Roland Delorme vs. Alex Caceres Added to UFC 165 in Toronto

A bantamweight fight between Roland Delorme and Alex Caceres has been scheduled for UFC 165, which will take place this September 21 (H/T MMA Junkie for reporting the announcement).
The matchup is a very tantalizing one, not because it is particularly …

A bantamweight fight between Roland Delorme and Alex Caceres has been scheduled for UFC 165, which will take place this September 21 (H/T MMA Junkie for reporting the announcement).

The matchup is a very tantalizing one, not because it is particularly meaningful in the scope of the UFC bantamweight title picture, but because both Delorme and Caceres have been known to put on exciting bouts that see the action go everywhere.

Delorme, who will be defending his home turf in Canada, will enter the fight coming off of a competitive decision victory over Edwin Figueroa at UFC 161.

Since joining the UFC via The Ultimate Fighter, Delorme has posted a spotless 3-0 record, including a pair of submissions. He was knocked out in the first round of his UFC 149 match by Francisco Rivera, but the result was overturned when Rivera tested positive for a banned substance.

Like Delorme, Caceres comes into the bout on a winning note. Back in March he defeated Kyung Ho Kang in a back-and-forth affair, but the result was nullified when Caceres tested positive for marijuana after the fact. 

Even so, the American is riding an official two-fight win streak, and holds a 3-3 UFC record overall. 

Though neither Delorme nor Caceres has lit the MMA world on fire, both guys have shown flashes of tremendous upside, and both have exhibited an eagerness to mix it up with their opponents.

Putting them into the Octagon together should prove to be a good decision, as the fight should be competitive, and has some serious Fight of the Night (and Submission of the Night) potential. 

The pairing also represents a terrific opportunity for both guys as the winner should be catapulted into a more high profile contest early next year.

Delorme vs. Caceres is the 13th match to be added to the UFC 165 fight card, which means it is probably the event’s last addition. But if that’s so, at least it is a good, albeit unheralded final addition.

 

 

 

 

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Paul Daley Back with BAMMA

It looks like Paul Daley’s dream return to the UFC won’t materialise after all. A lack of interest from the world’s top MMA promotion has led the British welterweight to re-sign with BAMMA just weeks after his departure from Bellator….

It looks like Paul Daley’s dream return to the UFC won’t materialise after all. A lack of interest from the world’s top MMA promotion has led the British welterweight to re-sign with BAMMA just weeks after his departure from Bellator.

Daley was a hot property at 170 pounds in 2009 when he joined the UFC. He instantly made his mark with some head-turning knockout wins over Martin Kampmann and Dustin Hazelett, proving his worth as one of the most dangerous and heaviest-handed fighters in all of MMA.

But all that came crashing down after a moment of madness following a frustrated three-round decision loss to Josh Koscheck in 2010 at UFC 113. After the final bell, with the match clearly lost, Daley punched Koscheck, earning him an instant dismissal from the promotion.

Three years fighting for other prominent MMA organisations, such as Strikeforce, Bellator and BAMMA, followed, resulting in some successes and a recent four-fight winning streak.

However, the fighter has never been far from controversy. In December 2012, shortly after starting a new contract with Bellator, Daley was denied a visa to fight in the US and rumours, which the fighter denied, suggested it was because of criminal charges related to a bar brawl he was facing in England.

Those issues never got resolved with relations between the two parties worsening after Daley aired his grievances over Bellator’s contract demands.

Two weeks ago Bellator finally released him, with the MMA media abuzz with talk of a return to the UFC.

Daley himself wasted no time in expressing his desire to return to the sport’s top promotion. However, UFC president Dana White showed a distinct lack of interest in the idea.

Perhaps the fighter, with visa issues and a history of discipline problems, came with just too much baggage for the UFC. In any case, he has signed a new deal with BAMMA, where he last fought in 2011, saying (H/T MMA Mania):

“I’m extremely happy to sign with a premier European promotion… BAMMA provides exciting match-ups for hardcore fans, with a TV production that appeals to mainstream viewers. I’m aiming to bring my own brand of fight entertainment into households around the world the only way I, Paul ‘Semtex’ Daley, know how … knockout victories.”

No date has been set for his return to BAMMA, although his fight against an unnamed opponent for Russian MMA promotion, Legend Fight Show 2, will still go ahead in November.

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Johny Hendricks on Georges St-Pierre: ‘I’ve Got to Beat Him Twice’

In the Octagon, Johny Hendricks looks like a left-handed Leonidas who grunts when he sleeps.
He charges with enough reckless abandon to make the Juggernaut (NSFW) retreat like he just messed with Sasquatch.

If Dracula drank Hendricks’ blood, he’d wake…

In the Octagon, Johny Hendricks looks like a left-handed Leonidas who grunts when he sleeps.

He charges with enough reckless abandon to make the Juggernaut (NSFW) retreat like he just messed with Sasquatch.

If Dracula drank Hendricks’ blood, he’d wake up with a hangover from getting drunk with power.

You get the point: Johny Hendricks is intimidating.

But outside of the cage, his demeanor flips the script and is infinitely more serene. Hendricks seems less like a hard-hitting cage fighter and more like a camp counselor ready to hand out pamphlets and oatmeal cookies.

Recently, the welterweight No. 1 contender shot the breeze with MMAWeekly.com and touched upon his upcoming UFC 167 bout vs. Georges St-Pierre

Judging from his responses, Hendricks tends to see life through a long-sighted lens. 

Firstly, the bearded brawler revealed that he naturally walks around at 215 to 220 pounds. Considering welterweights often tip the scales at (roughly) 175 on fight night, the 40-plus-pound cut explains why he resembles a pocket-sized Paul Bunyan in the Octagon. 

Hendricks proceeded to raise a few eyebrows by referring to UFC 167 as “Hendricks-GSP I.” When asked about the added number, he giddily grinned and offered, “I know I have to beat him twice.”

The stone-fisted contender explained: 

I’ve got to beat him twice. I’m not going to beat him once and get away with it. I’ve got to beat him twice, unless it’s just a…blowout for me. You know, that’s the only way that it’s not going to happen. But if I go out there and knock him out in the first round, there’s going to be GSP [vs. Hendricks] II.  

If Hendricks follows through and upsets St-Pierre, UFC president Dana White will find himself staring at a pot-bellied cash cow. Hendricks, who was born in Oklahoma and trains in nearby Dallas, Texas, has already expressed interest in holding a potential rematch at Jerry Jones’ AT&T Stadium (home of the Dallas Cowboys and the world’s largest epileptic nightmare). 

In the history of American-hosted UFC events, Dallas drew the second-highest attendance with 17,428 spectators at UFC 103: Franklin vs. Belfort (2009). The recently renovated AT&T Stadium seats 80,000 ticket holders. 

Texans clearly like their cage fights.

If White signed off on a grudge match that pinned a would-be local champion against a future legend, connecting the dots makes out a paycheck that could dwarf the overhead screen. 

 

Thank Brett for not ending with an “Everything is bigger in Texas” pun by following him on Twitter:

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Heated Jon Jones Changes Tone: “It’s Personal Now Gustafsson, Let’s Play”

Sticks and stones may break his bones, but words will never hurt Jon Jones, unless they allude to breaking his will or taking his soul.
In several heated Twitter posts, the reigning light heavyweight champion put an end to the playful banter with upcom…

Sticks and stones may break his bones, but words will never hurt Jon Jones, unless they allude to breaking his will or taking his soul.

In several heated Twitter posts, the reigning light heavyweight champion put an end to the playful banter with upcoming UFC 165 opponent Alexander Gustafsson. According to Jones, the fight is now personal:

 

Them’s fighting words!

The rivalry between the two light heavyweights has been relatively low-key up until this point. If anything, some minor war of words should make things a little easier on the UFC’s promotional team.

Both Jones and Gustafsson typically stay away from unnecessary trash talk and disparaging remarks. So far, the UFC’s only marketing angle has been based around the fact that Gustafsson is the first light heavyweight to match Jones in size. The recently released UFC 165 poster is testament to that.

Jones, who is currently shining like Leroy Green from “The Last Dragon,” is a win away from breaking UFC Hall of Famer Tito Ortiz’s record for most successful light heavyweight title defenses. The UFC also recently listed him as the top pound-for-pound fighter in the world.

Initially, there was some concern that Jones wasn’t taking the fight with Gustafsson seriously after he released a pre-camp picture of himself overweight and out of shape. Most of this talk was quelled by the fact that Jones typically balloons up in between camps, and he was still nursing the gruesome toe injury he suffered against Chael Sonnen in April.

Jones appears completely fixated on defeating Gustafsson and proving his placement as the best in the world.

If anything, the alleged comments made by Gustafsson’s coach just added fuel to an already raging fire.

 

Jordy McElroy is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon Worldwide. 

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UFC, Bellator Continue Olympic Fight for Wrestling, Albeit from a Distance

As the September vote for Olympic inclusion nears, all three sports under consideration—baseball/softball, squash and wrestling—are sure to pull out their heavy guns showing how global and progressive they are. Squash has dropped courts in …

As the September vote for Olympic inclusion nears, all three sports under consideration—baseball/softball, squash and wrestling—are sure to pull out their heavy guns showing how global and progressive they are.

Squash has dropped courts in front of some of the world’s greatest tourist attractions to show its portability; softball points toward more global inclusion and baseball mentions large crowds for youth events in Asia; and wrestling has gone back to host events in Ancient Greece, Grand Central Station, Niagara Falls and a massive venue in the American Midwest, all the while playing to its progressive rule changes and ever-growing social media presence.

But the one element baseball may lack—the support of Major League Baseball to suspend its season a la the NHL to let the best players play—is the element of support wrestling has in many ways: the media presence and support of professional Mixed Martial Arts to help propel the message forward.

That many of MMA’s biggest stars come from wrestling backgrounds—wrestlers who competed in the Beijing Games are 36-0 in MMA thus far—is quietly welcomed by wrestling but kept at a distance in most cases. Some members of the International Olympic Committee may feel that MMA, which is a hybrid sport that includes not just wrestling, but other Olympic disciplines like boxing and even tae kwon do in addition to jiu-jitsu, is too violent to be considered for Olympic inclusion.

So wrestling welcomes the support of its former stars on large stages like the UFC and Bellator, but still maintains its neutrality toward overt support from The Octagon.

“It is an interesting mix for wrestling for sure,” said Chris Lencheski, CEO of Comcast-owned Front Row Marketing Services and a longtime Olympic marketer. “Here you have arguably the fastest rising sport that draws a string young male demo in MMA, but it remains a sport that in some cultures is seen as too violent and is not welcomed by many international sport organizations.

“However, if it weren’t for elite wrestling and its stars, MMA may not even exist,” he added. “So wrestling has to enjoy the support that the UFC and Bellator and others have provided but do so quietly and respectfully for all involved, and thus far they seem to be doing it right.”

How fervent has the MMA support for wrestling been? UFC title holder Chris Weidman sports a USA Wrestling tattoo below his shoulder, while many UFC favorites have entered the Octagon wearing “Save Olympic Wrestling” T-shirts. Bellator last week staged a wrestling clinic in New Mexico for hundreds of kids with MMA champion Frank Shamrock leading the way, along with elite wrestlers Joe Warren and Greg Jackson.  

Spike TV, longtime supporter and partner in MMA, first with the UFC and now with Bellator, even went so far as to create a compelling TV spot with a call to action in support of wrestling, using not just elite former wrestlers and MMA stars like Rampage Jackson and Randy Couture, but professional wrestling icon Hulk Hogan and even Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, imploring viewers to take to social media and cast a vote for wrestling going back in the Games.

The spot has been so popular that it is running across a host of Viacom properties in addition to Spike’s MMA and TNA programming.

“I come from Pennsylvania so I get how popular wrestling is and how passionate its followers are because of the life lessons learned in the sport,” Lencheski added. “So the support wrestling is getting, without even asking from its loyal supporters is not surprising. It will be interesting to see where it all goes not just with the vote, but how wrestling, if they do get back in, can use this support to help grow its footprint even more as a brand globally, in addition to the States.”

But for now, wrestling will keep its cards close to its vest and, like the other sports, work the back rooms of the IOC to plead its case quietly and respectfully. Quiet is certainly not a tactic that MMA is usually known for, and its loud support is going to be valuable to wrestling after the vote.

Silent respect and quiet gratitude are more the norm as one of the world’s original, and now progressive, Olympic sports preps for its last hurdle—the September vote in Buenos Aires that could return wrestling front and center to the Games it has been a part of for centuries, with some added marketing mojo now prepped and ready to help even more.

Jerry Milani is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report. All quotes were obtained firsthand unless noted.

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Dana White UFC on Fox Sports 1 Video Blog

The UFC will kick off its Fox Sports 1 tenure Aug. 17 with UFC Fight Night 26: Shogun vs. Sonnen. It isn’t fight week just yet, but UFC president Dana White is clearly looking forward to the event and has begun pumping out his video blogs a bit early t…

The UFC will kick off its Fox Sports 1 tenure Aug. 17 with UFC Fight Night 26: Shogun vs. Sonnen. It isn’t fight week just yet, but UFC president Dana White is clearly looking forward to the event and has begun pumping out his video blogs a bit early this time around.

Because we are still a fair ways away from UFC Fight Night 26, White’s first entry doesn’t focus too heavily on the upcoming event. Yes, there is a little “sickest live free fight card on free TV ever seen” chatter at the outset, but the majority of the video is actually a behind the scenes look at UFC 162: Silva vs. Weidman.

As per usual, White’s video blog grants us a closer look at the things we don’t see during broadcasts. In this case, that includes fighters preparing to enter the Octagon, fighters returning backstage from either victory or defeat and Bruce Buffer dispensing advice on how to overcome a raspy voice.

It’s an interesting glimpse at the focus and concentration demanded prior to a fight and the frustration (Chris Leben wasn’t pleased with Andrew Craig’s game plan) pain (Rafaello Oliveira was carried from the Octagon after taking too many leg-kicks from Edson Barboza) and jubilation (Chris Weidman was pretty darn happy about becoming the middleweight champion) that comes afterwards.

So while the “UFC on Fox Sports 1 Video Blog” is a bit of a misnomer because the episode is mainly about UFC 162, it’s worth a watch anyway. 

And if you’re more interested in looking forward rather than back and are disappointed that the entry doesn’t feature UFC Fight Night 26 more heavily, be patient—White promises more entries are to follow.

Given how solid the Aug. 17 card looks from bottom to top, there will certainly be much to discuss in the next 10 days or so leading up to the event.

We’ll get you those videos as the UFC releases them.

 

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