UFC Star Miesha Tate and Bryan Caraway: The Most Hated Couple in MMA?

Bantamweight fighter Bryan Caraway was never the most popular guy in the UFC—and thanks to recent events, he may become an outright villain.After all, the Team Alpha Male talent has quite a track record of controversy.So far, he’s threatened…

Bantamweight fighter Bryan Caraway was never the most popular guy in the UFC—and thanks to recent events, he may become an outright villain.

After all, the Team Alpha Male talent has quite a track record of controversy.

So far, he’s threatened to physically maim Ronda Rousey on Twitter, publicly bashed marijuana supporters while gleefully accepting another fighter’s bonus pay while speaking to MMA Junkie, and if the latest news from Bloody Elbow turns out to be accurate, intentionally attacked Cat Zingano prior to her TUF 17 Finale bout with his girlfriend, Miesha Tate.

If Caraway’s trying to get himself more fans, he’s going about it the wrong way.

But if this is some kind of strange plan to become one of the most disliked names in the promotion, he’s weaving a masterful web of hatred.

Miesha Tate arguably hasn’t done much better for her own public image in the UFC either, although she’s by far the bigger star compared to her boyfriend.

Still, many MMA fans and pundits haven’t hesitated to bash the former Strikeforce champion on occasion, most notably during UFC on Fuel 8, when Tate provided some of the worst corner advice ever, telling Caraway to “coast” for a decision during a close fight against Takeya Mizugaki.

If that wasn’t bad enough, Tate only made matters worse by demanding in a tweet that Dana White award Caraway his win bonus anyway, despite her boyfriend losing a split decision—a move that several fans have mocked, calling Tate and Caraway sore losers.

Throw in a history of verbal mudslinging with Rousey, complete with sullen dismissals on Fuel TV of her rival’s obvious talent, and it’s arguable that Tate’s painted a picture of herself as the jealous runner-up who lost everything to a rising star.

But the PR disasters don’t stop there.

Other prominent UFC fighters can’t seem to stand Tate and Caraway either.

Nate Diaz recently got himself fined and suspended for calling Caraway “the biggest fag in the world” on Twitter and Rousey herself pointedly told MiddleEasy that Tate should dump her “douche” boyfriend.

Several members of the UFC have relationships that never come into the public eye, but very few of those relationships are between fighters.

Hence, Tate and Caraway pay an added price for their partnership—one that seems to have made them the most hated couple in the UFC, if not the most hated couple in the sport altogether.

To their credit, the two of them seem to take it in stride, continuing to openly support each other and take active parts in each other’s camps.

But while Tate and Caraway can shrug off losses, harsh critiques of their relationship and the occasional bonus-related backlash, Bloody Elbow’s chilling story from Cat Zingano may not be something that they can roll off their backs:

[Caraway] smiled back in my face then elbowed me in the head at weigh-ins. I was pissed. I considered him in that same respect. I am a fighter all the same, but that was dirty and cheap to do to anyone, let alone a girl.

[Caraway and Tate] were both in on it, which makes it even more disturbing. If my husband or son ever pulled something like that, I would be their biggest problem. I won’t be bullied nor condone it.

Other members of Zingano’s camp have corroborated the story, although no response has come forth from Tate, Caraway or their managers.

But what if it’s true?

What if Tate and her boyfriend are exposed as bullies, or worse, Caraway is pegged with the stigma of being an actual woman-beater?

It’s true that the validity of Zingano’s claims may be in question without the other side’s response, but Tate and Caraway seem to be making more enemies by the day—and with so much negative press in such a short span of time, one has to wonder when (and if) MMA fans will turn on them completely.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Website Mimics War MMA, Tells Nick Diaz Fans to ‘Get Over’ UFC Loss to Condit

Apparently, someone out there isn’t a fan of Nick Diaz and his new MMA promotion. A public website is now dedicated to making fun of the former Strikeforce champion.”War MMA”—which can be found at nickdiazpromotions.com—could become a legit…

Apparently, someone out there isn’t a fan of Nick Diaz and his new MMA promotion. A public website is now dedicated to making fun of the former Strikeforce champion.

“War MMA”—which can be found at nickdiazpromotions.com—could become a legitimate regional MMA enterprise, provided that Diaz has his promoter’s license approved by the California State Athletic Commission, according to MMA Junkie.

Diaz seems serious about the endeavor, as War MMA even has its own official Twitter account.

But one MMA fan is taking a public shot at the Stocktonian, mimicking his website’s address with nickdiazpromotion.com and displaying the following message: “nick diaz lost to carlos condit. get over it.”

Fight Opinion was the first to spot the website, and although it was initially reported to be a hack of Diaz‘s original site, it’s clearly an alternate URL meant to take a stab at Diaz fans.

UFC 143 featured a interim welterweight title fight between Diaz and Carlos Condit, which ended in one of the most controversial decisions in company history.

Instead of his usual aggressive all-out attack, a more careful Condit elected to outbox and out-manuever Diaz for the better part of five rounds in their main event bout, winning a unanimous nod on all three judges’ scorecards to secure a match with Georges St-Pierre.

Many MMA fans were outraged at the result, with the common consensus being that Diaz had clearly won the first, second and fifth rounds.

That proved not to be the case according to FightMetric, which scored the fight for Condit due to his advantage in total strikes—particularly with kicks, a notable weakness shared by other members of the Cesar Gracie BJJ team like Nate Diaz and Gilbert Melendez.

Since losing his own title shot against St-Pierre at UFC 158, Diaz has proposed retirement at 29 years old, unless he gains a rematch against “Rush” or a superfight with middleweight champion Anderson Silva at a future event, according to Ariel Helwani of UFC Tonight (h/t Bloody Elbow).

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, MacworldGamePro1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Report: Dana White Says Nate Diaz Could Be Cut From UFC For Gay Slur to Caraway

Update: Nate Diaz has been indefinitely suspended by the UFC, according to reports from Bloody Elbow and MMA Junkie.Bleacher Report MMA will have updates as news develops.According to UFC president Dana White, it’s possible that UFC veteran N…

Update: Nate Diaz has been indefinitely suspended by the UFC, according to reports from Bloody Elbow and MMA Junkie.

Bleacher Report MMA will have updates as news develops.


According to UFC president Dana White, it’s possible that UFC veteran Nate Diaz may lose his job over a series of Twitter messages that included a gay slur directed at Bryan Caraway.

As relayed by MMA Junkie’s John Morgan, White says that a punishment will come down for Diaz, and his Twitter rant could result in a pink slip:

On Thursday, the younger Diaz brother called Caraway “the biggest fag in the world” for accepting $65,000 originally given to Pat Healy—bonus money from UFC 159 that was revoked when the former Strikeforce lightweight tested positive for marijuana.

Not only did Healy lose out on $130,000 in “Fight of the Night” and “Submission of the Night” bonuses from his bout with Jim Miller, but Caraway—the only other fighter on the card with a submission win—was retroactively awarded the submission money.

Diaz is one of the longest-tenured fighters in the UFC today, having fought 18 of his 27 total career MMA bouts within the Octagon since 2007. In addition, he won The Ultimate Fighter 5 when he was 22 years old.

Over the years, Diaz has bounced between the lightweight and welterweight division in search of solid winning streaks and a title shot. Recently, he came up short against lightweight champion Benson Henderson at UFC on Fox 5.

Nate Diaz typically doesn’t cause the UFC nearly as much trouble as his older Nick Diaz, although he carries his older brother’s penchant for trash-talking opponents, making rude gestures during fights and generally cursing like a sailor.

Both Diaz brothers were also key players in the infamous brawl (via UFCwords) that took place at Strikeforce: Nashville in April 2010, where they attacked Jason “Mayhem” Miller after he interrupted Jake Shields’ post-fight interview to demand a rematch.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania & The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Nate Diaz Tweets Homophobic Slur, Slams Bryan Caraway For Taking UFC Bonus Money

Bantamweight fighter Bryan Caraway may be ecstatic about getting $65,000 in UFC bonus money due to a failed drug test from Pat Healy, but Nate Diaz isn’t smiling.In fact, the former lightweight contender thinks that Caraway is “the biggest fag” for doi…

Bantamweight fighter Bryan Caraway may be ecstatic about getting $65,000 in UFC bonus money due to a failed drug test from Pat Healy, but Nate Diaz isn’t smiling.

In fact, the former lightweight contender thinks that Caraway is “the biggest fag” for doing so.

Those were the strong words that the Stocktonian recently posted on his official Twitter feed, bashing a decision by the UFC to revoke $130,000 in double bonus money for Healy’s UFC 159 victory over top-ranked Jim Miller.

Despite winning a “Fight of the Night” and “Submission of the Night” bonus for his efforts, a positive drug test for marijuana overturned the victory for Healy, whom Diaz says is innocent:

Caraway, for his part, told MMA Junkie that he had “zero remorse” or guilt in retroactively being awarded a “Submission of the Night” bonus for his win over The Ultimate Fighter 14 alumnus Johnny Bedford, stating that he had “never” tried marijuana and “cannot stand” the drug.

Diaz’s views on marijuana use are shared by many fighters in the UFC, especially his brother Nick Diaz, who tested positive for the drug after his UFC 143 interim welterweight title bout with Carlos Condit as reported by USA Today, which led to a one-year suspension from the sport.

However, Diaz’s choice of words may land him in hot water.

The UFC’s “code of conduct” explicitly forbids that kind speech from their fighters, both at public events and on social media, as outlined by MMA Mania.

“Fighters shall conduct themselves in accordance with commonly accepted standards of decency, social convention, and morals, and fighters will not commit any act or become involved in any situation or occurrence or make any statement which will reflect negatively upon or bring disrepute, contempt, scandal, ridicule or disdain to the fighter or the UFC.”

“Derogatory or offensive conduct, including without limitation insulting language, symbols, or actions about a person’s ethnic background, heritage, color, race, national origin, age, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation.”

Heavyweight Matt Mitrione suffered a penalty for violating that same policy, recently being fined and suspended for a hate speech tirade against transgender MMA fighter Fallon Fox.

Nate Diaz seemed to temporarily block the original Twitter post from his feed, but it’s now live once again, along with a follow message calling Caraway a “sorry ass little bitch” via hashtag. It’s currently unknown if Diaz will suffer any penalty for his message.

Update: It seems that Nate Diaz is in serious danger of losing his job.

According to Dana White (via MMA Junkie’s John Morgan), Diaz may be fined and suspended for his Twitter violation, if not cut from the UFC roster altogether.

Update: Nate Diaz has been indefinitely suspended by the UFC, according to reports from Bloody Elbow and MMA Junkie.

Bleacher Report MMA will have updates and more information as news develops.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania & The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 164: Brandon Vera vs. Ben Rothwell Fight Is Official for August 31

Following a bad stint at 205 pounds, Brandon Vera is returning to the Octagon at UFC 164 for a heavyweight division battle with Ben Rothwell.MMA Junkie initially reported on Tuesday that the rumored bout was targeted for the upcoming August 31 car…

Following a bad stint at 205 pounds, Brandon Vera is returning to the Octagon at UFC 164 for a heavyweight division battle with Ben Rothwell.

MMA Junkie initially reported on Tuesday that the rumored bout was targeted for the upcoming August 31 card at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, but it wasn’t yet known if the match would be made official by UFC brass.

But now, Vera vs. Rothwell is a done deal.

Both fighters have seen some setbacks in their respective MMA careers, but Vera carries the heavy distinction of notching only one win in five fights since November 2009.

Most recently, Vera lost an action-packed brawl against former light heavyweight champion Shogun Rua at UFC on Fox 4, succumbing to punches in the fourth round of their main-event bout.

That sealed a lackluster 1-3-0-1 stretch for Vera, including a single win over retired The Ultimate Fighter alumnus Eliot Marshall, losses to Jon Jones and Randy Couture and another defeat to Thiago Silva—which was later overturned to a “no contest” after Silva failed his urine sample test.

Rothwell‘s record has looked much better by comparison, but he’s also had his fair share of losses.

Despite entering the UFC on a 13-fight winning streak, Rothwell hasn’t put together back-to-back wins since July 2008, with his UFC record standing at 2-3 going into this next match.

It’s also possible that the loser of this bout could be on the cut list, if the UFC’s recent roster trimmings are any indication.

According to Bloody Elbow, Vera made a disclosed $70,000 for his loss to Rua, befitting of a seven-year UFC veteran and former headliner.

Rothwell‘s last reported salary came from UFC 145 (via MMA Fighting), where he made $104,000 in his victory over Brendan Schaub—$52,000 for his base pay and an extra $52,000 for his win bonus, not including an extra $65,000 for his “Knockout of the Night” award.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, MacworldGamePro1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bryan Caraway Has ‘Zero Remorse’ Taking Pat Healy’s UFC Bonus After Drug Test

Marijuana has cost former Strikeforce lightweight Pat Healy both his spot in the UFC title hunt and $130,000 in bonus money, but Bryan Caraway couldn’t be happier.As reported earlier today by B/R MMA, Healy’s misfortunes started when he failed his…

Marijuana has cost former Strikeforce lightweight Pat Healy both his spot in the UFC title hunt and $130,000 in bonus money, but Bryan Caraway couldn’t be happier.

As reported earlier today by B/R MMA, Healy’s misfortunes started when he failed his UFC 159 post-fight drug test, turning his Fight of the Night and Submission of the Night victory over top-ranked Jim Miller into a no-contest result.

And just to drive the point home, UFC president Dana White added that $65,000 of that money would go to Bryan Caraway, who had the only other submission win of the event.

MMA Junkie spoke with Caraway about the news, with the bantamweight stating that he had “zero remorse” about being handed the bonus money and “couldn’t be more happy” about the fallout over Healy’s “expensive weed”:

All I’ve got to say is that’s some expensive weed. I like Healy a lot. I came up through the fighting ranks with him. We used to train together at Team Quest. I love the guy. But I have absolutely zero remorse or guilt.

I hate weed. I cannot stand it. I’ve never tried it. I’ve never smoked a drug in my life. So I have absolutely zero tolerance for people that do it. I don’t care if it’s legal in some places or not. I think it’s absolutely ridiculous. Whether it’s legal in real life or not, they tell you to follow the rules. You need to follow the rules.

Ironically, this isn’t the first time the Team Alpha Male fighter has fought tooth and nail for his bonuses.

Despite Caraway losing a close struggle to Takeya Mizugaki in a previous bout at UFC on Fuel TV 8, Miesha Tate went to Dana White after the fact, demanding the UFC award her boyfriend his win bonus for a “BS” decision.

Caraway also won a Fight of the Night bonus for his performance at UFC 149 last July against Mitch Gagnon, winning via third-round rear-naked choke submission.

Although he has recently drawn massive heat from MMA fans and pundits for threatening to “break” Ronda Rousey (via Bloody Elbow), Caraway has nonetheless managed to stay afloat in the UFC, maintaining a winning record of 3-1 since joining the promotion in 2011.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com