Ultimate Fighter 17: Contestants Who Will Show Glimpses of Their Bright Future

Urijah Faber’s battle with Scott Jorgensen will headline the finale of The Ultimate Fighter 17, and Cat Zingano’s clash with Miesha Tate will garner its share of attention as well.But the actual contestants from the reality series will also…

Urijah Faber’s battle with Scott Jorgensen will headline the finale of The Ultimate Fighter 17, and Cat Zingano’s clash with Miesha Tate will garner its share of attention as well.

But the actual contestants from the reality series will also deliver some intriguing action.

In this season, three men stand out to me as fighters who could possibly wear UFC gold in their careers.

Here are the fighters I believe have the brightest future.

 

Uriah Hall

This is as obvious as anything you could predict in sports. 

Hall’s tremendous speed, striking ability and strength provide him a base of natural gifts.

Although he isn’t a finished product—he could still stand to get better in takedown defense and grappling—Hall is as exciting a prospect as I’ve seen in a while.

He has the type of explosiveness that fans will pay to see in pay-per-view main events and the fearlessness to drop bombs on anyone.

I pick him to defeat Kevin Gastelum on Saturday night, but that’s just the beginning for Hall.

 

Kelvin Gastelum

Although I don’t see him beating Hall, I do believe Gastelum has the ability to make the fight competitive. Gastelum is a smart fighter. He will attempt to get Hall on the mat, and I think he will have his moments. 

Hall is just too strong, and I predict he’ll ultimately stop Gastelum but there is no shame in that. When you consider Gastelum is just 21 years old, he has a bright future.

At 5’9”, he is a bit shorter than what you’d like to see at middleweight, but he has amazing heart and a good balance between striking and submission skills.

Were it not for Hall, he’d have the must upside of any fighter from TUF 17.

 

Bubba McDaniel

He isn’t fighting for the title of TUF 17 winner, but McDaniel has a decent ceiling. The 29-year-old is 20-6 in his career and is a formidable submission artist. Yes, Hall decimated him with a vicious counter right hand earlier in the show, but McDaniel is still a warrior.

He battles Gilbert Smith on Saturday night in a fight he should win easily.

Because of his experience and size (6’3”), he has a good shot to be a top-10 middleweight over the next two years. It wouldn’t surprise me to see him challenge and win a title at some point.

 

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Fallon Fox: Ronda Rousey Becomes Latest to Chime in on Transgender Fighter

Transgender MMA fighter Fallon Fox is getting heat from another member of the UFC’s roster. This time, women’s UFC champion Ronda Rousey offered her take.Per Marc Raimondi, Rousey said this to the New York Post when a…

Transgender MMA fighter Fallon Fox is getting heat from another member of the UFC’s roster. This time, women’s UFC champion Ronda Rousey offered her take.

Per Marc RaimondiRousey said this to the New York Post when asked about the controversial fighter:

“She can try hormones, chop her pecker off, but it’s still the same bone structure a man has. It’s an advantage. I don’t think it’s fair.”

For those that are unaware of the situation, here are the specifics:

Born a man, Fox underwent a sexual re-assignment procedure and subsequently competes as a woman in MMA.

Matt Mitrione received a suspension from UFC head man Dana White after he said this in an interview with Ariel Helwani of MMA Hour, per Yahoo! Sports.

Because she’s not a he. He’s a he. He’s chromosomally a man. He had a gender change, not a sex change. He’s still a man. He was a man for 31 years. Thirty-one years. That’s a couple years younger than I am. He’s a man. Six years of taking performance de-hancing drugs, you think is going to change all that? That’s ridiculous.

That is a lying, sick, sociopathic, disgusting freak. And I mean that. Because you lied on your license to beat up women. That’s disgusting. You should be embarrassed yourself.

Though Rousey didn’t do any name-calling, her sentiments weren’t far off the ones that earned Mitrione a suspension. It will be interesting to see if Rousey faces any disciplinary actions because of her comments.

The question here is this: Was Mitrione disciplined because of his views or his language? It surely can’t be because of his language, as UFC fighters—and White himself—have come under fire for slurs in the past, per Mary Buckheit of ESPN.

If it was indeed based on his viewpoint, it would seem a suspension for Rousey is possible as well. But we all know that Rousey is far more important to the UFC than Mitrione is.

Her groundbreaking fight with Liz Carmouche at UFC 157 was a huge commercial success for the company. GeorgeMon of Fan IQ estimates the event drew 500,000 pay-per-view buys.

Rousey is also set to appear as one of the coaches for the upcoming season of The Ultimate Fighter 18 reality series.

Is White willing to make an example out of Rousey for the sake of consistency and fairness?

We shall soon see.

 

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Ultimate Fighter 17 Finale: Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

Urijah Faber is an amazing fighter whose greatness is sometimes overshadowed by other highly touted superstars in the bantamweight division.On Saturday, Faber’s main-event clash with Scott Jorgensen at The Ultimate Fighter 17 finale may be second on th…

Urijah Faber is an amazing fighter whose greatness is sometimes overshadowed by other highly touted superstars in the bantamweight division.

On Saturday, Faber’s main-event clash with Scott Jorgensen at The Ultimate Fighter 17 finale may be second on the hype scale to the Miesha Tate-Cat Zingano battle.

Many hardcore fans will watch to see Faber’s well-rounded game, but many more will be interested in seeing who prevails in the event’s only female fight. Why is that bout so interesting?

Because the winner will be Ronda Rousey‘s next opponent, and that will be another groundbreaking event for women’s MMA.

In an interview I did with Rousey, she said she’d like to see Zingano win. Rousey already owns a win over Tate from their days in Strikeforce.

She expressed an interest in seeing someone new get a chance. We’ll see if she gets her wish on Saturday night.

As for the main event, Faber is trying to maintain his status as a top-three bantamweight. He’s lost to the fighters currently occupying the top two spots: Dominick Cruz and Renan Barao.

Less than two months ago, Faber defeated Ivan Menjivar by submission in the first round. He’ll be looking to score his second win in a row after a quick turnaround.

Don’t forget the card obviously features the final battle of this season of the reality series. Uriah Hall will take on Kelvin Gastelum to name the winner of TUF 17.

Here is the information needed to catch this event on TV.

 

When: Saturday, April 13 at 6 p.m. ET

Where: Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas

TV: FUEL TV (Preliminaries) and FX (Main Card)

Live Stream: Facebook (Preliminaries)

 

This is the fight card scheduled for TUF 17, per UFC.com, along with predictions. An asterisk indicates that a deeper analysis is written below.

Matchup Coverage Weight My Pick
Justin Lawrence (4-1) vs. Daniel Pineda (17-9) Facebook Featherweight Lawrence by KO/TKO
Sam Sicilia (11-2) vs. Maximo Blanco (8-4-1) Facebook Featherweight Sicilia by decision
Cole Miller (18-7) vs. Bart Palaszewski (35-16) Facebook Featherweight Palaszewski by KO/TKO
Clint Hester (7-3) vs Bristol Marunde (12-7) FUEL Middleweight Marunde by submission
Dylan Andrews (15-4) vs. Jimmy Quinlan (3-0) FUEL Middleweight Andrews by KO/TKO
Luke Barnatt (5-0) vs. Collin Hart (4-1-1) FUEL Middleweight Barnatt by decision
Josh Samman (9-2) vs. Kevin Casey (5-2) FUEL Middleweight Kaesy by decision
Robert “Bubba” McDaniel (20-6) vs. Gilbert Smith (5-1) FX Middleweight McDaniel by decision
Travis Browne (13-1) vs. Gabriel Gonzaga (14-6) FX Heavyweight Browne by KO/TKO*
Miesha Tate (13-3) vs. Cat Zingano (7-0) FX Bantamweight Zingano by KO/TKO*
Uriah Hall (8-2) vs. Kelvin Gastelum (6-0) FX Middleweight Hall by KO/TKO*
Urijah Faber (27-6) vs. Scott Jorgensen (14-6) FX Bantamweight Faber by decision*

 

Browne Will Rebound From His Loss to Antonio ‘Big Foot’ Silva

The man they call Hapa was handed his first loss as a professional when Big Foot Silva stopped him in the first round at UFC on FX 5.

He won’t suffer a second consecutive setback.

Gonzaga has won three fights in a row, including submitting Ben Rothwell at UFC on FX 7, but Browne’s size advantage will be too much for him to overcome.

He’ll be giving up five inches to his opponent, and that should allow Browne’s striking to control this fight.

I anticipate a second-round KO win for Hapa.

 

Rousey Will Get Her Wish

I love everything I’ve seen of Zingano. She’s one of the strongest women at 135 pounds, and her game appears to be fairly well rounded.

This KO win over Takayo Hashi is one of her most impressive victories. She may have looked a bit too aggressive here, but I believe it was because she knew she had her opponent outclassed.

While Tate is a fiery competitor, I believe she will be overpowered in this bout.

Her best opportunity will be to take the fight to the ground, but even then Zingano looks to be sharp enough as a grappler to hold her own.

I’m predicting we’ll see our first TKO/KO in women’s UFC action.

 

Hall Is a Rising Superstar

Both Hall and Gastelum looked impressive in their semifinal matches, but Hall has something special about him.

His striking ability is simply amazing and deadly. Against Dylan Andrews in the semifinal, he proved he was even dangerous striking from his back.

I have a ton of respect for Gastelum as a fighter, and I believe he will have a nice career, but he won’t beat Hall on Saturday.

My prediction is a second-round KO for Hall.

 

Jorgensen Is No Match for Faber

I’ve never been overly impressed with Jorgensen as a fighter. He’s an extremely hard worker and a battler, but he can’t match the overall game Faber brings.

Jorgensen lacks the power to handle Faber in the stand-up game, and he won’t fare well on the ground.

The California Kid is one of the few fighters in the UFC that is almost equally adept at striking, grappling and submissions.

In the last five years, his only losses have come to esteemed fighters like: Cruz, Barao, Jose Aldo and Mike Thomas Brown. Jorgensen will not be adding his name to this list.


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UFC on Fuel TV 9: Losers from Card in Sweden Who Should Consider Retirement

UFC on Fuel 9 from Stockholm, Sweden, featured three TKO/KO-related stoppages, but two of the fighters who tasted defeat should consider stopping their careers altogether.This is not basketball or baseball where competing too long results in a low batt…

UFC on Fuel 9 from Stockholm, Sweden, featured three TKO/KO-related stoppages, but two of the fighters who tasted defeat should consider stopping their careers altogether.

This is not basketball or baseball where competing too long results in a low batting average or poor shooting percentage. Once you realize you don’t have it in mixed martial arts, the consequences of fighting too long are more severe.

Some fighters are defensively sound enough to defend against crushing strikes, but they don’t have a shot at beating any quality fighters, because they don’t mount enough offense.

Here are the fighters who should be considering a career change.

 

Phil De Fries

The big man from England has one hope when he gets into the Octagon: take his opponent to the ground and go for submissions. 

Unfortunately for him, that plan hasn’t been working well lately. On Saturday night, Matt “Meathead” Mitrione became the third man in four fights to batter De Fries into defeat in the first round.

These losses have happened over a matter of just 14 months.

This beating took only 19 seconds, but it was brutal enough to have lasted 10 minutes. De Fries is done as a serious heavyweight contender. He should step away to save himself from any more damage.

He’s only 26 years old, but he simply doesn’t have the power or striking defense to usher him to the ground game, which is his only redeeming quality.

 

Michael Johnson

The man they call the Menace hasn’t been very menacing. He took another loss on Saturday night, when he was made to tap out by Reza Madadi via anaconda choke.

Johnson has only lost two in a row, but it’s not just the losing streak, it’s the way he’s losing. Again against Madadi, Johnson showed tentativeness, and he seemed content to try to survive on the ground.

Instead, he was choked out.

Johnson’s record dropped to 12-8, and even though he’s moving down on the UFC food chain, he isn’t looking better against lower levels of competition.

He’s become a name MMA fans frown at when they see it on an event card. That’s not a good thing.

 

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UFC on Fuel TV 9: Latifi vs. Mousasi Fight Card, TV Info and Predictions

The UFC Fuel 9 main event received a major change when Alexander “The Mauler” Gustafsson was ruled out due to a nasty cut above his eye, per Franklin McNeil and Josh Gross of ESPN. Although fans would have loved to see the Mauler in action against Gega…

The UFC Fuel 9 main event received a major change when Alexander “The Mauler” Gustafsson was ruled out due to a nasty cut above his eye, per Franklin McNeil and Josh Gross of ESPN.

Although fans would have loved to see the Mauler in action against Gegard Mousasi, he has been replaced by Ilir Latifi.

The 29-year-old Swedish light heavyweight stands 5’8″ and carries the nickname Sledgehammer.

He will be making his UFC debut against Mousasi, who is also fighting in the UFC for the first time. The man they call the Dreamcatcher is one of the best fighters to come to the UFC from Strikeforce.

He hasn’t lost a fight since April 2010 and carries an impressive MMA record of 33-3-2 overall. He had hoped to make his debut against a young, highly touted fighter like Gustafsson, but he’ll get Latifi instead.

While he obviously doesn’t carry the same name recognition as Gustafsson, he does offer some intrigue as an unknown commodity.

He has a record of 7-2 and with the fight taking place at the Ericsson Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, he will likely have his share of supporters.

Get to know the Sledgehammer:

Per Bleacher Report’s own Jeremy Botter, Mousasi is looking for a shot at a title or at least a meeting with Lyoto Machida. But first, he must deal with Latifi.

Here is how you can catch this fight and the rest of the Fuel 9 card.

 

When: Saturday, April 6, at 2 p.m. ET

Where: Ericsson Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden

TV: Fuel TV

Live Stream: Preliminaries on Facebook

 

Main Card on Fuel

  • Gegard Mousasi (33-3-2) vs. Ilir Latifi (7-2)
  • Ross Pearson (14-6) vs. Ryan Couture (6-1)
  • Matt Mitrione (5-2) vs. Phil DeFries (9-2)
  • Brad Pickett (22-7) vs. Mike Easton (13-2)
  • Diego Brandao (15-8) vs. Pablo Garza (12-3)
  • Akira Corrasani (10-3) vs. Robbie Peralta (16-3)

 

Preliminary Fights on Facebook

  • Reza Madadi (12-3) vs. Michael Johnson (12-7)
  • Tor Troeng (15-4-1) vs. Adam Cella (4-0)
  • Chris Spang (5-1) vs. Adlan Amagov (11-2-1)
  • Marcus Brimage (6-1) vs. Conor McGregor (12-2)
  • Benny Alloway (12-3) vs. Ryan LaFlare (7-0)
  • Michael Kuiper (12-1) vs. Tom Lawlor (8-5)
  • Papy Abedi (8-2) vs. Basem Yousef (8-1)

 

Predictions

* indicates more information below

Matchup

Coverage

Weight Class Hype Favorite – Per Fight Bet Network

My Pick

Benny Allaway vs. Ryan LaFlare

Facebook

Welterweights

Low LaFlare -175 LaFlare

Marcus Brimage vs. Connor McGregor

Facebook Lightweight Moderate McGregor -160 Brimage

Michael Kuiper vs. Tom Lawlor

Facebook Middleweight Moderate Lawlor -175 Lawlor

Papy Abedi vs. Besam Yousef

Facebook

Welterweights Low Abed -127 Abedi

Chris Spang vs. Adlan Amagov

Facebook

Welterweights

Low Amagov -155 Amagov

Tor Troneg vs. Adam Cella

Facebook Middleweight Low Troeng -215  Troeng 

Reza Madadi vs. Anthony Johnson

Facebook

Lightweight

Moderate Johnson -225 Madadi*

Akira Corassani vs. Robbie Peralta

Fuel TV

Featherweight

Moderate

Peralta -333

Corassani

Diego Brandao
vs. Pablo Garza

Fuel TV Featherweight Moderate Brandao -200 Brandao

Brad Pickett vs. Mike Easton

Fuel TV Bantamweight High Pickett -149 Pickett*

Matt Mitrione vs. Phil DeFries

Fuel TV Heavyweight High Mitrione -302 Mitrione*

Ross Pearson vs. Ryan Couture

Fuel TV Lightweight High Pearson -376 Couture

Gegard Mousasi
vs. Ilir Latifi

Fuel TV Light Heavyweight High -1000 Mousasi*

 

Johnson Will Fall to Madadi

Michael “The Menace” Johnson has been anything but menacing in his latest bouts. He was dominated by Myles Jury at UFC 155, and he seems to falling into a very non-aggressive pattern.

He doesn’t have big power and he appears content with simply surviving on the ground.

Madadi lost a controversial split-decision to Cristiano Marcello at UFC 153, but prior to that he had won seven fights in a row. I see him applying the same type of pressure to Johnson that Jury did.

Johnson won’t be knocked out, but expect to see him bloodied again from top control and ground and pound from Madadi.

 

Easton‘s Intimidation Factor is Gone

For a while Mike “The Hulk” Easton‘s aggression and big-time KO power was intimidating many bantamweights, but I think Raphael Assuncao’s shut-out victory over Easton at UFC on Fox 5 may have created the blueprint for stopping the Hulk.

Assuncao’s movement and unpredictable striking gave Easton a problem.

The veteran Pickett will do his best to employ this strategy, but he also packs quite a punch himself. He’s coming off a thrilling split-decision defeat to Eddie Wineland at UFC 155, but he will rebound with a win over Easton.

 

Mitrione will Be the Latest To Blast De Fries

I’ve never been overly impressed with Mitrione, but I’ve been even less impressed with De Fries. He looked scared to death against Todd Duffee at UFC 155.

Duffee is more athletic than Mitrione, but they both use a similar all-out assaulting style. De Fries has been vulnerable to the big powerful striker in his career.

Duffee knocked him out in the first round and Stipe Miocic put him to sleep in the first 43 seconds of their fight at UFC on Fuel 1. Mitrione will join that list.

 

Home-Field Advantage Won’t Help Latifi

Despite getting an opportunity to make his UFC debut in front of his hometown crowd, Latifi will be defeated by Mousasi.

UFC fans that aren’t aware of Mousasi‘s ability will learn first hand on Saturday night why he is highly regarded in the sport. He is a very well-balanced fighter, and in this fight he will use his five-inch height advantage to tag Latifi from distance.

Even if the fight goes to the mat, Mousasi is more than capable of finishing his opponent there as well. He has 11 submission victories in his career.

This should be a nice showcase for him.

 

Follow me, because Royce Gracie started me on this MMA path, and now I’m out of control.

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Ronda Rousey Opens Up on TUF 18, Pressure, Training and Cyborg Santos

Ronda Rousey is a superstar. Her UFC debut was a resounding success for her, women in MMA and the UFC as a whole.She is 7-0 as a professional MMA fighter, but even more than that, her skills, good looks and spunk have vaulted her to celebrity status. F…

Ronda Rousey is a superstar. Her UFC debut was a resounding success for her, women in MMA and the UFC as a whole.

She is 7-0 as a professional MMA fighter, but even more than that, her skills, good looks and spunk have vaulted her to celebrity status. Fresh off her historic match with Liz Carmouche, Rousey isn’t slowing down, though.

She’s been named one of the coaches for the upcoming season of the The Ultimate Fighter 18, and she’ll likely take on the winner of the Miesha Tate-Cat Zingano bout, as either Tate or Zingano is set to be the other coach in the house for TUF 18, per Yahoo! Sports.

Those two didn’t waste time talking a little trash about Rousey after her win over Carmouche.

With all that going on, Rousey was nice enough to take some time to talk to me about TUF 18, her training, struggles and Cris “Cyborg” Santos.

 

Brian Mazique: I have to ask you about your participation with TUF 18, as again you’re breaking new ground by being the first female coach on the show. Can you tell us what we can expect for you as a coach?

 

Ronda Rousey: I don’t really know, there’s a lot of unknowns coming in. I’ve coached doing judo before, but I’ve never coached MMA. I’ll have my own coach with me to help me along the way and I can’t really fail with him by my side, but I’m a little nervous.

As an athlete you’re taught to be selfish. When I’m training, it’s usually all about me, but now I’ll have to be a little selfless because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for a lot of these kids, so I can’t spend that time and that opportunity just focused on myself. It’ll be new to put other fighters’ needs in front of my own.

 

BM: That’s interesting because this is quite an adjustment for a fighter asked to take on that responsibility. All of you are in an individual sport, so I know that has to be a little tough.

I mentioned you being the first female coach on TUF. Do you ever get tired of all the “first female this, the first female that” talk?

 

RR: Do I ever get tired of being the first female everything? Not really, I just happened to be in a position where the job that I wanted was not really there for me. I had to create an opportunity instead of waiting for an opportunity.

Whenever people call me the first female this or that, it doesn’t make it more special because no one in front of me wanted the same job. I’ve always wanted weird stuff and enjoyed things differently than other girls.

That I happened to fall into a career that no other girls wanted isn’t surprising to me. I wanted something that didn’t exist, so I had to create it.

I try not to think about it. I try not to get caught up on how cool I am. That way nothing ever gets done. I’m always thinking about what I haven’t done.

 

BM: It sounds like that approach can help you deflect the pressure from the outside.

 

RR: I put a ton of pressure on myself. Eddie Murphy said you can’t let the good things people say make you feel too good, because you’re going to let the bad things make you feel bad.

I’ve been doing this for a long time. My mom has been jumping on me doing armbars since before I was a teenager, so everyone is walking around saying this is so new and amazing, but it’s not.

I don’t want to sound like I’m not grateful; I am. But I’m not shocked.

 

BM: Most successful people aren’t shocked with their success because part of being successful is working hard and expecting to succeed.

But I wrote an article before the Carmouche fight in which I talked about how much pressure it seems is on your shoulders considering most MMA fans associate women in MMA with you.

That may be unfair, but if you were to lose early in your career, it would be a big blow to the sport. Do you acknowledge that, and if so, how does that make you feel?

 

RR: Yeah, I acknowledge that I have a lot of responsibility, but I think that’s part of what makes TUF 18 such a great idea.

It’s going to bring a lot of other women visibility and have the fans get to know them so I don’t have the lion’s share of the marketing anymore.

I want women’s MMA to thrive and be here to stay. I don’t want it to be dependent on one person. You don’t hear about if Anderson Silva loses they may get rid of his entire division.

You know, that’s not something anyone even talks about. That’s how I want women’s MMA to be. I want it to be where if I retire, fans will be like, “Whatever, we have several other people coming up that we know.”

This TUF is the perfect way to address that issue and take a lot of the load off of my shoulders and share it with the other girls that not only need it, but they want it and are willing to fight for it.

 

BM: I’ve actually made the analogy—and you tell me if you agree with this—I compare you a bit to Royce Gracie.

For a lot of people who were just getting into MMA back in 1993, their first indoctrination to the sport was based on Gracie’s dominance. I think you’re having a similar impact on women’s MMA.

Do you consider that a fair comparison?

 

RR: I don’t think I would ever compare myself to Royce Gracie because I hold him in such high regard. I felt nervous sitting next to him at an event. Your Royce Gracie is like my Fedor Emelianenko. He’s like perfect in my eyes.

But I guess it makes sense because you have no idea how many times people say, “You’re the only reason I watch MMA.”

It’s like 70-year-old ladies and even guys are like, “You’re the only MMA fighter I watch. Even boxing fans are like, “You’re my only favorite MMA fighter, and I hate MMA.”

I think that’s fantastic and it’s an honor to be in the same sentence as those guys.

 

BM: I think often times “hardcore MMA” fans say, “This is what an MMA fan looks like,” or “This is what a boxing fan looks like.” It really shouldn’t be that way.

To shift gears a little bit, I talked to Leo Frincu and he talked about his time with you. I’m sure you know he has a book out and he talks about his high-performance mentality approach to training. Can you tell me how he helped you?

 

RR: Sure, MMA is tough, man. There were times when I didn’t have any funding and I was broke. Leo helped me kinda stay grounded.

In the beginning, I had this resolve and I was like, “I do not give a f–k, this is going to f—–g happen, and no one is going to stop me.” But having someone like Leo to reassure me that says, “Yes, you can do this,” really helped my confidence a lot.

I mean, there were times that I worked the graveyard shift all Sunday night. I’d sleep for two hours and I’d then go to Leo to train.

One morning I went to McDonald’s and wanted a coffee, but after I ordered it I realized I didn’t have any money and my account was overdrawn. The lady wouldn’t give me the coffee, so I just went to the gym and I was just so tired, broke and dejected.

Leo is one of those people that can always tell how you feel. He sensed it and sat me down to motivate me. He always seems to know exactly what I need to hear and when I need to hear it.

We talked a lot about manifestation and the mental training. What makes the difference is how you approach it, and Leo is an expert at that.

 

BM: Shifting gears a bit, and I’m sure this comes up in almost every interview you do, but I have to ask you: We did an interview with Cris “Cyborg” Santos and she made some interesting comments.

She claims that while both of you were in Strikeforce, she asked Sean Shelby [the matchmaker at Strikeforce] for a fight with you, but he told her no because you weren’t ready.

Is there any truth to that?

 

RR: The only time I was offered a fight with Cris Cyborg was before I had my first amateur fight. I got a call saying they couldn’t find any opponents for Cyborg, do you want that fight?

I’m like, “I haven’t even had my first amateur fight, what’s wrong with you people?”

That’s the only time I’ve ever heard of it when we were both at Strikeforce

After the Julia Budd fight, I told Sean, Miesha [Tate] hit me up on Twitter and said she was down to fight me, so after this fight I’m going to call Miesha out. I did that and it worked out really well.

Nobody approached me about Cris at all in Strikeforce, but then after the Julia Budd fight, Cris was caught taking Stanozolol, or whatever steroid it was.

It’s all bulls–t.

I mean, you can even listen to Mike Dolce’s testimony (BJPenn.com). They told her they could bring her to her athletic potential at 135 [pounds] and the UFC was going to pay for it.

Everyone was down, but as soon as she switched management it never happened.

I’m kinda talking in circles about this chick. Really, I’m not concerned with her. I have so many things going on and she has nothing going on but me. So I’m going to do this season of TUF and have this fight.

If she ever has enough sense to say, “I’m going to go for the only belt that really matters, or else I’m going to pretty much keep fighting on the Internet and fading into obscurity,” she can come and fight me.

But there are a lot of girls that deserve that shot that haven’t cheated. I’m not going to go chasing after Cyborg, she’s going to have to come to me.

 

BM: You’re definitely in the position of power right now. It actually kind of goes back to something you said earlier: It’s going to give notoriety to someone else that is already associated with the UFC.

Maybe at that point, it can generate another name to discuss.

 

RR: She hasn’t had a recorded win in three years. Why are we even talking about this chick? She’s a f—–g cheater.

Imagine if this happened to one of the guys. Imagine that Jose Aldo got caught for steroids. I’m not saying that he is; this is purely hypothetical.

But imagine that he didn’t have a recorded win for three years and then he tells the f—–g division champion that he should f—–g come up in weight to fight him. They would think he’s out of his mind.

It’s like, dude, make the weight, fight your way up like everybody else. Where is this sense of entitlement coming from?

Cris has like an unbelievable sense of entitlement. She comes to the fight seven pounds overweight, she cheats, uses steroids and does these things repeatedly, but somehow thinks that everyone should bend over backwards for her.

Sorry, we’re not going to do that. We do have some morality. We’re going to give the fights to the girls that fight with some honor.

 

BM: The UFC did recently sign a group of women to compete in the division. Is there someone currently signed that you see that could create an exciting bout for you and the fans?

 

RR: The Cat Zingano-Miesha Tate fight will be exciting, but I’m really looking forward to seeing how Sara McMann does.

She’s undefeated and an Olympic medalist in wrestling and we started MMA around the same time. We have a lot of similarities.

She hasn’t really been my biggest fan up to this point, so it might be interesting in the build-up for that fight. She’s the Olympic medalist, single mom, super sweetheart, Miss America

I kind of like to think of myself as the bad girl Olympian that would get kicked out of the Miss America pageant.

 

BM: I think the bout with Miesha and the bout with Carmouche was impressive. Though the armbar came, it didn’t come easily, so the toughness and resolve you had to show was impressive.

The fight with Miesha was entertaining, so I’d like to see that one again.

 

RR: Yes, and I know a lot of people are pulling for Miesha to be the other coach in the TUF house, because me and her have never shied away from arguing before.

But Cat’s not only undefeated and skilled, she’s also very cute.

Besides that, I don’t know a whole bunch about her. I think it would be great for the fans to be exposed to another personality besides just Miesha again.

But besides that I’m totally open. May the best girl win.

 

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