Fights on Tap: Yan vs. Sandhagen, Font vs. Aldo among 27 UFC fights announced 

Fights on Tap: Petr Yan vs. Cory Sandhagen, Rob Font vs. José Aldo among 27 UFC fights announced  | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Check out all the fights announced over the past week in the UFC, Bellator and…


Fights on Tap: Petr Yan vs. Cory Sandhagen, Rob Font vs. José Aldo among 27 UFC fights announced  | Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Check out all the fights announced over the past week in the UFC, Bellator and other promotions.

Fights on Tap is a weekly roundup of all the fights booked in the UFC, Bellator and other promotions.

There are three months left in 2021, so the UFC is going all out with its recent additions to the final pay-per-view and fight night events of the year. The promotion either announced or finalized 27 fights this week, and an interim bantamweight championship between No. 1 and No. 3 in the division has been set.

Petr Yan and Aljamain Sterling were going to meet at UFC 267 in October for an immediate rematch stemming from their controversial outing at UFC 259 earlier this year. However, Sterling revealed that he is still dealing with some nerve issues from a recent neck surgery and could not obtain medical clearance to compete. Yan wanted to remain on the card and got his wish as Cory Sandhagen has been tapped as the replacement for Sterling. Yan and Sandhagen now fight for the interim bantamweight championship and the winner will go on the unify the titles against Sterling once he is allowed to return to the Octagon.

Some other interesting bantamweight fights have been added to the schedule, with Rob Font vs. José Aldo and Dominick Cruz vs. Pedro Munhoz among the highlights.

UFC Fight Night — October 16

Sijara Eubanks vs. Luana Carolina — women’s flyweight

UFC 267 — October 30

Petr Yan vs. Cory Sandhagen — bantamweight

Islam Makhachev vs. Dan Hooker — lightweight

Makwan Amirkhani vs. Lerone Murphy — featherweight

Elizeu Zaleski Dos Santos vs. Benoît St. Denis — welterweight

UFC Fight Night — November 13

Thiago Moisés vs. Joel Alvarez — lightweight

UFC Fight Night — November 20

Miesha Tate vs. Ketlen Vieira — women’s bantamweight

Tai Tuivasa vs. Augusto Sakai — heavyweight

Jessica Penne vs. Luana Pinheiro — women’s strawweight

Denys Bondar vs. Malcolm Gordon — flyweight

UFC Fight Night — December 4

Rob Font vs. José Aldo — bantamweight

Zhalgas Zhumagulov vs. Manel Kape — flyweight

Sergei Pavlovich vs. Tanner Boser — heavyweight

UFC 269 — December 11

Dominick Cruz vs. Pedro Munhoz — bantamweight

Sean O’Malley vs. Raulian Paiva — bantamweight

UFC Fight Night — December 18

Chris Daukaus vs. Derrick Lewis — heavyweight

Darren Elkins vs. Cub Swanson — featherweight

Raquel Pennington vs. Julia Avila — women’s bantamweight

UFC Fight Night — January 15

Brandon Royval vs. Rogerio Bontorin — flyweight

Jasmine Jasudavicius vs. Kay Hansen — women’s flyweight

Brian Kelleher vs. Saidyokub Kakhramonov — bantamweight

UFC 270 — January 22

Jared Cannonier vs. Derek Brunson — middleweight

Alexey Oleynik vs. Greg Hardy Jr. — heavyweight

Jacob Malkoun vs. AJ Dobson — middleweight

Rodolfo Vieira vs. Wellington Turman — middleweight

Ji Yeon Kim vs. Poliana Botelho — women’s flyweight

UFC Fight Night — February 5

Marc-André Barriault vs. Chidi Njokuani — middleweight

Announced Professional Fighters League (PFL) fights:

PFL 2021 Championship Event — October 27

Julia Budd vs. Kaitlin Young — women’s lightweight

Announced Cage Warriors fights:

Cage Warriors 130 — October 17

Tyler Escoto vs. Cesar Gonzalez — lightweight

UFC Vegas 39 Prelims preview and predictions (Part I)

The Strawweight division’s most decorated submission artist and one of its most potent strikers duke it out this Saturday when Mackenzie Dern squares off with Marina Rodriguez on ESPN+.
The APEX will also host a potentially wild…



The Strawweight division’s most decorated submission artist and one of its most potent strikers duke it out this Saturday when Mackenzie Dern squares off with Marina Rodriguez on ESPN+.

The APEX will also host a potentially wild Welterweight bout between Randy Brown and Jared Gooden, plus Tim Elliott vs. Matheus Nicolau in a clash of elite Flyweight ground specialists.

Seven Prelims take the stage before that, though, so let’s have a look at the first batch.

145 lbs.: Charles Rosa (14-5) vs. Damon Jackson (18-4-1)

Now seven years and 10 fights into his UFC career, Rosa continues to alternate losses and wins with clockwork regularity. His two-fight 2021 campaign has seen him suffer a decision defeat to Darrick Minner before bouncing back with a decision of his own over Justin Jaynes. He faces a two-inch height advantage and four-inch reach disadvantage.

Four years after first leaving the world’s largest fight promotion, Jackson finally secured his first UFC victory by upsetting Mirsad Bektic via bonus-winning guillotine. The run wasn’t to last, as he suffered a one-punch knockout loss to top prospect Ilia Topuria soon after. He hasn’t seen the judges since 2016 and has scored 14 submission wins overall.

Two weeks back, we saw one of Rosa’s fellow alternators lose their streak when Taila Santos handed Roxanne Modafferi her second defeat in a row. Unfortunately for “Boston Strong,” that looks like a one-off occurrence. Rosa’s complete and fundamental inability to stop a takedown figures to doom him once again against Jackson, whose top game is more than sufficient to shut down whatever offense Rosa tries to generate off of his back.

Rosa is admittedly quite a bit more durable than Jackson, who’s been knocked cold three times in his professional career, but his historical struggles with Jackson’s archetype and apparent lack of improvement in his defensive grappling despite all of those setbacks has me picking “The Leech.” Jackson cruises to victory with regular takedowns.

Prediction: Jackson by unanimous decision

155 lbs.: Charlie Ontiveros (11-7) vs. Steve Garcia (11-4)

Eight years into his professional career, Ontiveros answered the call to meet Kevin Holland in the Octagon when Makhmud Muradov withdrew. Things didn’t quite work out for the longtime Welterweight, as he suffered a brutal slam TKO midway through the first round. He boasts a two-inch height advantage and a three-inch reach advantage.

Garcia saw a potential Contender Series contract evaporate due to a flubbed weight cut, then missed the weight class above in his subsequent bout with Jose Mariscal. He finally reached the UFC by stepping up on short notice against Luis Pena, who dominated “Mean Machine” on the ground for a wide decision. This marks his first fight in over 19 months.

Gotta respect the UFC matchmakers here; they looked at two huge dudes who can’t grapple and made the correct decision to slam ‘em against each other like action figures to see what would happen. At the risk of poisoning the experiment with a preconceived idea of the outcome, Ontiveros is getting squashed. Though he figures to be the bigger man against Garcia, who somehow used to fight at Bantamweight, his utter lack of durability figures to be his undoing once again.

Ontiveros is capable of some solid offense, as seen in his ultra-slick one-hitter quitter against Washington Luiz, but he’s got seven stoppage losses to his name and consistently gets folded when he tries to step up in class. That puncher’s chance, legitimate though it may be considering Garcia’s raw aggression, pales in the face of Ontiveros’ historical inability to stay intact. Garcia bulldozes him in the first few minutes.

Prediction: Garcia by first-round knockout

115 lbs.: Lupita Godinez (5-1) vs. Sam Hughes (5-3)

“Loopy,” who went 1-0-1 with Hughes as an amateur, defeated Vanessa Demopoulos to claim LFA gold and a spot in the Octagon. She wasn’t quite as successful in her UFC debut, however, dropping a split decision to the returning Jessica Penne in April 2021. She stands three inches shorter than Hughes, who also sports a 3.5-inch reach advantage.

Though a comeback submission from the aforementioned Demopoulos ended Hughes’ bid for the LFA Strawweight title, she returned to form by choking out Danielle Hindley in impressive fashion. Her efforts got her dropped right into the UFC deep end, where she fell to striking standouts Tecia Torres and Loma Lookboonmee. All four of her pro finishes have come inside two rounds.

With all due respect to Hughes, a very talented fighter who’s had the misfortune of fighting two top-notch kickboxers in the Octagon, this is essentially a litmus test for Godinez’s ability to execute. When she’s firing on all cylinders, she has Hughes beat virtually everywhere thanks to super-crisp boxing and impressive-if-underutilized wrestling. That said, she threw the Penne fight away with some jaw-droppingly poor decision-making and allowed Demopoulos back into their title bout after beating her half to death in the first two rounds.

I’ll go ahead and indulge my optimism by saying that the Penne loss should serve as a wake-up call, especially since Hughes lacks the elite submission skills that Godinez clearly feared. Even if it doesn’t, Hughes’ tendency to compromise her reach advantage by initiating the clinch will allow even a half-cocked Godinez to punish the body and hit takedowns as needed. Godinez enters the win column with a clear decision.

Prediction: Godinez by unanimous decision

Three fights to go, including the latest from unbeaten Heavyweight finisher Alexandr Romanov. Same time tomorrow, Maniacs.

Jake Paul Points Out “Loophole” In Woodley’s “I Love Jake Paul” Tattoo

The “I Love Jake Paul” tattoo that Tyron Woodley got branded on him was not the rematch-sealing gesture Woodley had hoped it would be. Prior to the Jake Paul versus Tyron Woodley boxing match on August 29, the tattoo stipulation was clear: the loser gets tattooed with “I Love <Insert Winner’s Name>.” Immediately after the […]

Continue Reading Jake Paul Points Out “Loophole” In Woodley’s “I Love Jake Paul” Tattoo at MMA News.

The “I Love Jake Paul” tattoo that Tyron Woodley got branded on him was not the rematch-sealing gesture Woodley had hoped it would be.

Prior to the Jake Paul versus Tyron Woodley boxing match on August 29, the tattoo stipulation was clear: the loser gets tattooed with “I Love <Insert Winner’s Name>.” Immediately after the fight ended, the stipulation was amended: Should Woodley get this tattoo, it would secure him the rematch that he demanded in the ring when Paul was announced the winner.

After Paul stated that the tattoo window had elapsed, Woodley got and displayed his brand-new tattoo anyway.

Before Woodley got the tattoo and one day after their fight, Paul took to Twitter to lay out the following guidelines to ensure all the expectations for the tattoo were aboveboard:

1. 3×2 inches at least

2. Can’t get it covered

3. Permanent

4. Must post on social media

5. Has to be visible with shorts and shirt on

In a recent interview with TalkSport.com, Paul pointed out a loophole that he believes Woodley is trying to create, and it’s one that isn’t associated with the above guidelines.

“Let’s see what happens,” Paul said of a rematch against Woodley. “He was like three or four weeks late on the tattoo, he let the hype die down,” the 24-year-old explained. “I think he had a call with his accountants and he saw how much taxes he had to pay and he was like ‘oh, man, I need to get this tattoo right now.’

“The weird thing about it, and I’m saying this on record right now, is the tattoo is on his middle finger and it’s done in a way where he can change it to say ‘f*** Jake Paul’. He did it so the I looks like an F or could be changed to that, so I think personally he’s going to change it to say f*** Jake Paul on his middle finger.

“It goes perfectly with that, so I’m calling it out right now. He’s trying to find loopholes and be slick but he’s not as smart as he thinks he is,” Paul said.

This response to Woodley’s tattoo goes into much more depth than Paul’s previous, trollish one from last week. Nevertheless, it still falls shy of confirming that a rematch between the two will take place. You can therefore chalk this up to being the second consecutive response from Paul that Woodley won’t want to hear and one that may make “The Chosen One” choose to modify his “I Love Jake Paul” tattoo to the explicit remix that Paul suspects is already coming.

Do you agree with Jake Paul? Is Tyron Woodley trying to be slick with his interpretation of the “I Love Jake Paul” tattoo?

Continue Reading Jake Paul Points Out “Loophole” In Woodley’s “I Love Jake Paul” Tattoo at MMA News.

Chael Sonnen Slams Jon Jones For Blaming His Latest Arrest On The Devil

Chael SonnenChael Sonnen has let rip at Jon Jones who he says blamed his latest arrest on the devil. The former UFC light-heavyweight champion was arrested on the same night he was inducted into the Hall of Fame for his epic first fight with Alexander Gustafsson. Jones stands accused of battery domestic violence as well as […]

Chael Sonnen

Chael Sonnen has let rip at Jon Jones who he says blamed his latest arrest on the devil.

The former UFC light-heavyweight champion was arrested on the same night he was inducted into the Hall of Fame for his epic first fight with Alexander Gustafsson. Jones stands accused of battery domestic violence as well as injuring and tampering with a vehicle.

Following his arrest, Jones took to social media posting a series of motivational quotes including one which read, “What the devil means for bad, God means for good.”

In an episode of Beyond the Fight, Sonnen addressed Jones’ arrest and his subsequent social media activity.

“Now, he (Jon Jones) has only got three options, okay? You can bury your head in the sand, do absolutely nothing, keep your mouth shut. You’ve got a legal process. You can bury your head in the sand. You can change the topic or you can apologize,” Sonnen explained. “Now, of those three, Jon is never going to admit fault or say he’s sorry and potentially, doesn’t even know how to say that. So, he has now blamed the deity on his actions. He actually blamed the devil for his behaviour.

“Never said that he was sorry. Back in the gym, working on himself,” Sonnen continued. “Going to make this the greatest thing that’s ever happened in his life. When you get knocked off a horse, you get right back on it. These things would be good and meaningful perspectives had Jon been knocked off a horse. He’s not accused of being fallen off a horse. He’s accused of coming into a room at five in the morning and beating the hell out of a woman in front of her children. That’s what he’s been accused of. And if he’s saying that it could be bad but he’s going to mix it into a positive, that’s an admission of guilt.” (Transcribed by Sportskeeda)

Do you agree with Chael Sonnen? Is Jon Jones failing to take responsibility for his actions?