Spinning Back Clique: What rematch? Jan Blachowicz is Jon Jones’ next challenger. Or is he?

Jan Blachowicz complicated the light heavyweight title picture at UFC Rio Rancho, and now there is no easy choice for Jon Jones’ next challenge.

Welcome to “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts. In this week’s episode,  “Gorgeous” George, “Goze” and John Morgan unpack the fallout from UFC on ESPN+ 25, including where things stand with the light heavyweight title picture after big outcome in the headliner.

SHOW RUNDOWN:

  • Suddenly, light heavyweight champion [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] has plenty of options in front of him after UFC on ESPN+ 25, where [autotag]Jan Blachowicz[/autotag] made a statement with a first-round knockout of Corey Anderson. Was it enough for Blachowicz to assert himself as the next 205-pound challenger just one week after cries for a Jones vs. [autotag]Dominick Reyes[/autotag] rematch reached a fervent pitch?
  • [autotag]Diego Sanchez[/autotag] left UFC on ESPN+ 25 a winner when his opponent, Michel Pereira, landed a hard illegal knee in Round 3 that rendered Sanchez unable to continue. Sanchez, who was getting beat in the first two rounds, won by disqualification, and the result has come with heavy criticism from fans saying things like “he quit” and was “looking for a way out.” We have some thoughts on that nonsense.
  • Yes, [autotag]Ray Borg[/autotag] won at UFC on ESPN+ 25, but he also missed the flyweight limit by two pounds. This is the third time in the last four fights that the former 125-pound title challenger has come in heavy. What should the UFC do with Borg?
  • Former Bellator champion and UFC veteran [autotag]Hector Lombard[/autotag] won his debut at Bare Knuckle FC 10 over the weekend. With 10 fights under its belt, is BKFC headed in the right direction?
  • Not that it was ever officially made, but for all intents and purposes we lost a fight between [autotag]Jared Cannonier[/autotag] and [autotag]Darren Till[/autotag] at UFC 248. What that means is, there isn’t a legit backup to the main event between middleweight champion [autotag]Israel Adesanya[/autotag] and [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag]. What can the UFC do for an insurance policy?

For answers to all of those questions, watch Episode 16 of “Spinning Back Clique.”

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After dominant win at UFC Rio Rancho, Macy Chiasson wants another booking with Nicco Montano

Take a look inside Macy Chiasson’s win over Shanna Young at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

RIO RANCHO, N.M. – [autotag]Macy Chiasson[/autotag] beat Shanna Young with a unanimous decision Saturday on the preliminary card at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

Take a look inside the fight with Chiasson, who got back in the win column after suffering the first loss of her pro career.

Result: Macy Chiasson def. Shanna Young via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 30-26)
Updated records: Chiasson (6-1 MMA, 4-1 UFC), Young (7-3 MMA, 0-1 UFC)
Key stat: Chiasson tripled up on Young in the striking department, 154-50, and landed three takedowns.

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Chiasson on the fight’s key moment

“I knew she’d come forward and pressure me out of the gate like that. It was a last-minute fight and she didn’t really have time to game plan. Neither did I, to be fair, but I was ready for anything. I got the call from my coach on Monday after one of my sessions (that Nicco Montano was out). I said it’s fine – whoever they find is good with me. I was calm about it because I prepared so well.”

Chiasson on rebounding from her first pro loss

“It feels really good to get back into the win column. I learned a lot from my last fight and I’m just happy I could go out there and showcase everything I’ve been working on.”

Chiasson on what she wants next

“I’d still love to run it back with Nicco once she is all recovered. She’s a former champ and ranked, so I’d love that. Maybe some time in May if it works out for everyone.”

To hear more from Chiasson, check out the video of the full post-fight interview above.

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UFC on ESPN+ 25 reactions: Winning and losing fighters on social media

UFC on ESPN+ 25 winners and losers react on social media outlets such as Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

Since the early days when the sport was anything but a mainstream endeavor, the MMA industry has thrived and survived through various websites, forums, and – perhaps most importantly – social-media platforms.

Fighters interact with fans, each other and many more through the likes of Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, which helps outsiders get a deeper look into the minds of the athletes.

Following Saturday’s UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M., several of the winning and losing fighters, along with their coaches, training partners or family members, took to social media to react to the event or share a message with supporters.

Check out some of those reactions.

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The defeated

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My wife is a badass!!! 🌹

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🙏🙏

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Quiero pedir una disculpa a Brok Weaver, su equipo y a UFC. Entrene muy duro para está pelea que todos estaban esperando , incluyendome. He peleado profesionalmente mucho tiempo, nunca me ha pasado algo asi y no volvera a pasar. Estudie bien a mi oponente y el siempre se levanta recomponiendo su posiciòn utilizando la jaula y su brazo en under hook, a lo cual yo quite presiòn de el pensando què lo haria como lo hacia en otras ocasiones y asì poder conectar la rodilla en el pecho. No salio como pensaba y estoy sumamente avergonzado. Estoy muy agradecido formar parte de UFC y las personas que me conocen saben que soy profesional y siempre juego limpio!! Brok es un hombre de honor al igual que yo y se que tambien a el le gustaria un rematch. ⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️ I want to sincerely apologize to Brok Weaver, his team and the UFC. I trained really hard for this fight that everyone was waiting for, including myself. I've been fighting professionally for a long time and this has never happened before and it won’t happen again. I studied my opponent very well, one of the things I noticed was that he always get back on his stands using the cage and using his arm on underhook, I was expecting him to get up the same as in other occasions and then be able to connect the knee to his chest. It didn’t go how I expected and I’m really embarrassed about it and once again I’m really sorry. People who follow my career know that I am very profesional, respectful to the sport and I’m not a dirty fighter. I am really thankful for being part of the UFC and Brok is a man of honor just like me. I know he would like a rematch and we both would appreciate it.

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🇮🇹 Ho iniziato il mio camp il 16 di dicembre. Mi sono dedicata , allenamento , mangiare bene , riposo . Ho un team perfetto , ho avuto una sparring partner perfetta , una preparazione perfetta . Ho lavorato veramente bene , ma sabato non sono riuscita ad esprimermi .Non sono riuscita a dimostrare tutto il lavoro che ho fatto in questi due mesi. Mi dispiace un sacco , triste si tanto triste per me , per il mio team per la mia famiglia e per le persone vicine. Non mi sono piaciuta e so cosa non è andato, adesso cercherò di lavorarci per sistemare e tornare più forte . DEVO ! – – 🇭🇳 Comencé mi campamento el 16 de diciembre. Me dediqué, entrenando, comiendo bien, descansando. Tengo un equipo perfecto, tuve un compañero de entrenamiento perfecto, una preparación perfecta. Trabajé muy bien, pero el sábado no pude expresarme, no pude demostrar todo el trabajo que he hecho en estos dos meses. Lo siento mucho, triste, muy triste por mí, por mi equipo, por mi familia y por las personas cercanas. No me gustó y sé qué salió mal, ahora intentaré trabajar en ello para arreglarlo y volver más fuerte. DEBO! – – 🇧🇷 Comecei meu acampamento no dia 16 de dezembro. Dediquei-me a treinar, a comer bem, a descansar. Eu tenho uma equipe perfeita, tive um parceiro de treino perfeito, uma preparação perfeita. Trabalhei muito bem, mas no sábado não consegui me expressar, não consegui demonstrar todo o trabalho que fiz nesses dois meses. Sinto muito, triste, muito triste por mim, por minha equipe, por minha família e por pessoas próximas. Eu não gostei e sei o que deu errado, agora vou tentar trabalhar nele para consertar e voltar mais forte. EU DEVO! – – 🇺🇸 I started my camp on December 16th. I dedicated myself, training, eating well, rest. I have a perfect team, I had a perfect sparring partner, a perfect preparation. I worked really well, but on Saturday I was unable to express myself. I was unable to demonstrate all the work I have done in these two months. I'm so sorry, sad, so sad for me, for my team, for my family and for close people. I did not like it and I know what went wrong, now I will try to work on it to fix and come back stronger. I MUST ! OSS

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@ufc @ufc_brasil @ufceurope @canalcombate

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The funk don't quit!

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The victorious

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The whole family came to watch me work #UFCRioRancho

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Party the night away over at @cakenightlife stop on by

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Fulfillment.

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🤪🥊👊

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Notice the picture was the last picture before fight was ruled a DQ aside from the Cut sustained for the illegal blow my face looks clean as F, aside from the cut sustained by the illegal knee?! Maybe due to my opponents lack of awareness he lost control and did not recognize I went down from knee to the ribs that broke two ribs. He delivered a kill blow too my head with so much force! Who had to take that head damage me. It was not a glancing blow it was flush with full power and connection! It split my wig & The scar will be with me forever! So for me to continue to compete in this head space makes me a coward? No it makes me a #wiseman maybe you should re watch the fight with no sound and witness the improvements in defense and movement when faced against the odds as is! fighting a 26 year old super athletic goliath that out weighs me by 20lbs has 5 inches in reach 5 inches in height, let’s add a uncanny ability to jump and deliver knees. This challenges my ability to get in for a shot, the game has evolved people it’s 2020 not 1996! @dc_mma 50 seconds in you and Trevor Wittman @twittman2 start poisonings the mind of the nation wide cast with your this is hard to watch and strange when I’m not taking damage. Protecting myself while still fighting a man who was not willing to stay the pocket and fight with me. I was sentenced to death in my own back yard, why isn’t anyone seeing this? Notice pereira got a three song custom champion only walk out song for his dance walk out? as if he was @stylebender or Jonathan Jones? This is not normal behavior by @ufc then @mikebisping hyping him up the dancing the flips OMG! Why the push is it @wwe now? All I know is the scar is for life and so is the Win! That makes 31 ufc fights in row why isn’t anyone saying that? It’s kinda some legend shit I’m doing. Well at least the highest paid top tier fight IQ athlete and legendary champion @thenotoriousmma is not blinded by the smear campaign against me my coach manager and mentor @joshuafabiaknowbody & his company @schoolofselfawareness by the media and others?! Thank you @thenotoriousmma you are a wise man too. It’s been 6 years since we put each others names in our destiny

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NYC🗽 #ufc #LegendaryPolishPower #newyorkcity

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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.

Triple Take: Who’s the best opponent for UFC champ Jon Jones next?

Three members of the MMA Junkie team weigh in on Jon Jones’ fight options, including Jan Blachowicz or a Dominick Reyes rematch.

The UFC light heavyweight division has more viable title contenders than any time in recent years, and that’s keeping UFC champ [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] in the headlines.

Just one week after [autotag]Dominick Reyes[/autotag] pushed Jones to the brink in a title bout at UFC 247, [autotag]Jan Blachowicz[/autotag] put himself in the forefront of the conversation with a knockout of Corey Anderson at UFC on ESPN+ 25. There’s a lot of jockeying for position, and also the lingering option of Jones fighting someone from another weight class.

What’s Jones’ best move? That’s the question MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn, Farah Hannoun and Danny Segura attempt to answer in the latest edition of Triple Take.

* * * *

Mike Bohn: Jan is the man

The UFC is all about trying to capitalize on momentum and opportunity, and quite honestly, this one fell right into Dana White’s lap. If Blachowicz had won in any less a spectacular manner than he did against Anderson, he would have been a reluctant part of the title conversation, only because of his overall body of work that includes three consecutive wins over Anderson, Ronaldo Souza and Luke Rockhold.

What he pulled off in reality, though, was nothing short of perfection.

Not only did Blachowicz avenge a crucial career loss to Anderson from 2015 with an exclamation point, but he did it with the champ Jones sitting in the front row. The Polish fighter took full advantage of that unique scenario, pointing at Jones through the cage and doing just what he needed to build hype for a potential title fight. Jones played his part, too, by totally immersing himself in the moment and making Blachowicz come off a much bigger star than he’d appear to be otherwise.

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Coming into the event, a rematch between Jones and Reyes felt like the most marketable title fight at 205 pounds, but now there is an argument to be made. Jones went backstage after Blachowicz win, as well, and sold his new contender as someone truly deserving of a chance at the gold. That was done for good reason, and it would seem somewhat silly to let that go to waste.

Does Reyes deserve another chance to share the octagon with Jones? Probably. But that fight will be there. He can get the attention again with a solid performance against a fellow contender, making a second fight with Jones even bigger. Blachowicz has the hot hand at the moment, though, and that’s why he the best bet to fight Jones next, especially if the UFC brass are looking for a main event for the rumored June pay-per-view card in Australia.

Next page – Farah Hannoun: Dominick Reyes rematch is the answer

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Kazula Vargas embarrassed by UFC Rio Rancho DQ loss to Brok Weaver: ‘I’m not a dirty fighter’

Kazula Vargas wants the world to know he’s not a dirty fighter, and he hopes to have the chance to run back his bout with Brok Weaver.

Things didn’t go according to plan Saturday for [autotag]Kazula Vargas[/autotag].

The Mexican fighter suffered a disqualification loss at UFC on ESPN+ 25 after landing an illegal knee on opponent Brok Weaver. The knee was clearly outside the rules, as Weaver was sitting against the cage when Vargas’ knee connected on his chin. Weaver was rocked and was clearly hurt from the shot. The referee called the fight off  a minute into the first round, thus awarding the win to Weaver.

Vargas is not happy with the result of the fight in Rio Rancho, N.M.

“I feel a little embarrassed,” Vargas told MMA Junkie. “I apologized to Brok and his team because it wasn’t something that I planned or intended to do.

“This is the first time something like this happened in my career. I’ve never had a disqualification and I don’t have a past of being a dirty fighter. So yeah, there was nothing I could do but apologize to Brok, his team and the UFC for everything that happened. I’m not a person that looks for that kind of path or way of doing things. I’m not a dirty fighter, I always look to fight clean.”

Vargas said the illegal knee was result of miscalculation. The knee in that situation was part of the plan, but hitting him in his head while he was down was not.

“I was following the game plan, and from my point of view, I was winning the round no problem,” Vargas explained. “I was fighting well on top and mixing in the levels well.

“So what happened was that I studied Weaver so much I saw that he always stood up the same way against the cage – with one arm and leaning on the cage, and actually, he did it once and I dragged him back down. So my plan was to take away pressure, let him stand up, and that’s when I would shoot my knee to his chest, but he didn’t stand up. I’m not sure if maybe since I was hitting liver on the right side a lot, perhaps that had affected him and he wasn’t able to fully stand up.

“If you watch his videos, he always stands up using the under hook,” Vargas continued. “So, for example, in this case, he’s sitting down, gets the left under hook gets off to a side and does the stand up leaning against the cage. He does it well because in many fights he’s able to get up quick, even in his Contender Series fight he stood up several times like that and he does it very quick. So that’s what I thought, I thought he was going to stand up quick and that’s when I’d can catch him. I didn’t think the knee would put him away anyways. It was just to wear him down, but it didn’t come out right.”

In real time, Vargas actually thought he connected to Weaver’s chest and that’s why he followed up with a couple of shots after the knee.

“I thought I hit him on the chest, I didn’t even realized he was knocked down, I just threw the shot out of pure reflex,” Vargas said. “When the referee pulls me off and sends me to the other side of the cage, that’s when I realized something weird was going on. And when I see the replay on the screen that’s when I said, (expletive).”

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Vargas is disappointed on how things played out in his second UFC bout and so far in his overall UFC run. The 34-year-old fighter entered the UFC accepting a short-notice bout against Alex da Silva for UFC Montevideo in August. It was a tough ask to begin with, but outside factors made it even harder.

“My grandmother passed away and she had just been diagnosed with cancer three week prior,” Vargas said. “It was cancer on terminal phase and it was hard because she was a very active person and in three weeks her health decayed rapidly. She wans’t eating and they sent her home because there wasn’t much they could do for her. She did recover a little for a week.

“So she passed away on Sunday, we buried her on Monday at 10 a.m. and that same day at 1 p.m. I traveled to Uruguay, so it was from the funeral straight to the airport for fight week. I got to Uruguay on Tuesday because it was like 20 hours of travel. It was tough, she was like my mother, she was the one who raised me. I had a lot of contact with her and we were very close, so it was rough. My run in the UFC hasn’t been easy, but I didn’t expect it to be easy. But I also didn’t expect all these things to happen, but well, that’s part of life.”

Vargas is open to whatever course the UFC wants to take, but he hopes to get rebooked against Weaver, who wants the rematch.

“I hope the rematch is made for Brok, myself, the UFC, and all the fans that wanted to watch the fight,” Vargas said. “I know after our faceoff there was a lot of anticipation for the fight, we both come from warrior cultures, so it was panning out to be great fight.”

Either way, Vargas just hopes to get another bout in the UFC, as he knows fans have yet to see his full skillset.

“I haven’t been able to show what got me to the UFC,” Vargas said. “I’m an explosive fighter that’s aggressive and I’ve changed a lot of things to be more strategic. I feel like I haven’t been able to show what I got. The circumstances have been difficult, and everything has been so quick – two fights in six months and there was a third fight I couldn’t accept because I had to deal with a cut. But yeah, I haven’t been able to show what got me to the UFC and why they decided to sign me.”

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Merab Dvalishvili credits Aljamain Sterling for development after UFC Rio Rancho win

Take a look inside Merab Dvalishvili’s win over Casey Kenney at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

RIO RANCHO, N.M. – [autotag]Merab Dvalishvili[/autotag] beat Casey Kenney with a unanimous decision Saturday on the preliminary card at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

Take a look inside the fight with Dvalishvili, who picked up his third straight win after dropping his first two fights in the UFC.

Result: Merab Dvalishvili def. Casey Kenney via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-25, 29-28)
Updated records: Dvalishvili (10-4 MMA, 3-2 UFC), Kenney (13-2-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC)
Key stat: Dvalishvili landed a dozen takedowns in the fight and outstruck Kenney 136-38.

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Dvalishvili on the fight’s key moment

“My first UFC fight, I was sick with the flu and lost – but it’s OK. The second fight, I lost because of the judges – it was a bad decision. Now I have three wins in a row. I have my groove, and I keep winning because I train with the best team, Serra Longo, and I have the best sparring partners. My team gives me so much motivation. I never stop training. I’m always ready for a fight. I want to stay busy and keep fighting.”

Dvalishvili on training with Aljamain Sterling

“I train my jiu-jitsu with Matt Serra, and they have great black belts there, so I was very prepared. My main training partner is Aljamain Sterling. He made me like this. Years ago, when I was an amateur, ‘Aljo’ made me his punching bag, and now we have great sparring. I owe him so much.”

Dvalishvili on what he wants next

“I want to keep busy, I can fight every month, every two months, I just want to be busy and be a fulltime fighter. I’m ready for the best guys and just want to represent my team and my country.”

To hear more from Dvalishvili, check out the video of the full post-fight interview above.

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Diego Sanchez says he made ‘smart, veteran decision’ taking DQ over Michel Pereira

Diego Sanchez is completely comfortable with his disqualification win over Michel Pereira at UFC on ESPN+ 25.

[autotag]Diego Sanchez[/autotag] is completely comfortable with his disqualification win over Michel Pereira at UFC on ESPN+ 25.

The welterweight co-headline bout, which took place Saturday at Santa Ana Star Center in Rio Rancho, N.M., was cut short in the middle of the third round when Pereira (22-11 MMA, 1-2 UFC) landed a blatant illegal knee while Sanchez (30-12 MMA, 19-12 UFC) was down on the mat. The referee immediately intervened after the foul, and after a few minutes’ deliberation, the fight was called off.

Despite dishing out a devastating blow to the head that opened a nasty cut on Sanchez’s forehead, Pereira wasn’t immediately disqualified. Sanchez was given time to recover and asked if he could continue, and ultimately he decided he couldn’t. The 15-year UFC veteran received some backlash for not going through with the rest of the fight, but Sanchez said he knows he made the right call.

“Did I quit? No,” Sanchez told MMA Junkie on Monday. “I got hit with a (expletive) serious knee to the head. I knew I was going down on the scorecards, I knew how things were rolling out. I made a smart, veteran decision because I know my face is, regardless or not of the last two minutes of the fight, my face is going to be covered in blood. The image is going to be painted on the judges. I already know. I don’t have a chance of winning that fight anymore. So, did I quit? I made a (expletive) smart decision to not put myself in some real danger where I would’ve been injured when that mother(expletive) hit me with an illegal shot when I was down.”

Although Sanchez was down 20-18 on all judges scorecards going into the third round, “The Ultimate Fighter 1” winner felt he was doing some good things up until the fight-ending sequence. Pereira wasn’t able to put Sanchez is any serious danger, but was largely controlling the action.

Pereira cost himself the fight on multiple fronts, though. Sanchez admitted the knee that connected to his body prior to the illegal strike to the head caused some significant damage, then the vicious knee put the icing on the cake. Pereira had a good shot at ending the fight with a clean TKO, but instead he got reckless and cost himself a finish, or at worst, a decision win on the scorecards.

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Sanchez was quick to point out the blame for all that falls solely on Pereira. When given a choice, Sanchez looked out for not only his well being in the moment, but also for the long term.

“I took a hard hit to the head, but I made the right decision,” Sanchez said. “I knew that maybe I was going down on the scorecards. I knew. But my opponent lost control. He did not have the awareness to notice that I had gone down from a shot to the ribs. That really injured me, that shot to the ribs. It broke two of my ribs completely. I went down. He did not have the awareness that I went down. He threw a fully powered shot to my mother(expletive) dome piece, that split my wig. Split my forehead. I’m not your average human being. It did not knock me out, but did it damage me? Yes.

“How about the blood? How about the scar that’s going to be with me for the rest of my life? How about the blood that’s going to impact the judges? How about all this going forward? What if I get really (expletive) hurt? I made the right decision. I don’t need you guys look down here like, ‘Oh, I might have the biggest heart in the sport but I quit because I was (expletive) scared of Pereira.’ I’ve been doing this longer than (expletive) anybody and I deserve a little respect. If the UFC and the MMA community and the media don’t want to give it to me, I’m going to go (expletive) take it.”

Sanchez said that, despite the cut and damaged ribs, he is in a good place just days after the fight. He intends to continue working with head coach and manager Joshua Fabia from the School of Self Awareness and from there, will figure out his next move.

“When I came out of this fight I’ve never felt in a better head space,” Sanchez said. “It is not for the belt anymore, it is for the platform so I can get these people behind me so that I can find these people, get these people and eventually inspire them, motivate them and help them live healthier and live truly and more powerfully. This is something that’s going to happen with School of Self Awareness and myself. I’m set for life. With this other stuff going on, I’m not going to need fighting and how I finish my career will be on my terms.”

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Devin Clark laments up-and-down run, but still has eyes on sport’s ultimate prize

Take a look inside Devin Clark’s win over Dequan Townsend at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

RIO RANCHO, N.M. – [autotag]Devin Clark[/autotag] beat Dequan Townsend with a unanimous decision Saturday on the main card at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

Take a look inside the fight with Clark, who is back in the win column, but has alternated losses and wins his past seven fights.

Result: Devin Clark def. Dequan Townsend via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-26, 30-26)
Updated records: Clark (11-4 MMA, 5-4 UFC), Townsend (21-11 MMA, 0-3 UFC)
Key stat: Clark had three takedowns and outstruck Townsend 122-37.

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Clark on the fight’s key moment

“It feels great to kick off the new year with a win. (It) wasn’t the prettiest. I didn’t feel great out there, but I got the job done. The last-minute opponent change definitely impacted the game plan. We were preparing for a tough Dagestani wrestler, and now it was a rangy striker, which I lost to in my last fight. It played with my head a little bit, but I just stuck to the game plan and focused on takedowns and it worked.”

Clark on fighting in front of a friendly crowd

“Albuquerque is amazing, this is basically my second home. The fight culture here is so big, so it’s great to perform for the fans here.”

Clark on what he wants next

“I’ve been doing this win-loss thing recently, so I have to find my groove and put a win streak together. I don’t want to be a journeyman fighter. I want to go for the prize. Tonight, I kept going and got the ‘W’ and proved to myself that I still have it. After a big loss, it sucks, but I’ve won too many fights to give up. I can grind people out. It’s not the flashiest, but it works and it will get me to where I want to go.”

To hear more from Clark, check out the video of the full post-fight interview above.

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MMA Junkie Radio #3027: UFC on ESPN+ 25 reaction, BKFC 10 and more

Hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” react to the latest MMA news and notes and look back at UFC on ESPN+ 25 this past Saturday.

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Monday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here!

On Episode No. 3,027 of the podcast, the fellas react to the latest MMA news and notes and look back at UFC on ESPN+ 25 this past Saturday in Rio Rancho, N.M.

THE RUNDOWN

Stream or download this and all episodes of MMA Junkie Radio over at OmnyStudio, or check it out above. You can also catch it on Apple PodcastsSpotifyStitcher, and more. A new episode of the podcast is released every Monday and Thursday.

Fighting on same card as husband helped Montana De La Rosa stay focused at UFC Rio Rancho

Take a look inside Montana De La Rosa’s win over Mara Romero Borella at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

RIO RANCHO, N.M. – [autotag]Montana De La Rosa[/autotag] beat Mara Romero Borella with a unanimous decision Saturday on the main card at UFC on ESPN+ 25 in Rio Rancho, N.M.

Take a look inside the fight with De La Rosa, who bounced back from her first UFC loss.

Result: Montana De La Rosa def. Mara Romero Borella via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Updated records: De La Rosa (11-5 MMA, 4-1 UFC), Borella (12-7 MMA, 2-3 UFC)
Key stat: De La Rosa won a close striking battle, 74-64, but controlled large portions of each round on the canvas.

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De La Rosa on the fight’s key moment

“It feels amazing to start the year with a win like that. I felt like a whole new person in there for this fight. I was calm and everything went right.”

De La Rosa on fighting after husband Mark’s KO loss

“It was better than normal for me preparing for this fight with Mark. We were both on the same page and it was great having someone with you the whole fight week with the same goal in mind. He didn’t have the result he wanted, but I was 100 percent prepared for that. You kind of have to be when you are fighting on the same card as your husband – you have to be prepared for anything. I had to be focused on me and be selfish and it helped me come out with a win.”

De La Rosa on what she wants next

“It’d be great to break into the top 10 with this win. I just want to keep winning, get a couple more fights in this year and keep the ball rolling.”

To hear more from De La Rosa, check out the video of the full post-fight interview above.

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