With UFC title fight off table, Leon Edwards targets Colby Covington in quick turnaround

With his wish for the next UFC welterweight title shot unfulfilled, Leon Edwards is shifting his focus to Colby Covington.

With his wish for the next UFC welterweight title shot unfulfilled, [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag] is turning his attention to a fight with [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag].

Edwards (18-3 MMA, 10-2 UFC) returned to the octagon for the first time in 20 months this past Saturday and headlined UFC Fight Night 187 vs. short-notice replacement Belal Muhammad, who filled in for Khamzat Chimaev. The bout ended in anticlimactic fashion when an accidental eye poke from Edwards led to a no contest.

With a nine-fight unbeaten streak, Edwards showed little interest in a rematch and instead pushed to challenge champion Kamaru Usman. Just days later, though, Usman vs. Jorge Masvidal was announced as the UFC 261 headliner on April 24.

That has forced Edwards to shift expectations, and he told UFC commentator Joe Rogan on a recent edition of “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast that he’s seeking a fast turnaround against Covington (16-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC) in what seemingly would be an undeniable title eliminator.

“I’d like to be back straight away,” Edwards said. “The fight (with Muhammad) was one round. I didn’t get to get in my flow. (I want to fight) straight away, really. I feel like May. We’re trying to get Colby Covington, so we’ll see what he says. So May, early June. We’ll see. But I want to be active this year. I had a long year-and-a-half off, so if we can bang them out, I’m going to keep banging them out.”

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Although Edwards doesn’t necessarily agree Masvidal deserves a rematch for the belt after losing a lopsided decision to Usman last July, he understands why it’s happening.

He knows it’s a big money fight for the UFC, and despite his history with both men, he’s confident Usman will still be the man holding the strap when he gets there.

“Surprised (UFC booked the rematch)? No,” Edwards said. “Because it’s about money, right? Putting asses in the seats. I think the fight 10 out of 10 times, Usman (wins) nine probably. It’s a good, entertaining fight for the fans, but as martial artists, it’s just one of them fights. Usman’s going to go out there and grapple him probably. I’ll be watching for sure. But if I had to put money on it, I would probably go Usman for the win again.”

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UFC Fight Night 187 medical suspensions: Belal Muhammad faces 30 days after eye poke

Belal Muhammad isn’t facing a long time off after suffering a nasty eye poke against Leon Edwards at UFC Fight Night 187.

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Thankfully, [autotag]Belal Muhammad[/autotag] isn’t facing a potentially long medical suspension coming out of UFC Fight Night 187.

Muhammad’s first headliner vs. Leon Edwards was ruled a no contest after Edwards accidentally poked him in the eye 18 seconds into the second round of their welterweight fight. Visibly in pain, Muhammad was unable to continue and, as a result, the fight was stopped without a winner.

Muhammad (18-3 MMA, 9-3 UFC) was able to provide a positive update shortly after, stating that he suffered no permanent damage to his eye and was slowly starting to get his vision back. The medical report supports his claim as Muhammad will be prohibited from any contact for 21 days with no contest for 30 days, until he receives doctor clearance for his right eye.

MMA Junkie on Tuesday obtained the full list of suspensions from MixedMartialArts.com, the Association of Boxing Commissions’ official record keeper.

The full list of UFC Fight Night 187 medical suspensions includes:

  • [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • Belal Muhammad: Must have right eye cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 30 days; minimum suspension is 21 days.
  • [autotag]Misha Cirkunov[/autotag]: Suspended 60 days with 45 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Ryan Spann[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Gavin Tucker[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with 30 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Jonathan Martinez[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with 30 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Davey Grant[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with 21 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Manel Kape[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with 14 days no contact.
  • [autotag]Matheus Nicolau[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days.
  • [autotag]Angela Hill[/autotag]: Must have left eye cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 30 days.
  • [autotag]Ashley Yoder[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right ear is cleared by ENT.
  • [autotag]Marcelo Rojo[/autotag]: Must have maxillofacial bones fractures cleared by maxillofacial surgeon and left lamina papyracea cleared by an ophthalmologist, otherwise suspended 180 days.
  • [autotag]Charles Jourdain[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days due to left scalp laceration.
  • [autotag]Rani Yahya[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Ray Rodriguez[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]Nasrat Haqparast[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until left fibula X-ray is cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.
  • [autotag]Rafa Garcia[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right elbow X-ray is cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.
  • [autotag]Cortney Casey[/autotag]: Suspended 180 days or until right foot and right hand X-rays are cleared by orthopedic doctor; also suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]J.J. Aldrich[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Gloria de Paula[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag]: Suspended 21 days with no contact for 14 days.
  • [autotag]Matthew Semelsberger[/autotag]: No suspension.
  • [autotag]Jason Witt[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days.

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Spinning Back Clique: Illegal knees and eye pokes and more knees, oh my!

Check out the latest edition of “Spinning Back Clique,” in which our panel weighs in on illegal knees, eye pokes and more.

Check out the latest edition of “Spinning Back Clique,” in which our panel weighs in on illegal knees, eye pokes and more.

Welcome to “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a quick spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts. This week, host Simon Head is joined by panelists “Gorgeous” George Garcia of MMA Junkie Radio, as well as MMA Junkie’s Farah Hannoun and Nolan King. Let’s get into it!

  • The highly anticipated welterweight fight between [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag] and [autotag]Belal Muhammad[/autotag] ended in disappointment at UFC Fight Night 187 thanks to an accidental eye poke that took Muhammad out of the fight early in the second round. So what can the sport do about eye pokes, which have been a fairly consistent problem?
  • After the main event, Edwards was clear about what he wants next – and that’s a title shot, even though he didn’t beat Muhammad, and even though the fight was his first in more than 600 days. Muhammad thinks he’s crazy for thinking he deserves a shot at Kamaru Usman rather than a rematch of their fight. So what do we think should happen?
  • The eye poke wasn’t the only thing that stopped a fight early at UFC Fight Night 187. For the second straight week, a bout was stopped due to an illegal knee to the head of a grounded opponent. In the UFC 259 title fight between bantamweight champion [autotag]Petr Yan[/autotag] and challenger [autotag]Aljamain Sterling[/autotag], Sterling won the belt when Yan was disqualified for an illegal knee. But at UFC Fight Night 187, [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] simply had to endure a no contest when he hit [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] with one. Does the sport need to have a big reckoning with the rules and officiating so the end results will be a little more clear cut when things like that happen?
  • [autotag]Tony Ferguson[/autotag] and [autotag]Beneil Dariush[/autotag] are set to fight at UFC 262, and we’ve also got the potential for a [autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag] trilogy fight. The UFC’s lightweight division is a killer one, and with champion Khabib Nurmagomedov retired, but not officially retired, what kind of matchups do we want to see to get some kind of pecking order at the top of the weight class?

Hope you enjoy this week’s show. Watch Episode 71 of “Spinning Back Clique” above.

Stephen Thompson: I deserve UFC welterweight title shot more than Leon Edwards at this point

Stephen Thompson thinks he should be above Leon Edwards in the UFC welterweight championship pecking order.

[autotag]Stephen Thompson[/autotag] thinks he should be above [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag] in the UFC welterweight championship pecking order.

Edwards returned after an almost two-year layoff against Belal Muhammad in the UFC Fight Night 187 headliner this past weekend, but the fight was ruled a no contest after Edwards inadvertently poked Muhammad in the eye, rendering him unable to continue.

After the fight, Edwards expressed his desire to move on, calling for a title shot. But “Wonderboy,” who recently put a halt to the winning streaks of surging contenders Vicente Luque and Geoff Neal, thinks it’s absurd for Edwards to be asking for a title shot after a return that provided no clarity.

Thompson (16-4-1 MMA, 11-4-1 UFC) thinks Edwards (18-3 MMA, 10-2 UFC) should run things back with Muhammad and even sees himself in a better position to contend for the title.

“With the eye poke, there’s only one thing to do and that’s to run it back,” Thompson said on his “What’s Up Everybody?!” podcast. “I know Edwards is saying he deserves the title next, but you can’t get the title after being gone for two years and then having a no contest with a poke to the eye. Come on.”

He continued, “I know Edwards is like, ‘No, man, I want to fight for the title,’ but come on, dude, you haven’t fought. I deserve the title more than you deserve it at this point. I’m just saying, you know what I mean? Come on, guys. I’m the only guy that Usman hasn’t fought.”

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With welterweight champion Kamaru Usman’s next fight booked against Jorge Masvidal in the main event of UFC 261 on April 24, neither Thompson nor Edwards will get their wish. Both men have been on a collision course, with Thompson calling Edwards out in the past, and that just might be Edwards’ best shot at getting a crack at Usman, with Colby Covington continuously dismissing him.

Despite thinking Edwards should have been disqualified for poking Muhammad in the eye, Thompson was rather complimentary of his performance up to the point of the unfortunate fight-ending sequence.

“He looked really crisp, he looked really sharp, he looked fast,” Thompson said. “That’s the best shape I’ve seen Edwards in. … He was looking shredded. His fighting skills, he had great timing, he looked very calm. He had Belal backing up, so I had him winning the fight up until the point where he poked him in the eye and he couldn’t continue. But anything can happen. Belal was saying he was just getting warmed up.”

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UFC’s Marc Ratner: Referees can’t view fouls through black-and-white lens; gray areas needed

UFC VP of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner explains why illegal knees ended Yan-Sterling and Anders-Stewart with two different outcomes.

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There’s always room for improvement, but UFC vice president of regulatory affairs Marc Ratner largely thinks the three UFC fight-ending fouls over the past two weeks were handled well by officials overseeing those bouts.

The parade of recent fouls between UFC 259 and UFC Fight Night 187 has placed MMA officiating and rules pertaining to fouls under the microscope, with fighters, fans, officials, coaches and media all varying in opinions. For Ratner, however, the final rulings on all three recent incidents were the correct calls.

So why did the two illegal knees end with different outcomes? At UFC 259, [autotag]Petr Yan[/autotag] was disqualified for illegally kneeing [autotag]Aljamain Sterling[/autotag]. One week later at UFC Fight Night 187, [autotag]Eryk Anders[/autotag] hit [autotag]Darren Stewart[/autotag] with an illegal knee that resulted in a no contest.

Ratner explained the major difference was the referee interpretation of intent: Was the knee accidental or not?

“What we start with is the referee’s judgment,” Ratner told MMA Junkie Radio on Monday. “That’s the most important thing. He’s going to determine, in his mind, whether it was intentional or accidental. It certainly changes the way the fight is scored or the outcome. In the Yan fight, Mark Smith was the referee, and he felt that the knee was intentional. And therefore, because Sterling couldn’t go forward, that became a disqualification.

“The difference from last Saturday’s fight was Herb Dean felt that maybe (Anders), who landed the knee, (and Stewart), who was putting his hand up and down, kind of baited him into that knee. He felt it was an accident. Therefore it became a no contest or a ‘no decision.’ If it would’ve (gone) two rounds full, we would’ve gone to the scorecards.”

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Every referee is going to have an opinion, but that doesn’t mean an off-the-board mistake can’t be made. However, the interpretation of Smith, who officiated his first title fight in Sterling vs. Yan, aligned with Ratner’s assessment of what transpired.

“I would say that Aljamain’s knee was down for, I don’t know, four or five seconds,” Ratner said. “There was no question it wasn’t coming up. He hit him in the head. He kneed him in the head. Right from the beginning, I knew it was going to be a DQ. I was thinking that way. That was the correct decision.”

With all that said, the question whether the rules can be improved or made clearer still looms. Without having the rule in front of him to break down word-for-word, Ratner explained why leaving room for interpretation is important.

“I think you have a gray area there,” Ratner said. “You’re always going to have a judgment call in any sport. To put it in black and white, to say, ‘This is going to be accidental … this is going to be intentional,’ can you read intent? That’s really the question. … I don’t think it’ll ever be clear. I don’t know how you can make it in writing that you wouldn’t be able to use judgment. That would be, I don’t know – I read those rules and there is some gray area there. I think it would be hard to say that you can definitively say that black and white, ‘This was intentional … this was accidental.”

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With fighters who are illegally kneed, Ratner would like to see more decisiveness from the safety net that’s in place to protect them. Doctors shouldn’t leave the decision up to the injured fighter. Instead, they should swiftly nix the possibility of a bout continuing if the athlete is potentially concussed.

“My belief is if a fighter is compromised with what I would call a ‘closed-head injury,’ possibly a concussion, that you cannot let the fighter go forward,” Ratner said. “I would like the doctor to make a really quick decision. Don’t ask the fighter if it can go on. A lot of fighters would say yes because they don’t want to go out that way. It doesn’t matter what the fighter says. I want the doctors to be more definitive. I’m certainly not an educated doctor, but when I see a person compromised, I just assume you stop the fight right away. Don’t vacillate and have him make a decision. ‘Can you walk? Can you fight?’ I think that’s wrong.”

As for the eye pokes, like the one that ended the UFC Fight Night 187 main event between Leon Edwards and Belal Muhammad, Ratner and the UFC is always looking for solutions to improve. With different glove models proving difficult to grapple with, Ratner thinks locker room rules meetings between teams and officials are vital and should be taken seriously by everyone involved.

“I do believe hard warnings should be given in the dressing room, saying, ‘I’m not going to warn you during the fight. I’m telling you right now. Don’t grab the fence. If you’re leading with your fingers out there, I can take a point. I want you to know that. This is a hard warning, so think about this stuff very clearly,'” Ratner said. “Sometimes you’ve got language barriers, hoping the Portuguese, that their interpreters tell them these things. Sometimes you don’t know. We have a lot of international fighters now, but there’s no excuse for breaking the rules. They all know the rules. You just have to enforce them. Not every referee is going to enforce them the same way.”

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Gavin Tucker reflects on one-punch KO loss to Dan Ige: ‘Small mistakes, big consequences’

Gavin Tucker’s first-career knockout loss was a bitter pill to swallow, but he vows “the response will be appropriate.”

[autotag]Gavin Tucker[/autotag]’s first-career knockout loss was a bitter pill to swallow.

Tucker (13-2 MMA, 4-2 UFC) was stopped with one punch by top-10 ranked featherweight [autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag] in just 22 seconds this past weekend at UFC Fight Night 187, putting a halt to his three-fight winning streak.

The rising Canadian featherweight was dropped in the first exchange of the bout, but he vows not to be deterred from the unfortunate outcome. He took to Instagram to open up about the loss.

“Moment of impact

I don’t know much, but I know for sure we don’t get what we don’t go after. I went after it. But I lunged after it,..and in a straight line.
Small mistakes, big consequences.
Saturday night I walked onto a well timed right hand and experienced my first KO loss. I’m not gonna hide from it or downplay it. I’m heartbroken. But I can’t change what happened. I can only control how I move forward. Regretfully I didn’t get to show the work or represent the efforts and strides made from this great team. But I’ll create new opportunities and get back to business as soon as things are in order to do so.
Thanks to the UFC and my opponent for the opportunity.
Thanks to this team for the work they do, and to Everyone for the support and messages. My main goal for these next weeks of adjustment is to show strength in character, acceptance , and response.
The response will be appropriate. Time to walk in the dark for a while.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CMcJGf0HlGZ/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Tucker, who was briefly linked to a matchup with Cub Swanson, ended up with another big opportunity after Ryan Hall was forced out of his bout against Ige. Though things didn’t go his way, the 34-year-old was riding some momentum having scored three-straight wins over Seung Woo Choi, Justin Jaynes and Billy Quarantillo.

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Colby Covington slams ‘bum’ Leon Edwards after eye-poke no contest at UFC Fight Night 187

Colby Covington thinks Leon Edwards should have been penalized for his inadvertent eye poke against Belal Muhammad.

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[autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] thinks [autotag]Leon Edwards[/autotag] should have been penalized for his inadvertent eye poke against Belal Muhammad.

Edwards’ highly anticipated return was ruled a no contest when he accidentally poked Muhammad in the eye in their UFC Fight Night 187 headliner on Saturday night. Muhammad suffered clear damage to his right eye and the fight was waved off after “Remember the Name” was ruled unable to continue.

Edwards (18-3 MMA, 10-2 UFC), who has been campaigning for a title shot for a while now, is currently in a tough spot. His first fight in almost two years ended in unfortunate circumstances, perhaps leaving him in limbo in the UFC’s welterweight division.

After the Muhammad fight, Edwards expressed his desire to move on, and called for a title shot. But Covington (16-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC), who is also gunning for a rematch with welterweight champion Kamaru Usman, was not impressed by Edwards’ performance and thinks he should have received a harsher penalty for poking Muhammad in the eye.

No, I could care less how he looks,” Covington told Submission Radio. “I’ve watched little tapes from here, bits and pieces from the past, and I don’t see anything special. I see a bum. I see a guy that hasn’t fought in two years. What’s the criteria for the rankings? How is he still in the rankings? I know that before they pulled him out of the rankings because of the inactivity and he was ducking fights. He didn’t want to fight little ‘Wonderboy.’ He didn’t want to fight someone else. So, they pulled him out of the rankings. But now he’s back in the rankings, he still hasn’t fought in two years.

“He has a no contest – which by the way, that should have been a disqualification because he did poke the guy in the face in the first round. And backstage, I know that Herb Dean gave them the warning, ‘Hey, don’t poke anybody in the eye,’ because that’s the instruction they give every time before you go out for a fight. So, he should have been disqualified. I don’t know how that was a no contest. But that being said, he still hasn’t fought in two years. How is he in the rankings, guys? What’s the criteria?”

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Prior to the Muhammad booking, the UFC was angling for a matchup between Edwards and Covington, but Covington appeared uninterested. Covington explained that he would have accepted the short-notice fight if the numbers were right.

It was going to be a price tag,” Covington said. “I wanted a little bit more than was in my contract. I just wasn’t going to show up for a normal paycheck to fight that guy. For me to come up and show that up on short notice and fight that guy, you know, the way I fight guys, I redline it every time I fight. So, when I fight, you know you’re getting a Ferrari that’s coming forward, high octane, high energy, and he’s coming to fight and bring the fight. So, if I want to fight at my best, I need a full training camp. So, that fight was never gonna happen unless the UFC was gonna pay for it to happen.”

He continued, “They asked me and said, ‘Hey, what’s it gonna take, Colby, for your price?’ Because first off, let’s be honest, why are we in this position? Because this guy, irrelevant Leon Scott, was supposed to fight some kid named Sputnik. And, you know, Sputnik pulls out a couple of times, he doesn’t want to fight, your hype job is down the drain. Sorry, UFC, your plan, it’s all folded up now. Now it’s all in shame. So, let’s talk about why we got to that position. And once we get to that position, we’re three weeks out. You want me to save your card? You want me to get off the couch when I’m hanging out with Polyana Viana every day, and you want me to show up and save the day and make the UFC great again on short notice? It’s going to take a price tag.

“It’s not gonna be the basic offer that’s already in my contract. If you’re gonna give me the basic offer, I’m gonna take a full training camp and I’m gonna take my time. I’m gonna fight when I want to fight, when my body’s ready to fight. I’m always ready to fight. I strive on excellence and always being in shape and always ready to fight, but I also want to fight at peak performance. And there’s peaks and valleys, and I know when to peak and how to have my body ready to peak at the right time. So, if I want to have my body peak at the right time, I need a full training camp.”

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UFC Fight Night 187 matchmaker: Best next fights for key winners

See who Ryan Spann, Dan Ige and Angela Hill should fight next after their bouts at UFC Fight Night 187.

With another night of action in the rearview mirror at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, it’s time to look forward, put on a pair of Sean Shelby and Mick Maynard’s shoes, and play UFC matchmaker for UFC Fight Night 187‘s key winning fighters outside the main event.

Callout Collection: Who UFC Fight Night 187 winners want next – and how likely they’ll get them

Dan Ige and Ryan Spann were among those who name-dropped their preferred next opponents at UFC Fight Night 187 in Las Vegas.

Earning wins in the UFC is certainly no easy task, but what comes next is often even more important: the post-fight callout.

So, after Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 187 event in Las Vegas, who took advantage of their time on the mic?

See below for this week’s Callout Collection – and just how realistic each one is.