UFC free fight: Andre Fili puts away Sheymon Moraes in first-round KO, wins $50K bonus

Watch UFC featherweight Andre Fili put away Sheymon Moraes with a first-round KO in 2019.

[autotag]Andre Fili[/autotag]’s biggest career moment came against longtime fighter Sheymon Moraes.

In July 2019, Fili scored a first-round knockout over Moraes to improve to a run of 4-1 in five fights, which stands as his best stretch in the UFC so far. He also did it in his hometown of Sacramento, Calif., and won a $50,000 bonus for Performance of the Night.

You can watch Fili’s impressive finish in the video above.

Fili (23-10 MMA, 11-9 UFC) returns to the octagon Saturday against Dan Ige (17-7 MMA, 9-6 UFC) in the UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+) featherweight co-main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

UFC free fight: Dan Ige scores nasty walk-off KO over Damon Jackson

Ahead of UFC Fight Night 236, watch Dan Ige put away Damon Jackson with a nasty walk-off knockout.

[autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag] sure knows how to snap a losing streak with style.

Back in January 2023, the UFC featherweight veteran stopped a three-fight losing skid with one of his most impressive career knockouts. Ige (17-7 MMA, 9-6 UFC) put the lights out on Damon Jackson with a nasty walk-off. The finish earned Ige a $50,000 Performance of the Night bonus.

You can watch Ige’s impressive finish in the video above.

Ige returns to the octagon this Saturday in the co-main event of UFC Fight Night 236, which takes place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. He takes on fellow veteran Andre Fili (23-10 MMA, 11-9 UFC) in a featherweight bout.

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Call Brad Tavares a gatekeeper all you want – he knows how he stacks up

The term “gatekeeper” usually has a bad connotation in combat sports. But Brad Tavares doesn’t mind if that’s what he is … for now.

The term “gatekeeper” usually has a bad connotation in combat sports.

To be one, it means regularly being on the cusp of greatness – but also regularly just short while someone else goes on to, in this case, a middleweight title. So to get to that point to begin with: Very, very good. But most fighters don’t want that label saddled on them.

And [autotag]Brad Tavares[/autotag] (20-8 MMA, 15-8 UFC) no doubt would prefer to ditch the term, too. But if that’s the word you have to describe where he’s at right now in his UFC career, ahead of a fight against Gregory Rodrigues (14-5 MMA, 5-2 UFC), so be it.

“It is what it is. Yes: I look at the guys that I’ve fought and if they’ve gotten past me, boom, go on to be the champion. If somebody wants to say it in a negative way, then that’s on them. I don’t take it negatively,” Tavares said Wednesday at a media day for UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+), which goes down Saturday in Las Vegas.

Tavares lost to Robert Whittaker in 2015; Whittaker had gold around his waist five fights later. He lost to Israel Adesanya in 2018; Adesanya was a champ less than a year later. And in July 2022, he dropped a decision to current champ Dricus du Plessis.

So call him gatekeeper, but it means he’s right there – and regularly.

“I’m here fighting the best guys, and if they do make it past me, they’ve shown that they’ve gone on to become champions: Israel and Rob, Dricus – but all guys that I know on any given day, I can … I could still beat these guys. So that makes me excited, actually.”

This past August, Tavares got a much-needed win after a two-fight skid to du Plessis and Bruno Silva when he outworked former champion Chris Weidman at UFC 292. On paper, it’s arguably the biggest win of Tavares’ career.

The matchup with Rodrigues is a rebooking from a year ago, when Tavares pulled out with an injury. And though he said he didn’t care if it came back around, he sees a chance to stay in that gatekeeper lane with a win – and then the chance to push for more.

“I didn’t care (that we got rebooked), honestly,” Tavares said. “It was great to fight somebody like Chris Weidman, and honestly, if there had been another Chris Weidman-type fight out there, I would’ve loved that opportunity. But this is the fight that was presented, and it’s good to get it back and I guess settle the score. We were supposed to fight a year ago. It didn’t happen. Here we are a year later. I like the matchup. I think it’s a good matchup for me.”

Check out Tavares’ full interview in the video above.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Daniel Marcos sets goal of entering UFC bantamweight rankings in 2024

Ahead of his return at UFC Fight Night 236, Daniel Marcos sets a goal to enter the top 15 rankings in 2024.

[autotag]Daniel Marcos[/autotag] is a man with a plan, and he’s set the goal of earning a spot on the UFC official rankings this year.

The Peruvian bantamweight remains unbeaten in his professional career, and has a chance this Saturday to go 3-0 inside the octagon. Marcos (15-0 MMA, 2-0 UFC) takes on Aori Qileng (25-11 MMA, 3-3 UFC) in the opening bout of UFC Fight Night 236, which takes place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

Marcos believes a win this Saturday, plus a couple more later this year, and he should merit a stop among the best 15 fighters at bantamweight.

“This year I’ve set the goal of entering the top 15,” Marcos told MMA Junkie in Spanish. “That’s what I’ve set out for myself this year. I think I’m on a good path and going at a good pace. I will get even closer after this fight I’ll be having, I just need to keep showing what I’m capable of.

“I think two more fights, which is what I have in mind with my team, and I can get in the top 15. I think things will go my way this year. I’m advancing and this is what’s next. I plan on winning on February 10 and then be looking for someone in the top 15 or close, so I can enter.”

Marcos is feeling at home now in the UFC’s octagon. With two fights under his belt, and in arena shows, he no longer feels like a rookie – which is why this year he wants to further establish himself in the promotion.

“That’s now behind me,” Marcos said when asked if he still feels like a rookie. “That’s behind me and of course there’s always nerves and some fear, but that’s normal ahead of a fight. I was born for this, and I see myself as a champion in the future. This is what’s next, this fight in a couple of days, so I can show everything that I have evolved since my last fight.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Gregory Rodrigues: Brad Tavares ‘has a lot of experience, but I believe his time is gone’

Gregory Rodrigues is ready to springboard his career off of Brad Tavares.

[autotag]Gregory Rodrigues[/autotag] is ready to springboard his career off of [autotag]Brad Tavares[/autotag].

Rodrigues (14-5 MMA, 5-2 UFC) meets Tavares (20-8 MMA, 15-8 UFC) on Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+) main card at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

Tavares, a perennial middleweight contender, has fought just about every notable name, from former champions Israel Adesanya, Robert Whittaker and Chris Weidman to current champion Dricus Du Plessis. Rodrigues thinks beating someone like Tavares could be his ticket to a big fight.

“Brad fought maybe everyone in the division,” Rodrigues said at Wednesday’s UFC Fight Night 236 media day. “He has a lot of experience, but I believe his time is gone and now is my time. I’m ready for this.

“And if you see so many of the guys that fought him and beat him, they fought against someone at the top. I don’t know if that’s going to happen, if they’re going to offer me, but I believe it’s going to be one good step in my career.”

Rodrigues wanting to fight top-level competition is more of a desire than a demand. He’s willing to put in the necessary work to get there.

“I’m not going to rush,” Rodrigues said. “I don’t want to be like, ‘Oh, I need that.’ I want to do what I need to do. My plan is two more fights this year – maybe in the middle of the year and the end of the year. I believe I will finish this year on top of the contenders and my goal is to be a champion. I’m looking up, and I will take my time – but I will climb that.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Dan Ige gets UFC Fight Night 236 motivation fighting on same card with Brad Tavares

Dan Ige is hoping a potentially once-in-a-career opportunity will give him an extra boost this week.

[autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag] is hoping a potentially once-in-a-career opportunity will give him an extra boost this week.

Ige (17-7 MMA, 9-6 UFC) takes on Andre Fili (23-10 MMA, 11-9 UFC) in the UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+) featherweight co-main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. A couple fights prior to that, fellow Hawaiian Brad Tavares will fight Gregory Rodrigues. The chance to fight on the same show is a unique one for the friends.

Ige gave Tavares much credit for helping him get on his feet when he first moved to Las Vegas to train.

“When I moved to Vegas, Brad was the first guy – he opened up his couch. I had no money. I slept on his couch,” Ige said at Wednesday’s media day. “(I) literally walked into his house, spilled my whole jar of chia seeds all over the house, and he is like, ‘What the f*ck are chia seeds?’ I’m like, ‘Ah, dude, they’re healthy. I don’t know.’ And he’s like, ‘You f*cking dumbass. You spilled chia seeds everywhere.’ I’m pretty sure he still has chia seeds in his house.

“Me and Brad are on the (video game joy)sticks every night. That’s my self care. It’s nice to reminisce and just look back at those little things and just make each other laugh and think about the good times, because the good times always last. I’m grateful. I may never, ever get a chance to compete on the same card with him again, so I’m taking it all in and we’re looking to go out there and do some big things.”

Ige was set to fight Lerone Murphy, but now meets Fili, who stepped up on about three weeks’ notice for the fight. He’ll be trying to bounce back from a decision loss to Bryce Mitchell in September 2023 that snapped a two-fight winning streak.

Ige is a -175 betting favorite against Fili, who is working off a first-round knockout of Lucas Almeida less than two months ago.

Check out Ige’s full interview in the video above.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Michael Johnson ahead of UFC Fight Night 236: ‘I’m not finished by a long shot’

Michael Johnson still has a lot left in the tank.

[autotag]Michael Johnson[/autotag] still has a lot left in the tank.

Johnson (21-19 MMA, 13-15 UFC) enters his 29th octagon bout when he takes on Darrius Flowers (12-6-1 MMA, 0-1 UFC) on Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 236 main card at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas (ESPN+).

The 37-year-old Season 12 “Ultimate Fighter” finalist showed serious potential earlier in his career when he defeated Tony Ferguson and knocked out Dustin Poirier, but has struggled in recent years. He’s had a lot of inconsistencies throughout his career, but hasn’t lost his desire to compete.

“(I’m) just keeping my mind on the goal, and that goal is to be victorious – to get in here, enjoy the process, and see where it goes from there,” Johnson said at Wednesday’s UFC Fight Night 236 media day. “I’ve been in this sport for a long time, and I’m not finished by a long shot.”

Johnson will look to rebound from his knockout loss to Diego Ferreira this past May, and says he’s had plenty of time to do so. He spent some time training with Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix in preparation for Flowers.

“You’ll be looking for the best Michael Johnson you guys have seen to date,” Johnson said. “I’ve been training for this fight since like November, maybe even a little bit before that, because I was trying to get into the octagon late last year. So, I’ve been preparing all year. I’m in great shape, my mentality is great, and I’m ready to go in here, enjoy this process, and get the win.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Andre Fili on why he stepped in vs. Dan Ige: ‘I’m here to win a bunch of money, get a number next to my name’

Andre Fili sees nothing but incentives in his short-notice opportunity vs. Dan Ige.

[autotag]Andre Fili[/autotag] sees nothing but incentives in his short-notice opportunity against [autotag]Dan Ige[/autotag].

Fili (23-10 MMA, 11-9 UFC) replaced Lerone Murphy on about three weeks’ notice to take on Ige (17-7 MMA, 9-6 UFC) in Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+) co-main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

Fili is coming off a first-round TKO of Lucas Almeida this past December at UFC 296 and is happy to kick off 2024 with a big opportunity against top 15-ranked featherweight Ige.

“I have the utmost respect for him, and it wasn’t a fight I was hunting,” Fili said at Wednesday’s UFC Fight Night 236 media day. “I wasn’t calling him out. They presented the fight, and I took it. It’s time to get paid and it’s time to get a big win.

“It’s time to get these big opportunities rolling and keep this momentum going. I’m incredibly excited. It’s a great opponent, it’s a great card, it’s a great everything, and I’m excited to be a part of it.”

Fili, 33, still has aspirations of becoming UFC champion. He will look to string together a winning streak for the first time since 2019.

“All these fights are a chance at development, at growth, at testing yourself, at challenging yourself, at overcoming those challenges,” Fili said. “That’s what excited me. Also, getting f*cking paid excited me. So running up two checks back-to-back at the beginning of the year and still having time to fight two more times this year, that really excited me.

“It’s a great matchup, but I’m just so focused on myself it kind of doesn’t matter who it is. My last fight, I was basically the first fight on the card, now I’m the co-main event. Who cares? A fight’s a fight, and I’m here to win a bunch of money, get a number next to my name, and most of all, just make myself and the people around me proud.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Darrius Flowers thought he and opponent Michael Johnson were cool, and then: ‘It’s, ‘F*ck you’ now’

Darrius Flowers’ UFC debut was nothing like how he wanted it to be. Now he has some redemption on the mind – and some other drama, too.

[autotag]Darrius Flowers[/autotag]’ UFC debut was nothing like how he wanted it to be. Now he has some redemption on the mind.

Flowers won his way into the UFC with a 73-second slam TKO win on Dana White’s Contender Series in August 2022. He didn’t make his UFC debut until nearly a year later, though, and when he did, he found out the hard way about fighting at elevation.

At UFC 291 in Salt Lake City, Flowers said he went through altitude sickness that adversely affected him and contributed to his second-round submission loss to Jake Matthews. Of course, it didn’t help matters that he was itching to get in the cage, so moved up from his natural lightweight home to welterweight for the shot against Matthews.

“Obviously, I didn’t win, but I wouldn’t say that I was disappointed or it didn’t go how I would have liked it,” Flowers said at Wednesday’s media day for UFC Fight Night 236. “The fight was still a good fight. The worst part about that fight was the elevation, but I’ve learned from that. I moved to Vegas in October so I won’t have to deal with the altitude sickness that I went through for a week.”

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That may be an indicator of the level of seriousness Flowers (12-6-1 MMA, 0-1 UFC) is ready to apply to his fighting career ahead of his bout against longtime UFC lightweight Michael Johnson (21-19 MMA, 13-15 UFC). They meet on the UFC Fight Night 236 (ESPN+) main card Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

The Las Vegas altitude is only about half that of Salt Lake City, but it certainly is better than no altitude at all for conditioning fighter lungs.

“I’m going to be 30. I’m starting to run into realities now, that I can’t keep doing the same thing I was doing at 22 (now that I’m) 29? Now I’m getting older and realizing that sh*t is real out here. The biggest change (from the move) is just consistency. … Now I’m consistent and I don’t get tired. I can go 50 rounds. I’m very content with the move.”

But if things get a little bizarre at his face-off with Johnson on Friday, don’t be surprised. Flowers said the two had been cordial for years – to the point of even having MMA business-related reasons to hit each other up. But after Flowers signed to fight him, he said Johnson quickly blocked him.

And that’s fine with Flowers, but don’t expect him to be giving out any lowercase flowers to an opponent who throws up the ol’ social media block.

“I know Michael Johnson. We’ve hung out,” Flowers said. “… He’s called my phone numerous times, just for fight business because I was promoting shows and vice versa. And I’ll call his phone to see, ‘Hey, do you have anybody you know?’ We just kept in contact over the years. I even asked him to f*cking say, like five-six years ago, ‘Yo, could you say something to (Sean) Shelby for me?’ He’s like, ‘Bro, I’ve got you. I see Shelby.’ And then he goes and blocks me. We were cool. We had no problems. I looked up to the guy – been talking to him since like beginning of my pro career. Everything was fine. Then I f*cking went to his page …”

Flowers implied the optics, career-wise, might make it seem like Johnson should have reason to take some liberties. But whatever the reason for Johnson’s block, Flowers said some things can’t be undone.

“He’s making his 28th (UFC) walk. I’m making my second. I would think he would have a better relationship than somebody else,” Flowers said. “We didn’t have a real relationship. We were just cordial and knew each other and respectful. … It’s just business for me. I’m not trying to bring the drama into it. I’m just telling it like it is. He’s a cool guy. He just blocked me for no reason. It’s weird.

“You don’t go back from there. It’s not like after the fight, you’re going to unblock me and we’re cool again. No, we’re not cool anymore, bro. It’s, ‘F*ck you’ now, at the end of the day.”

Check out Flowers’ full media day interview in the video above.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.

Jack Hermansson targets Nassourdine Imavov with win over Joe Pyfer at UFC Fight Night 236

Jack Hermansson already has his sights set on another middleweight if he can get past Joe Pyfer.

[autotag]Jack Hermansson[/autotag] already has his sights set on another middleweight if he can get past [autotag]Joe Pyfer[/autotag].

Hermansson (23-8 MMA, 10-6 UFC) meets rising contender Pyfer (12-2 MMA, 3-0 UFC) in Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 236 main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas (ESPN+).

“The Joker” returns from a 14-month layoff. He most recently was seen in action in a second-round TKO loss against Roman Dolidze in December 2022. Dolidze is coming off a decision loss to Nassourdine Imavov this past Saturday at UFC Fight Night 235 – an opponent Hermansson is eyeing if he beats Pyfer.

“This fight is the most important thing on my mind at the moment, and I don’t have any big plans forward,” Hermansson said at Wednesday’s UFC Fight Night 236 media day. “But I would like to stay active, get a few more fights in, and if I beat Joe, I would love to be able to climb up again. I think that after Imavov’s fight last weekend, that might be a good opponent if I beat Joe.”

Imavov’s win over Dolidze was dominant, but had plenty of lulls. Despite finding a lot of success on the feet, Imavov struggled to finish the gutsy Dolidze.

“It wasn’t the prettiest fight that I’ve seen, but I like different styles of fights,” Hermansson said. “That was one of those which was just gritty. You could see that they were tired, and it was about who wants the most almost. I enjoyed that fight and it was kind of exciting even though it wasn’t very beautiful to watch.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 236.