Layoff over, Yair Rodriguez ready to jump out of plane (figuratively) and fight Max Holloway

Yair Rodriguez wants to make it clear that he’s more than prepared for the biggest fight of his career at UFC Fight Night 197

LAS VEGAS – It’s been more than two years since [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] set foot inside the octagon, but he wants to make it clear that he’s more than prepared for the biggest fight of his career.

To “El Pantera,” a matchup with former UFC featherweight champion [autotag]Max Holloway[/autotag] is exactly the type of fight he’s worked for since he began his martial arts journey.

“I’ve been waiting for these, like, forever – like I’ve been trying to get big names,” Rodriguez told reporters, including MMA Junkie, at Wednesday’s media day at the UFC Apex. “That’s what I’ve been fighting for all my life, my career, like fighting people that are in front of me in the rankings, people that are going to put me in a better position, not guys that are behind me.”

Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) and Holloway (22-6 MMA, 18-6 UFC) meet in the headlining bout of Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 197 event, which streams live on ESPN+ from the UFC Apex.

It’s a big moment for Rodriguez, who currently sits at No. 14 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie featherweight rankings, while Holloway is near the top of the division at No. 3. It’s a tough assignment, of course, perhaps made even tougher by any rust Rodriguez might feel after such a long layoff.

Rodriguez admits it was a tough stretch – one that saw both him and Holloway deal with injuries at various times, as well as being forced to serve a six-month suspension due to repeated whereabouts violations with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

Oh, and that whole global pandemic thing that has caused chaos around the planet for the past 20 months or so.

“I guess it was difficult for a lot of reasons – personal reasons like COVID and, like, family passing away, friends recently passing away and injuries – mine and Max,” Rodriguez said. “Kind of everything added to this couple of years of being out of competition, but I’ve been really trying to get back in here, bro.

“I was ready to fight in March. I’d been getting prepared. When my suspension got over March 7, I was ready, and they told me that I was going to fight Max right in June, and then when it happened, it was July. He got injured, and then we moved all the way here. That’s almost a year of just waiting, but that’s the past. Now we’re here, and we’re looking forward for Saturday and doing our best, and we’re ready.”

Yair Rodriguez (red) fights Jeremy Stephens in October 2019, his last fight before UFC Fight Night 197 on Saturday. (Bob DeChiara, USA TODAY Sports)

Rodriguez makes no attempt to deny the challenge that Holloway presents. Rather, he likens the thrill of the task to that of skydiving, giving him a nervous energy he believes will drive him to succeed.

“That’s why we are here: to prove ourselves against the best fighters in history, in the world,” Rodriguez said. “If you really want to prove yourself, not to prove to nobody else, to prove yourself – like, I want to prove myself against Max Holloway because I know the caliber of fighter that he is, and I feel like whenever I’ve got pressure on myself … like I have jumped out of an airplane three times, and everybody says, like, right when you’re scared to jump, that’s when you jump, and that’s what I did with this fight. You know, I was a little scared to jump, but at the same time, I was excited.

“You know, when I’ve got that feeling inside me, that emotion in my stomach, I was like, ‘OK, this is going to be a good fight. Take it. Let’s go. Let’s do it,’ and we’ll just train hard and everything else will be fine.”

With a win, Rodriguez could conceivably enter his name into the featherweight title picture. After all, he’s long been a highly touted prospect. His fighting style is fan friendly, and he’s one of the flag bearers of MMA in Mexico.

But Rodriguez isn’t interested in talking about that at the moment. Instead, he’s got one thing on his mind.

“I mean, I’m sure that the title shot is going to be in front of me, but first I’ve got to win against Max,” Rodriguez said. “Anything can happen in there, and I’m not focusing on that right now. My main focus is Max Holloway, Saturday the 13th at 3 p.m.”

To see the full interview with Rodriguez, check out the video above.

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Insider’s Scoop: A UFC featherweight standstill, broken jaw updates, and more

MMA insider Nolan King dives into the state of the featherweight division, gives updates on broken jaws, and reveals the UFC’s first fight date of 2022.

Before we get into the crux of what you all showed up for (news), we want to re-introduce you to the “Insider’s Scoop.”

Every once in and while, our reporters, when enough noteworthy developments have piled up, will release news in an easy-to-digest roundup for the MMA Junkie audience.

From fight rumblings to event locations and dates to roster departures and more, various tidbits will be featured each time “Insider’s Scoop” is released.

So without further ado, here’s the latest edition of “Insider’s Scoop.”

Dana White says UFC targeting Max Holloway vs. Yair Rodriguez as Nov. 13 main event

The featherweight contender fight was originally scheduled to take place in July before Max Holloway withdrew due to injury.

The UFC is closing in on a date for the postponed [autotag]Max Holloway[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] bout.

According to promotion president Dana White, the featherweight contenders will fight Nov. 13 at a location and venue to-be-announced, pending bout finalization. White mentioned the targeted booking in an interview Tuesday with TSN. If finalized, the fight is expected to headline the event.

Initially, Holloway (22-6 MMA, 18-6 UFC) vs. Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) was scheduled to take place July 17 in Las Vegas. However, the fight was pulled from the card after Holloway suffered an undisclosed injury.

Holloway, 29, will enter the fight off of a historic striking performance against Calvin Kattar, which he won via unanimous decision in January. The fight returned Holloway into the win column after back-to-back title fight losses to UFC featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski.

Rodriguez, 28, hasn’t competed since an October 2019 “Fight of the Night” bonus-earning victory over Jeremy Stephens. Since his 2017 loss to Frankie Edgar, Mexico’s Rodriguez has gone 2-0 with wins over Stephens and “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung, as well as one no contest against Stephens due to an eye poke.

With the addition, the Nov. 13 lineup includes:

  • Max Holloway vs. Yair Rodriguez
  • Philipe Lins vs. Ovince Saint Preux

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Giga Chikadze says he agreed to replace Max Holloway, tells ‘p*ssy’ Yair Rodriguez to accept

Giga Chikadze claims he’s been offered a main event spot against Yair Rodriguez at UFC on ESPN 26 following Max Holloway’s withdrawal.

[autotag]Giga Chikadze[/autotag] claims he’s been offered a main event spot against [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] at UFC on ESPN 26 following Max Holloway’s withdrawal.

Chikadze (13-2 MMA, 6-0 UFC) said he accepted immediately, and he’s ready to fight in four weeks’ time at the July 17 event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. His concern, however, is that Rodriguez (12-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) won’t oblige.

It was originally reported that the UFC intended to reschedule Rodriguez vs. Holloway for a later date, but with Chikadze saying he’s been offered the fight, that’s apparently not the case. Nothing is set in stone, though, and Chikadze said he’s currently waiting for an official answer on what’s to come.

Chikadze knows he’s ready to fight, though, and he put out a statement on social media to make the behind-the-scenes discussions public and put some pressure on Rodriguez to fight (via Instagram):

“Max Holloway pulled out from the fight with Yair Rodriguez due to injury. UFC called me to replace him, and of course I agreed. Now we’re waiting for Yair. This buy didn’t fight for 20 or 21 months. Guess what I was doing in this time? I was fighting, fighting and fighting. I’ve fought six times, I beat all my opponents. This guy started to play games. It’s been a few days. I haven’t heard back. Hopefully he’s going to show up July 17, but I heard he’s a little bit of a p*ssy. He didn’t show up four times with Zabit (Magomedsharipov), and I heard he did everything to pull out from this fight. I don’t think the guy is scared to be in UFC, but hopefully now he’s going to be meet me in front face-to-face and we’re going to talk. I can’t wait.”

Rodriguez’s team at First Round Management did not immediately respond to MMA Junkie’s request for comment, and whether Rodriguez intends to compete against Chikadze – or anyone else – at UFC on ESPN 26.

The exact nature of Holloway’s injury is unknown. Whether he’s out for six weeks or six months would seemingly play a factor in Rodriguez’s decision-making, but if the promotion offered him another fight, it’s possible it wants to move on from a Holloway pairing.

Rodriguez hasn’t competed since a unanimous decision win over Jeremy Stephens in October 2019. Chikadze has been one of the most active 145-pound fighters in the UFC over the past two years and is coming off a 63-second TKO of Cub Swanson at UFC on ESPN 23 in May.

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Max Holloway out at UFC on ESPN 26, Yair Rodriguez fight postponed

The highly anticipated showdown between former featherweight champion Max Holloway and Yair Rodriguez is on hold.

The highly anticipated showdown between former featherweight champion [autotag]Max Holloway[/autotag] and [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] is on hold.

An injury has pushed Holloway (22-6 MMA, 18-6 UFC) out of the UFC on ESPN 26 main event next month and the fight with Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) will be moved to a later date. News of Holloway’s injury first was reported by UFC broadcast partner ESPN through ESPN Deportes.

Holloway vs. Rodriguez was set to headline UFC on ESPN 26 on July 17. While a location and venue haven’t been announced, the card most likely will take place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The event is set to feature the return from retirement of former UFC women’s bantamweight champ Miesha Tate against Marion Reneau. It is not yet known if that bout will become the main event.

Holloway lost the featherweight title in December 2019 to current champ Alexander Volkanovski. He lost a split decision to him in a July 2020 rematch, giving him losses in three of four fights. But he bounced back in January with a dominant decision win over Calvin Kattar at UFC on ABC 1 to put himself back in the title conversation.

Rodriguez hasn’t fought since an October 2019 win over Jeremy Stephens. He was scheduled to return in August 2020 against Zabit Magomedsharipov, but an ankle injury took him out of the fight. On his recovery, he was booked for the Holloway fight. But now his long-awaited return is on hold again.

With the change, the UFC on ESPN 26 lineup now includes:

  • Marion Reneau vs. Miesha Tate
  • Amir Albazi vs. Ode Osbourne
  • Sergey Morozov vs. Khalid Taha
  • Guram Kutateladze vs. Don Madge
  • Gabriel Benitez vs. Billy Quarantillo
  • Francisco Figueredo vs. Malcolm Gordon
  • Anderson dos Santos vs. Miles Johns
  • Alan Baudot vs. Rodrigo Nascimento
  • Phil Hawes vs. Deron Winn
  • Islam Makhachev vs. Thiago Moises
  • Mateusz Gamrot vs. Jeremy Stephens
  • Alan Baudot vs. Rodrigo Nascimento
  • Amanda Lemos vs. Montserrat Ruiz
  • Abubakar Nurmagomedov vs. Daniel Rodriguez

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Max Holloway vs. Yair Rodriguez headlines UFC’s July 17 event

A former champion will return to work this summer to continue his quest to get back to a title shot.

A former champion will return to work this summer to continue his quest to get back to a title shot.

Former featherweight champ [autotag]Max Holloway[/autotag] (22-6 MMA, 18-6 UFC) is set to take on [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) in the main event of the UFC’s July 17 card. The news first was reported by UFC broadcast partner ESPN, citing promotion president Dana White. The UFC has not yet made a formal announcement.

The July 17 card does not yet have an announced location or venue, but is likely to be a “Fight Night” card at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas with a broadcast on a combination of ESPN and ESPN+.

Holloway got back in the win column in January with a dominant decision over Calvin Kattar at UFC on ABC 1. He snapped a two-fight skid of losses to current champ Alexander Volkanovski, who beat him by unanimous decision in December 2019 to win the title, then took a split decision from him in their July 2020 rematch at UFC 251.

Holloway won the interim featherweight title in December 2016, then beat Jose Aldo to unify the belts in June 2017. He knocked Aldo out a second time in a rematch later that year. His title reign also included wins over Brian Ortega and Frankie Edgar, as well as a failed attempt to win the interim lightweight title against Dustin Poirier in April 2019.

Rodriguez hasn’t fought since an October 2019 decision win over Jeremy Stephens in a fight that was a rematch from a month prior. In their first meeting, an accidental eye poke left Stephens unable to continue just 15 seconds into the fight. Rodriguez picked up a “Fight of the Night” bonus for the win after a double-bonus knockout of Chan Sung Jung 11 months prior.

Rodriguez was set to take on Zabit Magomedsharipov this past August, but pulled out of the fight with an injury. Then in December, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency announced he had been suspended for six months for failing to notify the organization of his location for drug testing.

With the addition, the UFC’s July 17 lineup now includes:

  • Max Holloway vs. Yair Rodriguez
  • Marion Reneau vs. Miesha Tate
  • Amir Albazi vs. Ode Osbourne
  • Sergey Morozov vs. Khalid Taha
  • Guram Kutateladze vs. Don Madge
  • Cameron Else vs. Aaron Phillips
  • Herbert Burns vs. Billy Quarantillo
  • Francisco Figueredo vs. Malcolm Gordon
  • Anderson dos Santos vs. Miles Johns
  • Alan Baudot vs. Rodrigo Nascimento
  • Phil Hawes vs. Deron Winn
  • Islam Makhachev vs. Thiago Moises
  • Mateusz Gamrot vs. Jeremy Stephens
  • Alan Baudot vs. Rodrigo Nascimento
  • Amanda Lemos vs. Montserrat Ruiz
  • Abubakar Nurmagomedov vs. Daniel Rodriguez

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Yair Rodriguez updates on UFC return, says he’s ‘f***ing dying’ to fight Zabit Magomedsharipov

For Yair Rodriguez, the Zabit Magomedsharipov debacle has to be settled at some point.

For [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag], the [autotag]Zabit Magomedsharipov[/autotag] debacle has to be settled at some point.

Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC), who hasn’t competed since October 2019, is ready to return to the octagon after being sidelined due to an injury and a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency whereabouts violation.

He was scheduled to face Magomedsharipov at UFC Fight Night 175 on Aug. 29, but was forced to withdraw due to an ankle injury. The 28-year-old was then hit with a six-month USADA suspension, retroactive to Sept. 8, following three “whereabouts failures” during a 12-month period.

Magomedsharipov also has been inactive of late. His last octagon appearance was in November 2019 when he defeated Calvin Kattar via unanimous decision in a three-round main event. After Rodriguez withdrew from their bout for a second time due to injury – the first being UFC 228 back in September 2018, Magomedsharipov accused him of ducking.

But whether Rodriguez ends up facing Magomedsharipov (18-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) next or not, he vows that his time will come.

“Just to be clear, he was talking a lot of crap, saying that I didn’t want to fight him, that I was faking injuries and stuff like that,” Rodriguez told ESPN. “Nobody does that. We’re all here to fight anybody at any point, and I’m sure I’ll fight him at some point, no matter what. This is a fight that has to happen. I’m f***ing dying to fight him with all the crap he’s talking about. His moment will come when it has to come.”

Rodriguez is currently in New Mexico helping Donald Cerrone prepare for his upcoming fight with Diego Sanchez. He wants to return by summer against the highest-ranked opponent possible, in what he hopes would be a No. 1 contender bout.

“I would like to fight as soon as possible, to be honest,” Rodriguez said. “As I’ve been getting ready to fight – I don’t have anything in specific right now. I don’t have a specific date that I’m scheduled to fight or any name as for now, but I think I’ll have some more information in the next week or two, but I can’t wait to compete. Probably July 17 will be a nice date for me, and I’m just getting prepared and ready for whatever comes.”

He continued, “In an ideal scenario, I would like to face the champion, right? Because that’s the fight that everybody wants. But from there, going back in the rankings, I would take it as they come. I want the champion. If not, the No.1, if not, the No. 2, if not, No. 3. At this point, it doesn’t matter who I fight. Winning my fight would mean fighting for a title next. So, to be honest, I’m here to fight anybody.”

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USADA suspends UFC’s Yair Rodriguez six months for missing drug tests

Light has been shed on Yair Rodriguez’s recent inactivity after he was suspended by USADA for “whereabouts failures.”

The reason behind [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag]’s recent inactivity has come to light, but it opens the door for further questions.

On Thursday, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency announced it has suspended Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC), one of the UFC’s top featherweight fighters, for six months following three “whereabouts failures” during a 12-month period.

“Like all UFC athletes, Rodriguez, 28, is a member of the UFC Registered Testing Pool and is therefore subject to certain Whereabouts responsibilities, which allow him to be located for testing,” USADA said in a statement. “Accurate Whereabouts information is a crucial component of an effective out-of-competition testing program because it enables anti-doping organizations to conduct no-notice sample collections, which helps maintain effective doping deterrence and detection.

“Rodriguez failed to update his Whereabouts information and was unavailable for testing at locations provided in his Whereabouts Filings on three occasions. He accrued a Whereabouts Failure in each of the first three quarters of 2020. The accumulation of three Whereabouts Failures within a 12-month period constitutes a policy violation under the UFC Anti-Doping Policy.”

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USADA stated Rodriguez was eligible for a reduction in punishment because “his conduct did not raise suspicion that he was trying to avoid being available for testing.”

Rodriguez, who hasn’t competed since October 2019, will be eligible to return in March 2021. He was scheduled to fight Zabit Magomedsharipov in August but withdrew due to an ankle injury.

At last Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 18 post-fight news conference, UFC president Dana White was asked about Rodriguez’s hiatus and gave a cryptic answer.

“We have not talked publicly about that?” White said. “Why not? I don’t think he’s going to fight soon. No, (he’s not hurt). We didn’t announce it. I don’t know why we didn’t. I don’t know what the deal is.”

Rodriguez is not the only UFC fighter to be suspended for missing mandatory drug tests. Most notably, former UFC welterweight title challenger Nick Diaz was suspended for one year in 2018 for the same violation.

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Dana White: In a perfect world, Zabit Magomedsharipov vs. Yair Rodriguez is five rounds

Dana White thinks the highly anticipated fight between Zabit Magomedsharipov and Yair Rodriguez should serve as a headliner.

LAS VEGAS – Dana White thinks the highly anticipated fight between [autotag]Zabit Magomedsharipov[/autotag] and [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag] should serve as a headliner.

The matchup has been brewing for years, but the two top-ranked featherweights have yet to fight. They’re projected to finally square off this year.

Magomedsharipov (18-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) and Rodriguez (13-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) were linked to the UFC’s Aug. 29 headliner, but Rodriguez was forced out due to an ankle injury.

Magomedsharipov accused Rodriguez of not being brave enough to show up, prompting Rodriguez to fire back and tell Magomedsharipov to wait like the “little dog” that he is.

Rodriguez is targeting a return this fall, but no official date has been assigned for their rebooking. Rodriguez wants it to be a five-round fight, and so does White, who says the bout is still being worked on.

“(Tuesday) was matchmaking, and we’re still working on that fight,” White told reporters, including MMA Junkie, after Dana White’s Contender Series 29 in Las Vegas. “We want to do the Yair and Zabit fight, so we’re waiting for Yair to get healed.

“I don’t know how it’s going to end up playing out, but in a perfect world, yes, I would like it to be five rounds.”

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Magomedsharipov has looked near flawless in his octagon performances, but continues to draw criticism for his cardio. He has shown a tendency to slow down in fights and his headliner against Calvin Kattar in November 2019 was only three rounds due to the late-notice main event slot. He lost Round 3 on all three judges’ scorecards.

On the other side of the 145-pound bracket, former UFC featherweight title challenger Brian Ortega will look to bounce back from his first-career loss when he takes on the streaking Chan Sung Jung in the UFC’s Oct. 17 main event.

A No. 1 contender is expected to emerge from either one of those pivotal featherweight clashes while champion Alexander Volkanovski waits for his next challenger.

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Hablemos MMA #3: Entrevista con Marlon ‘Chito’ Vera, resumen de UFC on ESPN+ 32 y Bellator 243, mas

Escucha el tercer episodio de Hablemos MMA con Danny Segura.

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(Editor’s note: Hablemos MMA is MMA Junkie’s weekly Spanish-language podcast hosted by reporter Danny Segura. New episodes are released every Monday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and more of your favorite podcasting platforms. You can also stream or download the latest episode above.)

En el tercer episodio de Hablemos MMA, Danny Segura entrevista a [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag] acerca de su pelea coestelar contra [autotag]Sean O’Malley[/autotag] en UFC 252, su posición en la división, y mucho mas.

También analizamos los resultados de UFC en ESPN+ 32: [autotag]Derrick Lewis[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Aleksei Oleinik[/autotag], Bellator 243: [autotag]Michael Chandler[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Benson Henderson[/autotag], y repasamos las ultimas noticias de las artes marciales mixtas incluyendo el futuro de [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag], lesiones de [autotag]Kevin Lee[/autotag] y [autotag]Yair Rodriguez[/autotag], fichajes de [autotag]Deiveson Figueiredo[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Cody Garbrandt[/autotag], [autotag]Valentina Shevchenko[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jennifer Maia[/autotag], y mucho mas.