UFC 303 ‘Fight Motion’: Super-slow motion video of Alex Pereira’s vicious KO

The UFC’s International Fight Week wrapped up with a thunderdous finish in Las Vegas.

The UFC had to pivot on its International Fight Week plans when Conor McGregor pulled out, but the new main event delivered.

Light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira knocked out former champ Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1 MMA, 4-2 UFC) in the headliner and staked his place, in many minds, as the top pound-for-pound fighter in the world. And in an insane circumstance, Diego Lopes went from fighting at featherweight on weigh-ins day to a 165-pound catchweight against a new opponent just a few hours before his fight, then beat Dan Ige.

Plus, there was a 19-second finish, an elbow that nearly exposed someone’s skull and more finishes and bloody wars at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Check out all the highlights in super-slow motion in the UFC 303 “Fight Motion” video highlights above.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.

Jon Anik expects Conor McGregor to make UFC return in 2024 and ‘fight twice in eight months’

Lead UFC play-by-play commentator Jon Anik still has high hopes for Conor McGregor’s future in the octagon.

Lead UFC play-by-play commentator [autotag]Jon Anik[/autotag] still has high hopes for [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag]’s future in the octagon.

Despite the uncertainty around a new date for McGregor (22-6 MMA, 10-4 UFC) to make his highly-anticipated return from injury following his withdrawal from the UFC 303 main event vs. Michael Chandler this past month, Anik is not among those who don’t see “The Notorious” ever fighting again.

In fact, Anik thinks that once McGregor, 35, has his next fight scheduled, it will kick off a window where the world gets to witness him compete multiple times. It might seem unrealistic, but Anik maintains a high degree of hope about what’s on the horizon for the brash Irishman.

“I’ve been waxing optimistic on Conor for a long time,” Anik told MMA Junkie and other reporters in a recent interview on the 2024 UFC Hall of Fame red carpet. “I fully expect him to compete in 2024, to come back at a high level. Fight twice in eight months. I know it sounds ridiculous and super ambitious to some people, but I just know the mixed martial arts athlete is in there, and I just remain hopeful that he’s going to come back and make more of an impact than anyone expects that he will.”

The UFC brass managed to salvage the UFC 303 card in the aftermath of McGregor’s injury pullout for a broken pinkie toe. It put together Alex Pereira vs. Jiri Prochazka for the light heavyweight title as a replacement headliner, among other additions.

Ultimately, Anik would’ve preferred to call a McGregor fight on June 29. However, he is pleased with how the promotion responded.

“I messaged Conor after UFC 300 and I said, ‘Only thing bigger than 300 is McGregor vs. anybody,'” Anik said. “So the biggest thing we can do is have a Conor McGregor-led pay-per-view. That’s not our reality at (UFC 303), but this company obviously comes to the rescue and is able to present a deeper pay-per-view.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.

Daniel Cormier urges Jon Jones to ‘take all that thunder’ and fight Alex Pereira after Stipe Miocic

Daniel Cormier would like to see Jon Jones take on Alex Pereira if he gets past Stipe Miocic.

[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] would like to see [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] take on [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag] if he gets past [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag].

Heavyweight champion Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) is expecting his first title defense vs. Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC) to take place at UFC 309 Nov. 9 in New York.

This past Saturday in the UFC 303 headliner, light heavyweight champion Pereira (11-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) notched his second title defense when he knocked out Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1 MMA, 4-2 UFC) in their rematch.

Jones admitted to a fan when answering their question on “X,” that he’s unsure about retirement and that “options are looking crazy right now.” With Pereira previously teasing a move to heavyweight, Cormier sees a fight with Jones as the best possible move.

“I’ll tell you one thing Jones said: Now he might stick around because he goes, ‘The options are looking great,'” Cormier said on his “Funky and the Champ” show with Ben Askren.

“If I’m Jones, I fight Stipe, I beat Stipe, and then I call out the UFC to make Pereira go up (to heavyweight), knowing that you could take all that thunder because Jones vs. Pereira would be a massive payday.”

Ben Askren thinks Jones vs. Pereira would look similar to Jones’ quick submission of Ciryl Gane at UFC 285, and Cormier agrees.

“Jones is a -800 favorite to fight Pereira and beat Pereira, if they were to fight,” Cormier said. “So it’s not a great matchup, but I love Alex, man. It couldn’t have happened to a better guy.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.

Brian Ortega addresses late UFC 303 withdrawal from Diego Lopes fight: ‘I got sick and my body gave out’

Brian Ortega released a statement explaining what led to his late pull out from UFC 303 at International Fight Week.

[autotag]Brian Ortega[/autotag] has released a statement addressing what went wrong during UFC 303 fight week.

After stepping up on short notice to replace another co-feature that fell apart, Ortega (16-3 MMA, 8-3 UFC) was ready to compete against Diego Lopes in the co-main event of UFC 303 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

After completing all of his fight week media obligations, the former featherweight title challenger requested that the bout against Lopes (25-6 MMA, 4-1 UFC) be moved to a lightweight bout just hours before weigh-ins, to which his opponent and the promotion agreed.

Ortega weighed in at 155 pounds but would not make it to the cage on fight night as he withdrew on fight day due to illness, making way for Dan Ige to step up on a moment’s notice to face Lopes.

Wednesday, Ortega addressed what went wrong in a statement posted on Instagram, stating, “To those have always supported me, I’m very grateful for your guys. I hope this brings clarity to you.”

Read Ortega’s full statement below:

“I’m feeling much better, thank you for all the love. Come fight week I felt off and I didn’t feel right, I thought it was just the residual effects from the cut. I was 178 lb when I accepted this fight on 15 days notice. Thursday night after 7 straight hours, I could not break 151 lb. Later, I would fight out that I was battling a fever and I could not break into the final 5 lbs as my body started to shut down. Rather than risking huge health consequences and possibly calling the fight off, thankfully we were able to move the weight to 155. At weigh ins, I still felt off but I was sure it would go away after I rehydrated and ate. Later on that night I still felt off and was suffering from cold sweats and no sleep. Finally, I fell asleep at 6 am Saturday morning and woke up at 1 pm hoping to feel better. I could not keep any food or water down nor could I stand up to use the restroom.

I struggled with my own ego, got on a call with Tiki (Ghosn) and Hunter (Campbell), and I made the decision to call off the fight. I dared to do something crazy for the love of fighting, but I got sick and my body gave out on me. I want to give the fans and my opponents my best performance every time I step into the cage. Diego Lopes I can only imagine what went off on your side, you have nothing but my respect and I’ll talk to Hunter and Tiki and make this right by you. To the UFC, Dana, Hunter, and the fans, thank you for having my back.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/C8-dUl1SXpv/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

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Daniel Cormier gives current UFC light heavyweights ‘no chance’ of striking with Alex Pereira

Daniel Cormier wonders if anyone can stop Alex Pereira’s reign as UFC light heavyweight champion.

[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] wonders if anyone can stop [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag]’s reign at light heavyweight.

Pereira (11-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) notched his second 205-pound title defense when he knocked out Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1 MMA, 4-2 UFC) in their title-fight rematch this past Saturday at UFC 303 from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Cormier compares his own reign to that of Pereira, because Cormier had strong grapplers such as Jon Jones, Glover Teixeira, Phil Davis, and Ryan Bader at the top of his division. In the current top light heavyweight rankings, Cormier doesn’t see too much of a ground threat for Pereira.

“When I look at the light heavyweight landscape, look at the top five, he’s beaten on Jiri twice,” Cormier said on “Good Guy/Bad Guy” with Chael Sonnen. “He’s beat Jamahal (Hill) who’s also in the top five.

“(Aleksandar) Rakic is a striker, (Jan) Blachowicz is a striker, Johnny Walker in a striker, Khalil Rountree is a striker. The only one that has any wrestling is (Magomed) Ankalaev, but Ankalaev isn’t technically a wrestler. He is a striker who has said he is going to knock Alex ‘Poatan’ Pereira out.”

Ankalaev is confident he doesn’t need to resort to his wrestling to beat Pereira. But Cormier doesn’t like anyone’s chances on the feet vs. the knockout specialist.

“I look at this weight class right now, Chael, and I see no wrestlers,” Cormier added. “I don’t see any wrestlers all the way to No. 10. No. 6 guy in the world is Nikita Krylov. If nobody wrestles this guy, Chael, how long can Alex Pereira reign at top of the division? Because it feels if you’re forced to stand with him and strike with him, you really have no chance.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.

Jamahal Hill: Alex Pereira made ‘beautiful adjustments’ in UFC 303 knockout of Jiri Prochazka, looked evolved

Jamahal Hill had high praise for rival Alex Pereira after UFC 303.

[autotag]Jamahal Hill[/autotag] had high praise for rival [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag] after UFC 303.

Pereira (11-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) notched his second title defense by knocking out Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1 MMA, 4-2 UFC) in their title-fight rematch this past Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Hill (12-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC) is eager to run things back with Pereira after he suffered a knockout loss to him at UFC 300, but couldn’t help but compliment “Poatan” for his performance.

“Great main event, absolute dominant performance by Alex from start to finish,” Hill said on his YouTube channel. “I believe this is honestly probably the first fight that I’ve seen where Alex came out and won the fight from start until he got the finish. He didn’t have to come back and – it was still some adversity, Jiri still presented his challenges in it, but he adapted and he made good adjustments.”

Pereira knocked down Prochazka at the end of Round 1 with a left hook, and was able to take him out with a head kick just 13 seconds into Round 2. Pereira later revealed that he noticed a tendency in Prochazka’s warmup which he was able to capitalize on.

“The adjustment that I seen that Alex made from that was the check hook,” Hill said. “More so before, you see him in come like he steps in with that hook and he tries to land it leaning in and throwing his power forward. This time we seen him implement it from more of a defensive and a counteractive manner in this particular fighting sequence.

“The first hook that he landed on Jiri, he hit him and you could see the eyes roll, you could see him get dazed a little bit. From there, he landed another one that kind of wobbled him, that kind of shook the legs a little bit and then he landed the one at the end of the round that put him on his back. It’s beautiful adjustments bro, beautiful adjustments. He looked evolved, he looked like he’s taking more steps and getting better as a fighter.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.

Dan Ige rewarded for fighting on hours’ notice at UFC 303: ‘I got paid double or triple what I normally get’

Dan Ige says the UFC gave him a “double or triple” his usual pay and a new contract for fighting Diego Lopes at UFC 303.

[autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag] was rewarded handsomely for stepping up on super short notice to save the UFC 303 co-main event.

Ige (18-8 MMA, 10-7 UFC), who was at home getting a massage when the card at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas began, ended up fighting before the main event, creating arguably the wildest short-notice replacement story in UFC history.

Diego Lopes was scheduled to fight Brian Ortega, but he fell ill on fight day. Ige, who lives in Las Vegas and was already in fight camp, accepted the fight when his manager contacted him. Initially, Ige thought his manager was saying he was getting an opponent switch for July 20, when he was scheduled to fight Chepe Mariscal.

As it turned out, Ige would frantically get his things together, head to the arena immediately, and get ready for a fight that night.

The event had already seen more than its share of late changes, including the main event, Conor McGregor’s big return to face Michael Chandler. The headliner ended up being a light heavyweight title rematch between Alex Pereira and Jiri Prochazka.

The co-main event was originally set to be Jamahal Hill vs. Khalil Rountree, but after a number of injuries and shakeups, Ortega vs. Lopes was the fight on the docket on the morning of UFC 303. However, even that matchup didn’t last, and Ige filled in at the drop of a hat.

Although Ige lost a decision to Lopes (25-6 MMA, 4-1 UFC), the promotion compensated him well for stepping up.

“I got all my money, show and my win, and I got more,” Ige told MMA Junkie Radio. “I got a new deal out of it. I got paid well. I probably got double or triple what I normally get, so it was – the number hit the bank account today, and it looks nice.

“I got to make those payouts, though. The payouts are bigger now, but I’m blessed, man. I’m grateful, I’m happy. You’re always going to want more money in a way, so I try not to get too greedy in my heart. But I do believe I was compensated fairly.”

Ige knew the last-minute situation to fill in was delicate, but also believed he deserved to be paid appropriately. While he believes he could have asked for more money, he wouldn’t lose the opportunity to step up for a same-day fight on International Fight Week.

“I wasn’t going to sit there and negotiate myself out of a deal,” Ige said. “I wasn’t going to be like, ‘Give me $2 million,’ and they’d be like, ‘OK, go screw yourself.’ They could easily just shut down the whole thing. This was an opportunity for me to become a legend and do something above and beyond, something that’s never been done in this era of the sport.”

Aside from financial compensation, UFC CEO Dana White granted Ige’s request to compete at Noche UFC at Sphere in Las Vegas. Now, he has to wait to see who he will share the cage with at the one-off event at the unique venue.

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USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, July 2: Alex Pereira overtakes Jon Jones for P4P No. 1

Check out the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings following UFC 303 in Las Vegas, in which a new P4P king has been crowned.

Following UFC 303 and 2024 PFL 6, the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings required updating.

A massive shakeup has occurred in the MMA Junkie pound-for-pound rankings following the UFC’s pay-per-view event headlining International Fight Week in Las Vegas.

Alex Pereira knocked out Jiri Prochazka in Round 2 of their light heavyweight title rematch, and as a result, shook up the top of the P4P rankings.

Jon Jones returned to claim the No. 1 P4P spot after winning the heavyweight title in his divisional debut at UFC 285, and held it until now. Due to his incredible performances and high activity, Pereira, a former middleweight champion, swoops in to take the throne after winning his fourth straight fight, all of which were against former light heavyweight champions.

Due to inactivity, Jones falls to No. 3 behind lightweight champion Islam Makhachev.

Also in action at the pay-per-view event, [autotag]Ian Machado Garry[/autotag] and [autotag]Macy Chiasson[/autotag] made waves in the rankings with their victorious outings.

Check out all the latest pound-for-pound and divisional USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings above.

UFC 303’s Dan Ige recounts taking same-day bout vs. Diego Lopes: ‘In a way, it felt like I won’

Dan Ige looks back at the wild sequence of events that led him to fight last minute at Saturday’s UFC 303.

[autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag] had one hell of a weekend as he partook in one of the UFC’s craziest pulls in modern history.

This past Saturday, Ige co-headlined UFC 303 in Las Vegas – an event that served as the crown jewel of the prestigious UFC International Fight Week. Although that is an honor for many fighters, what made it crazy and unique is that he wasn’t supposed to fight on the card, and was summoned hours before the co-main event, after the card had already started.

That’s right. With just four hours’ notice, Ige (18-8 MMA, 10-7 UFC) ended up fighting dangerous contender Diego Lopes (24-6 MMA, 3-1 UFC) in the co-main event of UFC 303. It was a hectic and chaotic turn of events for Ige, and ironically enough, he was in “full-on zen mode” and listening to spa music when it all went down.

“My massage therapist was at my house, she worked on my whole family, I was the last one,” Ige told MMA Junkie Radio, recalling the moment he got the call to fight Lopes. “I got on the table around 3 p.m. I had an hour and a half booked, and I had no clue I’d be fighting.

“I was just getting ready for Monday, recovering and getting ready for Sunday and then Monday because I was getting ready for a fight (on July 20), so I was just getting my body right.”

As Ige was getting his body worked on, his manager and UFC brass were scrambling to get him. He was the ideal option to replace an ill Brian Ortega, who was supposed to fight Lopes in the card’s co-main event. Ige was training and had a fight booked in Las Vegas, so he had all his medical paperwork done and lives in town.

“My phone was on do not disturb, and my wife comes upstairs because she was getting calls from Ali (Abdelaziz) and my mom was calling saying, ‘Hey, Ali is calling,'” Ige said. “Finally, I grabbed my phone. Ten missed calls – Ali, Hunter Campbell. I was like, ‘What’s going on?’

“As I’m trying to look who called me, Ali’s calling again, so I answered. I was like, ‘Hey, what’s going on brother? Sorry, I’m getting a massage.’ He was like, ‘Brother, brother. Ortega is out.’ I’m like, ‘OK, cool.’ He’s like, ‘Brother, you want to fight Lopes?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, sure. Let’s go.'”

Ige, who was supposed to fight Chepe Mariscal on July 20 at a UFC Fight Night event at the Apex, thought he was getting the call to fight Lopes at a later date, thinking Lopes’ fight with Ortega had been canceled. But as we know now, Ige’s manager meant fighting Lopes in a few hours at UFC 303.

“I’m like, ‘What? That’s not even possible,'” Ige said when he realized they were asking him to fight in a few hours’ time. “Anyway, I’m starting to get excited. So I’m like, ‘Yeah, let’s go! Let’s go!’ He’s like, ‘Brother, you want me to get a deal done?’ I’m like, ‘Whatever that means, sure. Let’s go.’ So he said, ‘OK, I’ll call you back.’ So, I’m like, that was weird.”

Abdelaziz told Ige to pack his bag and head over to the T-Mobile Arena, as his fight with Lopes was likely going to happen. Some details needed to be addressed, but Abdelaziz told him it was 80 percent done.

“I’m running around my house like, what do I need?” Ige said. “I’m trying to drink water, trying to eat something because if I’m going to fight, I need to be fueled. I had some yogurt and granola, some honey. I had a coffee, I had some supplemental carbs. I’m literally running around my house, frantically excited and just grabbing random things.”

Ige called his head coach, Eric Nicksick, who was already at the arena to corner Roman Dolidze and told him what was happening. Nicksick asked no questions and quickly assembled a last-minute corner, calling PFL’s Kai Kamaka III and former UFC champion Sean Strickland.

Abdelaziz then picked up Ige and took him to the arena.

“I’m walking in, they take me to this VIP room, there’s famous people in there: Mark Wahlberg, Jellyroll, Dana (White), Hunter (Campbell),” Ige said. “I say what’s up and boom, they take me to the scale.

“I didn’t know I actually had to weigh in. I didn’t read the bout agreement. They sent me the bout agreement, and I was like, ‘Oh, sweet. The money is there. I’m getting good money.’ That’s all I looked at. I didn’t know there was an actual weight class – 165.”

Luckily for Ige, he was on weight as 165 pounds is his walk-round weight in camp and weighed in no problem. Lopes was also weighed in at 161 pounds, making their co-main event bout official.

Next thing you know, Ige is getting his hands wrapped and was an hour and a half away from co-headlining one of the promotion’s most important card of the year in front of 20,000 fans.

Ige went on to lose a 29-28 unanimous decision, but put on an admiral effort in the process. Although an official loss on his record, Ige was happy with the experience and that he showed the MMA world that he’s indeed about that life.

“For no game planning, nothing, just going out there and having fun and fighting, I thought I did pretty well,” Ige said. “In a way, it felt like I won. I won a lot of notoriety, I won fans, I got UFC favor, and it feels good. You don’t normally feel like this after a loss on a Tuesday, but the amount of just love and respect that I got from people, fans, the media, here we are, man. What a fricking wild night.”

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Diego Lopes, Movsar Evloev trade barbs after UFC 303: ‘Sit back and watch the big guys do the work’

UFC featherweights Diego Lopes and Movsar Evloev have reignited their rivalry.

UFC featherweights [autotag]Diego Lopes[/autotag] and [autotag]Movsar Evloev[/autotag] have reignited their rivalry.

After a whirlwind of a week, Lopes (25-6 MMA, 4-1 UFC) defeated four-hour notice replacement Dan Ige in this past Saturday’s UFC 303 co-main event at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Ige replaced Brian Ortega, who fell ill on the night of the fight.

Lopes expressed interest in a rematch with Evloev after his UFC 300 win over Sodiq Yusuff. Now Evloev (18-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) is willing to grant his wish, vowing to finish him if they rematch.

Hey @Diegolopesmma, I wanna give you a rematch at the Sphere because @funkmasterMMA is running for his life, and this time I’m gonna finish you.”

Lopes called for his fight with Ortega to be rebooked for UFC 306 at the Sphere. He appears to have moved on from Evloev.

“Have you finally realized that the way the UFC pays attention to you is by mentioning my name? Or are you afraid that tomorrow morning I’ll be in your place in the rankings? It took you 3 months to get back to me. Sit back and watch the big guys do the work.”

Evloev wasn’t impressed with Lopes’ performance against Ige, who was able to rally late. After two strong rounds, Lopes appeared to slow down in Round 3.

“Diego you lost six times, you’ve been knocked out by two guys, bums. Dan Ige took a fight on 4 hours notice and In the third round he exposed you. Don’t talk too much you trash!”

Since Evloev defeated Lopes at UFC 288, he picked up another decision win over Arnold Allen at UFC 297. Meanwhile, Lopes has fought four times since making his debut on short notice against Evloev. Lopes fired back at Evloev for his lack of activity.

On Saturday night, Dan and I did something you would never do in your life. You’ve only had one fight in 13 months. You have no right to anything. First you seek to finish someone, or at least try to get a submission. 🤫.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 303.