Derrick Lewis Issues Stern Warning To Daniel Cormier Before UFC 230

Derrick Lewis claims he will be at 100 percent for November’s UFC 230, and he warns heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier to take him seriously. Lewis is fresh off a remarkable come-from-behind knockout victory over Alexander Volkov at UFC 229. That fight was not even two weeks ago. Regardless, “The Black Beast” will step right into the […]

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Derrick Lewis claims he will be at 100 percent for November’s UFC 230, and he warns heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier to take him seriously.

Lewis is fresh off a remarkable come-from-behind knockout victory over Alexander Volkov at UFC 229. That fight was not even two weeks ago.

Regardless, “The Black Beast” will step right into the main event of UFC 230 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. And although Lewis may still have some swelling on his face from the war with Volkov, he promises to be in the best shape of his life.

Lewis’ Health

“I will be 100 percent going into this fight,” Lewis today said at a UFC 230 media event in Las Vegas via MMAjunkie. “I went to the doctor and got cleared. Everything checked out pretty good. They basically said I was good to fight.”

Lewis very well may be in peak physical condition come November 3, but can “DC” show up in the same shape?

Cormier has been dealing with a lingering hand injury that he suffered back at UFC 226 when he defeated Stipe Miocic. The performance earned “DC” the heavyweight title but may have caused some lasting damage.

Lewis thinks “DC” may be taking him lightly or underestimating him. For that, “The Black Beast” has a stern warning for the champ-champ.

“The Black Beast’s” Warning

“I believe he’s thinking this is going to be an easy fight for himself,” Lewis said. “Go ahead and think that. It’s crazy I even made it this far without he training I put in before each and every fight. I’m serious, I don’t stay in the gym each day like my opponents. I spend probably 30 minutes (training), five minutes sitting and five minutes on my phone posting memes and stuff.

“I go into every fight with a bad back and overweight and a damn-near diabetic. It doesn’t matter to me that he’s coming into a fight with just a bad hand. That’s good for him, then.”

The 33-year-old Lewis is a most unlikely title challenger. Don’t His record speaks for itself, as winning nine of 10 fights in the heavyweight division is unheard of. However, it is Lewis’ personality that has fast-tracked his title hopes.

But even Lewis agrees Miocic should’ve been next in line for a title shot.

“It’s just one (opportunity) that I can’t pass up because I know there’s a lot of guys in this division that probably deserve a shot more than I’m getting,” Lewis said. “I probably don’t deserve a shot more than Stipe, should have probably got the shot. But, ain’t no telling when the next time I’m going to get this opportunity, so I had to jump on it anyway.”

In the past, Lewis has been open about his lackluster performances, admitting he slacked in preparation for some of his past fights. Lewis has also stated he needed more cardio training before a title shot, but a shot at Cormier was too good to pass up.

But according to “The Black Beast” he is pushing himself to new limits ahead of the biggest fight of his career.

An Honest Assessment

“As long as I’m 100 percent, I’m in good shape. I don’t care what he’s going to do or what he thinks he can do,” Lewis said. “I’m just going to worry about what I can do. … If you don’t take me serious, it’s a mistake. I want him to take me serious, I don’t want no excuses or nothing like that. I can’t wait for that fight.”

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MMA Legend ‘Totally Understands’ Khabib’s Post-UFC 229 Attack

One notable MMA figure understands why Khabib Nurmagomedov jumped the Octagon at UFC 229 to attack McGregor cornerman Dillon Danis.

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Things got way out of hand after UFC 229 earlier this month (Sat. October 6, 2018).

UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov successfully defended his title against Conor McGregor. “The Eagle” submitted the Irishman via fourth-round neck crank. After the fight, however, madness erupted. Khabib, who was allegedly heckled by McGregor cornerman Dillon Danis, hopped the Octagon and went after the jiu-jitsu specialist.

They began to brawl outside the Octagon, sparking another melee inside the cage. A few of Khabib’s teammates entered the cage and attacked McGregor. “The Notorious” ate a few sucker punches before the commission was able to get the situation under control. Both McGregor and Khabib are facing complaints from the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC).

Many people are pointing the finger at Khabib for losing his composure and sparking the entire ordeal by hopping the cage. However, many are also failing to realize the verbal onslaught he had to endure from McGregor in the lead-up to the contest.

McGregor insulted Khabib’s country, family, and religion. Danis’ alleged antics were apparently the straw that broke the camel’s back. Speaking to Submission Radio recently, mixed martial arts (MMA) legend Bas Rutten offered his thoughts on the matter.

The palm-striking maestro admitted that the incident should’ve never happened, however, he did understand where Khabib was coming from:

“Okay, first, let’s say this, it shouldn’t have happened, it’s wrong. I know that it’s all wrong. It should not have happened, I’m not for it. Not at all. But I can totally get it, right? We’re all human. He’s been taking insults for the last six weeks, two months, every day. Every day he decided not to say anything back.

“Yeah, a little here and there, but you know what it is? That’s a drop in a bucket, and it keeps on going and it keeps on going and it keeps on going. And after the fight, finally, the fight is over, they’re finally unloading, and then the coach for McGregor starts saying something to him. That was the drop that made the bucket flow, and he just lost it at that moment.”

Rutten claimed at that point, all of the bad blood McGregor had built with his insults came out in a kind of physical manifestation. “El Guapo” said even the most stoic of men like Khabib could not hold that down anymore:

“Then, everything came back – all the insults about his family, about his religion, about his country. You know, there’s a lot of things (Conor said). And everybody says the same thing, but people go, ‘come on, Bas, you can understand it?’ I say, you can’t understand that? Of course I can understand. Everybody’s human.

“What, he’s a machine? He doesn’t get effected by it? If somebody talks about my family and my religion and my culture, ‘oh, these stupid people from Holland,’ and it’s constantly going, and ‘your friends are terrorists,’ and it just keeps on digging, eventually, yeah, you’re going to hit a snare somewhere.”

Rutten reinforced his belief that the melee should never have happened. He wanted people to remember, however, that McGregor did something similar before UFC 223, so his fans should maybe lighten up in Khabib.

Overall, the all-time MMA legend knows the two will have to face the music from the NSAC:

“And then when the moment presents itself and they keep on going after it, yeah, I can completely understand it. Should it have ever happened? Of course not, I’m not for it. I’m not saying it’s good. Absolutely not. But I can understand it happened. That’s the only thing I’m saying. Well, I said the same thing when Conor went wrong (at UFC 223), right?

“I said, the fans of Conor should give him a break. I mean, we all do stupid stuff, I said at the time. But he’s gonna have to pay for what he does, of course. He needs to go to the athletic commission, and whatever fine it is, well, he’s gonna have to pay that. For sure.”

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UFC Rankings Update: “Eagle” Soars On Pound-For-Pound List

The official UFC rankings have been updated after last weekend’s (Sat., October 6, 2018) UFC 229 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. Obviously, the biggest impact was made by UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov. ‘The Eagle’ submitted former champion Conor McGregor via fourth-round neck crank (watch full highlights here) in his first title […]

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The official UFC rankings have been updated after last weekend’s (Sat., October 6, 2018) UFC 229 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Obviously, the biggest impact was made by UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov. ‘The Eagle’ submitted former champion Conor McGregor via fourth-round neck crank (watch full highlights here) in his first title defense.

For his historic effort, Nurmagomedov rose eight full spots on the pound-for-pound list to No. 2. The undefeated wrestler only trails heavyweight and light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier for the top spot in the UFC as a result. McGregor fell the same six spots down to No. 8 at pound-for-pound. He also fell to No. 2 at lightweight. Tony Ferguson overtook him thanks to his thrilling TKO win over Anthony Pettis.

However, all of that could change pending the results of Khabib and McGregor’s complaints from NSAC. The fighters engaged in one of the most chaotic brawls in MMA history. It began when Khabib leaped into the crowd to assault McGregor’s teammate Dillon Danis. McGregor’s coach John Kavanagh recently revealed what Danis did to set Nurmagomedov off.

Three of Khabib’s teammates assaulted McGregor and were arrested. They will not face charges, however, after McGregor declined to press them. But the NSAC was not so lenient on ‘The Eagle.’ They withheld his sizable $2,000,000 purse for the fight. It is possible he could be stripped of the belt as well. UFC President Dana White recently offered his thoughts on his champ’s upcoming punishment. Nurmagomedov’s official ranking could be changing soon as a result.

But for now, ‘The Eagle’ is flying high.

Check out the fully updated UFC rankings from UFC.com here.

Official UFC Rankings:

POUND-FOR-POUND
1 Daniel Cormier
2 Khabib Nurmagomedov +6
3 TJ Dillashaw
4 Max Holloway
5 Georges St-Pierre
6 Tyron Woodley
7 Demetrious Johnson
8 Conor McGregor -6
9 Stipe Miocic
9 Henry Cejudo +2
11 Cris Cyborg -1
12 Robert Whittaker
13 Tony Ferguson
14 Amanda Nunes
15 Rose Namajunas

FLYWEIGHT
Champion : Henry Cejudo
1 Demetrious Johnson
2 Jussier Formiga +3
3 Sergio Pettis -1
4 Joseph Benavidez -1
5 Ray Borg -1
6 Deiveson Figueiredo
7 John Moraga
8 Wilson Reis
9 Dustin Ortiz
10 Alexandre Pantoja
11 Brandon Moreno
12 Ben Nguyen
13 Tim Elliott
14 Matheus Nicolau
15 Ulka Sasaki

BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion : TJ Dillashaw
1 Cody Garbrandt
2 Dominick Cruz
3 Raphael Assuncao
4 Marlon Moraes
5 Jimmie Rivera
6 John Lineker
7 Aljamain Sterling
8 John Dodson
9 Pedro Munhoz
10 Cody Stamann
11 Rob Font
12 Alejandro Perez
13 Thomas Almeida
14 Douglas Silva de Andrade
15 Rani Yahya

FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion : Max Holloway
1 Brian Ortega
2 Jose Aldo
3 Frankie Edgar
4 Renato Moicano
5 Chad Mendes
6 Jeremy Stephens
7 Cub Swanson
8 Josh Emmett
8 Mirsad Bektic
10 Chan Sung Jung
11 Alexander Volkanovski
12 Ricardo Lamas
13 Darren Elkins
14 Zabit Magomedsharipov
15 Yair Rodriguez

LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion : Khabib Nurmagomedov
1 Tony Ferguson +1
2 Conor McGregor -1
3 Dustin Poirier
4 Eddie Alvarez
5 Kevin Lee
6 Edson Barboza
7 Justin Gaethje
8 Anthony Pettis
9 Al Iaquinta
10 Nate Diaz
11 Michael Chiesa
12 James Vick
13 Alexander Hernandez
14 Dan Hooker
15 Francisco Trinaldo

WELTERWEIGHT
Champion : Tyron Woodley
1 Colby Covington (Interim Champion)
2 Darren Till
3 Rafael Dos Anjos
4 Stephen Thompson
5 Robbie Lawler
6 Kamaru Usman
7 Demian Maia
8 Neil Magny
9 Jorge Masvidal
10 Santiago Ponzinibbio
11 Leon Edwards
12 Donald Cerrone
13 Alex Oliveira
14 Gunnar Nelson
15 Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos

MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion : Robert Whittaker
1 Yoel Romero
2 Luke Rockhold
3 Chris Weidman
4 Kelvin Gastelum
5 Jacare Souza
6 Derek Brunson
7 David Branch
8 Paulo Costa
9 Israel Adesanya
10 Brad Tavares
11 Antonio Carlos Junior
12 Uriah Hall
13 Elias Theodorou
14 Krzysztof Jotko
15 Thiago Santos *NR

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion : Daniel Cormier
1 Alexander Gustafsson
2 Volkan Oezdemir
3 Jan Blachowicz
4 Ilir Latifi
5 Jimi Manuwa
6 Dominick Reyes +6
7 Corey Anderson -1
8 Glover Teixeira
9 Ovince Saint Preux -2
10 Anthony Smith -1
11 Misha Cirkunov -1
12 Mauricio Rua -1
13 Nikita Krylov +1
14 Patrick Cummins -1
15 Tyson Pedro

HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion : Daniel Cormier
1 Stipe Miocic
2 Derrick Lewis
3 Curtis Blaydes
4 Francis Ngannou
5 Alexander Volkov
6 Alistair Overeem
7 Junior Dos Santos
8 Aleksei Oleinik
9 Marcin Tybura
10 Mark Hunt
11 Tai Tuivasa
12 Shamil Abdurakhimov
13 Andrei Arlovski
14 Stefan Struve
15 Justin Willis

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT
Champion : Rose Namajunas
1 Joanna Jedrzejczyk
2 Jessica Andrade
3 Claudia Gadelha
4 Tatiana Suarez
5 Karolina Kowalkiewicz
6 Tecia Torres
7 Michelle Waterson +1
8 Carla Esparza -1
9 Felice Herrig
10 Cortney Casey
11 Nina Ansaroff
12 Alexa Grasso
13 Randa Markos
14 Angela Hill
15 Mackenzie Dern

WOMEN’S FLYWEIGHT
1 Valentina Shevchenko
2 Nicco Montano
3 Katlyn Chookagian
4 Sijara Eubanks
5 Alexis Davis
6 Liz Carmouche
7 Roxanne Modafferi
8 Lauren Murphy
9 Jessica Eye
10 Jessica-Rose Clark
11 Ashlee Evans-Smith
12 Joanne Calderwood
13 Mara Romero Borella
14 Jennifer Maia
15 Andrea Lee

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion : Amanda Nunes
1 Holly Holm
2 Ketlen Vieira
3 Julianna Pena
4 Raquel Pennington
5 Germaine de Randamie
6 Cat Zingano
7 Aspen Ladd +2
7 Marion Reneau
9 Sara McMann -1
10 Yana Kunitskaya *NR
11 Bethe Correia -1
12 Irene Aldana -1
13 Lucie Pudilova
14 Lina Lansberg -2
15 Tonya Evinger *NR

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UFC 229 Brawl Proves Why MMA Will Never Be Mainstream

We’ve had almost a full day to digest the bizzare UFC 229 brawl following the Khabib vs. McGregor main event from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The scene was both equal parts riveting entertainment and a shocking setback for the sport of mixed martial arts. On one hand, the primal emotion of undefeated champion […]

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We’ve had almost a full day to digest the bizzare UFC 229 brawl following the Khabib vs. McGregor main event from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The scene was both equal parts riveting entertainment and a shocking setback for the sport of mixed martial arts. On one hand, the primal emotion of undefeated champion Khabib’s disdain for McGregor came out in explosive fashion. He submitted his greatest enemy following a dominant performance. The win not only put him on top of the MMA world but did so in front of countless eyes, many of which may rarely watch fighting.

The drama should result in a rematch unlike any we’ve ever seen in the sport as well. It will be even bigger than McGregor vs. Diaz. That’s saying a lot, yet it should happen. McGregor already wants it and no way the UFC turns him down. They probably should not.

The Lasting Effect

Khabib ended the bad blood and drama of McGregor’s infamous bus attack in Brooklyn, New York this April. But only seconds after he did, he then incited a wildfire on par with that public drama. Perhaps it will be even more dramatic in the end.

Khabib not only muddied his victory, but he did something that is much, much more lasting as a result. Sure, Khabib may be stripped of his title, he will be fined, and his friends who jumped into the Octagon may have their visas taken.

Yet the wild scene after MMA’s biggest fight of all-time may have proven that mixed martial arts will simply never be a mainstream sport.

A Different Kind Of Sport

It’s too visceral. That’s part of its attraction to many and the main cause of its lack of attraction for many more. Yes, Khabib’s pent-up aggression after months of having a silver-tongued wordsmith like McGregor insult his family, country, religion, and management came out in one fury. He unleashed that on McGregor’s teammate and training partner Dillion Danis.

The final repercussions are yet to be unveiled, and it will be some time before the truly lasting ones are.

The black eye on MMA remains. The champion’s behavior in a spot where he should have been basking in historic accomplishment is unreal. Khabib’s anger at McGregor and his team after so much insult is understandable. That does not make his actions right.

I’ve seen many arguing that what McGregor did in New York is a bad or worse as the brawl. I disagree. McGregor’s melee was unnecessary and terrible for sure, but he committed the act in the basement of an arena after the UFC 223 media day was over. He was also arrested for it.

Khabib caused an all-out melee of his own, live on pay-per-view, when the biggest UFC audience ever was watching. He also was not arrested. McGregor’s attack ultimately may have been more dangerous, yet Khabib’s received exponentially more live exposure.

A true pro, the air of which Khabib gave off throughout McGregor’s never-ending insult in the lead-up, would not have made that leap into the crowd. He won the fight and should have been celebrating that win.

Overcoming Stereotypes

Brawls like this have painted the sport in a bad light before. The glaring example of the Strikeforce: Nashville brawl between the Diaz brothers and Jason “Mayhem” Miller comes to mind. That fight was aired on CBS – major network television – and was seen by millions like UFC 229 was. MMA has not been on CBS since. Public spectacles like that and the UFC 229 brawl take years to recover from in terms of P.R. standpoint.

A fringe sport like MMA already has a pre-attached stigma to overcome because of its inherent bloodlust and violence.

So while the UFC laughably bragged of “world f**king domination” during their vast expansion plans of the last several years, it won’t be elbowing up next to soccer, football, baseball, or basketball anytime soon. Imagine Lionel Messi, Aaron Rodgers, or Lebron James jumping into a brawl to fight one of their rivals’ teammates who was talking trash.

It wouldn’t happen. Yes, it probably cannot be stated enough how understandable Khabib’s anger at McGregor and his team is. As the undefeated champion who just came out victorious in the biggest UFC fight ever, you simply have to swallow that pride like the superstars of other more mainstream sports would.

MMA showed its youth and emotion as a sport in the form of the UFC 229 brawl last night. The pinnacle of fighting simply can’t be acting like that on its grandest stage.

And that is why MMA will never be a mainstream sport.

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NSAC Withholding Khabib’s Purse For UFC 229 Brawl

The repercussions for Khabib Nurmagomedov’s post-fight brawl after the main event of last night’s (Sat., October 6, 2018) UFC 229 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, are already beginning to appear. Khabib won the fight via neck crank submission in the fourth frame (watch full highlights here). The undefeated champion incited all-out war when he […]

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The repercussions for Khabib Nurmagomedov’s post-fight brawl after the main event of last night’s (Sat., October 6, 2018) UFC 229 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, are already beginning to appear.

Khabib won the fight via neck crank submission in the fourth frame (watch full highlights here). The undefeated champion incited all-out war when he jumped out of the cage to fight McGregor’s cornerman Dillon Danis. He even threw a flying stomp kick at him. What followed can only be described as the biggest post-fight scuffle in UFC history. Three of Khabib’s teammates jumped in and hit McGregor with a few sucker-punches.

UFC President Dana White first voiced his disgust at the fight. He then detailed that Khabib’s teammates had been arrested. White even claimed they may lose their visas and not be able to fight in the States any longer. That was lifted when news arrived McGregor would not press charges.

Khabib’s teammates may be out of the woods in terms of actual criminal charges. But the dominant UFC lightweight ruler could be facing some very significant punishments of his own. It’s reportedly so serious that White revealed at the UFC 229 post-fight presser that the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC) has withheld Khabib’s $2,000,000 purse for the fight pending their investigation:

“The Nevada State Athletic Commission pulled the footage from us. There’s an investigation going on. They are withholding Khabib’s purse. They are not withholding Conor McGregor’s They looked at the footage and felt that there was no need to withhold his purse, so they gave him his and they’re holding Khabib’s.”

Dana White’s View Of The Chaos

White then dove into further detail about his view of the attack. He confirmed this was far from what the UFC wanted in this situation. UFC 229 was their biggest event ever, and everything had gone off so easily until that point. Maybe too easily, White said. Either way, he affirmed that the UFC had taken all precautions in terms of security:

“I can promise you, this is not what a mixed martial arts event is normally like. And, uh, you know, when you have such an amazing event that we’ve worked hard to build over the last several months and it goes perfect. I mean, literally, it was too eerie, I kept saying this is too crazy, man. Everybody made weight, everything’s so smooth, this and that. Took all the right precautions. Those of you have been to many events, you’ve never seen this many Metro police officers.”

White was then questioned if the UFC 229 post-main event brawl was actually a good thing for the UFC. True, it may put a temporary black eye on the UFC’s rep, but talk of a rematch was already sizzling amongst fight fans.

The outspoken exec claimed it was not what the UFC wanted no matter if it lead to a rematch:

“It’s definitely not a good thing, and maybe I’m taking it harder than most people would because this is not who we are, not what we do. You guys know. You’ve been a million events, man, a million events. This ain’t like a Red Sox-Yankees game, you know? Believe me, I’ve been to some Red Sox-Yankees game that’ll scare the s**t out of everybody.

“This is not what we’re about. This isn’t what we do, this isn’t how we fact. and, it’s unfortunate that the night the most people are watching, this s**tshow goes on that happened.”

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‘Rampage’ Wants Back In Bellator Heavyweight Grand Prix

Following his TKO stoppage of Wanderlei Silva at Bellator 206 (highlights here), Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson wants back in the Heavyweight Grand Prix. Jackson and Silva entertained the crowd in attendance last night (Sept. 29, 2018) at the SAP Center in San Jose, California, for the duration of their co-main event match-up. Although both fighters are […]

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Following his TKO stoppage of Wanderlei Silva at Bellator 206 (highlights here), Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson wants back in the Heavyweight Grand Prix.

Jackson and Silva entertained the crowd in attendance last night (Sept. 29, 2018) at the SAP Center in San Jose, California, for the duration of their co-main event match-up. Although both fighters are obviously past their primes and fighting well above their ideal weight, Jackson and Silva managed to engage in some decent action.

Riding high off his TKO victory over Silva, Ramage now wants back in the Heavyweight Grand Prix.

Rampage Wants Back In

When asked if he could serve as a possible back up in the tournament, Jackson cracked a smile at Bellator President Scott Coker and said:

“I’m very disappointed that I lost in that tournament,” Jackson (38-13 MMA, 5-2 BMMA) said. “No disrespect to Chael (Sonnen), because honestly, I’ve been thinking about that. It really bothered me.”

“I know you guys don’t know me that well, what type of person I am, what type of mind I got, but it really bothers me that Chael outsmarted me.”

When preparing for Sonnen, Jackson revealed he spent much of his time wrestling, in preparation for “The American Gangster.”

Hindsight is always 20/20, and Rampage now believes he has the right game plan to beat Sonnen. Now he just needs back in the Grand Prix:

“He outsmarted me by standing up with me,” Jackson said. “And that’s my type of fight. I like standing up with a mother f*ck*r. I’m a f*ck*ng wrestler, but I like standing up. Chael outsmarted me. I was disappointed, I thought I was going to win that tournament. I thought I was going to take everybody.”

“So yeah, I’m going to stay in shape. If somebody gets hurt, I want back in. But if anything, I want the winner of the tournament. I want the heavyweight belt.”

It’s unclear what the immediate future holds for Jackson. Coker didn’t seem too enthused at the prospect of opening up yet another tournament alternate.

Besides, that designation in theory already belongs to Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson who advanced by default as his would-be opponent Mirko Cro Cop was forced out with an injury.

Roy Nelson & Twitter

Still, after Jackson’s stoppage of Silva, Nelson teased on Twitter that he would next fight ‘Rampage.’

“What?! His fat ass called me out on Twitter? I will f*ck Roy Nelson’s fat ass up,” Jackson blurted after hearing about Nelson’s message.

Jackson & Sonnen’s bet

Jackson then directed his attention back toward Sonnen, and he proceeded to clarify their much-publicized bet.

“I owe Chael 30 grand. The reason why I haven’t given Chael the money yet is because he never put nothing up, so it wasn’t really solidified.”

“What do I get, mother f*ck*r if I block all your takedowns? I blocked every takedown except for those f*ck*ng weak-ass trips he got me with.”

“I’m a man of my mother f*ck*ng word. But he never put nothing up. What good is a one way mother f*ck*ng bet? I’m not going to lie. I want to give him 30 grand, but you know what I did? I went to the strip club three times, and I spent 10 (thousand) each. So there was Chael’s mother f*ck*ng 30 grand. I put some strippers through college.”

Let us know what you think. Should Rampage be allowed back in the Heavyweight Grand Prix? Or will he still be relegated to the senior leagues?

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