Video: No. 3 UFC storyline of 2020 – Stars lost to retirement, Bellator

The UFC lost big names such as Daniel Cormier, Khabib Nurmagomedov and Henry Cejudo in 2020, but will any come back in 2021?

The 2020 calendar year is one most of us want to forget, though it will be hard not to remember.

And though there were challenges in the world of sports, after some tentative moments early in the pandemic, MMA mostly powered on – with a lot of adjustments.

At MMA Junkie, we’re taking a look back at the top five storylines in the UFC in 2020.

Check out No. 3 in the video above: The UFC loses stars to retirement ([autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag], [autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] and [autotag]Henry Cejudo[/autotag]) and Bellator ([autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag], [autotag]Anthony Johnson[/autotag]).

Is Bellator, with a UFC assist, the most intriguing promotion heading into 2021? | Opinion

By scuttling big names in favor of low-paid Contender Series types, the UFC handed Bellator a fight as good as Anthony Johnson vs. Yoel Romero. That could just be the start.

In 2021, [autotag]Anthony Johnson[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] would be an easy UFC on ESPN main event. Or the type of pay-per-view co-main event that lures in fans who are on the fence about buying.

“Rumble,” owner of some of the most devastating knockouts in UFC history, returning after a nearly four-year retirement, still the winner of 12 of his past 14 fights. Romero, admittedly on his career back nine, looking to prove he’s relevant coming off a lackluster loss to Israel Adesanya for the UFC middleweight title.

This is a no-brainer of a fight. It will very likely be made. But it will happen in Bellator. And that’s in part due to decisions made by the UFC, which is opening the door for a more interesting MMA landscape outside of the sport’s leading promotion heading into 2021 than we’ve had in quite some time.

Earlier this week, UFC president Dana White put out a video congratulating himself for doing his job during the coronavirus pandemic. You know who else adapted to the circumstances and got back on with their lives under trying conditions? Literally every other person, family, and company on earth who had their routines disrupted. And they did it without declaring war on imaginary enemies, or without taking a victory lap as if they were the only person alive who figured a path forward.

Mentioned almost as an aside in the video was a technically true but misleading claim – the bit about no one from the UFC losing their jobs.

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Technically, this is accurate. But this ignores that the UFC’s parent company, Endeavor, went through massive cutbacks earlier this year and is reportedly eyeing another round. That’s important context when you remember the UFC is releasing, in White’s own words, 60-80 fighters. The fighters legally speaking are independent contractors, which enables the UFC to make a “no layoffs” semantic dodge.

That brings us back to Johnson and Romero, two of the biggest names to recently part ways with the UFC. Romero made a disclosed $350,000 for his loss to Adesanya at UFC 248. “Rumble” made $500,000 for his last fight, a loss to Daniel Cormier at UFC 210.

Releasing those two fighters alone, let alone 60-80, pays for dozens of fights involving fighters signed fresh off Dana White’s Contender Series. In cobbling often-slipshod cards this year in a mad scramble to fill its ESPN contract, Endeavor’s bean counters appeared to come to the conclusion they can simply replace the likes of “Rumble” and Romero with any random fighter and the fans will still tune in. And they may be right.

But this is also the point where the UFC cuts so much that Bellator is able to make real inroads. Johnson vs. Romero is a gift-wrapped outstanding fight, and it could come as part of a light heavyweight tournament that would also feature the likes of champion Vadim Nemkov, Ryan Bader, Phil Davis, Lyoto Machida, Gegard Mousasi, and Corey Anderson. That’s a world-class list of MMA talent.

Make no mistake, this isn’t a reprise of Bellator putting Tito Ortiz and Stephan Bonnar together in a Hail Mary attempt to garner attention that actually connected. Nor is it the days of putting together fights like Royce Gracie vs. Ken Shamrock or Kimbo Slice vs. Dada 5000.

This was the year in which it became apparent Bellator’s investment in blue-chip prospects is beginning to pay dividends. Most notable is featherweight A.J. McKee, who, is likely to meet Patricio Freire in the finals of the grand prix – barring a “Pitbull” upset loss to Emmanuel Sanchez in the semifinals – in what will be one of the sport’s most anticipated bouts. Or Aaron Pico, who got back on track in 2020 after nearly crumbling under the early hype.

Consider, also, smart signings of Eastern European standouts such as Magomed Magomedov, who’s already proven himself capable of beating current UFC bantamweight champ Petr Yan.

What you have here is the makings of a Bellator roster that’s better than anything we’ve seen outside the UFC since Strikeforce’s heyday. The only thing missing for many of these competitors, both the up-and-comers and the Euro imports, are the type of name-brand victories that casual fans will recognize.

That’s where the UFC’s ongoing cuts get all the more interesting. As the releases start to trickle across weight classes, opportunities to snag exactly the right opponents to help Bellator’s youngsters “get over” — to steal a pro wrestling term — are almost certain to keep popping up, and right at the moment the sport’s best crop of prospects in any major promotion in quite some time is starting to come of age.

This is not to imply the UFC is in any danger of losing their No. 1 spot now, next year, or at any point during our lifetimes. But sometime in 2020, the promotion made the decision it’s going to let fighters go despite their fan followings and not being finished, and fill its slots with cheap replacements. And that, in turn, appears primed to make major league MMA outside of the biggest group a more interesting place than it’s been in quite some time.

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Yoel Romero says ‘there’s a 90 percent chance’ he fights Anthony Johnson in Bellator debut

Yoel Romero believes the chances of a potential Bellator debut fight against Anthony Johnson are strong.

Looks like [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] believes he’ll have exactly Bellator debut fans want to see.

The multiple-time UFC middleweight title challenger said there’s a good chance he’ll take on Anthony “Rumble” Johnson in what would be both fighters’ Bellator debut sometime in early 2021.

Romero (13-5 MMA) signed with Bellator earlier this week after getting released by the UFC in a move announced Dec. 4. The news came in the heels of Bellator announcing the signing of Johnson, who’s a multiple-time UFC light heavyweight title challenger.

The fighter nicknamed “Soldier of God” said all options are still open, but the potential bout with “Rumble” is a strong possibility.

“Citing a name here is just a speculation, because there are still things that I can’t speak on right now, but it’s a great possibility,” Romero said in Spanish speaking with ESPN regarding a fight with Johnson. “There’s a 90 percent chance that he (Johnson) will be my first opponent. It’s a fight that a lot of people would be pleased (if it happens).”

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Romero expects to compete at 205 pounds, a weight class above where he become a perennial UFC contender. Romero likes Bellator’s light heavyweight division and feels it’s a top quality weight class.

“I think there are many athletes at 205 with great quality,” Romero said. “We were looking at it with (his management team), the quality that exists in Bellator at 205.

“Taking out the champion the Russian guy (Vadim Nemkov), they currently have five or four athletes, Lyoto Machida who was champion of the UFC is in this division, plus three athletes that fought for world titles in the division and that they were ranked in the top five when Jon Jones was there, who in my opinion is the best pound for pound.”

Romero said he was training for a fight in January prior to the UFC release. The former Olympic silver medal-winning wrestler representing Cuba said he’s still training hard and could be ready to make his Bellator debut in the first quarter of 2021.

“I was training before they released me from the UFC to fight in January, so it was soon,” Romero said. “I’m still with the same training, so I’m ready to fight in February. I’m ready, I’m prepared and I’m happy waiting for big things to come. And for big things to come you need to be hungry and happy. All those top fighters at 205, that’s who we’re aiming for so we can get to the top.”

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Yoel Romero says UFC release was ‘completely unexpected,’ details disagreement with matchmakers

Yoel Romero admits that when his managers informed him of his release from the UFC, he thought he was being pranked.

[autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag]’s release from the UFC surprised everyone – including himself.

Romero (13-5), who parted ways with the UFC earlier this month, signed a multifight deal with Bellator earlier this week and will debut in the light heavyweight division in 2021. Although the multitime UFC middleweight title challenger has lost four of his past five fights, the losses have come in tightly contested matchups with the division’s elite.

According to Romero, 43, his release wasn’t the result of his recent losing skid. Instead, it was due to a disagreement with UFC matchmakers, whom offered Romero numerous fights that didn’t interest him.

With Romero targeting the top-tier fighters at both middleweight and light heavyweight, the matchmakers had different ideas.

“First and foremost, it was something that was completely unexpected,” Romero told ESPN in Spanish through an interpreter on Wednesday. “I was already training very hard, getting ready. We were already thinking of fighting in January or February at 185 or 205. We were looking to fight with the top three in either division. My managers explained this to the presidency, the top of the UFC.

“They wanted (me) to fight with Uriah Hall, Derek Brunson, and we explained to them that it didn’t make sense for (me) to fight with these young men. We had an idea we were chasing, the world title. The way we were training, making it happen, we knew that we had one or two fights and then we would go for the belt. Our thought was that fighting any of these guys that are in the back of the roster, that it was taking steps backward, not forward.”

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After Romero declined the fight offers at 185 pounds, the discussion between his team and the UFC continued, this time, with offers at 205 pounds. But once again, Romero did not like the matchups. That’s when the UFC decided to let him go.

“My managers were back and forth non-stop with the matchmakers and with (UFC president Dana White), and there was no accordance,” Romero said. “They came back to us with an offer to fight Johnny Walker at 205. At 205, we wanted whomever triumphed between ‘Marreta’ (Santos) or Glover (Teixeira).

“The managers were initially saying we wanted to fight with Dominick Reyes, Glover Teixeira, ‘Marreta,’ or Anthony Smith, and it was kind of like a back and forth, kind of quiet on their end, and once they reached back it was to let (me) know that we couldn’t come to an agreement, and they were going to commit to the release.”

Romero admits that, despite numerous disagreements with the matchmakers, he legitimately thought he was being pranked when his managers delivered the news.

“I would have never expected this,” Romero said. “I was training not extra hard, but training with an intensity that I was going to run through my next two fights, get another shot at Izzy (Adesanya), and once I was in there, I was going to take his head off.”

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MMA Twitter is salivating over the idea of Anthony Johnson vs. Yoel Romero in Bellator

Please make this happen.

We got some unexpected – yet also expected? – breaking news Monday when it was revealed that [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] would be signing with Bellator 10 days after he was released by the UFC.

The news was expected because, well, even at 43, Romero remains an absolute beast of a human being who would bolster Bellator’s roster, so it made total sense. But it was also unexpected in that, just last week, Bellator president Scott Coker explained to MMA Junkie’s Nolan King why the promotion was taking a pass – initially.

The key word was “initially” as Coker did acknowledge that dialogue would remain open with Romero’s agents at First Round Management. And, well, he must’ve came to his senses about the slough of intriguing matchup possibilities with Romero aboard.

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None, however, is bigger or has MMA Twitter salivating quite as much as Romero fighting hard-hitting knockout artist [autotag]Anthony Johnson[/autotag], whom Bellator signed just last week after he also parted ways with the UFC.

Take a look:

And on and on the tweets kept coming. Can you blame us? A light heavyweight clash between Johnson and Romero is an absolute dream matchup between two of the most feared men in the history of our sport.

We need this, Scott Coker. Make it happen!

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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With Yoel Romero signing, Bellator now rivals UFC’s light heavyweight division | Opinion

Bellator’s light heavyweight division is picking up, enough to give the UFC’s 205-pound weight class a run for its money.

The claim the UFC has the best divisions in MMA has held up for a long time, but in 2020 that claim has an asterisk next to it.

Let’s call it how it is right off the bat: Overall, the UFC still is the leading MMA promotion in the world, and that’s where the majority of the biggest fights take place. However, the claim the UFC holds all the best fighters on the planet in each division is simply not true anymore, at least when looking at light heavyweight.

Bellator, a fellow American promotion, has always been second to the UFC in every weight class. The Viacom-owned promotion certainly has many world-class gems. Some have been UFC champions or have gone on to win a UFC belt after leaving Bellator. But divisional depth has been something that’s lacked when compared to the UFC.

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With recent signings, including the latest in two-time UFC middleweight title challenger [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag], Bellator now rivals the UFC’s light heavyweight division.

Now, you might think the UFC still holds a better 205-pound weight class, and that’s fine. But what you can’t do is ignore the fact Bellator holds many of the best fighters in the world at 205 pounds – a big enough number to not only rival the UFC’s division, but also make a claim of having the best top five.

Hear me out.

Bellator now has Romero, [autotag]Anthony Johnson[/autotag], [autotag]Corey Anderson[/autotag], [autotag]Ryan Bader[/autotag], [autotag]Phil Davis[/autotag], and of course current champion [autotag]Vadim Nemkov[/autotag]. Except for champ Nemkov, who never competed in the UFC, all the contenders have been in the UFC’s official top five rankings.

Those Bellator contenders, plus the champion, could easily exchange a fair and even number of wins and losses with the UFC’s top five and belt holder today.

The UFC has champion [autotag]Jan Blachowicz[/autotag], and top-five contenders [autotag]Glover Teixeira[/autotag], [autotag]Thiago Santos[/autotag], [autotag]Dominick Reyes[/autotag], [autotag]Aleksandar Rakic[/autotag] and [autotag]Jiri Prochazka[/autotag].

Let’s just look at some quick history.

UFC champ Blachowicz has a defeat to Anderson, just like Bellator champ Nemkov has a loss to Prochazka in RIZIN. Teixeira has lost to Bellator’s Johnson, Anderson and Davis. Additionally, Santos lost to current Bellator middleweight champ Gegard Mousasi.

That alone shows how competitive Bellator’s additions are.

These are not fighters who are washed up. and just have big names to bring big audiences, but actual contenders in the UFC who for different reasons weren’t able to come to terms with the promotion, so they switched over to Bellator.

Now, it’s fair to say that all of the former UFC fighters now in Bellator have lost to UFC talent, as well.

But there’s more. This goes beyond the top five. Bellator also has 185-pound champion Mousasi, who’s competed at 205 pounds, and could easily move up in weight to spice things up for a champion vs. champion bout. And add Lyoto Machida to the mix, who’s still a prominent figure despite maybe not being in his prime.

So all in all, Bellator’s light heavyweight division is world class and looking good. It’s safe to say that it rivals the UFC’s – or at the very least it’s worth a discussion.

The big factor here that splits the difference is Jon Jones, and don’t think I forgot.

However, it’s uncertain if Jones will return to 205 pounds or continue on with his plans to move up to heavyweight. Jones is indisputably the greatest light heavyweight today and the best of all time. That’s something you can’t take away from the UFC.

But as long as Jones is not listed or part of the UFC’s light heavyweight mix, Bellator has a case for having a top five that rivals the UFC’s.

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Who will stand across from Yoel Romero in his Bellator debut? 7 names to consider

Now that Yoel Romero is headed to Bellator, who are some of the fighters who might be across from him for his promotional debut?

One of the most feared light heavyweights in recent UFC memory is headed to a new home in 2021.

[autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] (13-5 MMA, 0-0 BMMA), it was reported Monday, will join Bellator in the new year after news broke earlier this month that he had parted ways with the UFC. Romero leaves the promotion on a three-fight skid with just one loss in his past five fights.

In March, his only fight in 2020, he lost a unanimous decision in a middleweight title fight against champion Israel Adesanya. He got that title shot despite coming off a decision loss to Paulo Costa in August 2017. And prior to that, he lost a split decision to then-champion Robert Whittaker in a rematch.

Romero, a silver medalist in wrestling for Cuba at the 2000 Olympic Games, is expected to fight at light heavyweight when he gets to Bellator. It will be a return to the division in which he fought early in his career before dropping to 185 pounds when he signed with the UFC in 2013. Romero twice missed the middleweight limit on the scale – in back-to-back title fights, making him ineligible first for the interim title against Luke Rockhold in a fight he won, and then ineligible in his rematch with Whittaker.

Now that he’ll have a new division and a new promotional home, let’s take a quick alphabetical look at some of the names who could be on the horizon for the 43-year-old “Soldier of God” in Bellator’s light heavyweight division.

Former UFC title challenger Yoel Romero to join Bellator, make debut at light heavyweight

Yoel Romero will reunite with Scott Coker under the Bellator banner.

[autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] will reunite with Scott Coker under the Bellator banner.

Romero (13-5 MMA, 9-4 UFC), a multi-time UFC title challenger who parted ways with the organization earlier this month, is expected to sign a multi-fight contract with Bellator with his debut coming in the light heavyweight division in 2021.

The fighter’s management, Abe and Malki Kawa, both verified the news on Twitter following an initial report from ESPN. MMA Junkie subsequently confirmed the news with a person with knowledge of the move. The person requested anonymity because an official announcement has yet to be made.

Romero, 43, made his UFC debut in April 2013. He won his first eight fights with the promotion to set up a title opportunity against Robert Whittaker at UFC 213 in July 2017. He dropped a decision, but worked his way to a rematch with Whittaker at UFC 225 in July 2018.

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The Cuban fighter missed weight for the rematch with Whittaker, then lost a split decision in what many considered to be the “Fight of the Year.”

Romero, who is No. 6 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie MMA middleweight rankings, has since lost decisions to Paulo Costa and Israel Adesanya, giving him a 1-4 record leading up to his release.

Although he didn’t capture a title, Romero still left his mark in the UFC. He has the third most knockouts in middleweight history (seven), the third-most knockdowns overall (10), is one of two fighters in UFC history with multiple flying knee finishes, along with other accolades.

Romero fought once for Coker under the now-defunct Strikeforce banner in September 2011. Coker initially said he wasn’t keen to sign “The Soldier of God,” but ultimately the two sides found room for a deal.

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Scott Coker explains why Bellator passed on signing Yoel Romero for now

Bellator president Scott Coker isn’t interested in Yoel Romero at this time. Here’s his explanation.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – Scott Coker respects everything [autotag]Yoel Romero[/autotag] has accomplished in his career, but the Bellator president is happy with his current roster.

Romero (13-5 MMA), a multi-time UFC middleweight title challenger, was recently released from his UFC deal and became a free agent. Though Coker said he’s always in communication with Romero’s management team, the Bellator president said they passed on the opportunity to bring in the veteran competitor.

“We got a call from (his) agent and originally we just passed,” Coker said. “If you look at our roster and how many fighters we have on this roster and how many fights we’re going to do, there are only so many TV slots. We have kind of gotten away from signing the OGs we used to sign back in the day. That’s because guys like A.J. (McKee) are coming up. Ilima-Lei (Macfarlane) is developing into a main event fighter.

“We’ve basically built from the bottom up. We have a lot of great fighters that are on the roster that we’ve built over the last four to five years. We were kind of headed in a different direction. I was happy with the way the roster is right now not adding anybody.”

ESPN initially reported Bellator’s lack of interest in Romero – a claim manager Malki Kawa seemingly disputed on Twitter shortly thereafter. While Coker said the company doesn’t have any interest at the moment, that doesn’t mean the door is permanently closed.

“The dialogue will always be open,” Coker said. “Things change quickly in this sport so you never know but the initial thought was that I talked to my guys and they thought it was better for us to pass.”

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Romero, who is No. 6 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie MMA middleweight rankings, has lost recent decisions to Paulo Costa and Adesanya, giving him a 1-4 record leading up to his release.

Although he didn’t capture a title, Romero still left his mark in the UFC. He has the third-most knockouts in middleweight history (seven), the third-most knockdowns (10), is one of two fighters in UFC history with multiple flying knee finishes, along with other accolades.

Bellator returns Thursday with Bellator 254, which takes place at Mohegan Sun Arena. The main card airs on CBS Sports Network after prelims on MMA Junkie.

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