkie Radio #3259: Guest John McCarthy, Bellator 281 preview, more

Thursday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here.

Thursday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here.

On Episode 3,259, the fellas bring on guest John McCarthy, a former referee and current Bellator broadcast color commentator who help them preview Friday’s Bellator 281 event in London. They also discuss a recent Rose Namajunas/Pat Barry interview, break down the latest news and much more. Tune in!

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.

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Watch Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s eye-popping reaction to Michael Chandler’s knockout of Tony Ferguson

‘The Rock’ nearly spit out his drink as Michael Chandler connected with the front kick that knocked out Tony Ferguson at UFC 274.

Even the biggest star in Hollywood gets floored when incredible things happen inside the octagon.

[autotag]Dwayne Johnson[/autotag], who has been a fan of the UFC for many years, posted a selfie-style video to social media showing his reaction to the insane knockout that [autotag]Michael Chandler[/autotag] created with his front kick to the chin of Tony Ferguson at UFC 274.

In the video, “The Rock” appears to be enjoying the pay-per-view event by himself with a cold beverage close by. The video starts as the second round of Chandler vs. Ferguson begins.

“Let me tell you something, you could feel the electricity and the mana,” Johnson said in the video posted to Instagram, reacting to the energy of the first round. “You could feel it through the TV. By the way, I could just imagine how it is in this arena. Let’s f*cking go, boys.”

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Johnson turned his camera back toward his television screen for a moment and then back to himself to offer a toast to the camera, naturally, with a brand he owns, Teremana Tequila.

Just as Johnson began to sip from his glass, the front kick from Chandler landed that put Ferguson down, and “The Rock” nearly spit out his drink as his eyes opened wide in disbelief.

“Holy sh*t,” Johnson said after a few seconds of silence. “F*cking incredible. Chandler caught Ferguson I think with a high right kick. That was in-f*cking-credible.”

Johnson is no stranger to attending UFC events and keeping up with the news surrounding the promotion and the sport of MMA. In addition to taking in a number of events cageside over the years, “The Rock” has also been a direct participant in the festivities.

At UFC 244, Johnson cut a promo at the weigh-ins and wrapped the “BMF” title around [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag]’s waist after he defeated Nate Diaz in the pay-per-view’s main event.

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.

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UFC 274 medical suspensions: Tony Ferguson faces 60 days after devastating knockout

Check out the full UFC 274 medical suspensions that were levied on 17 fighters following the pay-per-view event in Phoenix.

UFC 274 produced a number of highlight moments throughout the event, and we know now how long the competitors will be sidelined following their bouts.

[autotag]Michael Chandler[/autotag] produced a potential Knockout of the Year against [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] early in the second round of their lightweight bout. Chandler landed a clean front kick to the jaw of the former interim champion Ferguson, who immediately crashed to the canvas and lay on the canvas for a few minutes afterward. Ferguson will face a 60-day medical suspension, while Chandler received 30 days following a competitive first round of action.

The Arizona Department of Gaming’s spokesperson Maxwell Hartgraves released the medical suspensions on Wednesday following the pay-per-view event which took place at Footprint Center in Phoenix this past Saturday. The commission only provided the length of the suspensions, while their reasons were not disclosed.

Check out the full UFC 274 medical suspensions that were levied on 17 fighters following the event.

USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, May 10: Carla Esparza, Charles Oliveira, Ryan Bader move up P4P list

Check out the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings following UFC 274, Bellator 280 and 2022 PFL 3.

The USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie men’s and women’s pound-for-pound rankings saw major movement coming out of a weekend of UFC, Bellator and PFL action.

At UFC 274, [autotag]Charles Oliveira[/autotag] – after losing his championship belt over a half-pound miss at weigh-ins – solidified his status as the best lightweight on the planet with a first-round submission of Justin Gaethje in the night’s main event. In the co-headliner, [autotag]Carla Esparza[/autotag] became a two-time UFC strawweight champion after earning a split decision from Rose Namajunas in a lackluster fight – but it was a win no less for “Cookie Monster.”

One day earlier at Bellator 280, heavyweight champion [autotag]Ryan Bader[/autotag] grinded out a clean-sweep unanimous decision win over Cheick Kongo. And at 2022 PFL 3, [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] made her season debut with a ho-hum performance (“utter dog crap” in her own words) that led to a unanimous decision over Marina Mokhnatkina.

What do those results mean for this week’s pound-for-pound rankings?

On the men’s side, Oliveira jumped up two spots from No. 7 to 5, while Bader advanced one spot from 11 to 10. As for the women, Esparza, who is now on a six-fight winning streak, catapults herself from honorable mention to No. 5, dropping Namajunas a spot to No. 6, as well as Harrison from No. 9 to No. 10.

The pound-for-pound categories weren’t the only ones to be shaken up. Take a look at the full rankings in the dropdowns coming out of UFC 274, Bellator 280, and 2022 PFL 3.

‘That scale was accurate’: UFC exec Marc Ratner doesn’t see controversy in Charles Oliveira missing weight

For UFC VP of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner, the UFC 274 weigh-in controversy surrounding Charles Oliveira is black and white.

For UFC vice president of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner, the UFC 274 weigh-in controversy surrounding [autotag]Charles Oliveira[/autotag] is black and white.

Oliveira submitted Justin Gaethje in the first round of the UFC 274 headliner this past Saturday at Footprint Center in Phoenix, but he’s no longer the lightweight champion because he weighed in over the championship limit of 155 pounds one day earlier. Oliveira registered a mark of 155.5 on his first weigh-in attempt. Per the Arizona commission’s rules, Olivera was allowed one hour to cut the half-pound. When he returned for his second try, Oliveira still weighed 155.5, which forced him to vacate the lightweight once the UFC 274 main event began.

Oliveira, who tweeted he was on weight the morning of official weigh-ins, was stunned by his miss. But what really raised the level of controversy was the fact that several fighters questioned the accuracy of the unofficial scale being used to check weights before stepping on the official scale.

UFC president Dana White called the situation “a nightmare” after UFC 274. Ratner, though, doesn’t view it the same.

“Well, first of all, let me say that the official scale, which is the one they weighed in on Friday with the athletic commission … 28 of the fighters made weight,” Ratner said Tuesday on Sirius XM’s “Unlocking the Cage.” “So I’m very, very sure that there was nothing untoward on that scale. That scale was accurate.

“What people are talking about, the night before, there’s a scale where the fighters can come down and check their weight. Some fighters wanted to change the scale from pounds to kilograms, which you can do, and I think that may have knocked it – we don’t have any proof of anything, but it may have knocked the (practice) scale out of calibration. When we found out that there was a problem with the scale early on Friday morning somewhere around 8 or 8:30, we got another scale that was calibrated and put it out there.”

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Ratner’s explanation aligns with what White said after UFC 274, that non-American fighters are prone to change the backstage scale from pounds to kilos. How the accuracy of the backstage scale may have affected Oliveira in this instance is unclear.

“I am not sure what time that Charles or his camp came down on Friday,” Ratner said. “But he’s saying that he checked the weight on Thursday night, and he was fine. But I can say for sure that Friday there was nothing wrong with the official scale.”

Given the UFC prefers to use a traditional beam scale for its official weigh-ins, there is a human element to consider since a commission member must operate it. Some people are quick to determine weights, which wasn’t the case with Oliveira.

A change to a digital scale seemingly would eliminate the human element, but Ratner doesn’t see a reason for that to happen.

“Digital scale, sometimes you get tenths of ounces. Or not even tenths – a pound is 16 ounces,” Ratner said. “You’d hate to have just a regular fight, and the weight is supposed to be 155 and you can weigh up to 156, and on the digital scale you could weigh 156.2. Well, that doesn’t make sense either. We’ve always used the meat scale. It’s accurate, it’s balanced, it’s calibrated, so I have no problem using it.”

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Video: Charles Oliveira no longer is the UFC lightweight champ – but who’s to blame?

In a stunning development, UFC lightweight champion Charles Oliveira missed weight for his title defense against Justin Gaethje.

In a stunning development this past Friday in Phoenix, UFC lightweight champion [autotag]Charles Oliveira[/autotag] missed weight for his title defense against Justin Gaethje.

Even though Oliveira had an extra hour to hit the championship max of 155 pounds, he failed to lose the extra half-pound with the additional time. Consequently, he was stripped of the title.

That meant the belt was only up for grabs at UFC 274 if he lost. But Oliveira (33-8 MMA, 21-8 UFC) submitted Gaethje (23-4 MMA, 6-4 UFC), which made the lightweight title vacant. We know Oliveira will get a chance to win it back later this year, but we don’t know whom it will be against.

The question, though, on a lot of minds was: Who is to blame for Oliveira missing weight? He claimed, as did other fighters on the card, that the official scale was recalibrated the morning of the weigh-ins, which caused many fighters who thought they were on weight to come in a little bit over. So is it the fault of whoever messed with the scale? Is it Oliveira’s fault for not taking every measure to be sure something crazy didn’t happen?

That’s what we asked our Spinning Back Clique panel of Brian “Goze” Garcia, Mike Bohn and Nolan King with host “Gorgeous” George Garcia. Check out their conversation in the video above, and don’t miss the full episode below.

Nate Diaz ramps up call for Michael Chandler fight: ‘Send a contract. It’s time’

After Michael Chandler’s brutal head kick knockout of Tony Ferguson at UFC 274, he caught the attention of one of the sport’s biggest names.

After [autotag]Michael Chandler[/autotag]’s brutal head kick knockout of Tony Ferguson this past Saturday at UFC 274, he caught the attention of one of the sport’s biggest names.

After Chandler (23-7 MMA, 2-2 UFC) put Ferguson (25-7 MMA, 15-5 UFC) to sleep with a front kick to the chin early in the second round in Phoenix, [autotag]Nate Diaz[/autotag] (20-13 MMA, 15-11 UFC) said he’d like to get in there with the former Bellator lightweight champion.

The two chirped back and forth at each other on Twitter, but Diaz gave arguably his most definitive statement yet about wanting to get the final fight on his UFC contract booked.

“UFC got me on ice for a year now,” Diaz posted on Twitter. “Chandlers obviously ready to fight send a contract it’s time.”

Previously, Diaz had suggested a July 30 fight at welterweight after Chandler suggested a “quick turn around” in which he would “spin your head on its axis,” meaning Diaz.

After a three-fight winning streak in 2011-2012, Diaz has fought just 10 times in the past 10 years and is 4-6 in that stretch. His statement win came with a submission of Conor McGregor at UFC 196 in a short-notice fight in March 2016. Later that year, he lost a majority decision in rematch.

Then Diaz sat out for three years until an August 2019 return with a win over former lightweight champion Anthony Pettis. But he lost the “BMF” fight to Jorge Masvidal at UFC 244 later that year. In June 2021, he dropped a decision to Leon Edwards at UFC 263.

Ahead of UFC 274, a matchmaking board in the UFC’s offices in Las Vegas was caught on camera and showed a matchup between Diaz and Khamzat Chimaev (11-0 MMA, 5-0 UFC) for UFC 276 on July 2.

UFC president Dana White said that matchup is a hypothetical one – though it’s one he’d like to make.

But perhaps if that doesn’t happen, the promotion has a new target with Diaz and Chandler each seeming to be interested in a fight.

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Joanna Jedrzejczyk predicts she’ll dethrone Carla Esparza for a second time after UFC 275

Joanna Jedrzejczyk thinks history is going to repeat itself against Carla Esparza.

[autotag]Joanna Jedrzejczyk[/autotag] thinks history is going to repeat itself against [autotag]Carla Esparza[/autotag].

After Esparza (19-6 MMA, 10-4 UFC) claimed the UFC strawweight title from Rose Namajunas at UFC 274 this past weekend in a heavily criticized split decision, Jedrzejczyk (16-4 MMA, 10-4 UFC) appears perfectly posed to get a chance to fight for the belt.

First, of course, she has to get through her rematch with Zhang Weili at UFC 275 on June 9, which will be no easy task. Jedrzejczyk is confident she will get it done, though, and go on to challenge Esparza.

It’s a familiar situation, because Jedrzejczyk successfully went through it before. After Esparza won the inaugural 115-pound belt from Namajunas in December 2014, her reign would quickly come to an end just a few months later courtesy of a lopsided TKO win for Jedrzejczyk.

Jedrzejczyk couldn’t explain why Esparza and Namajunas put on such a dud, but not she sees the new champ as a juicy target.

“I don’t know what happened, but when you feel – that first round wasn’t good. The second wasn’t, and sometimes you have to do something to get the victory,” Jedrzejczyk told reporters on Monday’s UFC 275 media day. “Even paying a big price. But I don’t know what happened. Til the end of the fight I thought Rose got it, but no. Like Carla, I really thought she was going to look better. I was like, ‘This girl is going to look better. She has so many win streak.’ But for me, she looked the same as when we fought for the belt seven years ago in Dallas. And history likes to make a circle. And soon (I’m) to be the champ.”

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Jedrzejczyk hasn’t fought in more than two years. The former longtime UFC titleholder last competed in March 2020 when she had a Fight of the Year war with Weili at UFC 248, losing by unanimous decision.

The pair are set to run it back in the featured bout of UFC 275, which takes place at Singapore Indoor Stadium in Singapore and airs on pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN and ESPN+.

Despite the long break from competition, Jedrzejczyk said she’s motivated to be back and is driven to get revenge over Weili before another rematch with Esparza that would lead to UFC gold.

“Before I accept the fight with Weili Zhang, I knew that I was going to fight for the belt,” Jedrzejczyk said. “After the first fight with Weili Zhang, I knew that I was going to be the next one in line. Sometimes it takes time and other girls have to fight for the belt as well and I Just wanted to be back. Here we go, we have a big fight. Fighting Weili Zhang for the second time is a big motivation for the me because I can be better every single day.”

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Carla Esparza understands criticism of UFC 274 title win: ‘Nobody wants to see a fight like that’

Carla Esparza reacts to the public criticism surrounding her title win vs. Rose Namajunas at UFC 274.

[autotag]Carla Esparza[/autotag] took home UFC gold, but that also came with a big chunk of criticism.

The more than 12-year veteran defeated Rose Namajunas to reclaim the UFC strawweight title in the co-main event of Saturday’s UFC 274 at Footprint Center in Phoenix. It was an uneventful fight that ended in a split decision favoring Esparza.

With just 67 combined significant strikes landed over 25 minutes, it’s been touted as one of the most lackluster championship fights in UFC history.

Both Esparza (19-6 MMA, 10-4 UFC) and Namajunas (11-5 MMA, 9-4 UFC) have been criticized for their performances in the aftermath of the event. The new champion is well aware of the public disdain for the bout, and finds it to be fair.

“Most definitely,” Esparza told MMA Junkie. “Nobody wants to see a fight like that, nobody wants to be part of a fight like that. I hate that I couldn’t put on a show for the fans.

“I hadn’t fought in front of a crowd since 2019 because of COVID. I was excited to go back in front of the crowd and put on a show. I was envisioning in my head, ‘We’re going to get Fight of the Night.’ Like this is the performance. We’re going to show up like we did the first time, but it’s just going to be a higher-skilled version of that fight and that’s what I was looking forward too.”

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Esparza, 34, first became champ in December 2014 when she submitted Namajunas to become the inaugural UFC strawweight champion. She would go on to lose her title in the following fight against Joanna Jedrzejczyk in March 2015.

Esparza is proud to have fought her way back to the belt, but does admit the nature of the fight and subsequent fallout does damper the moment.

“You don’t want to win a fight like that,” Esparza said. “You want to win a fight showing your skills and everything you’re working for, and you want to dominate and make a statement. So, it definitely made it a little bit bittersweet on how the fight went and kind of how the fans have been reacting.”

Esparza can’t exactly pinpoint why the fight played out the way it did. She expected a high-paced fight. However, she does feel like her threat of the takedown made Namajunas hesitate when striking.

“It’s hard to throw at someone who’s not going to stand in front of you and not really engage,” Esparza said. “You have these battles where you’re trading with someone and then that sets up others things too. We didn’t get much of a chance at that.”

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Loopy Godinez thinks she’s fighting on ‘a whole other level’ after dominant victory

It appears Loopy Godinez might be her own harshest critic at times. But in reality, she knows where she thinks she stands.

PHOENIX – It appears [autotag]Loopy Godinez[/autotag] might be her own harshest critic at times. But in reality, she knows where she thinks she stands.

Godinez (8-2 MMA, 3-2 UFC) dominated Ariane Carnelossi (14-3 MMA, 2-2 UFC) for a unanimous decision on the UFC 274 early prelims Saturday night. Although she got a pair of 10-8 rounds from two judges, many online analysts thought she could have gotten 10-8 scores in all three frames.

But still, Godinez said she’s not satisfied – and her coaches probably won’t be, either.

“I’ve got to go back to the gym and work harder,” Godinez said. “I’m sure there is a lot of stuff that I did wrong that I have to fix up. I’ve got to watch the fight again. I wanted to finish her, but I couldn’t. I’ll have to talk to my coaches – I’m sure they’ll have something to say.”

Even realizing she might have ways to improve after a dominant performance, Godinez said she felt different all fight week.

“This whole week, I just felt like a whole different level, and when I was walking out,” Godinez said. “I feel like I’m fighting too many times now – I just to whole different levels. I think it shows, and I feel way more confident in there.

“We’re going to look at my goal, which is fighting for the belt. I’m just going to wait for the UFC and see what they offer me.”

Check out Godinez’s full post-fight interview in the video above.

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