Melvin Guillard hears teammate dissension over UFC-Reebok deal: ‘They’re going to lose a lot of talent’

Months ago, while waxing poetic about his newly-signed Bellator contract, Melvin Guillard divulged that the deal included provisions which would give him the ability to fight when he wanted against who he wanted. While the remarks sound…

Months ago, while waxing poetic about his newly-signed Bellator contract, Melvin Guillard divulged that the deal included provisions which would give him the ability to fight when he wanted against who he wanted. While the remarks sounded overly optimistic in theory, they turned out to be prophetic in reality.

Guillard is now scheduled to debut this Friday in the main event of Bellator 141. When he does so, the man standing across from him will be Brandon Girtz, a rugged Division II wrestler who the veteran lightweight says he handpicked from a variety of possible opponents presented to him by Bellator matchmakers.

“In the UFC I fought Waylon Lowe, I fought Shane Roller, and they were good wrestlers, they were brawlers, they liked to come forward aggressively,” Guillard explained to MMAFighting.com. “So when I watched him on tape, that was a big reason why I picked him.

“I want to come out and have a spectacular debut that people are going to remember for a long time. I didn’t pick him because I thought he was an easier fight, so I don’t want people to get that twisted. Because like I tell everyone, at this level everybody is tough, everybody is strong, everybody is game. Right now he probably thinks he has an opportunity to make a name for himself by fighting me, so I know he’s going to be a tough opponent. But I think as far as aggression and the technical part of the fight, I really think he matches up very well for my style.”

If Guillard is right, Aug. 28 could prove to be a dramatic launching point to the latest chapter of his prizefighting career.

An alumnus of the second of The Ultimate Fighter, Guillard has seen it all throughout a 14-year journey that’s taken him through each of the major three MMA promotions on the North American scene. The abrupt end to his 22-fight UFC tenure led to a brief and tumultuous run with World Series of Fighting, and now that he’s landed in Bellator, Guillard is afforded a unique perspective on the sport’s shifting landscape.

Guillard is just one of several familiar UFC names to board the Bellator train since the arrival of Scott Coker, co-signing the move alongside the likes of Phil Davis, Josh Thomson, and Josh Koscheck. But Guillard’s departure is different from the others for two main reasons; one, he was cut by the UFC whereas the others fought out their contracts, and two, his exit came before the Reebok sea change that so intensely overhauled the UFC’s sponsorship system.

The disenchantment with the Reebok deal and its effects capping fighter sponsorship incomes has been voiced by many fighters within the UFC, most notably figures like Brendan Schaub and Tim Kennedy who draw sponsorship interest that far outpaces the four- and five-figure stipends handed out by Reebok. And when Guillard walks through the halls of American Top Team in Coconut Creek, FL, he says he hears the cynicism from his UFC teammates.

“I’ve been hearing that a lot around my gym,” Guillard said. “A lot of the guys are really unhappy with how things went with the UFC. I’m just happy that I was released before all of that went down, because I never left with bad blood, I never left in a bad way. I was the one released, so I’m kind of glad it happened like that because a lot of guys are really not looking forward to re-signing. And I’m just thinking to myself, damn, the UFC is really just dropping the ball on a lot of guys. They’re going to lose a lot of talent.”

If Guillard was fighting in the UFC on Friday night, he would earn $20,000 from Reebok for his extensive Octagon experience. That number is eight times larger than the $2,500 starting figure which is handed out to UFC newbies, but is one that Guillard says still pales in comparison to the $50,000 or $60,000 per fight he claims was commonplace for him around 2008-2009, before the UFC instituted its sponsor tax.

With those numbers in mind, Guillard likened the new Reebok figures to “a slap in the face” for his veteran teammates.

“Guys aren’t happy with how things are going as far as the Reebok deal, obviously,” Guillard said. “Guys are losing money with sponsorships because they can’t make any money with sponsors. I never ever understood when I was with the UFC and they started charging companies to be in the UFC. That’s when everything started affecting our money. I never understood that, but I was always optimistic to think that maybe they would pay us more money on the back-end because we were losing money on this end, but it never happened. So I don’t know what the motive for what they’re doing is.

“If I was still in the UFC, I know I wouldn’t be paying my agent no 15- or 20-percent for marketing because there’s no point now,” Guillard added. “You might as well just pay them for lining up your fight.”

Guillard, more than anything, is curious to see how the marketplace plays out in the coming years and whether more fighters are going to start fighting out the lives of their contracts, regardless of which promotion they’re in, if only to understand their value on the open market.

While his road to Bellator hasn’t exactly been smooth, Guillard says he learned a lot after hitting free agency twice in the past two years, and that more fighters would benefit from doing the same, no matter where their final destinations may be.

“Me personally, I’m ecstatic and happy being with Bellator, man,” Guillard said.

“It’s something new and it’s fun, and you look forward to doing something different. So right now I’m happy with where I’m at, especially financially. I think financially this is the best move for me, being with Bellator. For me, I will always love the UFC. I will always be respectful to the UFC, because the UFC was my childhood dream. When I was a kid, I wanted to be a UFC fighter. So I have no disrespect to the UFC about how they run their business. They run their business how they want to run it, and when people aren’t satisfied, people have to do what they have to do to survive and live.”

For Guillard, that survival begins anew at Bellator 141. Despite the many miles on his body from his 50 professional fights, the 32-year-old says he feels as fresh as he did five years ago. His shift towards positivity started after he emerged from a year-long depression during his WSOF days. While moonlighting a fulltime job as a bouncer at an adult club, Guillard struggled to figure out whether professional fighting was still for him, and his flippancy showed with his many indiscretions while with WSOF.

That’s all behind him now, though. Guillard is itching to erase the stink from his past two performances and remind fight fans why “The Young Assassin” was once considered must-watch television.

“I’ll give them the reminder when I get in the ring and fight,” Guillard said. “It’ll be a quick reminder. They won’t forget. They’ll be like, damn, that’s the guy I remember fighting. You know, I took a little time off in the midst of competing. I wasn’t myself. But it’s good to let people think that (you’re done). That way you can give them that surprise.”

Tensions erupt between ‘Pitbull,’ Awad camps at Bellator 141 poster signing

The bad blood between Saad Awad’s camp and the ‘Pitbull’ brothers spilled over late Tuesday night.

After weeks of back-and-forth on social media, the two teams finally crossed paths while Awad and opponent Patricky Freire signed posters for Bellator 141 in Temecula, CA, leading to an explosive exchange between the fighters and their respective training partners, featherweight contender Georgi Karakhanyan and Bellator champion Patricio Freire.

Bellator 141 takes place this Friday, Aug. 28 and airs live on Spike TV.

Video of the scene can be seen below, filmed by Team Nogueira wrestling coach Eric Albarracin.

Tensions were High between fight camps as Patricky and Saad Awad signed posters for This fridays #Bellator141 , as…

Posted by Eric Albarracin Ultimate Fighter Coach on Wednesday, August 26, 2015

The bad blood between Saad Awad’s camp and the ‘Pitbull’ brothers spilled over late Tuesday night.

After weeks of back-and-forth on social media, the two teams finally crossed paths while Awad and opponent Patricky Freire signed posters for Bellator 141 in Temecula, CA, leading to an explosive exchange between the fighters and their respective training partners, featherweight contender Georgi Karakhanyan and Bellator champion Patricio Freire.

Bellator 141 takes place this Friday, Aug. 28 and airs live on Spike TV.

Video of the scene can be seen below, filmed by Team Nogueira wrestling coach Eric Albarracin.

Tensions were High between fight camps as Patricky and Saad Awad signed posters for This fridays #Bellator141 , as…

Posted by Eric Albarracin Ultimate Fighter Coach on Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Carlos Condit on Nick Diaz: ‘I don’t think anything short of a rematch’ would change things

Over three years have passed since Carlos Condit edged Nick Diaz to become interim UFC welterweight champion. But considering all the cries of ‘Diaz 1, 2, 5′ that continue to litter MMA comments sections, it may as well have been yesterday.

With then-champion Georges St-Pierre sidelined by injury in Feb. 2012, Condit scored a unanimous decision over Diaz to capture the interim title at UFC 143. The win, however, was not without controversy. Ardent Diaz supporters bombarded social media with outrage over Condit’s movement-heavy gameplan and their belief that Diaz’s volume and aggression should’ve won him the first, second, and fifth rounds on the judges’ scorecards.

While the uproar ultimately meant nothing, as both Condit and Diaz fell short in subsequent bids against the returning St-Pierre, the criticism of Condit’s tactics stuck like a thorn in the side of the Albuquerque native for several years, flying in the face of Condit’s well-earned reputation as one of the most ruthless and efficient finishers the division has ever seen. And he doubts that sentiment ends anytime soon.

“Honestly, I don’t think anything short of a rematch with [Diaz] would change things in anybody’s mind,” Condit said Monday on The MMA Hour. “I’m not worried about it. I went out there and I got the win. And … I’ve said it in interviews in the past, I’ve agreed to that rematch a couple times. I don’t know if he’s ever coming back.”

Diaz is currently awaiting a September disciplinary hearing from the Nevada Athletic Commission (NAC) after testing positive for marijuana metabolites in his UFC 183 fight against Anderson Silva. The incident was Diaz’s third such failure for marijuana, and considering Diaz’s history with the NAC, it’s possible the welterweight could receive a suspension stretching across several years.

Condit, on the other hand, is slated to challenge for the title against UFC champion Robbie Lawler at the 70,000-seat Etihad Stadium in Melbourne, Australia at UFC 193. The show has the potential to smash UFC 129’s current attendance record of 55,724, and the match-up against Lawler has all the makings of an instant classic.

Condit’s title shot was in many ways a surprise considering the welterweight division has a glut of worthy contenders, the main two of which — Johny Hendricks and Tyron Woodley — both own recent wins over “The Natural Born Killer.” But neither Hendricks nor Woodley carry the name cachet of Diaz, and if Condit emerges with the belt at UFC 193, a championship rematch against Stockton’s favorite son would undoubtedly do big business.

Such a scenario would obviously require Diaz to get off light next month in his NAC hearing. But even if that were the case, and everything lines up perfectly, Condit would rather meet a deserving contender than allow Diaz to once again jump the line for a title shot.

“Fighting Nick Diaz comes with a lot of other stuff,” Condit said. “There’s the fight it and of itself. Hey, it’s a tough fight. It’s a tough guy to gameplan against and to fight. But the fans and the social media aspect, all of that, I’d have to get my head right for that. Of course I’m not looking past Robbie Lawler, but if I get this belt, I’d like to avenge a couple losses to the next couple of guys who you mentioned earlier, Hendricks and Woodley.”

Over three years have passed since Carlos Condit edged Nick Diaz to become interim UFC welterweight champion. But considering all the cries of ‘Diaz 1, 2, 5′ that continue to litter MMA comments sections, it may as well have been yesterday.

With then-champion Georges St-Pierre sidelined by injury in Feb. 2012, Condit scored a unanimous decision over Diaz to capture the interim title at UFC 143. The win, however, was not without controversy. Ardent Diaz supporters bombarded social media with outrage over Condit’s movement-heavy gameplan and their belief that Diaz’s volume and aggression should’ve won him the first, second, and fifth rounds on the judges’ scorecards.

While the uproar ultimately meant nothing, as both Condit and Diaz fell short in subsequent bids against the returning St-Pierre, the criticism of Condit’s tactics stuck like a thorn in the side of the Albuquerque native for several years, flying in the face of Condit’s well-earned reputation as one of the most ruthless and efficient finishers the division has ever seen. And he doubts that sentiment ends anytime soon.

“Honestly, I don’t think anything short of a rematch with [Diaz] would change things in anybody’s mind,” Condit said Monday on The MMA Hour. “I’m not worried about it. I went out there and I got the win. And … I’ve said it in interviews in the past, I’ve agreed to that rematch a couple times. I don’t know if he’s ever coming back.”

Diaz is currently awaiting a September disciplinary hearing from the Nevada Athletic Commission (NAC) after testing positive for marijuana metabolites in his UFC 183 fight against Anderson Silva. The incident was Diaz’s third such failure for marijuana, and considering Diaz’s history with the NAC, it’s possible the welterweight could receive a suspension stretching across several years.

Condit, on the other hand, is slated to challenge for the title against UFC champion Robbie Lawler at the 70,000-seat Etihad Stadium in Melbourne, Australia at UFC 193. The show has the potential to smash UFC 129’s current attendance record of 55,724, and the match-up against Lawler has all the makings of an instant classic.

Condit’s title shot was in many ways a surprise considering the welterweight division has a glut of worthy contenders, the main two of which — Johny Hendricks and Tyron Woodley — both own recent wins over “The Natural Born Killer.” But neither Hendricks nor Woodley carry the name cachet of Diaz, and if Condit emerges with the belt at UFC 193, a championship rematch against Stockton’s favorite son would undoubtedly do big business.

Such a scenario would obviously require Diaz to get off light next month in his NAC hearing. But even if that were the case, and everything lines up perfectly, Condit would rather meet a deserving contender than allow Diaz to once again jump the line for a title shot.

“Fighting Nick Diaz comes with a lot of other stuff,” Condit said. “There’s the fight it and of itself. Hey, it’s a tough fight. It’s a tough guy to gameplan against and to fight. But the fans and the social media aspect, all of that, I’d have to get my head right for that. Of course I’m not looking past Robbie Lawler, but if I get this belt, I’d like to avenge a couple losses to the next couple of guys who you mentioned earlier, Hendricks and Woodley.”

Charles Oliveira released from hospital, preliminary tests negative for ‘major’ injuries

Charles Oliveira has been released from the hospital two days after his disastrous setback at UFC Fight Night 74.
The UFC announced the news Tuesday night, adding in a statement that preliminary test results for the featherweight’s chest, ne…

Charles Oliveira has been released from the hospital two days after his disastrous setback at UFC Fight Night 74.

The UFC announced the news Tuesday night, adding in a statement that preliminary test results for the featherweight’s chest, neck, and throat have come back free of “major” injuries, and that Oliveira plans to have a follow-up appointment with doctors after returning home on Wednesday.

Oliveira (20-5, 1 NC) saw his three-fight win streak snapped after suffering what appeared to be a bad injury just 99 seconds into his UFC Fight Night 74 main event bout against Max Holloway.

The 25-year-old Oliveira revealed to MMAFighting.com that he entered the contest with a previous neck injury he suffered in training. The injury appeared to aggravate itself early in the bout’s opening round during an innocuous sequence that saw Oliveira fall with his left side against the cage. Oliveira returned to his feet, only to fall back down clutching his neck and shoulder area after trying to lift his arm.

“I injured my neck in training, but did physical therapy and thought everything was fine,” Oliveira told MMAFighting.com after the fight. “But when I fell against the cage everything went numb. I couldn’t feel my body.”

The UFC’s complete statement on Oliveira can be read below.

“UFC featherweight Charles Oliveira has been released from medical care in Saskatoon today and will be traveling home tomorrow. Preliminary test results for major chest, neck or throat injuries were negative and Oliveira will have a follow up appointment with his local physician upon returning home. Oliveira is in good spirits and appreciates the support he’s received from his fans during this time.”

WSOF exec Ali Abdel-Aziz: Melvin Guillard is ‘the world champion of tapping’

Melvin Guillard only fought twice for World Series of Fighting, but bitter feelings from the relationship’s bizarre end still linger.

“I don’t think it ended poorly. I just think Melvin, he’s out of his mind,” WSOF executive vice president Abdel-Aziz said Monday on The MMA Hour. “I don’t really care about Melvin. He’s a UFC reject. He’s a WSOF reject. Now he’s headlining Bellator’s main event. Like, the guy was talking so much s**t. When he left the UFC, he was talking s**t about the UFC. When he left World Series of Fighting, he was talking s**t about World Series of Fighting. When he’s going to get cut from Bellator, he’s going to talk about Bellator.”

Guillard makes his Bellator debut this Friday in the main event of Bellator 141. The bout will be Guillard’s first since the 32-year-old and WSOF parted ways following a tumultuous run inside the organization, one which saw Guillard badly miss weight for both of his fights and publicly criticize WSOF as a “B-league” promotion.

Guillard initially inked his deal with WSOF in April 2014 following the abrupt end to his 22-fight stint in the UFC. Despite coming overweight for his WSOF debut, Guillard was awarded a title shot against lightweight champion Justin Gaethje for his sophomore effort. Tensions between Guillard and WSOF officials escalated when the fighter and Abdel-Aziz aired their grievances during a memorable media conference call, and things fell apart soon after.

Guillard showed up to the Gaethje fight four pounds overweight, rendering it a non-title bout. He was then pulled from his next bout after failing to provide medicals in a timely fashion and refusing to do media to promote his fight, aside from an interview with Submission Radio in which Guillard slammed the organization and its executives. Guillard ultimately asked for and received a release from his WSOF contract, leaving Abdel-Aziz frustrated by the very public manner in which way the situation played out.

“People know what Melvin is,” Abdel-Aziz said. “And honestly, I’m upset with Melvin. Because after he asked for his release and (manager) Malki (Kawa) asked me, and we gave him his release and he sent me a text message saying ‘thank you, I really appreciate it,’ the whole thing is he’s going on the internet and talking about WSOF is s**t and UFC is s**t. He’s s**t. Like, Melvin sucks. Honestly, I think he’s an explosive, athletic guy, he’s getting older — it’s not working for him.

“Listen, Melvin, we had some sparring sessions in the gym at Greg Jackson’s, and I beat Melvin every time. Melvin is never going to be a world champion. Melvin is going to be a world champion of one thing: he taps. That’s what Melvin does. That what he does, he’s the world champion of tapping.

“All you’ve got to do is just match him up with a wrestler. He’s going to take him down and finish him. That’s how I finished him in the gym and Greg Jackson was a witness of that.”

Abdel-Aziz pointed to a similar labor dispute he had with former WSOF title challenger Josh Burkman. Despite their differences, Burkman was granted his WSOF release and has since fought three times in the UFC. Abdel-Aziz says he personally helped facilitate the move with UFC President Dana White, simply because of the professionalism Burkman displayed throughout the situation — professionalism he feels Guillard did not share.

“It seems like f**king everybody is leaving a promotion now and talking s**t about the other promotion,” Abdel-Aziz said.

“I didn’t have to release Melvin. Melvin, if he was still with World Series of Fighting, would probably be fighting on the undercard somehow. Now he’s headlining a main event. But you know what, it’s good for him. But I’m not worried about it. Even his coaches, his own coaches, they were asking me, ‘why are you not cutting this guy? He doesn’t deserve to be at World Series of Fighting.’ He’s a guy who burned a lot of bridges, but listen, we have a lot of great things going on at World Series of Fighting. The last thing I want to worry about is Melvin.”

Melvin Guillard only fought twice for World Series of Fighting, but bitter feelings from the relationship’s bizarre end still linger.

“I don’t think it ended poorly. I just think Melvin, he’s out of his mind,” WSOF executive vice president Abdel-Aziz said Monday on The MMA Hour. “I don’t really care about Melvin. He’s a UFC reject. He’s a WSOF reject. Now he’s headlining Bellator’s main event. Like, the guy was talking so much s**t. When he left the UFC, he was talking s**t about the UFC. When he left World Series of Fighting, he was talking s**t about World Series of Fighting. When he’s going to get cut from Bellator, he’s going to talk about Bellator.”

Guillard makes his Bellator debut this Friday in the main event of Bellator 141. The bout will be Guillard’s first since the 32-year-old and WSOF parted ways following a tumultuous run inside the organization, one which saw Guillard badly miss weight for both of his fights and publicly criticize WSOF as a “B-league” promotion.

Guillard initially inked his deal with WSOF in April 2014 following the abrupt end to his 22-fight stint in the UFC. Despite coming overweight for his WSOF debut, Guillard was awarded a title shot against lightweight champion Justin Gaethje for his sophomore effort. Tensions between Guillard and WSOF officials escalated when the fighter and Abdel-Aziz aired their grievances during a memorable media conference call, and things fell apart soon after.


Guillard showed up to the Gaethje fight four pounds overweight, rendering it a non-title bout. He was then pulled from his next bout after failing to provide medicals in a timely fashion and refusing to do media to promote his fight, aside from an interview with Submission Radio in which Guillard slammed the organization and its executives. Guillard ultimately asked for and received a release from his WSOF contract, leaving Abdel-Aziz frustrated by the very public manner in which way the situation played out.

“People know what Melvin is,” Abdel-Aziz said. “And honestly, I’m upset with Melvin. Because after he asked for his release and (manager) Malki (Kawa) asked me, and we gave him his release and he sent me a text message saying ‘thank you, I really appreciate it,’ the whole thing is he’s going on the internet and talking about WSOF is s**t and UFC is s**t. He’s s**t. Like, Melvin sucks. Honestly, I think he’s an explosive, athletic guy, he’s getting older — it’s not working for him.

“Listen, Melvin, we had some sparring sessions in the gym at Greg Jackson’s, and I beat Melvin every time. Melvin is never going to be a world champion. Melvin is going to be a world champion of one thing: he taps. That’s what Melvin does. That what he does, he’s the world champion of tapping.

“All you’ve got to do is just match him up with a wrestler. He’s going to take him down and finish him. That’s how I finished him in the gym and Greg Jackson was a witness of that.”

Abdel-Aziz pointed to a similar labor dispute he had with former WSOF title challenger Josh Burkman. Despite their differences, Burkman was granted his WSOF release and has since fought three times in the UFC. Abdel-Aziz says he personally helped facilitate the move with UFC President Dana White, simply because of the professionalism Burkman displayed throughout the situation — professionalism he feels Guillard did not share.

“It seems like f**king everybody is leaving a promotion now and talking s**t about the other promotion,” Abdel-Aziz said.

“I didn’t have to release Melvin. Melvin, if he was still with World Series of Fighting, would probably be fighting on the undercard somehow. Now he’s headlining a main event. But you know what, it’s good for him. But I’m not worried about it. Even his coaches, his own coaches, they were asking me, ‘why are you not cutting this guy? He doesn’t deserve to be at World Series of Fighting.’ He’s a guy who burned a lot of bridges, but listen, we have a lot of great things going on at World Series of Fighting. The last thing I want to worry about is Melvin.”

WSOF announces one-night, eight-man lightweight tournament for WSOF 25

The one-night tournament is back in style. An eight-man, one-night lightweight tourney is in the works for Nov. 20 at World Series of Fighting 25. The victor will be awarded the next lightweight title shot against the winner of Justin Gaethj…

The one-night tournament is back in style. An eight-man, one-night lightweight tourney is in the works for Nov. 20 at World Series of Fighting 25. The victor will be awarded the next lightweight title shot against the winner of Justin Gaethje vs. Luis Palomino 2.

WSOF executive vice president Ali Abdel-Aziz announced the news Monday on The MMA Hour.

“The winner will fight three times, and it’s going to crown a tournament champion,” Abdel-Aziz said. “It’s going back to the gladiator days. One gladiator fights and he keeps going and going until he achieves his ultimate goal.”

The field of eight includes Dagestani prospect Islam Mamedov (12-1), UFC veteran Mike Ricci (10-4), Joao Zeferino (18-6), Rich Patishnock (6-2), Jorge Patino (37-15-2), Brian Cobb (20-8), plus the likely winner of WSOF 23’s LaRue Burley (6-0) vs. Brian Foster (22-7) main card fight and another unnamed competitor.

The bracket will be seeded in general tournament style, with the No. 1 seed taking on the No. 8 seed in the opening round, No. 2 taking on No. 7, and so on.

Seeding is not yet finalized, though Mamedov (No. 1), Zeferino (No. 2), Cobb (No. 4), Burley/Foster winner (No. 5), Patishnock (No. 7), Patino (No. 8) are the tentative rankings.

“I think fans should be excited about it, because there’s so much MMA out there. People are getting kind of tired, a little bit. There’s so many shows. It’s true,” Abdel-Aziz said.

“That’s good for the hardcore fan, but when you have an eight-man tournament, you want to sit in front of the TV and watch which gladiator is going to win the tournament — which one is going to wrap his knee and go back into the second round, then is going to ice his eye from swelling and go back and fight this other gladiator and be a champion.”

WSOF 25 is slated to take place in Seattle, WA, with the blessing of the Washington State Department of Licensing. The main card will air on NBC Sports Network.

Several reserve bouts will populate the undercard in the event that one of the tournament competitors is unable to move on due to injury or exhaustion.

Newly signed UFC and Strikeforce veteran Jason High will also debut on the night’s main card against ONE FC standout Caros Fodor.

“We just wanted to do something different,” Adbel-Aziz said. “World Series of Fighting for the next three months will be kicking ass. We’ll be putting on these great fight cards and we’ll be bringing some big names back and we’re building talent.”