Jose Aldo and Chad Mendes Have Heated Staredown, Aldo Shoves Mendes at Media Day

Apparently, shoving your opponent during a staredown is the new trend among UFC fighters. 
Less than one month after Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier’s infamous brawl at the UFC 178 media day in Las Vegas, UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo invaded Cha…

Apparently, shoving your opponent during a staredown is the new trend among UFC fighters. 

Less than one month after Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier’s infamous brawl at the UFC 178 media day in Las Vegas, UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo invaded Chad Mendes‘ personal space with a forceful shove inside the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro ahead of their UFC 179 rematch. 

MMA Fighting was on scene to capture the action. 

While Aldo knocked out Mendes with a brutal knee during their first matchup at UFC 142, this rematch contains plenty of intrigue, shoving matches or not. Almost three years have passed since the first scrap, and Mendes has looked better than ever during that stretch, posting a remarkable 5-0 record with four stoppages. 

On top of that, Mendes‘ teammate, T.J. Dillashaw, recently obliterated Aldo’s teammate and former bantamweight champion Renan Barao via TKO at UFC 173 to steal the 135-pound strap. Prior to that fight, Barao had looked untouchable, and Dillashaw dismantled him in every way. 

While Aldo has looked incredibly dominant throughout his six-fight run with the UFC, his performances have been slowly declining. He’s still unquestionably the best featherweight on earth, but during the same stretch of time, Mendes went 5-0 with four finishes while Aldo went 3-0 with just one finish. Even in that lone victory inside the distancea fourth-round TKO of “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung—Aldo looked less dominant than usual, finishing the job only after Jung suffered a serious shoulder injury and was forced to fight with only one effective arm. 

Add in the slowly building rivalry between Team Alpha Male (home to Mendes and Dillashaw) and Nova Uniao (home to Aldo and Barao) as well as this latest scuffle between Aldo and Mendes at the UFC 179 media day, and the upcoming rematch on Oct. 25 is suddenly a can’t-miss event.

What do you make of the shove? Is Mendes in Aldo’s head, or is Aldo simply hyping the fight to sell some more tickets for his boss? 

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Jose Aldo vs. Chad Mendes 2 Re-Booked for UFC 179, October 25th in Rio


(“Damn it, Chad. I told you the dress code was business casual.” / Photo via Getty)

Nearly three years after their first meeting, UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo and top contender Chad Mendes will get another chance to settle the age-old debate: “Who’s the real pussy?” UFC president Dana White confirmed Saturday night that their “postponed” featherweight title fight has been re-scheduled to headline UFC 179, October 25th in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.

If you’ll recall, Aldo and Mendes were set for a rematch at UFC 176 in Los Angeles this coming weekend, but Aldo suffered a cervical spine injury in training, which led to the euthanization of that event. Now, Mendes has to face Aldo in Rio again — the same town where Aldo KO’d him in front of a very supportive crowd at UFC 142 back in January 2012. Kind of a bummer for Mendes.

No other fights for UFC 179 have been confirmed yet. The pay-per-view event will be held at the 12,000+ capacity Ginásio do Maracanãzinho, not the larger HSBC Arena, where the UFC’s four previous Rio PPVs were held. It’s unclear whether the Kings of Leon had anything to do with the venue change, although it should be mentioned that Aldo vs. Mendes 1 reportedly had the smallest paid attendance for an HSBC show (10,605).

We’ll keep you posted as the card fills up.


(“Damn it, Chad. I told you the dress code was business casual.” / Photo via Getty)

Nearly three years after their first meeting, UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo and top contender Chad Mendes will get another chance to settle the age-old debate: “Who’s the real pussy?” UFC president Dana White confirmed Saturday night that their “postponed” featherweight title fight has been re-scheduled to headline UFC 179, October 25th in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.

If you’ll recall, Aldo and Mendes were set for a rematch at UFC 176 in Los Angeles this coming weekend, but Aldo suffered a cervical spine injury in training, which led to the euthanization of that event. Now, Mendes has to face Aldo in Rio again — the same town where Aldo KO’d him in front of a very supportive crowd at UFC 142 back in January 2012. Kind of a bummer for Mendes.

No other fights for UFC 179 have been confirmed yet. The pay-per-view event will be held at the 12,000+ capacity Ginásio do Maracanãzinho, not the larger HSBC Arena, where the UFC’s four previous Rio PPVs were held. It’s unclear whether the Kings of Leon had anything to do with the venue change, although it should be mentioned that Aldo vs. Mendes 1 reportedly had the smallest paid attendance for an HSBC show (10,605).

We’ll keep you posted as the card fills up.

Jose Aldo and Chad Mendes Rematch Set for Brazil

Chad Mendes hopes the second time will be the charm when he travels to enemy territory once again to take on UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo.
UFC President Dana White spilled the beans on the featherweight title scrap on Saturday night during the UFC…

Chad Mendes hopes the second time will be the charm when he travels to enemy territory once again to take on UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo.

UFC President Dana White spilled the beans on the featherweight title scrap on Saturday night during the UFC on Fox 12 post-fight press conference. The rematch between Aldo and Mendes will now take place at UFC 179 on October 25 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“[Jose Aldo vs. Chad Mendes] is the fight [to headline the Brazil card],” White confirmed. “I’m probably going to get murdered for this. Brazil is going to call up screaming and yelling at me that I blew their big whatever. So there you go. I gave you something tonight before I left.”

Aldo and Mendes were originally slated to headline the UFC 176 pay-per-view card on August 2, but the bout was postponed after Aldo withdrew due to a neck injury. Subsequently, the entire fight card was scrapped after losing the main event bout.

Not only will this be a rematch, but it will also mark the second time Mendes has fought Aldo in Brazil. The reigning UFC champ landed a highlight-reel, first-round knockout over Mendes back in January 2012, becoming the first and only man to hand the Team Alpha Male standout a loss.

Since teaming up with muay thai coach Duane Ludwig, the improvements in Mendes’ striking have been like the difference between day and night. He is currently riding a five-fight win streak, with four of those victories coming by knockout.

Meanwhile, Aldo has continued to cement his legacy as an all-time great and one of the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world. Since defeating Mendes, he has gone on to successfully defend his title against Frankie Edgar, Chan Sung Jung and Ricardo Lamas.

The ever-growing beef between Aldo and Mendes should make for a good storyline heading into the event.

During a recent appearance on The MMA Hour, Mendes hinted at the idea that Aldo was trying to avoid a fight with him. Aldo quickly responded in an open letter to Brazilian outlet Combate.com (h/t MMAjunkie) by accusing Mendes of being a possible “supplement” abuser.

If all goes according to plan, the talking will finally cease on October 25 when the cage door closes and the top two featherweights in the world battle once more.

 

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

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Is a Rivalry Brewing Between Nova Uniao and Team Alpha Male?

Most MMA fans, no matter the age, get the opportunity to gaze upon a genuine rivalry between two elite fighters in their lifetime. They square off back and forth, split victories and keep fans hungry.
That’s like winning $15 on a $1 scratcher fro…

Most MMA fans, no matter the age, get the opportunity to gaze upon a genuine rivalry between two elite fighters in their lifetime. They square off back and forth, split victories and keep fans hungry.

That’s like winning $15 on a $1 scratcher from the gas station across the street.

Few fight fans ever get the opportunity to be witness to two of the best fight camps in the world—stocked to the brim with elite fighters—showcasing a similar rivalry.

That’s like landing the rich girl, or guy, who’s light-years out of your league.

MMA fans can rejoice, though, for you’ve all landed your wealthy partner who’s as capable of picking up the check as getting past all your insecurities and emotional baggage.

That partner can otherwise be referred to as the rivalry that’s brewing between Rio de Janeiro’s Nova Uniao and Sacramento’s Team Alpha Male.

Just in case you’re unaware, read on for a bit of a history lesson.

 

The Featherweights 

It’s difficult to pinpoint the exact origin to the rivalry, but it’s safe to assume that Jose Aldo’s victory over Urijah Faber at WEC 48 in 2010 played a big role in getting things going.

Nova Uniao’s Aldo, who at the time was riding a nine-fight winning streak, had just captured the WEC featherweight crown in 2009—a title once held by Team Alpha Male’s Faber.

After an unsuccessful attempt at regaining his title against Mike Brown—the man who would dethrone Faber but lose to Aldo—The California Kid got another crack at the belt.

Unable to defend against Aldo’s vicious leg kicks, Faber was forced to exit the cage with bad bruising on his legs and no belt on his waist.

Aldo would go on to take his winning streak even further, capturing eight more victories en route to becoming the first ever UFC featherweight champion and most dominant man to ever step inside any cage at 145 pounds.

Faber wouldn’t be the last Team Alpha Male member to try to knock Aldo off the mountain and end his dominant reign—a then-undefeated Chad Mendes tried his luck against the dominant Brazilian before taking a vicious knee to the face in the first round of their title fight at UFC 142 in 2012.

Mendes was out cold and Aldo would take his championship record to an undefeated 2-0 against the Sacramento-based team.

Two years later, and Aldo still sits on his throne while Mendes has knocked out four out of his last five victims upon earning a second chance at Aldo’s strap. They haven’t been so cordial this time around.

From volleying performance-enhancing drug allegations back and forth at each other to Mendes questioning the champion’s durability as a fighter, it’s evident these two men have thrown respect out the window.

Mendes first spoke with Sherdog Radio in response to Aldo calling him a “pu–y” (h/t MMAFighting.com) for the PED accusation:

This is huge for me. This is huge for me getting in there and taking that belt from him. I’ve never seen him talk like this about anybody. He’s being very disrespectful. I’ve never been caught red-handed or anything. It’s funny to me that as soon as the whole random drug testing started popping up, the next day he is injured and out of the fight. If anything, I could throw that in his face, but whatever.

  

The Bantamweights 

After realizing he could no longer compete with the bigger, stronger fighters the 145-pound division had to offer, Faber made his way down to bantamweight.

He would go on to lose his first chance at UFC bantamweight gold when he came out on the bad end of a close, but unanimous, decision to then-champion Dominick Cruz.

Faber’s next chance at the title came against a rising, dominant bantamweight star in Nova Uniao’s Renan Barao.

Barao was riding a 28-fight winning streak and Faber was fresh off a dominant submission victory against Brian Bowles.

Faber’s fight against Barao went much like his last fight against a Nova Uniao fighter—he was left battered. A broken rib suffered early on inside the Octagon would prevent Faber from seeing his hand raised and leaving with UFC gold.

Three submissions in four wins in 2013 would place Faber back inside the cage against Barao, who was now seeking to defend his bantamweight belt for the third time.

The sequel would be nothing like the original—but that didn’t mean it would end well for Faber this time, either. Barao dominated Faber on the feet, stunning him and knocking him down twice before a premature stoppage from referee Herb Dean at UFC 169. He was 0-3 in title fights against Nova Uniao.

With seemingly nobody left to challenge Barao’s 32-fight winning streak, the UFC green-lit a bout between Barao and TJ Dillashaw—the latest Team Alpha Male member to get an opportunity at UFC glory.

With just one fighta loss, at thatagainst a ranked bantamweight opponent, many (including this author) believed Dillashaw was merely the next body for Barao to dispose of. 

He was supposed to be No. 33.

He was inexperienced. He was unproven. He was vulnerable.

It didn’t matter.

It took one round and a jaw-dropping knockdown to silence all the critics—Dillashaw, at the very least, belonged inside the cage with the champion. It took four-and-a-half rounds of complete and utter domination to prove he was the better fighter and the rightful heir to the bantamweight throne.

Team Alpha Male finally had a UFC champion to call its own.

Once an invincible, dominant, pound-for-pound beast, Barao now stands where Dillashaw once did—an undeserving title contender. Really, it wasn’t even close enough to give the greatest of champions an immediate rematch.

So, here we stand.

Bloody Elbow indicates Barao was the latest to take part in a Duane Ludwig striking seminar, and Mendes is finally under Aldo’s skin. If all that history isn’t enough to validate this rivalry, you might want to dust off your dictionary.

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.

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Chad Mendes Thinks Jose Aldo ‘Definitely’ Using Performance-Enhancing Drugs

Top UFC featherweight title contender Chad Mendes continues to wage a war of words with current champion Jose Aldo as he awaits his second crack at championship gold. 
During an appearance on Monday’s edition of Sherdog Radio Network’s “Beatdown” …

Top UFC featherweight title contender Chad Mendes continues to wage a war of words with current champion Jose Aldo as he awaits his second crack at championship gold. 

During an appearance on Monday’s edition of Sherdog Radio Network’s “Beatdown” show, “Money” came close to flat-out calling Aldo a user of performance-enhancing drugs, questioning the timing of his recent injury. 

“I feel like this happens to me a lot, like I have a curse or something. It sucks,” Mendes said about UFC 176 being cancelled. “I definitely do [think Aldo’s using PEDs]. This is something that’s been ongoing, but for him to all of a sudden just drop out — I mean he drops out of a lot of fights — but I think it’s pretty coincidental.”

UFC 176 was called off after “Scarface” withdrew from the main event, a rematch with Mendes, due to a shoulder/neck injury. 

Mendes, who has scored five straight victories (four of which came via knockout), was less than thrilled about the turn of events and almost immediately accused Aldo of ducking him, per MMA Fighting

That’s when this feud took a turn for the worse, at least as far as verbal warfare goes. 

In an interview with Brazilian media outlet Combate (translation per MMA Fighting), the Brazilian titleholder uncharacteristically lost his cool and called his American counterpart a “p—y” who doesn’t get hurt in training due to a unique choice of “supplements.”

Mendes gushed about the champ’s comments on the “Beatdown” show, stating that he’s “in his head” since he lost his temper.

For the record, neither Aldo nor Mendes has failed a drug test in a combined 42 professional fights. 

Obviously, that hasn’t prevented either competitor from slinging bold accusations as they await a rematch, which could potentially take place in October. 

Aldo and Mendes first met at UFC 142, where the versatile Brazilian striker scored a Round 1 knockout when he landed a big knee to the jaw of Mendes. 

Mendes’ claims that Aldo is consistently injured aren’t without merit: The Team Nova Uniao standout has fought three times since January 2012. 

With all this back-and-forth trash talk, is Aldo vs. Mendes II quickly becoming one of the most anticipated rematches in recent memory?

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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Weekend Round-up: Aldo Accuses Mendes of Steroid Use, A Fighter is Out of UFC on FOX 12, and More


(Angry Jose Aldo looks identical to Happy Jose Aldo)

It’s been a rare, event-less weekend. Despite the lack of fisticuffs, Saturday and Sunday have been packed with quite a bit of mid-level news and fight booking house-keeping matters.

The biggest recent news has been a spat between Jose Aldo and Chad Mendes. As you’ve likely heard, an Aldo injury forced “postponement” [Ed’s note: LOL] of UFC 176.

Mendes took Aldo to task over this on the MMA Hour, saying:

If Aldo can’t stay healthy and is too fragile to go through a training camp, then I think it is time to step aside and let guys who are able to do that and able to push through all that stuff, to be a champ.

To put it bluntly, Aldo was fucking pissed. He told Combate (translation via MMA Fighting):

Maybe I have so many injuries because I’m not taking the same ‘supplements’ you take. I have injuries because I train a lot to beat you like I did last time, and I think you remember that and still have nightmares about it. I did all the medical exams I had to do, but if you’re a doctor now, I can send them so you can take a look. Maybe you can prescript one of your supplements so I can heal faster.

The one who gets beat up usually runs away from another beating, but you can’t run forever because I’m going after you. Before the cage is closed you can say whatever you want, because once they close it you won’t be able to open your mouth, so keep talking while you have a mouth. And who are you to say where we are going to fight? I don’t think Dana White would be happy to see someone making his decisions.

You’re the one who seems to only fight at your home, who desperately doesn’t want to fight in Brazil. I got injured before and my fight with Frankie Edgar was moved from Brazil to Las Vegas. I fought your coach in your home, fought at Mark Hominick’s home in front of 55,000 fans, I fought in Japan and Europe. And now you tell me you want to be the champion? A champion doesn’t choose opponents or where the fight is going to be. And now I ask you, who’s the real pussy?

Harsh words from a harsh man.

In other UFC news…


(Angry Jose Aldo looks identical to Happy Jose Aldo)

It’s been a rare, event-less weekend. Despite the lack of fisticuffs, Saturday and Sunday have been packed with quite a bit of mid-level news and fight booking house-keeping matters.

The biggest recent news has been a spat between Jose Aldo and Chad Mendes. As you’ve likely heard, an Aldo injury forced “postponement” [Ed’s note: LOL] of UFC 176.

Mendes took Aldo to task over this on the MMA Hour, saying:

If Aldo can’t stay healthy and is too fragile to go through a training camp, then I think it is time to step aside and let guys who are able to do that and able to push through all that stuff, to be a champ.

To put it bluntly, Aldo was fucking pissed. He told Combate (translation via MMA Fighting):

Maybe I have so many injuries because I’m not taking the same ‘supplements’ you take. I have injuries because I train a lot to beat you like I did last time, and I think you remember that and still have nightmares about it. I did all the medical exams I had to do, but if you’re a doctor now, I can send them so you can take a look. Maybe you can prescript one of your supplements so I can heal faster.

The one who gets beat up usually runs away from another beating, but you can’t run forever because I’m going after you. Before the cage is closed you can say whatever you want, because once they close it you won’t be able to open your mouth, so keep talking while you have a mouth. And who are you to say where we are going to fight? I don’t think Dana White would be happy to see someone making his decisions.

You’re the one who seems to only fight at your home, who desperately doesn’t want to fight in Brazil. I got injured before and my fight with Frankie Edgar was moved from Brazil to Las Vegas. I fought your coach in your home, fought at Mark Hominick’s home in front of 55,000 fans, I fought in Japan and Europe. And now you tell me you want to be the champion? A champion doesn’t choose opponents or where the fight is going to be. And now I ask you, who’s the real pussy?

Harsh words from a harsh man.

In other UFC news:

Michael Johnson is out of his UFC on FOX 12 bout with Josh Thompson due to injury. This is a shame as the two were expected to curtain-jerk the main card and it would’ve been quite an exciting affair. Let’s hope the main event of Robbie Lawler vs. Matt Brown stays intact.

Now, some news on the B-level circuit:

Bellator 123 has a new fight. Pat Curran will defend his featherweight title against Patricio “Pitbull” Freire. This is a fine enough main event for a normal Bellator card. The problem is  this isn’t a normal Bellator card. This is the one that’s going head-to-head with a UFC Fight Night Card headlined by Gegard Mousasi and Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza. If Pitbull-Curran is the best Bellator’s got, they’re going to be slaughtered.

World Series of Fighting, too, has some title news. Lightweight champion Justin Gaethje–who recently defeated Nick Newell at WSOF 11–will defend his title against Melvin Guillard. No date has been announced.  We’re amped up for this one. Gaethje is quite talented, and Guillard looked fantastic in his last fight against Gesias Cavalcante.

That’s all for now, Potato Nation. We suggest you make the best of what’s left of your Sunday.