Floyd and Conor Are More Like a Comedy Duo Than Bitter Rivals After ‘World Tour’

Nobody enjoyed their time on the road more than Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor.
Maybe in the end that was part of the problem.
The “world tour” designed to drum up hype for the pair’s August 26 boxing match wrapped up Friday in London the same way…

Nobody enjoyed their time on the road more than Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor.

Maybe in the end that was part of the problem.

The “world tour” designed to drum up hype for the pair’s August 26 boxing match wrapped up Friday in London the same way it began Tuesday in Los Angeles—with Mayweather and McGregor standing on stage screaming obscenities in each other’s faces.

After four press conferences in four days in four different cities, there wasn’t much left to do. We’d already seen everything these two showmen had to offer. In that way, the initial publicity push leading up to next month’s mega-bout in Las Vegas certainly didn’t disappoint.

But it also didn’t really surprise.

The verbal barbs between Mayweather and McGregor remained predictably lowbrow throughout, but—while chaos eternally loomed just off stage—their traveling circus ultimately came off as contrived. Even as they preened and prodded and called each other every nasty name they could think of, it was plain to see there was no real animosity here.

“He could have rode off into the sunset 49-0,” McGregor told the London crowd. “Instead, this is my first time in a boxing ring, and in six weeks I run boxing. How the f–k did they let me roll up in here? They got f–king greedy, that’s how.”

Mayweather just laughed in response.

Indeed, when they finally make it to the ring at T-Mobile Arena next month, we can rest assured the competitive fires will be fully stoked. But this? This was just marketing—with Mayweather and McGregor starring as partners in crime.

“You’re the student. I’m the f–king teacher,” Mayweather told McGregor during his time on the mic Friday. “August 26 I’m going to take you to school.”

Aside from a brief scuffle between their two camps at Thursday’s event in Brooklyn, the fighters never really touched each other during this junket. Near the end of his remarks in London, McGregor rubbed the top of Mayweather’s head with his palm, but the boxer just chuckled at the gesture.

And so it went on. And on. And on.

Through these four events, which routinely started late and just as often dragged in the middle, neither guy succeeded in provoking much of a response from the other. In the end, the vibe was more like a series of celebrity roasts than an airing of real grievances. The back-and-forth flame wars played like banter between the leads in an awkward buddy comedy more than two men embroiled in a blood feud.

As McGregor stalked around the stage in Toronto on Wednesday and implored the crowd to chant “F–k the Mayweathers,” Floyd and his team roared with laughter. When Mayweather tossed handfuls of cash in the air over McGregor’s head at the Barclay’s Center to show that he had money to burn or that he owned McGregor—or something like that—the Irishman used it as a photo op:

Even when McGregor strayed over lines of racial sensitivity and repeatedly harangued Mayweather to “Dance for me, boy,” the boxer and his entourage only grinned at each other like they knew it was coming. And conspiracy-minded fight fans immediately began to speculate: Maybe they did?

And really, Conor and Floyd have no real reason to be mad at each other.

Especially for McGregor, this fight represents the opportunity of a lifetime. After more than two years of rumor and conjecture, the cocksure mixed martial artist has finally landed the opponent who will set his family up for generations. McGregor has already said he could bank $100 million for taking on Mayweather—a notable pay increase from the reported $3 million purse he earned in his rematch with Nate Diaz at UFC 202.

“I get to quadruple my net worth for half a fight?” McGregor said in London. “Sign me up.”

Likewise, there was no other adversary in the conventional boxing landscape who could bank Mayweather as much money as McGregor. The greatest pugilist of his generation now has the chance to end his brief retirement and collect a hefty payday for what he surely expects will be a light night of work.

So, yeah, who can blame them if during all this nose-to-nose gum-bumping it occasionally felt as though they could barely keep straight faces.

Aside from Thursday’s train wreck in Brooklyn, the two fighters managed to mostly keep things from going off the rails. McGregor started on shaky footing in L.A. but quickly regained the form UFC fans have grown accustomed to from their lightweight champion since he burst on the scene in 2013.

Meanwhile, Mayweather consistently showed why he’s been a top draw in boxing for years.

This was two of combat sports’ best trash talkers working in tandem to promote an event that will make each of them hundreds of millions of dollars. Every time Mayweather called McGregor a “bitch” or an “eejit” and every time McGregor poked fun at Mayweather’s age, fashion sense or reported trouble with the IRS, they were really just stuffing money in each other’s pockets.

Most everything here was all in good fun.

You could see it on the face of Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard Ellerbe, who—dressed to the nines nearly every step of the way—arguably laughed loudest at McGregor’s best lines.

You could see it in the Cheshire cat grin on UFC President Dana White—whose epic sunburn and thunderous introductions of McGregor were among the unsung stars of these events.

You could see it on the grimace of Showtime exec Stephen Espinoza, who, even during McGregor’s profane rants against him and his company, maintained an expression that said he’d sit there as long as it took to cash the checks from this pay-per-view.

And you could see it in the performances of Mayweather and McGregor themselves.

Credit these two men for going out there day after day to sell a grudge where none likely exists. With the bout itself expected to be a dominant victory for Mayweather, this fight had to be sold on the singular nature of the matchup and on doctoring-up some emotion.

Even if behind the scenes they’re laughing all the way to the bank.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Interim Belt Aside, Yoel Romero vs. Robert Whittaker Will Decide World’s No.1 MW

The Michael Bisping era in the UFC middleweight division hasn’t exactly been a model of consistency.
By the time Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker fight for an interim championship at UFC 213 Saturday in Las Vegas, it will have been nine months since th…

The Michael Bisping era in the UFC middleweight division hasn’t exactly been a model of consistency.

By the time Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker fight for an interim championship at UFC 213 Saturday in Las Vegas, it will have been nine months since the 185-pound title saw the light of day. Even longer since anybody who might rightly be considered a top middleweight contender got a sniff at the gold.

To find the last time a 185-pound title fight featured arguably the Octagon’s top two middleweights, you have to go all the way back to October 2015, when Luke Rockhold beat Chris Weidman at UFC 162.

Six months later at UFC 199, Rockhold‘s reign ended with a shocking first-round KO by Bisping.

That win not only made Bisping one of the most unlikely titlists in UFC history, it also created that rarest of situations in the Octagon: One where the champion isn’t necessarily regarded as the best fighter in his own weight class.

With any semblance of 185-pound order smashed, Bisping set about marking his own course. He ignored a gaggle of contenders clamoring for his gold in favor of picking and choosing his own matchups. He rematched the legendary Dan Henderson at UFC 204 and then began chasing an on-again, off-again booking against returning former welterweight titlist Georges St-Pierre.

In the process, normal business at middleweight has essentially ground to a halt.

Honestly? It hasn’t been all bad. If nothing else, it has been interesting.

It was initially considered a feelgood story that Bisping became champion. After a career spent as an important and influential draw for the UFC, it was like watching a well-liked coworker rip the wrapping paper off the gold Rolex at his retirement party.

It’s been nice to see “The Count” get a little time to bask in the limelight before calling it a career. On the other hand, his reign has ushered in a noticeable competitive drought in what should be one of the UFC’s most competitive and interesting weight classes.

To make matters worse, after negotiations for the St-Pierre fight bogged down, Bisping revealed he’s still recovering from knee surgery and may not fight again until the end of the year.

The whole situation has caused no small amount of unrest among fans, as well as the 185-pound rank and file. In May, Rockhold essentially advised his fellow middleweights to go on strike until matchmakers could install a workable plan for the weight class.

This week, the former champion made an even more dire pronouncement.

“The division is f–ked,” Rockhold told MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani. “No interesting fights.”

With all due respect to Rockhold, however, it’s possible Romero vs. Whittaker has the potential to unuhhscrew the 185-pound division in one fell swoop.

For starters, this bout finally gives two elite fighters a crack at winning a version of the title. Even with the interim tag looming, that’s a very good thing.

Second, it’ll be our best chance in a long time to anoint someone the consensus No. 1 middleweight on the planet.

An originally crowded herd of contenders that included Weidman, Rockhold, Romero, Gegard Mousasi and Jacare Souza has thinned a little bit at the moment. That leaves the door open for the winner of this fight to seize the throne atop the world rankings.

Third—and perhaps best of all—this fight shapes up as a scintillating matchup of styles between two of the division’s most compelling figures.

The 26-year-old Whittaker is as aggressive inside the cage as he is affable outside it. Currently riding an impressive seven-fight win streak, he made his bones as a legitimate title threat with a second-round TKO over perennial contender Souza three months ago.

But if Whittaker is a relative newcomer to the championship picture, it doesn’t make him any less dangerous. His five stoppages in nine UFC wins attest to that.

“I’m going to control this fight,” Whittaker said this week, via MMA Junkie’s Fernanda Prates and Ken Hathaway. “I think it’s going to be a smart fight … [but] I just see me putting too much hurt on him.”

Meanwhile, Romero has already been waiting for this opportunity for a long time.

The 40-year-old former Olympic wrestler has been ticketed as a potential title contender from nearly the moment he arrived in the UFC in 2013. With his outstanding amateur credentials and comic book physique, he certainly looks the part of a fearsome MMA destroyer.

After jetting to an 8-0 record in the Octagon, Romero has made good on that obvious potential. After looking a bit green during early UFC appearances, his most recent bouts have shown what the finished product might look like for him—and results have been scary good.

After edging Souza via split decision at UFC 194, he authored a 2016 knockout-of-the-year candidate with a flying knee on Weidman at UFC 205. By stacking those wins back-to-back, it’s hard to make a case anyone deserves a shot at the title more than Romero.

But that doesn’t mean he’s overlooking the up-and-coming Whittaker, either.

“All opponents are dangerous,” Romero said this week, via MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn and Hathaway. “He’s a young fighter, he’s hungry. These things always make your opponent dangerous.”

There has been some controversy to Romero’s UFC run, however. In between the Souza and Weidman wins, he was suspended six months for a positive drug test later determined to be the result of a contaminated dietary supplement. Though Romero’s claim that he’d done nothing wrong appeared to hold up, some people weren’t going to let him off the hook so easily.

One of those people is Bisping, obviously. The current champ has mocked Romero as a steroid user and waffled on whether he would deign to give the consensus No. 1 contender a title shot.

This week, however, the champion sent the clearest signal he may be open to fighting the Whittaker-Romero winner—even if his intent was merely to put more pressure on GSP.

“Georges, you’ve got until Saturday,” Bisping told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour (via Fansided’s Mike Heck). “Because on Saturday, I’m going to be on the FS1 post fight show and one of those two, tune in, Whittaker or Romero will be joining me at the desk, so you know that will have fireworks. If I can’t say I’m fighting GSP by then, then I have to say that I’m fighting Whittaker or Romero.”

UFC President Dana White also told MMAJunkie in an exclusive interview that Bisping‘s next fight will be against the winner of Romero-Whittaker, making it feel as though we’re tantalizingly close to getting the middleweight division back on track.

The first step toward that goal happens this weekend, when either Romero or Whittaker will leave T-Mobile Arena with a UFC belt around his waist.

The guy who holds that interim title may well hold the key to getting the weight class moving again.

With all due respect to the standing champion, they’ll also be regarded as the best 185-pounder in the world until Bisping gets his chance to prove that ranking wrong.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 213 Will Be Fine, but It’s Hard to Forget Robbie Lawler vs. Donald Cerrone

As recently as a week ago, UFC 213 shaped up as perhaps the first great MMA pay-per-view of 2017.
Now? Well, maybe not quite so much.
Saturday’s fight card from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas still looks perfectly fine, headlined by a women’s …

As recently as a week ago, UFC 213 shaped up as perhaps the first great MMA pay-per-view of 2017.

Now? Well, maybe not quite so much.

Saturday’s fight card from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas still looks perfectly fine, headlined by a women’s bantamweight title fight in a rematch between Amanda Nunes and Valentina Shevchenko as well as Yoel Romero vs. Robert Whittaker for the interim middleweight championship.

But with just a handful of days left before we all plunk down $60 to watch on PPV, the ghost of Robbie Lawler’s welterweight slobber-knocker against Donald Cerrone still haunts our dreams.

It was six days ago that MMA Fighting’s Luke Thomas broke the news that Cerrone was injured and out of the hotly anticipated 170-pound fight. Since then, the bout had been shuffled off the UFC 213 card and onto UFC 214 on July 29.

UFC President Dana White filled MMA Junkie’s John Morgan in on exactly what prompted the delay:

“Here’s the deal. ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone is a stud. He’s too tough for his own good. He absolutely wanted to fight. The kid’s got a pulled groin; he’s got a bruise from his knee to the inside of his groin. And his other knee is blowing up; he’s got staph infection. Could he come out and fight? Probably. Should he come out and fight Robbie Lawler with a pulled groin? No, he shouldn’t. We’re going to get him healthy and remake the fight.”

Here’s what Cerrone had to say to fans in an Instagram post shortly after his withdrawal was announced:

This is the second time Lawler vs. Cerrone has been postponed. The first time, the bout got called off just days after it was announced in November 2016, when Lawler reportedly decided he needed more time to prepare.

This time, we got so, so close.

To add to UFC 213’s troubles, Lawler vs. Cerrone wasn’t the only high-profile bout to fall by the wayside, either. UFC events typically lose a few proposed scraps between their announcement and fight night, but this time the losses hit especially hard. 

Remember, T.J. Dillashaw and Cody Garbrandt were originally intended to settle their feud with a fight for the men’s bantamweight championship here. Of course, that was before Garbrandt pulled out with a back injury, leaving Dillashaw to hunt around for another fight.

Still, the disappearance of Lawler vs. Cerrone is the biggest disappointment. Because make no mistake, seeing these two high-energy, no-nonsense headhunters go at it is the stuff MMA legends are made off.

At the moment, Cerrone stands at 4-1 since moving up to welterweight in February 2016. His most recent appearance was a second-round TKO loss to Jorge Masvidal in January 2017, but 17 performance-based fight-night bonuses to Cerrone’s name during his UFC/WEC career attest to the fact the Cowboy is one of White and Co.’s most popular attractions.

That popularity is as durable as Cerrone himself. Even after the Masvidal loss and now this delay, expect his momentum to merely keep on trucking.

The same can be said for Lawler, who spent a year-and-a-half as 170-pound champion from December 2014-July 2016. Lawler was also going off as the slight favorite, according to OddsShark, leading up to the moment their UFC 213 clash got scratched.

OddsShark analyst Justin Hartling summed up our expectations for this bout about as well as anybody could when the first five words of his breakdown were: “I hope you like violence.”

What MMA fans will likely get from Lawler and Cerrone—whenever they finally make it to the cage together—is nothing short of full-scale warfare.

Now, though, UFC 213 will have to soldier on without this attraction, and it remains unclear how much sights (or the event’s PPV buyrate) will be lowered because of it.

Nunes is nearly a year into her reign as 135-pound champion, but so far doesn’t seem to have been launched to superstardom by either her championship win over Miesha Tate at UFC 200 or her first-round TKO over Ronda Rousey at UFC 207.

Likewise, Shevchenko shapes up as a bit of an enigmatic challenger in Nunes’ first title defense. The fact she just lost to Nunes in the pair’s first fight at UFC 196 in March 2016 doesn’t do the marketability of this matchup a ton of favors, either.

It’s probable that matchmakers would’ve rather had either Holly Holm or Juliana Pena vying for the title in this spot, but Shevchenko beat both of them in back-to-back appearances.

Nunes vs. Shevchenko is an interesting clash between two high-level strikers and will likely be a good enough scrap to delight hardcore fans, but—in the parlance of White himself—it’s unlikely to move the needle on PPV.

The same could be true of Romero vs. Whittaker.

This interim middleweight title fight is as intriguing a pure physical matchup as we’re likely to get in the Octagon all year, but it features two men who haven’t proved themselves as significant draws.

The 26-year-old Whittaker is riding a seven-fight win streak, but is a freshly minted title contender after his second-round TKO over Jacare Souza in April 2017. Meanwhile, Romero has been circling a championship opportunity like a shark since soon after his UFC arrival in 2013.

With champion Michael Bisping either hurt or waiting for a fight against the returning Georges St-Pierre, the winner of this fight may well lay claim to being the best 185-pounder in the world.

But can the hype for this matchup carry a fight card on its own? No way.

Add a heavyweight fight between Fabricio Werdum and Alistair Overeem and a lightweight tussle pitting Anthony Pettis against Jim Miller to its four fight card and you’ve got all the makings of a fine Saturday night.

UFC 213 is a decent PPV.  It’ll be a good event—better than average, considering the way 2017 has gone so far.

But it’s no longer the blockbuster it looked like a week ago.

And we have the loss of Lawler vs. Cerrone to blame for that.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

After Chaos Reigns in NYC, Can Bellator MMA Make a Practice out of Pay-Per-View?

After a night when chaos was the only constant for Bellator MMA, company CEO Scott Coker remained predictably understated.
To look at him at the postfight press conference Saturday at Madison Square Garden, you would never know some of Coker’s&nbs…

After a night when chaos was the only constant for Bellator MMA, company CEO Scott Coker remained predictably understated.

To look at him at the postfight press conference Saturday at Madison Square Garden, you would never know some of Coker’s biggest stars had just coughed up a string of bizarre and baffling losses during Bellator’s first pay-per-view event since 2014.

You’d never know a lot of his best promotional plans had likely just crumbled to dust when—after years of hype—super-prospect Aaron Pico lost his professional debut in 24 seconds.

Or that two-time Bellator lightweight champion Michael Chandler had suffered a freak ankle injury and handed the title to virtual unknown Brent Primus just 2:22 into the first round.

Or that Matt Mitrione and Fedor Emelianenko had come millimeters from a wild double knockout in the opening moments of their featured heavyweight fight, only to have Mitrione regain his senses and pound the legendary Emelianenko into a TKO loss in 1:14.

At the very least, you’d never know whether Coker was bothered by any of it.

“That’s the thing about the fight business, is that you don’t know what’s going to happen,” he said, flashing the placid demeanor that has been his calling card since his days going head-to-head with the UFC from 2006-2011 at the helm of Strikeforce. “The people who were supposed to win tonight won. I think all of them will go back to training camp in a week or two and start calling me in a couple weeks saying, ‘When am I going to fight again?'”

After nearly three decades promoting kickboxing and MMA bouts, Coker has earned a reputation as perhaps one of the fight game’s least fiery personalities. Especially when juxtaposed with his closest industry counterpart—UFC President Dana White—the 54-year-old executive oozes professional calm.

Coker’s critics—if there were such a thing—might say he’s boring. In the days before the UFC bought Strikeforce and stripped it for parts in 2011, it became a running joke among MMA reporters that no matter what you asked Coker, his response would always be some version of: “I’ll have to get back to you on that.”

But on nights as weird as the one Bellator had Saturday, during the promotion’s most crucial fight card since Coker took over the organization three years ago, maybe it’s good to have a steady hand at the wheel.

Because make no mistake, when Coker says “the people who were supposed to win tonight won,” he meant it only in a fatalistic kind of way.

This wasn’t how Bellator drew it up in the dirt when it decided to make the jump back to PPV.

The last time the organization tried to run a for-pay event was May 17, 2014, when Quinton Jackson and Muhammed Lawal headlined a card from Landers Center in Southaven, Mississippi. That show went down one month before Coker took over for deposed former Bellator boss Bjorn Rebney, and it garnered a paltry estimated buyrate of 100,000, per Steven Marrocco of MMAjunkie.

By comparison, Saturday’s Bellator NYC seemed like a much bigger deal and a much bigger risk for North America’s second-largest MMA promotion.

Bellator’s complicated tangle of relationships—with its parent company, Viacom, and broadcast partners at SpikeTV—make it eternally difficult to gauge the organization’s health or potential longevity.

Simply put, the fight company is likely only as sustainable as Viacom and Spike think it is.

To that end, this card was an important litmus test for whether Coker and his band of misfit toys can begin transitioning its higher-profile tent-pole events off cable and on to the more lucrative pay-per-view. That means it will be impossible to get a good handle on how successful Bellator NYC was until industry insiders start estimating sales numbers.

When the event was announced back in March, Coker promised it would be the first in a new series of PPVs for Bellator, though he kept the schedule conveniently loose.

“We’re not going to do monthly pay-per-view just to do pay-per-views,” Coker said, per MMA Fighting’s Dave Doyle. “We’re going to build up to big fights more like the boxing model, and when the time is right, we’ll do the big, big fights. So when we put the big events together, like we have on June 24, then we’ll do it on a PPV event.”

With three title fights split between the SpikeTV prelims and the PPV main card, Emelianenko vs. Mitrione and a headliner pitting Chael Sonnen against longtime archenemy Wanderlei Silva, many observers predicted Bellator NYC would get a solid promotional lead-up.

Coker made a batch of personnel moves designed to add to the big-fight feel to the event, bringing in former UFC play-by-play announcer Mike Goldberg to work the desk and combat sports stalwart Mauro Ranallo to call the action.

This was in keeping with Bellator’s recent policy of adding fading UFC stars like Sonnen, Silva and Tito Ortiz and snapping up high-profile free agents like light heavyweight Ryan Bader and welterweight Rory MacDonald.

The new hires mostly had the desired effect. People like MacDonald and Bader crossing the aisle have raised eyebrows. Bringing in Goldberg and Ranallo and switching up the format from Bellator’s normal broadcasts did indeed give Bellator NYC a special feel.

In the bigger picture, if there were ever an opportune moment for Bellator to begin chipping away at the UFC’s dominance, it is likely now. With White and the larger fight company scuffling and lacking a clear direction under new owners WME-IMG, there was room for Bellator to at least try to get itself some high-profile wins.

In the weeks preceding Bellator NYC, however, the expected hype largely failed to materialize. Silva skipped several of the pre-fight press events, and while Sonnen did his best to run his normal shtick on his own, it largely felt like he was just going through the motions.

Pico’s coming-out party and the promotional debut of boxer Heather Hardy made some waves. A feature on Pico by Brett Okamoto held down the top spot on the ESPN.com homepage as the PPV kicked off, and a story about Emelianenko’s return to the United States was the lead story on Bleacher Report.

Hardy won her women’s flyweight fight against Alice Yauger via hard-fought third-round TKO on the prelims, but on the main PPV card, the 20-year-old Pico laid an unthinkably big egg.

Will any of these bad-luck calamities and missteps matter for Bellator?

Will it matter that Chandler—whom the broadcast lauded as “the face of Bellator”—lost his title and slipped to 4-4, dating back to his landmark clash with Eddie Alvarez in 2013?

Will it matter that the once-great Emelianenko continued the slow, painful slide into mortality that began during Coker’s time running Strikeforce? Or that Silva and Sonnen didn’t take the cage until after midnight in New York and then spent 15 minutes looking like a couple of 40-year-old men who were just there to get their paychecks?

Maybe. Maybe not.

If nothing else, the bedlam of Saturday night gave the company some storylines moving forward.

Pico will have to regroup and return to try to prove he was worthy of the protracted period the MMA world spent salivating over the day he’d finally start fighting.

Chandler will have to have a rematch with Primus once his ankle recovers.

Sonnen got on the mic and challenged Emelianenko following his unanimous-decision win over Silva.

Mitrione is now 3-0 in Bellator and looks as worthy as anyone of taking over the company’s vacant heavyweight title.

Any one of those bouts could make a better-than-average cable main event on SpikeTV.

But will any of them wind up on future pay-per-views?

After the chaos of Bellator NYC, will the buyrate numbers come back strong enough that Coker can make good on his promise of a new era for the organization, wherein its “big, big fights” hold their own alongside the UFC on PPV?

We’ll have to get back to you on that.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

In Case You Forgot: The Greatest Heavyweight in MMA History Fights This Weekend

Did you forget that the greatest heavyweight in MMA history fights in the United States for the first time in nearly six years Saturday?
No shame if you did.
Fedor Emelianenko doesn’t send shivers down the spines of fight fans quite the same way he onc…

Did you forget that the greatest heavyweight in MMA history fights in the United States for the first time in nearly six years Saturday?

No shame if you did.

Fedor Emelianenko doesn’t send shivers down the spines of fight fans quite the same way he once did.

On top of that, there’s no shortage of reasons why Emelianenko’s co-main event bout against Matt Mitrione is flying under the radar just a few days before Bellator MMA heads to Madison Square Garden to take its latest swing at pay-per-view.

Considering the stakes, this event has been lightly promoted by the U.S.’s second-largest MMA company. In addition, Emelianenko’s Bellator debut has already been postponed once, and the more we see The Last Emperor in the cage, the more we question how long he should soldier on.

If you’re still following the winding string of Emelianenko’s 41-fight career, you’re probably either a Fedor superfan or you’re starting to feel a little worried for the guy.

Or both.

Last time we saw Emelianenko on U.S. soil was July 2011, when he capped a three-fight losing streak with a crushing first-round TKO defeat by Dan Henderson. That loss ended a disastrous 1-3 run through the now-defunct Strikeforce organization that obliterated Emelianenko’s 10-year unbeaten run and killed any lingering notion he was the world’s most feared fighter.

Since then, he’s won five bouts in a row, fighting exclusively in his native Russia and in Japan. He’s also retired and unretired once, and the nature of the victories didn’t do enough to distract us from his declining physical skills.

If anything, Emelianenko’s most recent appearance—an iffy majority-decision win over UFC washout Fabio Maldonado at EFN 50 in St. Petersburg in June 2016—only cauterized our view of him as well past his prime.

So why will fans tune in Saturday to see the 40-year-old legend take on the 38-year-old Mitrione at Bellator: NYC?

If they do, it’ll be because he’s still Fedor—albeit an admittedly downgraded version. He’s still the same stoic knockout artist who held the Pride FC heavyweight class in his terrifying sway from 2002 until 2006.

He’s still the guy who toppled former UFC heavyweight champions Mark Coleman, Kevin Randleman, Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski.

Still the guy who downed Mirko “CroCop” Filipovic and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (twice) back when that trio arguably comprised the top three heavyweights on the planet.

Maybe MMA fans will tune in to this PPV with the weak glimmer of hope that the old Fedor will show up at MSG.

Or maybe they’ll buy this PPV because we all know full well Bellator’s strategy of propping up its tent-pole events with over-the-hill stars in the final days of their careers, and we’ve made our peace with it.

Still, it remains unclear how much Emelianenko has left in the tank or what kind of an asset he’ll be in supporting this event’s all-important PPV buy rate.

To his credit, he remains as humble and inscrutable as ever, telling Ariel Helwani on the The MMA Hour ahead of Saturday’s event that he never bought into his own hype as one of the greatest fighters of all time.

“I never considered myself to be the best one,” Emelianenko said (via MMA Fighting’s Chuck Mindenhall). “A fighter can lose at any moment—and there are some fighters that…will be better than me in some techniques.”

For its part, Bellator appears content to promote the Fedor legacy more than the man who will climb into the cage Saturday:

Will fans open their wallets to watch?

That remains to be seen.

This entire Bellator card seemed poised for bigger things when company CEO Scott Coker announced it back in March.

With Chael Sonnen vs. Wanderlei Silva as its main event, three titles on the line and the debut of super-prospect Aaron Pico, some observers were cautiously optimistic Bellator could make a modest splash as it returned to PPV for the first time since 2014.

Yet so far, the expected pre-fight fireworks haven’t materialized.

By all rights, the purported blood feud between Sonnen and Silva should have had a weekslong build that culminated in a tense on-stage standoff. Instead, Silva skipped the event’s first two press conferences.

The first time, he said it was because he was too busy training for the fight. Then, when Silva no-showed a second Bellator presser, the organization said he was “under the weather,” per Steven Marrocco of MMAjunkie. Later, the fighter revealed he just didn’t want to be there with Sonnen, per MMA Fighting (h/t Milan Ordonez of Bloody Elbow).

Hard to sell the fight when one guy won’t show up the promotional events.

Those missed opportunities leave a short window to try to market this PPV during fight week, with Emelianenko and Mitrione playing second-fiddle to a main event fight that hasn’t done its share of the heavy lifting.

Mitrione exited the UFC on the heels of back-to-back losses in 2016, but he’s won two straight contests since coming to Bellator. He’s the slight favorite here, according to OddsShark, but considering Emelianenko’s recent inactivity, there’s no way to anticipate how they will match up.

The two heavyweights were originally supposed to meet in February before Mitrione pulled out with kidney stones, and this rescheduled bout has naturally lost a little momentum.

And Mitrione says he’s struggled to keep his eye on the prize.

“It is difficult to do that,” the former New York Giants defensive lineman told Dan Pizzuta of Big Blue View. “I’ve done the exact same movements, counters, combinations, visualizing. … I’ve done all of this for a really long time. It’s difficult to stay motivated during this, especially in the waning weeks of the camp.”

To recap: Saturday’s Bellator PPV is headlined by one guy who didn’t show up to the introductory press conferences.

Meanwhile, the co-main event features one guy who steadfastly claims he’s not the best and one guy who admits he had a hard time staying motivated for this one.

Then again, perhaps thinking about it that way is to judge this fight too harshly.

Each time Emelianenko steps in an MMA cage these days, we know it might be for the last time. Fans are running out of chances to see the man who was once the most dominant heavyweight fighter the sport had ever seen.

That seems like something to mark your calendars for.

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Holly Holm Back in the Driver’s Seat in 2 Divisions After KO of Bethe Correia

Holly Holm’s prospects seemed pretty bleak to begin 2017.
As recently as February, Holm suffered a tepid unanimous-decision loss to Germaine de Randamie in a fight for the UFC’s inaugural women’s featherweight championship.
The defeat was a…

Holly Holm’s prospects seemed pretty bleak to begin 2017.

As recently as February, Holm suffered a tepid unanimous-decision loss to Germaine de Randamie in a fight for the UFC’s inaugural women’s featherweight championship.

The defeat was a double-whammy for Holm, as it was not only her third-straight in the Octagon, but it came in a bout that appeared intended to put the 145-pound belt around her waist.

A few months after turning 35 years old, that three-fight skid—including two championship losses in two different weight classes—made it feel unlikely that Holm would ever recapture the heights she enjoyed following her iconic UFC 193 win over Ronda Rousey.

At least for the time being, she was also out of the title picture in both divisions.

Suddenly, however, things look much brighter for Holm as Summer kicks off. It’s amazing what a highlight-reel knockout can do.

On the heels of Saturday’s third-round KO of Bethe Correia at UFC Fight Night 111, Holm shapes up as the potential No. 1 contender at women’s featherweight or bantamweight.

With one swing of her leg, she has vaulted herself from down-and-out to the brink of an enticing and lucrative championship match wherever she fights next.

A lot will obviously depend on the lay of the land.

At 135 pounds, current champ Amanda Nunes is scheduled to defend her title against Valentina Shevchenko at UFC 213 on July 8. Three weeks later at UFC 214, Cris “Cyborg” Justino will fight Invicta FC featherweight champ Megan Anderson for the vacant 145-pound belt recently stripped from de Randamie.

No matter who wins either of those fights, Holm could have next.

That’s remarkable considering that last weekend’s victory over Correia was her first win since her November 2015 shocker over Rousey.

“It’s been a year-and-a-half since I was able to do a back flip in here,” Holm told UFC color commentator Dan Hardy after the fight was over, referring to her traditional in-cage victory celebration with coach Mike Winkeljohn.

Credit Holm’s lingering marketability and the jaw-dropping nature of the kick she landed on Correia for instantly rehabilitating her image—but she also needed some outside help to get back to contender status.

First, she needed some turnover at the top of the bantamweight division, as former champion Miesha Tate (who beat Holm for the strap at UFC 196) lost to Nunes at UFC 200.

Second, she needed de Randamie’s championship run to implode before it even left the launch pad.

It’s hard to fathom how poorly de Randamie handled what should have been the biggest coup of her professional fighting career. After defeating Holm at UFC 208, she wasted little time setting fire to her own title reign.

The 33-year-old Dutch fighter appeared to want no part of fighting Cyborg, and she sent mixed messages about whether it was because she needed hand surgery or because of the Brazilian’s positive test for steroids in 2011.

De Randamie also talked openly about dropping back down to bantamweight—an odd move for a fighter who had just won the title at featherweight.

It took the UFC all of 128 days to get tired enough of having de Randamie as 145-pound champ that it vacated her title and set up Cyborg versus Anderson.

As ESPN’s Brett Okamoto joked on Twitter, that move effectively rebooted the entire beleaguered weight class:

It’s also great news for Holm.

Assuming the fight between Justino and Anderson plays out according to chalk, and Cyborg dispatches the Invicta champion, Holm likely makes the most sense as next challenger.

After all, that’s what matchmakers had in mind the first time around, before negotiations fell apart with Cyborg and they had to scramble to insert de Randamie.

For her part, Justino is already saying she thinks a No. 1-contender bout between Holm and Cat Zingano is called for, but let’s be reasonable. The UFC women’s 145-pound division is already mostly make believe. Without a large body of fighters to choose from, there’s no reason to have viable contenders picking each other off.

No matter who wins the Justino-Anderson fight, the right move is to have Holm next with Zingano waiting in the wings for the winner of that fight.

But if, for whatever reason, the featherweight landscape appears untenable, Holm would also make an equally good challenger for the winner of Nunes-Shevchenko.

With Rousey now likely gone for good and Tate retired, Holm is the best-known fighter on the UFC’s women’s 135-pound roster. If Nunes retains her title with a win over Shevchenko, a Nunes versus Holm pairing would be the bantamweight division’s highest-profile option.

Certainly, Holm would be preferable to matching Nunes up with either Julianna Pena or Raquel Pennington.

Perhaps most interesting of all, either of these opponents—Cyborg or Nunes—presents good matchups of styles for Holm.

The Albuquerque, New Mexico, native is always at her best against aggressive foes who will bring the fight to her. Clearly, that covers both Justino and Nunes, who have each established reputations as hard-nosed, strike-first fighters.

Because of it, any bout with Holm seems like a surefire winner.

That makes for a dramatic turnaround for a fighter who seemed to be near the end of her rope just a few months ago but now suddenly finds herself a dual-division title threat all over again.

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