Quote: Cain Velasquez Will Be Heavyweight Champ Again

Cain Velasquez’s return to mixed martial arts (MMA) action is on the horizon. The former UFC heavyweight king will return to the Octagon this weekend (Sat. February 17, 2019) in Phoenix, Arizona. Velasquez will share the cage with feared knockout…

Cain Velasquez’s return to mixed martial arts (MMA) action is on the horizon. The former UFC heavyweight king will return to the Octagon this weekend (Sat. February 17, 2019) in Phoenix, Arizona. Velasquez will share the cage with feared knockout artist Francis Ngannou. They’ll headline UFC on ESPN 1 from the Talking Stick Resort Arena. […]

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Dana White Believes The “Time Is Now” For Jones vs. Cormier Trilogy

UFC President Dana White believes the time is now for a trilogy fight between light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier. Jones and Cormier are currently in a position where they could very well be matched up against each other yet again. Speaking on ESPN’s “Now Or Never,” White admitted that the […]

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UFC President Dana White believes the time is now for a trilogy fight between light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier.

Jones and Cormier are currently in a position where they could very well be matched up against each other yet again. Speaking on ESPN’s “Now Or Never,” White admitted that the time is “now” for the trilogy between the two rivals on ESPN’s ‘Now Or Never’ (via BJPenn.com):

“Now,” White said “Yeah. I think that right now, Cormier probably has three fights left in his career, you know what I mean? And one of those guys is definitely going to be Jon Jones.”

“Bones” and “DC” have one of the most organic rivalries in mixed martial arts (MMA) history. As the two best light heavyweights in the world, they truly hate each other, and it shows inside the cage. They first fought back in 2015 in the main event of UFC 182. Jones bested Cormier via unanimous decision to retain his championship.

In July of 2017, Cormier defended his 205-pound championship against Jones. ‘Bones’ was returning from a United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) violation. Jones defeated Cormier via third-round head-kick knockout. Shortly after the fight, however, it was determined Jones once again violated the USADA’s anti-doping policy. As a result, he was stripped of the title, which was returned to Cormier.

The fight was ruled a No Contest. Now, Cormier is the heavyweight champion of the world, and Jones is back on top of the light heavyweight division. If Jones successfully defends his title in March, it could very well set up a final meeting between himself and Cormier.

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Watch: Sean O’Malley Surpasses Tyron Woodley’s Punching Power

Rising UFC bantamweight “Sugar” Sean O’Malley is currently set to return from injury to face Jose Quinonez at October 6’s UFC 229. He’s been out of action since March’s UFC 22, where he outlasted Andre Soukhamthath despite a badly injured foot. O’Malley has been one of the UFC’s most touted rising stars since his highly-publicized […]

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Rising UFC bantamweight “Sugar” Sean O’Malley is currently set to return from injury to face Jose Quinonez at October 6’s UFC 229.

He’s been out of action since March’s UFC 22, where he outlasted Andre Soukhamthath despite a badly injured foot. O’Malley has been one of the UFC’s most touted rising stars since his highly-publicized knockout on Dana White’s ‘Tuesday Night Contender Series’ in summer 2017.

Since then, the *********-focused O’Malley has made quite the name for himself. He’s carved out his own niche in the sport utilizing a very cannabis-friendly persona, evident by his full-on pimp getup on last night’s ‘UFC Tonight.’ O’Malley showed up with his trademark afro, shades, scarf, skinny jeans, and boots – but don’t let that fool you.

The kid can straight-up throw hands, and that became evident when he took to the show’s power-punching machine. There, O’Malley uncorked a shot so powerful that it surpassed UFC welterweight champion Tyron Woodley’s score and put him behind only heavyweights Derrick Lewis, Daniel Cormier, and Pat Barry.

Watch O’Malley’s power punch right here:

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Coach: For Jones, Cormier Will Be Easier Fight Than St. Preux

Taking a fight on short notice is never an easy thing to do, even if you are the consensus best pound-for-pound fighter in the world. So now that Jon “Bones” Jones and his coaches can rest assured they know who will be staring back across at him from the other side of the Octagon, “Team Bones”

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Taking a fight on short notice is never an easy thing to do, even if you are the consensus best pound-for-pound fighter in the world. So now that Jon “Bones” Jones and his coaches can rest assured they know who will be staring back across at him from the other side of the Octagon, “Team Bones” can enter into this championship bout, slated for UFC 200 on July 9, 2016, with the poise and confidence we’ve all become accustomed to seeing.

According to Mike Winkeljohn, Jones’ head coach at the renowned Jackson-Wink fight team, this familiar feeling of sufficient preparation is certainly going to make “Bones’” rematch with his increasingly bitter rival a much easier path to walk.

“We’ve already got the game plan put together – now it’s almost easier in some ways, because we continue working it.”

It’s hard to argue with that sentiment, seeing that Jones was still able to dominate the awkward and the oft difficult-to-prepare-for Ovince St. Preux on short notice after his original opponent, current UFC light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier, pulled out of their scheduled UFC 197 fight due to a leg injury.

“Bones” admitted that his coaches had advised against taking the bout on such short notice, and Winkeljohn in particular said “OSP” would pose some issues with his physical stature and awkward stand-up style, but that didn’t appear to be much of a problem, as Jones handled the tough, athletic former University of Tennessee Volunteers football standout with relative ease.

However, now that Jones and company can get back to their usual routine and preparation, especially for an opponent against whom “Bones” has already competed and soundly beaten, Coach “Wink” has a sneaking suspicion that this trip to the Octagon is going to be a different story than was the ill-prepared scrap with “OSP” (even if Cormier himself may not think so).

“We’ve been training for it for a while, so I think it’s going to be an easier fight [than OSP was] for Jon…Jon is going to hit him with some really, really, really hard elbows.”

Somewhere in the United States, Brandon Vera is shuddering to himself, still haunted by the devastating elbow delivered by a 22 year old soon-to-be champion that nearly cracked the entire right side of his skull.

So if “DC” has learned anything from his previous meeting with Jones, and the rest of the bodies that “Bones’” has left in his wake, he’ll spend his night inside that Octagon on July 9 with his hands up, his chin down and his head and neck as far away as humanly possible from Jones’ terrifying clinch.

But no matter what, barring any injuries or visits to the Albuquerque police station, it’s safe to say that this much anticipated rematch between the consensus top two light heavyweights in the world will not disappoint.

 

 

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Jones’ Coach: Jon Still Would Have Beaten Cormier At UFC 197

Ever since the heated few weeks preceding Jon “Bones” Jones and Daniel “DC” Cormier’s first championship tussle at UFC 182, there has been an impassioned debate over just who is the better mixed martial artist. Jones’ decisive victory, his eighth consecutive light heavyweight title defense, appeared to be enough to put the final nail in the

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Ever since the heated few weeks preceding Jon “Bones” Jones and Daniel “DC” Cormier’s first championship tussle at UFC 182, there has been an impassioned debate over just who is the better mixed martial artist. Jones’ decisive victory, his eighth consecutive light heavyweight title defense, appeared to be enough to put the final nail in the proverbial coffin of that fervent argument.

However, after numerous slip-ups outside of the cage by “Bones” and two very imposing performances by Cormier in the former champ’s absence, the debate over whom is the superior fighter slowly crept back towards a state of equilibrium.

The dispute carried on for months, with each man happily providing his two cents as to why he is the better fighter, and it all came to a sort of culmination last weekend (Sat., April 23, 2016) at UFC 197, when Jone’s fought Ovince St. Preux for the interim light heavyweight strap. Admittedly, Jones looked more mortal than he normally does in the Octagon, but he still managed to turn in a dominant five-round performance against “OSP” to secure the inherently meaningless interim title.

Though victorious, “Bones’” surprisingly ordinary performance did not go unnoticed by Cormier, who was sitting (and commentating) ringside during the main event bout.

According to “DC”, Jones’ ring rust was quite apparent, and he even went as far as to say that had he faced Jones that night, he was utterly confident that he would have sent Jones home shouldering the burden of his first legitimate pro loss, and that Jones was ‘lucky’ that he instead fought “OSP.” He was so confident that what we all witnessed was the “new Jon” that he said their newly scheduled bout at UFC 200 would be ‘light work’.

ufc 182 fight motion chris weidman

Right on cue, as expected, Jones fired back with his now-routine responses, attacking “DC’s” wrestling skills and his inability to ’embrace the grind’ in the championship rounds. But what was far more surprising was the fact that Jone’s head coach Greg Jackson, a generally reserved and seldom publicly vocal personality, voiced his own opinion in defense of Jones from Cormier’s quips.

Jon’s one of those guys that fights to the level of his competition. When the going gets tough, he gets going for sure. I’m very confident he would have won that night because he would step up to that [Cormier’s] level. He’s one of those guys if you push him really hard he will push back…For me, we’d done so much work for Daniel, I think he still would have won that night. If you push him hard, that almost wakes him up.

Not the most vehement of retorts, no, but that’s not really Jackson’s style. He tends to take the high (and silent) road and leave the coach-versus-fighter banter up to gentlemen like John Kavanagh and Rafael Cordeiro.

Nonetheless, if this is just a minute glimpse into the tornado before the storm that’s coming in the build-up leading to the main event at UFC 200, it’s safe to say that we’re in for quite an entertaining ride.

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UFC 200 Embedded Promo Tour Episode 2

“Daniel, shut up, p*ssy boy.” That’s just one of many colorful and prodding quotes from this week’s episode of Embedded: UFC 200. The second installment of the vlog series follows the top main card fighters from the upcoming blockbuster event as they make their way through the arduous media tour, making stops at “Good Morning

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“Daniel, shut up, p*ssy boy.”

That’s just one of many colorful and prodding quotes from this week’s episode of Embedded: UFC 200.

The second installment of the vlog series follows the top main card fighters from the upcoming blockbuster event as they make their way through the arduous media tour, making stops at “Good Morning America” and a UFC press conference in the Big Apple.

The video features behind-the-scenes footage of the fighters preparing for media events, bickering back-and–forth, and throwing out their opening gambits for the inevitable pre-fight mental warfare that each set of combatants will obligingly take part in.

Check out the second episode of the official vlog series here:

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