John Gotti Seeks to Redefine a Notorious Name and Build a New Legacy Through MMA

The name arrives before him. It always will, setting an expectation for what he should or shouldn’t be. 
The grandson of one of the 20th century’s most notorious gangsters knows this. He understands it, even if it’s not quite fair, and moves forwa…

The name arrives before him. It always will, setting an expectation for what he should or shouldn’t be. 

The grandson of one of the 20th century’s most notorious gangsters knows this. He understands it, even if it’s not quite fair, and moves forward with the hope that it doesn’t have to be this way forever. The name can be redefined and cast in a new light.

Now all John Gotti has to do is put in the work.

By most indications, that’s exactly what he’s doing. Later this year, after three years of patiently wading through New York’s amateur mixed martial arts scene, Gotti will step into a cage as a professional for the first time.

The fight, targeted for September but not yet official, will almost certainly take place somewhere near his grandfather’s old stomping grounds—either New York or New Jersey—and bring with it a certain level of anticipation.

MMA is by definition counterculture, and so it has a built-in fascination with anti-heroes and the infamous. To be clear: Gotti is neither. He’s a 24-year-old chasing a dream. But his name? To fans and promoters, right now that’s the hook. It’s the reason to watch him. It represents both the height of opportunity and the weight of expectation.

“There’s no getting around it. Throughout my career, the name is always going to be attached to me,” Gotti told Bleacher Report. “My father and my grandfather, they’re a part of me. But this is a different avenue that I’m taking. Nobody in my family ever pursued sports to this degree or became a professional athlete. They never went down that road, so this is a whole different road I’m going down. It’s not like my name is Frank like my brother. I share the name ‘John Gotti.’ I want to put it in a positive spotlight and show people that I’m a hard-working kid and I’m dedicated to this game.”

For Gotti—son of John “Junior” Gotti and grandson of the notorious John Gotti—that process starts now.

Right off the bat, one thing is clear: This is no money grab. From his coaches to his training schedule and his long-term plans, nearly every aspect of his career has been plotted and considered. When he started training, he was a muscled 250 pounds. When he walks to the cage as a pro for the first time—most likely either for New York’s Triton Fights or New Jersey’s Ring of Combat—he’ll fight at a lean 170.

“He’s not a partier. He’s not a drinker. He doesn’t do anything like that,” said Nic Canobbio, who’s promoted Gotti‘s amateur fights with Triton. “He wants to be a great professional fighter, and he’s going to do what it takes to reach his ultimate goal.”

Gotti came to MMA as many do, in a roundabout way. Raised in Oyster Bay, New York, Gotti gravitated toward traditional sports as a kid, excelling in baseball and football.

Still, combat sports were always a part of his childhood. When his cousins would come over to visit, it wasn’t uncommon to grab a pair of autographed boxing gloves from his dad’s memorabilia collection—Evander Holyfield’s, Mike Tyson’s or Roberto Duran’s—and spar a few rounds.

“As kids, we didn’t know who these people were,” he said. “We would have these matches not knowing we were wearing these gloves from these legendary fighters. We were oblivious.”

Around the age of 11, he took up boxing for a couple of years, but eventually back-burnered his interest in favor of team sports.

It was around the time his dad returned home from a stay in prison that John was first exposed to MMA. His father, a longtime combat-sports lover, introduced him to mixed martial arts. Wanting to make up for lost time with his dad, he spent time side by side watching a Randy Couture vs. Chuck Liddell UFC fight.

He was quickly hooked.

“I fell in love with it right away,” he said. “It’s the purest form of combat. There are so many disciplines to it. I love boxing, but there is so much more to it than boxing.”

Still, it wasn’t until 2013—after a run at bodybuilding—that he finally decided he wanted to chase it as a profession, even though he says that in the back of his mind, he always knew he’d end up here. At first, his dad resisted the plan, but when John made it clear he was serious, his dad signed on in hopes of shepherding his path.

Within five months, John made his amateur debut. 

This was one of the few moments in his career that was not carefully considered. He was recommended for a fight to Canobbio by his then-trainer at Bellmore Kickboxing, Mark Lehr, who told Canobbio that he had a prospect that was raw but talented.

“He said, ‘full disclosure, it’s John Gotti‘s grandson,'” Canobbio recalled. “He told me to let him know if I thought it would work. But I didn’t really think too much of it. At the end of the day, he was training with a great team, and I figured if they’re putting the time in with him, he’s worthy of a fight.”

It was a match that arrived with little fanfare and no attempt to trade on the Gotti name for attention. And in at least one way, it was the perfect kind of debut outing, a brutal war of attrition that tests resolve and makes for an easy exit toward the next life adventure for those who decide such a path to be a wrong turn. Gotti survived, won and continued forward.

“I learned something about myself in there,” he said. “It made me see if this was for me or if it was not for me. It got really rough in there, and it gives you a gut-check, but I never had any doubts.”

Overall he’s had six amateur bouts, going 5-1 with a four-fight win streak. His fan-friendly style along with his name have afforded him plenty of opportunities, but so far he has been patient, rejecting anything that will move him ahead too far, too fast.

It’s an approach Ryan LaFlare, his teammate and the co-owner of his current gym, Long Island MMA, agrees with. LaFlare, who has a 13-1 pro record and is 6-1 as a UFC welterweight, says he’s “100 percent” certain Gotti can succeed at the UFC or Bellator level as long as he doesn’t rush ahead.

“He’s going to get a lot of opportunities early in his career because of his name, but he needs to be patient,” LaFlare told Bleacher Report. “He has a lot of potential.

“He is humble and willing to learn, which shows a lot of potential,” LaFlare continued. “I like to think of him as a rusted sword. Sharp and can do damage but once polished and sharpened, he can be lethal.”

Guided by his dad, Gotti has taken the slow, steady approach, most recently taking the last few months to sharpen his skills in preparation of his upcoming pro debut. Recently, he’s paid extra attention to his jiu-jitsu game with Anthony D’Angelo, and he’s brought in a strength and conditioning coach for the first time. He trains two times a day, and if all goes well in September, he’d like to fight again before the holidays and end the year 2-0.

If he did, that would get the fight world talking, but he’s trying not to get too far ahead of himself. Plans in MMA quickly change, he understands, and he has to be ready and willing to adapt to whatever comes.

Still, the pressure is on. After all, you can’t carry the Gotti name quietly. 

John never really got to know the man who made it famous. His grandfather was arrested and convicted before John was born, and his only memories of him were made in federal prison, where the “Dapper Don” passed away in 2002.

All this time later, his name still reverberates. And his grandson knows that may always be the case. But that doesn’t mean he can’t fight to change it.

“I just have to focus on what I can control and what I can create for myself,” he said. “The past is the past, and you can’t change that. I’m moving forward. I’m trying to project a positive image for my family and myself. I’m trying to create a positive path and create my own legacy. My grandfather is going to be remembered 100 years from now, when we’re all dead and gone. Good or bad, he’s part of history. My father has his own story. And hopefully, God willing, years from now when you think of the name, you’ll think of me, too. Hopefully people will think of me and my accomplishments in MMA.”

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Holly Holm’s Dazzling KO Win Showcases All of Her Brilliance and Inconsistency

Nearing the halfway point of her UFC main event fight in Kallang, Singapore, on Saturday, Holly Holm showed little sense of urgency. She moved and feinted but rarely attacked. Her fists remained cocked and ready but passive. The action—or inactio…

Nearing the halfway point of her UFC main event fight in Kallang, Singapore, on Saturday, Holly Holm showed little sense of urgency. She moved and feinted but rarely attacked. Her fists remained cocked and ready but passive. The action—or inaction—was sluggish enough that referee Marc Goddard took the uncommon step of warning both fighters that at some point they would have to engage.

“Listen ladies,” he said, “I respect the game plan, but you have to make something happen.”

Holm’s opponent, Bethe Correia, wasn’t budging. Correia is by nature overly aggressive, but by this point in the third round, it was clear she was diverting from her base instincts and staying away from Holm’s counterstriking strengths in an effort to force the former UFC bantamweight champion to lead the dance. Correia smiled at Holm, shook her head, taunted her. And finally, she invited Holm to attack, waving her forward.

It was as if she were saying, I dare you.

After all this time, it’s become clear Holm has certain offensive preferences. One of them is to let her opponent go first. Correia was turning the tables on her to a degree that Holm had rarely seen. Holm was flummoxed enough that in the first round she attempted only 13 strikes, and landed only seven, per FightMetric.

But this? This was going too far. And proving MMA is a sport that loves its instant karma, Correia’s audacious invitation was met by force; a shin upside the head that recalled the one that Holm landed against Ronda Rousey so many months ago, back when she was seemingly ready to take over the MMA world.

The kick was a thing of beauty: a Brazilian kick that presents itself as a front kick to the body before curling up and around the opponent’s shoulder and to their jaw. It was textbook, crashing into Correia’s face and sending her down in a heap.

“I think obviously if I was training to fight me, I’d say, ‘She has a left kick; watch out,'” Holm said in the post-fight press conference. “It’s one of those things. I think you know it’s coming, but I still want to hit you with it.”

It was brilliant, and for most, it was good enough to erase all the tentative moments that came before it. It was good enough to wipe out Holm’s three-fight losing skid. It was good enough to remind the world that on her best day, Holm is one of the best in the world, and that someday soon, she might go a step beyond that by wrapping another gold belt around her waist.

And now, the downside. It’s not worth getting overly critical—Holm won, and she did so in highlight-reel fashion. But even in victory, she does things that lead to second-guessing.

After her last two losses—decisions to Germaine de Randamie and Valentina Shevchenko—Holm openly spoke about turning up the heat with her aggression and leaving no doubt in the minds of the judges regarding who won each round. That didn’t happen against Correia, at least not for the first two rounds. Holm did win both rounds on the judges’ scorecards, but neither of them were what anyone would call decisive. They were simply “enough.”

One way to look at that is she was pacing herself for a possible five-round fight. Another interpretation is that she was what she’s always been: slow and methodical.

“One of my goals was to not let it look messy,” Holm said. “Her style is she wants to get in, make it look like a brawl. I wanted it to look clean. I’m not happy with even letting her land a couple shots in the second round. I wanted to pick clean shots and do it right. The game plan was not to rush anything, even if the crowd might boo. I thought, ‘I’m the one in here fighting, and I’m going to pick the right shot.'”

Holm is clearly a fantastic fighter. Her boxing resume proves that; so does her dominant KO win over Rousey. But those moments of excellence are often sprinkled in among long periods of inactivity, even when she is the more talented of the two in the cage. MMA is a dangerous game, and a certain amount of defensive caution must be imparted in every game plan. Unchecked aggression is also a path to peril. But as she moves on to conquer her next mountain, Holm has to ask herself whether the balance is right.

But that’s a discussion for next week. Now is a time for celebration, and there is much to enjoy. Holm is no doubt back on the short list of bantamweight championship contenders, and in all likelihood, her counterstriking style would sync well with current champ Amanda Nunes—if Nunes can get by Valentina Shevchenko in July.

Holm could also bounce back up to featherweight to fight the victor of the Cris Cyborg-Megan Anderson title match, which is almost set, per Ariel Helwani of MMA Fighting.

Winning creates opportunities, but it can also mask problems. With her win in Singapore, Holm ended a drought, but now she’ll take the escalator to higher-level competition. Athletically, she’s as good as anyone she might face in the future, so it may be her approach that makes the difference between winning and losing.

Saturday showed everything she can be and everything she is—the good and the bad on display; the power to change and the ability to evolve hers to summon in an instant.

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Halfway Across the World, Holly Holm Seeks to Fight off ‘One-Hit Wonder’ Label

When Holly Holm crashed her left shin against Ronda Rousey’s jaw and toppled a championship reign that had drawn worldwide attention, Holm quickly came to be seen as the heir to Rousey’s throne and the usurper of her fame. Here was the next…

When Holly Holm crashed her left shin against Ronda Rousey’s jaw and toppled a championship reign that had drawn worldwide attention, Holm quickly came to be seen as the heir to Rousey’s throne and the usurper of her fame. Here was the next golden girl, who like Rousey was accomplished in combat sports, articulate and telegenic, a ternary combination that seemed irresistible to fans and media alike. 

In the immediate aftermath, everything seemed to be setting her up for a long reign: her game, her personality and her conscientious outlook.

“I don’t want to be a one-hit wonder is probably the thing I’ve been saying about that,” Holm told FOX Sports shortly before her first title defense attempt. ”I don’t want it to be this one performance. I want to show people that I’m here for a reason and for me, I want to keep going, I want to keep getting better, I want to keep learning.”

Eighteen months later, all of her best-laid plans have evaporated, one disappointing loss at a time. 

And now, it’s led to this: On Saturday, Holm is headlining perhaps the weakest card of 2017. The UFC Fight Night main event features Holm, who is 0-3 dating back to that seemingly landmark win over Rousey, against Bethe Correia, who has won only one of her last four fights.

The event will be broadcast from Kallang, Singapore, and airs on UFC Fight Pass, ensuring the smallest audience for a Holm fight since she entered the UFC in early 2015.

 

That the UFC jettisoned Holm to the other side of the world to fight on its digital streaming site rather than television and on a card with little in the way of championship stakes is no coincidence. If the organization doesn’t see her as a declining asset, they most likely view her as a compromised one. The silver lining for Holm is that she has a realistic path to rebuilding her name value and star power.

In this matchup, the UFC has given Holm (10-3) an eminently winnable bout; most fight experts expect her to win Saturday night, and the odds see her as a heavy favorite, by as much as 6-1, per OddsShark.

In Correia (10-2-1), she is facing an opponent largely perceived as someone who has outperformed her potential, having advanced to a title shot back in 2015. Correia is not particularly fast or powerful, and she doesn’t have much offensive flourish to her game. She is mostly workmanlike, aggressively attempting to pile up strikes while prodding the fight to suit her rugged style. Her game is more heart than skill.

By contrast, Holm is polished and deliberate, preferring to let her opponent lead while waiting for openings to counter. 

Holm’s patience has been both her blessing and curse. When opponents rush her, as Rousey did in their Nov. 2015 matchup, Holm is at her best, using her skilled footwork to sidestep blitzes and her talented hands to land counters. She is murderous on static targets.

As opponents have figured this out and game plans have changed, Holm has looked decidedly average.

It may seem crass or unfair to characterize a former UFC champion in that way, but there is statistical evidence that Holm is the opposite of Correia and has underperformed her potential. Remember that Holm entered the UFC as a multi-time boxing champ, yet, according to FightMetric, she has landed only 34 percent of attempted significant strikes, a number below UFC average. She has been successful on only 18 percent of takedown tries, a downright poor number. Holm has also lost as a favorite three times and been out-struck in two of those fights.

In short, during her UFC run she performed brilliantly as an underdog against Rousey and has been inconsistent time and again as a favorite.

Fortunately for her, Correia seems tailor-made as an opponent. Correia will almost certainly come forward and offer Holm openings. It is up to Holm to capitalize upon them. If she can’t, Correia is likely to pile up enough strikes to take the lead on the scorecards—or at least to make the judges’ jobs more difficult based on sheer volume.

That’s exactly what’s happened to Holm in each of her last two fights, both unanimous decision losses. Against Valentina Shevchenko, Holm was out-struck 119-73, per FightMetric. Against Germaine de Randamie, she finished the fight at a 144-122 deficit.

And if she can’t beat Correia, what exactly will that say about Holm? 

First, we must acknowledge that Holm’s decorated boxing past can’t be taken away from her. Her UFC championship win can’t be overlooked, either. Both of those accomplishments cement her combat sports bona fides. 

If we concede that point, we must also accept that the legacies of active fighters are always in the process of being rewritten.

Eighteen months after Holm’s shocking knockout of Rousey, this fight against Correia stands as a point of no return. If she can’t rise to the occasion as an overwhelming favorite and on the motivation of breaking a losing streak, then that result makes a statement that cannot be disregarded. 

There have been plenty of fighters who struggled to adapt as the fight world adapted to them. On Saturday, Holm gets a chance to reset herself or forever risk being labeled as the very thing she resisted: an MMA one-hit wonder.

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Mark Hunt Will Not Go Gently into That Good Night

At 43 years, 2 months and 20 days old, Mark Hunt is the oldest fighter on the UFC roster. Instead of being called “old,” he’d probably prefer to be called timeless. For years, the best heavyweights in the world have been trying to close out his career …

At 43 years, 2 months and 20 days old, Mark Hunt is the oldest fighter on the UFC roster. Instead of being called “old,” he’d probably prefer to be called timeless. For years, the best heavyweights in the world have been trying to close out his career with no luck. The UFC once tried to pay him to go away. He’s been knocked out four times in the last four years. And yet he persists and finds a way to work himself back into the mix.

On Saturday night (Sunday in New Zealand), Hunt extended his career, perhaps to the disappointment of UFC brass. Facing the surging Derrick Lewis — a man 11 years his junior — Hunt took another dip into the fountain of youth, taking over late for a fourth-round technical knockout.

It was a performance worthy of those standard veteran adjectives like “wily” and “crafty,” words that are often bestowed on people who somehow continually survive in seemingly unwinnable circumstances.

Perhaps no one deserves them quite as much as Hunt.

Before the fight, there were numerous indications that the pairing could be a problem for him. In his last six matches heading into it, Hunt had been out-struck by a total of 599-155, an incredible deficit rarely seen by top 10 level fighters.

Moreover, in his last bout, which took place just 99 days ago, Hunt was knocked unconscious by Alistair Overeem. While he was given a 45-day medical suspension by the Nevada Athletic Commission following the loss, Hunt accepted the Lewis pairing less than three weeks later, when he was still barred from no contact while recovering.

The quick turnaround is not ideal for someone coming off the trauma of a legitimate knockout, and it didn’t help that he was tasked with returning against the powerful Lewis, who walked into the bout on a 6-fight win streak, during which he’d only been out-landed once. During that span, he’d out-landed his opponents 238-193 en route to five knockouts.

Aside from that, Hunt had the drag of an ongoing lawsuit with the UFC and Dana White hanging over him after he accused the promotion and its president of colluding to allow Brock Lesnar to use performance-enhancing drugs during the leadup to their July 2016 bout.

That alone would have been plenty to occupy his mind as he prepared for the powerful Lewis, but on top of it all, Hunt had to deal with the high-pressure prospect of competing in front of his home country fans for the first time in 16 years.

The last time Hunt performed in his native New Zealand, he was in his 20s and focusing on kickboxing. In that fight, he lost.

All this time later, he’s older and wiser, even as his career continues a long wind-down.

In the early part of the fight, Lewis looked faster and longer while flashing a more diverse arsenal, but all the while, Hunt stalked him as Lewis expended extra energy circling the circumference of the Octagon.

Late in the second round, Hunt swung the momentum his way when he landed a step-in elbow that buckled Lewis and stole the round, and at about that exact moment, you got the feeling that Hunt had processed exactly what he needed to know to continue on the road to victory.

Lewis showed good durability taking several heavy shots over the remaining minutes of the fight and firing back a few of his own, but his conditioning began to betray him, and he became a sitting target.

Still, he made one last stand with a jumping knee that knocked Hunt back a step, but that was about all he had left. After missing on a follow right hand, Lewis backed up to the fence and Hunt bombarded him with two step-in elbows among a barrage of strikes that led referee Marc Goddard to step in.

“It was just a matter of time,” Hunt said in the post-fight press conference. “He started getting tired, and you know what happens at the top-end when you start getting tired.”

This wasn’t supposed to happen. Even at home, Hunt was an underdog to Lewis.

It was as if the fight world forgot, just for a moment, that Hunt has come back from more adversity and endings than a slasher movie villain.

He wrote in his autobiography of suffering physical and mental abuse as a child. He overcame addictions to gambling and drugs. He spent time in jail.

So then, maybe we shouldn’t be surprised that he’s shown the mettle in the cage to overcome a six-fight losing streak, to work past the knockouts, to disregard age.

At 43, Hunt is more than just a guy in the UFC heavyweight division. He’s still a contender, even if his age suggests he should at least consider walking away.

When his night was over, he contemplated that possibility, however briefly, after he was asked by Fox announcer Brian Stann what might be next for him.

“I only have a few more fights left,” he said. “For me, if it ended here tonight, then so be it. I’ve had a good run, I’ve had a lot of fun traveling the world.”

His countrymen whistled and cheered, almost resisting what he was saying. Then Hunt smiled ever so slyly and added a final thought.

“But it looks like it’s still continuing.”

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Will Derrick Lewis vs. Mark Hunt Be the Slugfest of Our Heavyweight Dreams?

If you’re in the market for some hammer-fisted heavyweight action this weekend, the UFC has just the main event for you. Derrick Lewis and Mark Hunt will headline UFC Fight Night 110 on Saturday evening U.S. time in New Zealand.
Lewis vs. Hunt……

If you’re in the market for some hammer-fisted heavyweight action this weekend, the UFC has just the main event for you. Derrick Lewis and Mark Hunt will headline UFC Fight Night 110 on Saturday evening U.S. time in New Zealand.

Lewis vs. Hunt…oh, boy, that sounds like a main course, doesn’t it? In the UFC heavyweight rankings, that’s No. 7 vs. No. 6, but these are two fighters who are in very different stretches of their respective careers.

Lewis is on the come-up, a 32-year-old who had a late start in MMA but has found success with his crushing power, racking up six straight wins. Hunt, meanwhile, is 43 years old, embroiled in a lawsuit with the UFC and its president Dana White, and has only won two of his last six matches.

It’s rare to see a heavyweight prospect break through to title contention. Most of the names around the heavyweight top 10—Cain Velasquez, Junior Dos Santos, Alistair Overeem, Fabricio Werdum, etc.—have been there for years, but Lewis is moving closer to pushing to the front of the pack. So it’s a fun fight and an interesting one, and joining me to discuss it is my colleague, Chad Dundas.

Mike Chiappetta: Chad, I have a feeling that at about the moment the ref squares them up for last-minute instructions, I’ll be giddy about this fight. How could I not be? There is a reason that heavyweights steal the air out of a room. It’s not just their size, but their power and the aura of unpredictability that comes with it.

Any punch can change everything. Any moment could be the last one. 

Lewis and Hunt are in some ways birds of a feather. They are ferocious punchers who will gladly step in the line of fire to launch their own offensive. But the way they do it is very different.

Lewis isn’t a technical marvel. He’s big and powerful, and he fights like he knows those are two of his most meaningful weapons. He’ll walk you down and sling leather and, when he smells fear, unleash a torrent of fists and elbows until you wither or run for cover. He doesn’t have much interest in fighting on the ground or outpointing opponents. He’s all about the finish, baby.

Hunt has a little more subtlety to his game. He’s always had to, because at his height (he’s just 5’10”), he’s always had to navigate the distance to get inside against the heavyweight division’s monsters. So he’s had to develop a deep bag of tricks to get there. He’s great at baiting opponents into his traps and has the one-punch power to turn a single mistake into a TKO. He’ll chop down opponents with kicks, too. And he’s more than happy to fight in close quarters.

So they have some similarities and some differences, and that will be thrilling to watch, for however long it lasts. 

Chad, what do you like about this fight, and is there anything not to like about it?

Chad Dundas: Almost nothing that will likely happen from bell to bell, that’s for sure.

We all know how Hunt fights. It’s not as though he’s going to transform himself into a play-it-safe grappler in the next few days. He’s going to swing for the fences and hope for the best. And while it’s not a style of fighting you want to dwell on for too long, it should be fun to watch.

Meanwhile, the last time Lewis won by submission was November 2010, when he stopped somebody named Rakim Cleveland via second-round armbar at something called Worldwide Gladiator. Oh, to have footage of that one. Since that night, 14 of Lewis’ next 19 fights have ended in TKO victories for the 6’3″ Louisiana native.

So, yeah, this one ought to be a slobberknocker.

Now, granted, Lewis seemingly has more to lose than Hunt. Is there an outside chance he comes into this thing with an actual game plan? Is there a chance he tries to pull a fast one with takedowns and top control? Sure.

But honestly? I just don’t see it. Both these guys know what they’re here for and know full well the attributes that make them popular, marketable fighters. Besides, in the heavyweight division, it’s fairly simple to battle back from a loss, so there’s next to no reason—unless you want to consider the long-term effects—to play it particularly safe.

One thing that kind of does bother me, though, Mike, is Hunt’s ongoing legal struggle with the UFC. Since that ill-fated loss to Brock Lesnar at UFC 200, he’s given every impression he wants only to get through his existing contract as quickly as possible and then get gone.

Now he’s saying he’s found reasons to think his UFC 209 loss to Alistair Overeem was suspect, too.

Do those extenuating circumstances put any kind of damper on this for you? Namely, that Hunt doesn‘t seem to be in a great headspace?

Mike: Well, if you want to be all Debbie Downer about it, I must acknowledge you have a valid point. Even though Hunt is a born fighter, you can’t help but feel that this legal case has to be more than just a passing distraction and may actually affect his preparation and performance.

It’s easy to get caught up in the idea that the best person always wins, or that these guys are simple machines of destruction instead of complex humans that deal with the same hopes, fears, emotions and problems as anyone else, and that all those things can follow them to work.

When we make our predictions or set our expectations for fights, these are X-factors that we often can’t account for. 

Hunt isn’t only facing those kinds of problems, but he’s also at an significant age disadvantage here. He’s 11 years older than Lewis, and his chin, while still amazing, ain’t quite what it used to be. I wouldn’t say I’m to the point that it makes me uneasy to watch Hunt, but I am saying that I worry about how many more of these battles he has in him. 

Chad, you said something interesting, in that you believe Lewis has more to lose than Hunt. I’m not sure that’s the case. At Hunt’s age, how many more big paydays does he have ahead of him? According to the Nevada Athletic Commission, Hunt made a $750,000 purse in his last match. Say he loses and the UFC cuts him. Sure, there will be bidders for his services, but would any of them approach that kind of coin? Given what we know about MMA contracts, I have a hard time believing they would.

Lewis, though, still has a lot of time left. As you mentioned, a loss won’t end any kind of title hopes for him; the UFC will certainly offer him opportunities to get himself back into the chase.

So I guess that brings me to this: how will the fight go, and who will win?

For one thing, I actually believe this fight goes past a round or two. Both Lewis and Hunt are historically durable, and I think both will be a little more cautious of the other’s power than they normally would be against other opponents. But that will only last so long. I expect a lot of power punches being thrown with ill intent and some kind of highlight-reel ending. I’m sure most of us would be surprised if it didn’t end that way. 

Chad, this is about as fun a pairing as the UFC can make with its top-15 heavyweights, isn’t it? What do you hope we get out of it, and is this one of those matchups where the result is less important than the action that is delivered?

Chad: Well, first and foremost, I hope we get a fight-of-the-year candidate brawl to rival the one Hunt had against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva back in 2013—and this time without somebody testing positive for PEDs afterward. 

I hope, as always, we get in and out of this fight without any serious injuries.

Because I’m a strict institutionalist, I also hope something happens to further the overall heavyweight title picture. I guess that means my heart is with Lewis. As you mentioned, the 265-pound class has been hard-up for new title contenders in recent years. Suddenly, with Stipe Miocic as champion, and with Lewis and Francis Ngannou shaping up as fresh contenders, it feels as though there is some momentum starting to build.

A win over Hunt could conceivably make Lewis the next logical choice to face Miocic later this year. That would be a fun fight not only because of the matchup of styles but because both Miocic and Lewis bring a lot of personality to promoting their bouts. For my money, that’s exactly the kind of matchup the heavyweight division needs to start feeling great again.

Line up Ngannou for the winner—barring anything crazy like the arrival of Jon Jones or Daniel Cormier to the weight class later this year—and you might be onto something.

But because this is the heavyweight division, I also can’t be too confident any of that will happen, Mike. Despite the fact Hunt comes in 2-3 (1 no contest) in his last six fights and Lewis has won his last six in a row, the outcome here is far from a foregone conclusion.

Even when he’s on, Lewis gets hit, and his brawling style can sometimes turn sloppy. We all know only bad things happen when you allow one of Hunt’s canned ham fists to connect with your face. So, if this night ends in a big win for the Super Samoan on his home turf, I won’t be surprised about that, either.

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Forget Conor McGregor; Max Holloway’s the New Boss of the Featherweight Division

Max Holloway was the runaway train we never saw coming. When he debuted in the UFC back in 2012 at just 20 years old, he was the youngest fighter on the roster. Unsurprisingly, Holloway went through early struggles. After his first six bouts in the Oct…

Max Holloway was the runaway train we never saw coming. When he debuted in the UFC back in 2012 at just 20 years old, he was the youngest fighter on the roster. Unsurprisingly, Holloway went through early struggles. After his first six bouts in the Octagon, he was just 3-3.

Few fighters have started their careers with this kind of arc and gone on to become a UFC champion. Usually, greatness manifests itself early. But Holloway grew, worked, grinded and started racking up wins. He stopped four opponents in a row. Then, he outclassed veteran Cole Miller. And then, when he choked out Cub Swanson, there was no more hiding that Holloway had evolved past most expectations for him. 

Still, he had to further to go. Way further, as he piled up wins against Charles Oliveira, Jeremy Stephens, Ricardo Lamas and Anthony Pettis. By the time he was done—by the time the UFC agreed that yes, he was ready to fight for the undisputed belt—he’d won 10 straight, the longest streak any fighter has ever authored before fighting for a championship.

To take the final step, he only had to beat Jose Aldo, the consensus greatest featherweight ever. He only had to do it on Aldo’s home soil.

In a match that imitated Holloway’s career, the start was shaky and the finish was stunning. The UFC’s most unheralded win streak paved the road to gold, as Holloway captured the undisputed featherweight championship via technical knockout at 4:13 of the third round in Rio de Janeiro.

The stoppage—which came after dozens of unanswered strikes—left the once-frenzied crowd in almost complete silence, pondering Aldo’s fall and Holloway’s rise, and everything in between.

And there is so much else. 

This is the division that Conor McGregor ruled and then abandoned without a second thought, a division that has had his long shadow cast upon it by his absence all the while. 

However fair, Holloway and Aldo were fighting that, too, the memories of what McGregor had done to the division, and to both of them before he left to chase the UFC lightweight belt, and then—maybe—boxing.

A relatively short time ago, McGregor starched Aldo with a quickness. And some time before that, he’d drowned Holloway on the mat on the way to a decision win.

Those results don’t just go away; they can’t be erased. But Holloway has done everything possible to show his improvement. Back then, he was just a kid, young and green. Today, he is still just 25 years old, but he is reimagined, revamped and remarkable. And he is a worthy champion. An 11-bout winning streak is its own statement. So is the way he won.

In the early going, Aldo was sharper and faster and better. Holloway looked slow and unsure, but ate what Aldo had to offer before taking over.

The end came on a four-piece combination, followed by a ground swarm that could serve as an instruction manual for fight-finishing. Overhands and elbows and back-taking and flowing to mount. With every move, Aldo was sinking in quicksand. With every move, Holloway was drowning him.

“No adversity; it is what it is,” Holloway said on the Fox Sports 1 post-fight show. “Slow and steady always wins the race. I was taking my time. I had five rounds. I took my time. I knew he’d fade later on, and I took advantage of the shots that were open.”

It’s important to realize the context of this win; Aldo, we must repeat, is the featherweight G.O.A.T., even if he had his legacy changed by a single punch, one of the loudest left hands ever thrown by a loudmouth. 

The thing about it is that it wasn’t a fluke, and neither was the man who threw it. McGregor is both a superstar and a super-fighter, yet the aftermath of that punch has stuck on Aldo like a putrid stench. 

On an objective level, most people understand that a loss is a loss. But in the moment, emotion matters. The setting matters. The opponent matters.

Aldo’s failure was notable because of all the circumstances that predated it. The long lead-up. The world tour. The trash-talking opponent. All of it served to intensify the match, and to magnify the result.

Never mind that McGregor has lost, too. Never mind that he has more career losses than Aldo. All of that is forgotten in the electricity of a magical moment. 

Still, as that moment recedes into history and Aldo’s entire past comes back into view, perhaps reason will come back to us, too, and context with it. Perhaps as everything returns into focus, we will better grasp just what it is that Holloway accomplished.

In UFC history, guess how many people have had longer win streaks than Holloway? Four. Anderson Silva (16), Jon Jones (13), Georges St-Pierre (12) and Demetrious Johnson (12). 

That’s legendary consistency and a belt to go along with it. That’s enough to conclude that whatever the past, Holloway has reached greatness.

Everything changes in time. Fighters evolve and records are broken and shadows are overcome by light, and Max Holloway is a representation of all of this. 

When he first showed up all those years ago, we couldn’t see what he could be, not because we’re nearsighted, but because it was simply too far off in the distance. The future was whatever he made it. The future is still his. 

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