UFC on ESPN+ 24 fight breakdown: Blaydes vs. Dos Santos

Check out the MMA junkie’s John Morgan and Dan Tom’s analysis and predictions for the UFC on ESPN+ 24 main event between Curtis Blaydes and Junior Dos Santos.

Check out the MMA junkie’s John Morgan and Dan Tom’s analysis and predictions for the UFC on ESPN+ 24 main event between Curtis Blaydes and Junior Dos Santos.

UFC on ESPN+ 24: Make your predictions for Curtis Blaydes vs. Junior Dos Santos

We want your predictions for Saturday’s UFC on ESPN+ 24 event in Raleigh, N.C.

We want your predictions for Saturday’s UFC on ESPN+ 24 event in Raleigh, N.C.

Our staff picks feature includes the consensus picks from MMA Junkie readers. Simply cast your vote for each bout below, and we’ll use the official tallies that are registered by Thursday at noon ET (9 a.m. PT).

Those MMA Junkie reader consensus picks will be part of the UFC on ESPN+ 24 event staff predictions we release Friday ahead of the event. UFC on ESPN+ 24 takes place Saturday at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. The card streams on ESPN+.

Make your picks for all six main card fights inside.

Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Jan. 13-19)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels for news to break through, it’s nearly impossible to organize.

But here at MMA Junkie, we’ve got your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC and Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Jan. 13-19:

Bellator 238: Jan. 24, Inglewood, Calif.

Welterweight: With Craig Plaskett out, David Pacheco (1-0 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) fights Miguel Jacob (3-0 MMA, 0-0 BMMA)

Featherweight: With Tyler Beneke out, Jarrett Connor (0-0 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) fights Tony Bartovich (0-0 MMA, 0-0 BMMA)

UFC on ESPN+ 24: Jan. 25, Raleigh, N.C.

Featherweight: With Josh Emmett and Nad Narimani out, Arnold Allen (15-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) and Nik Lentz (30-10-2 MMA, 14-7-1 UFC) get matched up

UFC 247: Feb. 8, Houston

Bantamweight: Andre Ewell (15-6 MMA, 2-2 UFC) vs. Jonathan Martinez (11-2 MMA, 2-1 UFC) (BJPenn.com)

Next page: Bellator 239, UFC 248

Dequan Townsend opens up about positive test for cocaine, fentanyl: ‘I don’t judge nobody’

UFC Raleigh’s Dequan Townsend opens up about his positive USADA test for the first time.

Overcoming adversity isn’t anything new for [autotag]Dequan Townsend[/autotag].

At UFC on ESPN+ 24, the UFC middleweight will return from a six-month U.S. Anti-Doping Agency suspension for cocaine and fentanyl when he takes on Bevon Lewis (6-2 MMA, 0-2 UFC).

The positive test was announced in a press release on Jan. 8. In his first interview since, Townsend (21-9 MMA, 0-1 UFC) opened up to MMA Junkie about the situation. The 33-year-old fighter said he’s never been one to judge anyone and indicated he hopes he can be viewed similarly.

“Truthfully, there are plenty of ways things can get in people’s systems,” Townsend told MMA Junkie on Wednesday. “I’ve always said and I’ve told people a thousand times, I don’t discriminate. I don’t judge nobody based off of what they do with their life or how they do their life.”

There are a number of factors Townsend pointed to when he spoke about the events leading to his failed test, including the short-notice nature of his UFC debut and his outside-the-cage environment.

“Obviously, I took the fight on days’ notice and wasn’t prepared for this USADA stuff,” Townsend said. “I wasn’t prepared for any of the things that happened. I was pretty much just hanging with the wrong crowd. Hanging with the wrong crowd and a mix of things, it just happened. I touched the wrong stuff.

“I was in the wrong environment, but it happened. There’s nothing I can do about it. I just took the necessary precautions I needed to take to fix the situation and whatever USADA wanted me to do, I did to move forward.”

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Upon receiving the news of his failure, Townsend believed his UFC career was over. It took him 29 pro fights to get on the roster and feared it would all be for not. Townsend credits his manager for successfully lobbying for him a second chance.

“I worked so hard to get here,” Townsend said. “… I’m like, ‘Damn, I get my opportunity and then this happens.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah they’re going to cut me quick.’ I thought they wouldn’t even want to deal with the situation.

“Shoutout to my manager Jason House with Iridium. He had my back. He supported me with the situation like, ‘Look, this man took this fight on three days’ notice. He wasn’t a UFC-signed fighter. He didn’t know the situation with USADA. He didn’t know none of this.’ It wasn’t like I put steroids in my body when I knew that (expletive) is completely illegal.”

Outside of fighting, Townsend works in the healthcare industry. He’s aware of the dangers of cocaine use and fentanyl and said his use of the former was “completely unintentional.”

“(From) 9-to-5 I am a nurse,” Townsend said. “Those who actually know me from my hometown and my city, they know that I’m very aware of the seriousness of fentanyl. That was something that was completely unintentional.”

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Before being reinstated by the UFC, Townsend had to partake in a drug rehabilitation program. Townsend said he learned a lot, but the program served more as as reminder.

“In the program, I learned a lot of things,” Townsend said. “It was mindful information, but with my mindset and my previous history, it was just doing what I need to be doing. I have never been a drug user – no offense to people who do what they do in their personal time.”

The positive test presented just another moment of adversity for Townsend to overcome. In 2014, Townsend’s four-year-old son passed away from cancer. Townsend hopes his success inside the cage can serve as a positive motivator for people struggling with whatever challenges life throws at them.

“I’ve overcame so much to make it here,” Townsend said. “From the time I saw my son’s heartbeat stop, can’t no one tell me about overcoming anything. I’ve overcame it all and still managed to get into the cage, train hard, and make it to the next level. At the end of the day, this is just another stepping stone on my way to the top.”

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According to Townsend, fans should expect to see a new and improved fighter on Jan. 25. The version who stepped into the cage in June isn’t his true self.

“I’ll put it to you like this, a lot of people were surprised about a jab. They thought I was fast on the jab,” Townsend said. “Mind you again, I was 205. I had a bunch of extra weight because I took a fight on short notice. I was trying to conserve my energy because I didn’t get a chance to train. They will see me at 185. It’s the 185 division where there’ll be a lot of different eye openers for people.”

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Arnold Allen now meets Nik Lentz at UFC on ESPN+ 24 in Raleigh

Arnold Allen and Nik Lentz will remain on the card and fight each other after their respective opponents dropped out.

Injuries have caused a lineup shuffle at UFC on ESPN+ 24.

With both Josh Emmett and Nad Narimani forced out of their respective bouts because of undisclosed injuries, [autotag]Arnold Allen[/autotag] will now meet [autotag]Nik Lentz[/autotag] at UFC on ESPN+ 24.

Allen originally was scheduled to face Emmett, while Lentz was to square off with Narimani.

UFC on ESPN+ 24 takes place Jan. 25 at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. The card streams on ESPN+.

England’s Allen (15-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) is unbeaten in his UFC run, having won his first six fights. He is coming off a unanimous decision win over former Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez at UFC 239.

Lentz (30-10-1 MMA, 14-7-1 UFC) suffered a second-round TKO loss to Charles Oliveira in their trilogy bout in May, snapping a two-fight winning streak, which included wins over Gray Maynard and Scott Holtzman.

With the change, the current UFC on ESPN+ 24 lineup includes:

  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Junior Dos Santos
  • Michael Chiesa vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Arnold Allen vs. Nik Lentz
  • Jordan Espinosa vs. Alex Perez
  • Hannah Cifers vs. Angela Hill
  • Jamahal Hill vs. Darko Stosic
  • Justine Kish vs. Lucie Pudilova
  • Bevon Lewis vs. Dequan Townsend
  • Felipe Colares vs. Montel Jackson
  • Lina Lansberg vs. Sara McMann
  • Brett Johns vs. Tony Gravely
  • Herbert Burns vs. Nate Landwehr

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UFC’s Dequan Townsend accepts six-month USADA suspension for cocaine, fentanyl metabolites

UFC fighter Dequan Townsend has accepted a six-month suspension from USADA for traces of cocaine and fentanyl.

Dequan Townsend has accepted a six-month suspension from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA).

The suspension comes after Townsend (18-8 MMA, 0-1 UFC) was flagged for an in-competition urine test that detected the presence of cocaine metabolites. USADA announced the suspension Wednesday.

Townsend’s upcoming fight against Bevon Lewis at UFC on ESPN+ 24 on Jan. 25 will not be effected because the suspension is retroactive to the date before his June 28 UFC debut. The suspension ended Dec. 28.

Townsend tested positive for bezoylecgonine (cocaine) and norfentanyl (fentanyl) metabolites. Both metabolites are “prohibited in-competition and are considered Substances of Abuse under the UFC Anti-Doping Policy and the UFC Prohibited List,” according to USADA.

Townsend was given a reduced suspension due to his ability to prove the substance did not enhance, or wasn’t intended to enhance his performance, according to USADA. Additionally, Townsend completed a drug rehabilitation program.

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Townsend, 33, took his UFC debut on less than one week’s notice. At UFC on ESPN 3, Townsend stepped in for Justin Ledet and faced fellow newcomer Dalcha Lungiambula at light heavyweight. Townsend was finished by strikes early in Round 3.

UFC on ESPN+ 24 takes place Jan. 25 at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. The card streams on ESPN+.

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UFC Raleigh: Undisclosed injury forces Josh Emmett out of Arnold Allen fight

Josh Emmett has been forced out of his UFC on ESPN+ 24 fight vs. Arnold Allen due to an undisclosed injury.

UFC Raleigh has taken a major hit.

MMA Junkie has learned from sources close to the situation that [autotag]Josh Emmett[/autotag] (15-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC) has been forced out of his UFC on ESPN+ 24 fight vs. [autotag]Arnold Allen[/autotag] (15-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) on Jan. 25 due to an undisclosed injury.

Emmett was looking to make it three wins in a row with victory against in-form Brit Allen, and was heading into the event following back-to-back knockouts over Michael Johnson and Mirsad Bektic, with the latter earning him a “Performance of the Night” bonus last July.

Allen, meanwhile, is yet to suffer a loss in the UFC, and defeated former Strikeforce and WEC lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez in his last outing at UFC 239 in July 2019. Victory for the 25-year-old would have catapulted the talented Englishman towards the sharp end of the UFC’s featherweight rankings.

With that change, the current UFC on ESPN+ 24 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Junior Dos Santos
  • Michael Chiesa vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Jordan Espinosa vs. Alex Perez
  • Hannah Cifers vs. Angela Hill
  • Jamahal Hill vs. Darko Stosic

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 5 p.m. ET)

  • Justine Kish vs. Lucie Pudilova
  • Bevon Lewis vs. Dequan Townsend
  • Felipe Colares vs. Montel Jackson
  • Lina Lansberg vs. Sara McMann
  • Brett Johns vs. Tony Gravely
  • Herbert Burns vs. Nate Landwehr
  • Nik Lentz vs. Nad Narimani

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Nik Lentz vs. Nad Narimani joins UFC on ESPN+ 24 lineup in Raleigh

A featherweight matchup between Nik Lentz and Nad Narimani is the latest addition to UFC Raleigh.

A featherweight matchup is the latest addition to UFC Raleigh.

[autotag]Nik Lentz[/autotag] (30-10-1 MMA, 14-7-1 UFC) will take on [autotag]Nad Narimani[/autotag] (12-3 MMA, 2-1 UFC) at UFC on ESPN+ 24, UFC officials announced Friday morning.

UFC on ESPN+ 24 takes place Jan. 25 at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. The card streams on ESPN+.

Lentz was unsuccessful against Charles Oliveira once again at UFC on ESPN+ 10, where he suffered a second-round TKO loss in their trilogy bout. That snapped his two-fight win streak, as prior to that, Lentz had scored back-to-back wins over Gray Maynard and Scott Holtzman.

After two straight wins over Khalid Taha and Anderson dos Santos, Narimani was defeated by Mike Grundy at UFC London, his first promotional loss. The former Cage Warriors featherweight champion will look to get back to the win column, when he takes on experienced veteran Lentz.

With that addition, the current UFC on ESPN+ 24 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET)

  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Junior Dos Santos
  • Michael Chiesa vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Arnold Allen vs. Josh Emmett
  • Jordan Espinosa vs. Alex Perez
  • Hannah Cifers vs. Angela Hill
  • Jamahal Hill vs. Darko Stosic

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 5 p.m. ET)

  • Justine Kish vs. Lucie Pudilova
  • Bevon Lewis vs. Dequan Townsend
  • Felipe Colares vs. Montel Jackson
  • Lina Lansberg vs. Sara McMann
  • Brett Johns vs. Tony Gravely
  • Herbert Burns vs. Nate Landwehr
  • Nik Lentz vs. Nad Narimani

UFC on ESPN+ 24 poster features Junior Dos Santos vs. Curtis Blaydes, Michael Chiesa vs. Rafael dos Anjos

Check out the poster for the upcoming UFC on ESPN+ 24 show.

The UFC on ESPN+ 24 has been revealed.

To no one’s surprise, the two men involved in the main event are featured prominently. The poster features a stare-down between heavyweight contenders [autotag]Curtis Blaydes[/autotag] (12-2 MMA, 7-2 UFC) and [autotag]Junior Dos Santos[/autotag] (21-6 MMA, 15-5 UFC).

Also featured on the poster are the co-main event participants, lightweights [autotag]Rafael dos Anjos[/autotag] (29-12 MMA, 18-10 UFC) and [autotag]Michael Chiesa[/autotag] (16-4 MMA, 9-4 UFC).

Check out the UFC on ESPN+ 24 poster below:

UFC on ESPN+ 24 takes place Jan. 25 at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. The entire card will stream on ESPN+.

With the change, the current UFC on ESPN+ 24 lineup includes:

  • Curtis Blaydes vs. Junior Dos Santos
  • Michael Chiesa vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Frankie Edgar vs. Cory Sandhagen
  • Tony Gravely vs. Brett Johns
  • Hannah Cifers vs. Brianna Van Buren
  • Jordan Espinosa vs. Alex Perez
  • Lina Lansberg vs. Sara McMann
  • Justine Kish vs. Lucie Pudilova
  • Arnold Allen vs. Josh Emmett
  • Bevon Lewis vs. Dequan Townsend
  • Jamahal Hill vs. Darko Stosic
  • Felipe Colares vs. Montel Jackson
  • Herbert Burns vs. Nate Landwehr

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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Cory Sandhagen’s ideal fight? Dominick Cruz at UFC 248

With the Frankie Edgar fight falling through, Cory Sandhagen has diverted his attention to Dominick Cruz.

[autotag]Cory Sandhagen[/autotag] has moved on to bigger and better things.

His scheduled opponent, Frankie Edgar, opted to step in on short notice against Chan Sung Jung at UFC on ESPN+ 23, one month before Edgar was supposed to meet Sandhagen at UFC Raleigh on Jan. 25.

Sandhagen (12-1 MMA, 5-0 UFC) doubted Edgar would come out his new fight unscathed, which came to pass when he suffered a first-round TKO loss to Jung, which put him on medical suspension.

Now Sandhagen is left scrambling for a new fight, and it won’t be on Jan. 25. If it was up to him, Sandhagen would meet another former champion, former 135-pound king [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag].

“Ideally, me and Cruz fight in first week of March,” Sandhagen told MMA Junkie. “Ideally I fight on that date against Dominick Cruz, if that doesn’t happen then I’m likely going to have to wait until later March or April when this second round of bantamweight fights comes up and I can snag one of those top five guys.”

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Cruz (22-2 MMA, 5-1 UFC) hasn’t competed since losing his title to Cody Garbrandt almost three years ago at UFC 207, as a string of injuries have kept him on the sidelines. Sandhagen says he heard Cruz is looking to return in the first quarter of 2020, but won’t hold his breath waiting.

With that in mind, Sandhagen sees benefits in fighting any of the top-ranked 135-pounders.

“I’m not going to try to chase a fight with Cruz too much because I think that the division is in a spot right now – all of the fights I feel like are going to do similar things for me so for example, if I fight Moraes, or if I fight Yan or if I fight Cruz, or Sterling or Aldo, or whoever else there is to fight in that top five area, fighting either of those guys isn’t a ticket to a title shot. There’s still no clear contender, I just don’t want to be left in the dust.”

After the Edgar fight fell through, Sandhagen was contemplating staying on the UFC Raleigh card, which is headlined by teammate Curtis Blaydes, but wasn’t presented with any offers.

“They didn’t give me any options for that same date,” Sandhagen said. “They gave me the option to fight Pedro Munhoz in February but I mean that feels a little bit like a step back especially because I don’t think it would be on any card where I was co-headlining the card so once they told me it wasn’t Jan. 25, I kind of made the decision of like, I’ll wait until a really big name, or someone that’s going to do a lot for me.”

“Not that Pedro won’t, Pedro’s a great fighter but that’s the nature of the beast. I could just wait probably another month or two months in March or April and fight someone that has a lot of noise buzzing around them like a (Marlon) Moraes or a (Petr) Yan or Cruz or even (Jose) Aldo now if he doesn’t go fight Cejudo – or Aljamain (Sterling), I don’t know when he’s coming back but those are kind of like, my top choices.”

While he hopes that the UFC makes up for what happened with his scrapped fight with Edgar, Sandhagen thinks the withdrawal of Edgar may be a blessing in disguise after all.

“I think I’ll be ok, maybe even worked out in a better situation for me where instead of fighting Frankie, maybe I’m going to fight one of these top five guys which is still awesome for me as far as getting my name out there and stuff because it seems like that’s kind of where I’m lacking right now. I just need people to – I need like the fanbase and I need people following me so that when it is time to fight for a belt, people will tune in.”

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