Nate Landwehr: David Onama good, but ‘I’m going to smash his face in’

Nate Landwehr aims to run right through David Onama in their co-main event at UFC on ESPN 41 in San Diego.

SAN DIEGO – [autotag]Nate Landwehr[/autotag] aims to run right through [autotag]David Onama[/autotag].

Landwehr (15-4 MMA, 2-2 UFC) faces Onama (10-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC) in Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 41 co-main event at Pechanga Arena in San Diego. The card airs on ESPN and streams on ESPN+.

Onama boasts a 100 percent finishing rate, but Landwehr is confident that he takes him out.

“He’s good,” Landwehr said Wednesday at UFC on ESPN 41 media day. “He’s big, he’s tall, he’s young, he’s fast – I feel like I’m going to smash his face in. We’re going to see real quick. We’ve got five minutes to start off. We’ll see if we make it to the second five minutes. We’ll see if we make it to the third five minutes.”

Onama will compete in front of a crowd for the first time in his UFC tenure, as well as in a big co-headliner spot, but Landwehr expects him to bring the fight regardless.

“I don’t think there’s an edge,” Landwehr said. “I think the first time I ever did something cool, it felt natural, too. So it’s like you’ve either got it or you don’t. We’re going to see if he has it. He probably has it, and going to be a fist fight.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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Despite flyweight return vs. Nina Nunes, Cynthia Calvillo plans to drop to strawweight

Cynthia Calvillo plans to drop to strawweight following Saturday’s flyweight bout against Nina Nunes at UFC on ESPN 41.

[autotag]Cynthia Calvillo[/autotag] doesn’t plan to stick around much longer at 125 pounds.

The UFC veteran returns Saturday against Nina Nunes on the preliminary card of UFC on ESPN 41. But despite the flyweight return, Calvillo (9-4-1 MMA, 6-4-1 UFC) has her mind set on returning to her original home of 115 pounds.

“I think what’s going to happen is that we’re going to get through this fight first, and then we’re going to go back and re-run the tests and do a practice weight cut and just make sure that I’m going to be healthy enough to get back to 115,” Calvillo told reporters at the UFC on ESPN 41 media day on Wednesday. “But the plan is to get to 115 before the end of the year.”

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Calvillo said she actually planned to drop back to strawweight sooner, but the way things played out kept her at 125 pounds. Calvillo said she was supposed to fight Brianna Van Buren in June, but after that fight fell through, Nunes (10-7 MMA, 4-4 UFC) was presented to her as an option she didn’t mind taking.

“We spent a couple of weeks looking for an opponent, and Nina’s name came up and I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m good to fight Nina,'” Calvillo said. “And then they were like, ‘Nina wants to fight at 125, though.’ And I’m like, ‘You know what, this is an exception.’ I was planning to drop to 115, but with Nina previously being at 115, I was like, ‘I’ll do this. I’ll fight her at 125.'”

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For Marlon Vera, it’s nothing personal against Dominick Cruz at UFC on ESPN 41: ‘I want to f*ck you up. Simple.’

Maybe Marlon Vera had a problem with Dominick Cruz at some point during the build-up to UFC on ESPN 41, but not anymore.

SAN DIEGO – Maybe [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] had a problem with [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] at some point during the build-up to UFC on ESPN 41. But just days until they’re locked inside the octagon, that apparently is no longer the case.

“No emotions,” Vera said Wednesday at media day. “Cold blooded.”

Vera (21-7-1 MMA, 13-6 UFC) takes a three-fight winning streak into Saturday night’s main event at Pechanga Arena, a pivotal clash between ranked UFC bantamweights, and he looks forward to using Cruz (24-3 MMA, 7-2 UFC), a former two-time champion, as a springboard for his own title aspirations.

Vera said he’d been offered to fight Cruz before, but Cruz turned it down three times before they were booked for UFC on ESPN 41.

“The reason? I don’t know. I don’t care,” Vera said. “So I just made that public: ‘Hey, guys, I got offered a fight, he declined.’ Tagged him, talk sh*t or whatever. Who knows? I’m fun on Twitter. When I saw him face to face, I was like, ‘Hey, if you want to fight, let’s fight.’ I just keep it real. I’m not just gonna walk and sucker punch you. I’m not a b*tch. But if you give me the wrong energy, I’m sure we’re fighting.”

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As far as anything bad he’s said before about Cruz, Vera simply chalks it up to his general approach to fighting.

“I just speak the truth. I keep it real,” Vera said. “I don’t think fighting is a pretty thing. I’m not here to shake hands or bow to each other. If I want that, I would go to any other sport. But I like to fight. … I ain’t mad at nobody. I really have no emotions to anyone I ever fought. When they give me a contract with a name, and we get locked in the cage, I want to f*ck you up. Simple.”

For Cruz, a native of San Diego, this is a home game. But it’s possible that with the city’s large Hispanic population, Vera could be cheered in what would normally be considered enemy territory.

It wouldn’t surprise “Chito.”

“I’m always cheered,” Vera said. “The way I fight, people love it. I get it: I’m in San Diego. But I’m sure there’s a lot of Ecuadorians here. There’s a lot of Ecuadorians in L.A. But again, at the end of the day, it doesn’t f*cking matter. The cage is locked, it’s me vs. him, boos or hoorays, f*ck it. It’s a fight.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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UFC on ESPN 41’s Dominick Cruz is ‘gunning for a championship’ with a revamped state of mind

Almost 37, Dominick Cruz says “it’d be pretty useless” to keep fighting if he didn’t think he could win a third UFC title.

SAN DIEGO – By the time he was 24, [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] won the WEC bantamweight championship, but he admits those years weren’t easy. Now 36, maybe that’s why he’s so even-keeled when he speaks.

“I can honestly say that I made the 20s really hard on myself with decision making, with mind, with thought process, with the stress,” Cruz said Wednesday at UFC on ESPN 41 media day. “I’ve heard a lot that I seem more calm in interviews. I think that’s just because of the maturity of living life and having wins and losses and learning how to be more grateful for things instead of attaching to things. That’s really helped me keep from getting hurt, too, is the mindset,” Cruz said. “You can manifest a lot of injuries just by being stressed. It doesn’t even have to be the training itself. It can be your thought process going into training. … I’m doing the best I can now to try and keep things as calm as possible until I have to hype things up.”

The time for that will come Saturday when Cruz (24-3 MMA, 7-2 UFC) takes on Marlon Vera (21-7-1 MMA, 13-6 UFC) in a critical fight between ranked 135 pounders that serves as the UFC on ESPN 41 headliner at Pechanga Arena.

Cruz’s injury history of ACL tears, which cost him years from his career, is well known, but it’s also a distant memory. Cruz missed almost four years on his second layoff, which ended when he returned to fight then-champion Henry Cejudo for the bantamweight title in May 2020. Since that loss, Cruz has won two in a row against Casey Kenney and most recently Pedro Munhoz last December at UFC 269.

And you can be sure that at this stage of his career, he believes he can become UFC champion for a third time.

“Why would I do this if I wasn’t gunning for a championship?” Cruz said. “It’d be pretty useless in my opinion.”

He continued, “I’m sitting here still going even though everybody didn’t necessarily think I could. How grateful can I be sitting here? Considering, first of all, I’m not supposed to still be here, according to everybody else, because of all the injuries, should’ve never won the second title I won, probably to everybody else I’m the underdog in every fight that comes up from here. It’s OK.”

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The key to Cruz making a run at this stage of his career has been the way he takes care of himself. Living in Las Vegas, he takes advantage of the perks offered by the UFC Performance Institute, which includes an increase in physical therapy.

A San Diego native, Cruz couldn’t be happier with being able to face Vera in front of a packed arena.

“Shockingly no, plus health,” Cruz said. “The health on top of it, being healthy. Fans are gonna get the best version of me. I’m grateful that I can give that here in this place, too.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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David Onama sees big edge on Nate Landwehr at UFC on ESPN 41: ‘I’m just better than him’

David Onama thinks he’s going to give Nate Landwehr some serious problems in the octagon at UFC on ESPN 41.

SAN DIEGO – [autotag]David Onama[/autotag] thinks he’s going to give Nate Landwehr some serious problems in the octagon at UFC on ESPN 41.

Onama (10-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC) is set to meet Landwehr (15-4 MMA, 2-2 UFC) in the featherweight co-main event of Saturday’s card, which takes place at Pechanga Arena and airs on ESPN/streams on ESPN+.

According to Onama, the matchup has been on his radar for a very long time. It was originally supposed to happen in March, and at this point he thinks he’s got Landwehr perfectly scouted.

“I feel like I’m better than this guy everywhere,” Onama told MMA Junkie and other reporters at UFC on ESPN 41 media day. “I’m better rounded, I’m just better than him. It’s going to be a tough fight for him. I’m going to be one of his better opponents.”

Despite Onama having just three fights in the UFC, and four for Landwehr, respectively, the UFC chose the matchup to serve as the co-headlining spot. Onama said that position on the card filled him with added motivation, and he intends to deliver a performance that will show he should be there many times more in the future.

“Being the co-main event is very exciting for me,” Onama said. “It’s my first co-main event in the UFC. The UFC, they know what they’re doing. I’m a very exciting fighter. I bring fireworks. That’s why I’m the co-main event. They know what I bring.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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Nina Nunes didn’t follow wife Amanda in split from ATT, will train there ‘until I finish my career’

Nina Nunes is still training at American Top Team despite her wife Amanda Nunes having a well-documented divorce from the gym.

SAN DIEGO – [autotag]Nina Nunes[/autotag] is still training at American Top Team despite her wife Amanda Nunes having a well-documented divorce from the gym.

Following an upset loss to Julianna Peña at UFC 269 in December, Amanda parted ways with her longtime home at ATT in Coconut Creek, Fla., in favor of starting her own facility just a short drive away. That decision seemed to pay off for her after gaining revenge on Peña in the rematch at UFC 277 in July.

Nina (10-7 MMA, 4-4 UFC), who is set to meet Cynthia Calvillo (9-4-1 MMA, 6-4-1 UFC) on Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 41 card, opted against following suit. Her history with ATT goes back much further than Amanda’s, and Nina said she was able to allocate her time and maximize the conditions of working in multiple gyms.

“I stayed at American Top Team – I did both,” Nunes told MMA Junkie and other reporters at UFC on ESPN 41 media day. “I trained in the morning at American Top Team, I went to the gym, watched Amanda’s sparring, I coached her sparrings and then I trained conditioning after that. So I was actively in both gyms, I had good training partners at American Top Team. I’ve been there for 15 years. I’m going to stay there until I finish my career. I have the gym with Amanda as well. It’s 15 minutes apart. It makes no different to me. Amanda is going to pick whatever times she wants to train and we work around that.”

Nina was supposed to fight Calvillo at UFC on ESPN 39 on July 9, but she came down with an illness around weigh-ins. She said she went through every possible avenue to find a way into the octagon, but ultimately she “couldn’t keep food up” and was forced to pull out of the fight.

The UFC booked a new date, and now the matchup happens this weekend at Pechanga Arena and airs on ESPN and streams on ESPN+.

“I wanted to still fight Cynthia,” Nunes said. “I thought it would be fair to her, too, she prepared for a fight against me. It wasn’t her fault. They were asking to maybe do it in Long Island, but i wasn’t sure if it would be a 24-48 hour thing. The next card they had available was San Diego, I think she’s from California so it worked out well. It was enough time she was able to re-cut the weight.”

This fight is an important one for Nina’s career. She’s lost back-to-back fights against Mackenzie Dern and Tatiana Suarez, albeit nearly two years apart because of the time off she took to birth her and Amanda’s child.

Nina had no desire to have a three-fight losing skid on her record, and at UFC on ESPN 41 will be moving up to the women’s flyweight division for the first time in her UFC career.

She thinks this is the division where she belongs, and the 36-year-old hopes it’s where her best performance unfold.

“I feel so strong at 125,” Nunes said. “It was a no brainer. I am a 125er. I trained with the girls in (‘The Ultimate Fighter’) house that were 125ers, and it was like, ‘Yeah, I’m a 125er.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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UFC on ESPN 41 pre-event facts: Marlon Vera looks to add to finishes total

Check out the numbers behind UFC on ESPN 41, where Marlon Vera will look to 10 finishes in the bantamweight division.

The UFC makes its return to San Diego for the first time in more than seven years on Saturday with UFC on ESPN 41, which takes place at Pechanga Arena and airs on ESPN/streams on ESPN+.

A massive bantamweight fight serves as the main event of the card. [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] (19-7-1 MMA, 13-6 UFC), who has won nine of his past 11 fights, will look to continue his climb up the divisional pecking order when he meets former UFC/WEC champion [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] (24-3 MMA, 7-2 UFC).

For more on the numbers behind the headliner, as well as the rest of the card, check below for MMA Junkie’s pre-event facts about UFC on ESPN 41.

Spinning Back Clique: New UFC light heavyweight contender emerges, Jon Jones taking too long?, and more

“Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show, discusses the emergence of Jamahal Hill, Jon Jones’ return timeline, and more.

Check out this week’s “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts.

Our panel of Mike Bohn, Nolan King and Brian “Goze” Garcia discuss five topics with host “Gorgeous” George Garcia.

  • Looking back at UFC on ESPN 40 this past weekend, [autotag]Jamahal Hill[/autotag] defeated Thiago Santos in what was a fast-paced, action-packed, back-and-forth thriller to assert himself as a new title contender at light heavyweight. Or is that too strong of a position for the DWCS alum considering we’ve also got Glover Teixeira, Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev in the mix?
  • Also, this past weekend, [autotag]Anthony Pettis[/autotag] was bounced from the 2022 PFL lightweight playoffs after losing for the second consecutive time to Stevie Ray, this time a unanimous decision. The former UFC and WEC lightweight champion’s bid to win a third major title will have to wait. Furthermore, his contract expires after this season. At $750,000 a fight (disclosed), did the PFL get the return it wanted and should he be brought back?
  • Turning the page and looking forward, what are the stakes this weekend between [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] and [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] in the UFC on ESPN 41 headliner? We have a former champ vs. someone on a quest to be a champ.
  • Looking forward even further, we got a HUGE announcement last week that UFC 281 in New York will be headlined by middleweight champion [autotag]Israel Adesanya[/autotag] defending his title against [autotag]Alex Pereira[/autotag] on Nov. 12 at Madison Square Garden. These two have met before in kickboxing, with Pereira up 2-0. What do we think? MSG, Stylebender, November … sound about right? What are the early predictions?
  • Last but not least, looking ahead even further, former UFC light heavyweight champion [autotag]Jon Jones[/autotag] seemed a little perturbed and motivated by the notion from fans that he’s taking too long to return to the octagon for his heavyweight debut. Unless he headlines the UFC’s December pay-per-view, we will have gone two full calendar years without a Jones fight and not since March 2020 has he been in action. Could this long, drawn-out layoff hurting Jones?

“Spinning Back Clique” is released each Tuesday on MMA Junkie’s YouTube channel. You can watch the full episode in the video above.

UFC on ESPN 41 commentary team, broadcast plans: Anthony Smith back at desk after breaking ankle

Anthony Smith will return to a UFC broadcast on Saturday for the first time since his injury less than two weeks ago.

The UFC schedule continues this week with UFC on ESPN 41 on Saturday at the Pechanga Arena in San Diego.

As always, some marquee on-air talent will be there to help guide viewers through the experience.

Details of who will work as commentators and analysts for each event have been acquired by MMA Junkie through a person with knowledge of the situation, and you can see the scheduled broadcast team below.

Dominick Cruz explains why he represents himself in UFC negotiations: ‘What is a manager actually doing?’

Dominick Cruz hasn’t always represented himself but says he’s learned some things along the way that caused him to forgo hiring a manager to deal with the UFC.

Former bantamweight champion [autotag]Dominick Cruz[/autotag] hasn’t always represented himself during his 17-year professional MMA career but says he’s learned some things along the way that caused him to forgo hiring a manager to deal with the UFC.

Typically for UFC fighters, contracts are set at a fixed number of bouts and rate, which includes built-in escalators. Cruz, 37, points to this as one reason why having a manager doesn’t make sense for him. He also highlighted the UFC’s Venum uniform deal – previously Reebok, which began in 2014 – that puts strict limitations on fighter’s obtaining their own sponsors for their fights.

“Why would I pay somebody for four fights when it’s set after one? That doesn’t make sense to me,” Cruz said Monday on “The MMA Hour.” “And then on top of that, with a manager, how are they supposed to be bringing me in sponsors if the UFC dictates the sponsors? So now UFC dictates the sponsors, and UFC dictates the contract. So what is a manager actually doing? They’re just talking and creating communication.

“What managers are good at, from my experience, is making it seem like they have all the hookups. But in the UFC, what hookups can you get when the UFC makes the decisions for you?”

Cruz went on to explain that his stance is specific to the UFC and not other organizations that allow fighters to wear what they want in the cage.

“Now, if you’re in Bellator, if you’re in PFL, if you’re in any of these other organizations, it makes perfect sense, to me, for a fighter to have representation, because sponsors can get brought in,” Cruz said. “They can build relationships elsewhere. They can have a lineup of, like, 10 fighters and because one manager has a lineup of 10 fighters, sponsors might come to them directly and say, ‘Hey, do you have anybody?’ So that makes sense. But in the UFC, how many sponsors are even allowed in the UFC? Very few. And they’re already decided by the UFC. So the UFC sponsors who they want, and the UFC makes the contract.

“So, for me, after the manager renegotiates my contract from one fight, I feel like I’ll pay them on that and from there, I can do the communication for myself, because the contract is set. It’s only gonna go up a certain amount each fight from there, and that’s already dictated after the first conversation. So a manager is really only having one conversation and is getting paid out for four fights. That doesn’t make sense to me.”

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Cruz, who also works for the UFC as a cageside commentator, believes that a direct line of communication to UFC chief business officer Hunter Campbell and UFC matchmakers has benefited him greatly.

And for fighters who choose self-representation going forward, Cruz has a bit of advice.

“They’ve always been willing to work with me. I just don’t talk like a prick,” Cruz said. “… It’s really easy if you just talk to them – talk to Hunter, talk to Sean Shelby. They’re very open to listen to you if you can create a conversation from a neutral place. It’s when you come at them all crazy, ‘I deserve this’ – you’ve just got to come from a neutral place. Nobody deserves anything. You earn everything you get in this sport. You’ve got to understand they’re running a business.”

Cruz (24-3 MMA, 7-2 UFC) returns to action this Saturday when he headlines UFC on ESPN 41 against Marlon Vera (21-7-1 MMA, 13-6 UFC) at Pechanga Arena in San Diego. The card airs on ESPN and streams on ESPN+.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 41.

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