Dana White to Jon Jones: Alexander Gustafsson Is the No. 1 Contender

UFC President Dana White is sticking to his guns in his belief that light heavyweight champion Jon Jones should  rematch Alexander Gustafsson in his next Octagon encounter. 
Speaking to Rick Wright of The Albuquerque Journal, the UFC’s head h…

UFC President Dana White is sticking to his guns in his belief that light heavyweight champion Jon Jones should  rematch Alexander Gustafsson in his next Octagon encounter. 

Speaking to Rick Wright of The Albuquerque Journal, the UFC’s head honcho said that even top contender Daniel Cormier agrees that a second fight with The Mauler should be next on tap for Jones:

Gustafsson’s next in line. Even Cormier said, ‘Listen, I hope this whole things works out for me and I get the shot, but even I believe that Gustafsson deserves the next shot.’ (Gustafsson is) the No. 1 contender, he’s waited for this rematch and (Cormier) even agrees. … 

You’re the champion, you’re the pound-for-pound best guy in the world, and he says he wants to be known as the best ever. Well, you don’t turn down opponents, you know what I mean?

In a quickly deleted Instagram post yesterday which predictably found its way to YouTube, Bones stated that he was more interested in fighting Cormier, an undefeated (15-0) former Olympian. 

Furthermore, he has already beaten Gustafsson, so he doesn’t seem to see what the fuss is about there. 

The overwhelming majority of fight fans beg to differ, though, as Jones and Gustafsson put on a phenomenal five-round classic at UFC 165 in September, where the champ was bloodied and beaten to the point where he needed a hospital visit afterward. 

While many felt the challenger, who took plenty of stiff shots of his own, had done enough to unseat the seemingly unstoppable Jones, all three judges agreed that the champ did enough to earn a close decision victory. 

The 27-year-old Greg Jackson-trained MMA standout last fought at UFC 172 in April, easily outgunning Brazilian slugger Glover Teixeira in a one-sided five-round affair.  

Jones, the top pound-for-pound fighter in the UFC’s official rankings, is currently riding an 11-fight win streak (eight finishes) and holds the UFC record with six consecutive light heavyweight title defenses.

Meanwhile, Cormier has offered to fight Gustafsson for an interim title if Jones opts to wait on the sidelines. 

Will Jones sign up for a rematch with Gustafsson sometime soon, or will he continue to wait it out until a deal to square off with Cormier is on the table?

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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Wednesday Links: Fedor Doesn’t Like Women Competing in MMA, Dana White Insists Jon Jones Will Fight Gustafsson, ‘Game of Thrones’ Strongman Deadlifts 994 Pounds + More

(If Jones vs. Gustafssson 2 actually ends like this, I swear to God, I will order Fight Pass. / Props: BinaryMasta via r/MMA)

Fedor Emelianenko Believes Women Should Be Feminine and Not Fight in MMA (BleacherReport)

Dana White’s Answer to Jon Jones: ‘Gustafsson’s Next in Line’ (MMAFighting)

UFC: Ultimate Fighter Brazil Finale Sets New Low Ratings Mark for Nationally Televised Cards (BloodyElbow)

“Fighters’ World Tour” Promising UFC Stars Revealed to Be a Scam (MMAPayout)

Fernanda Hernandes Heats up the Octagon (BabesofMMA)

Dusty Exner Writes Open Letter to Her Childhood Bully, UFC Fighter Kajan Johnson; Johnson Apologizes in Long Letter, Exner Forgives Him, And the Whole Thing Is Kind of Heartwarming (trailerparkdusty)

VIDEO: The Mountain From ‘Game of Thrones’ Deadlifts 994 Pounds (Break)

Disgusting Video of Justin Bieber Singing Racist Parody of His Own Song Leaks (PopHangover)

Wisconsin Teens Claim They Stabbed Friend To Please Slenderman (EscapistMagazine)

Do You Even Lift, President Obama? (Guyism)

‘Watch Dogs’ Walkthrough (Gamefront)

36 Sexy Girls With Tan Lines (Radass)


(If Jones vs. Gustafssson 2 actually ends like this, I swear to God, I will order Fight Pass. / Props: BinaryMasta via r/MMA)

Fedor Emelianenko Believes Women Should Be Feminine and Not Fight in MMA (BleacherReport)

Dana White’s Answer to Jon Jones: ‘Gustafsson’s Next in Line’ (MMAFighting)

UFC: Ultimate Fighter Brazil Finale Sets New Low Ratings Mark for Nationally Televised Cards (BloodyElbow)

“Fighters’ World Tour” Promising UFC Stars Revealed to Be a Scam (MMAPayout)

Fernanda Hernandes Heats up the Octagon (BabesofMMA)

Dusty Exner Writes Open Letter to Her Childhood Bully, UFC Fighter Kajan Johnson; Johnson Apologizes in Long Letter, Exner Forgives Him, And the Whole Thing Is Kind of Heartwarming (trailerparkdusty)

VIDEO: The Mountain From ‘Game of Thrones’ Deadlifts 994 Pounds (Break)

Disgusting Video of Justin Bieber Singing Racist Parody of His Own Song Leaks (PopHangover)

Wisconsin Teens Claim They Stabbed Friend To Please Slenderman (EscapistMagazine)

Do You Even Lift, President Obama? (Guyism)

‘Watch Dogs’ Walkthrough (Gamefront)

36 Sexy Girls With Tan Lines (Radass)

Jon Jones’s Latest Video Greeting to His Haters: ‘It’s My Career, Not Yours’

(I like his little laugh at the end. Solid heel-move.)

Just as we friggin’ predicted, UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones shot a quick Instagram video responding to all the jackass fans who have accused him of “ducking” Alexander Gustafsson, simply because he’d rather fight Daniel Cormier in his next belt defense. And then, just like last time, he quickly took the video down. (Luckily, BleacherReport spotted this existing copy on YouTube.)

Basically, Jones feels that his request to fight an undefeated former Olympic wrestler and Strikeforce champion doesn’t exactly make him a coward, and hey, it’s his career anyway so STFU. All good points. And honestly, going after the fans is a pretty good idea as well if Bones is really trying to build himself up as a villain figure. As our own Matt Saccaro put it, “Jon Jones should be posting dozens more hate videos directed at fans, not deleting them.”

Your thoughts? Any idea why Jon looks so squinty?


(I like his little laugh at the end. Solid heel-move.)

Just as we friggin’ predicted, UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones shot a quick Instagram video responding to all the jackass fans who have accused him of “ducking” Alexander Gustafsson, simply because he’d rather fight Daniel Cormier in his next belt defense. And then, just like last time, he quickly took the video down. (Luckily, BleacherReport spotted this existing copy on YouTube.)

Basically, Jones feels that his request to fight an undefeated former Olympic wrestler and Strikeforce champion doesn’t exactly make him a coward, and hey, it’s his career anyway so STFU. All good points. And honestly, going after the fans is a pretty good idea as well if Bones is really trying to build himself up as a villain figure. As our own Matt Saccaro put it, “Jon Jones should be posting dozens more hate videos directed at fans, not deleting them.”

Your thoughts? Any idea why Jon looks so squinty?

Jon Jones Criticizes Haters on Instagram, Then Tries to Delete the Video

Jon “Bones” Jones has gone full heel.A lot has been made about how the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion is “ducking” a rematch with Alexander Gustafsson. Gustafsson gave Bones one of the hardest fights of his life in September 2013, leaving the …

Jon “Bones” Jones has gone full heel.

A lot has been made about how the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion is “ducking” a rematch with Alexander Gustafsson. Gustafsson gave Bones one of the hardest fights of his life in September 2013, leaving the champion battered and bruised. Bones won in a very controversial unanimous decision, and a rematch has been expected and anticipated ever since.

Yet here we are, with no date set and no contract signed.

Naturally, fans have been quick to accuse Jones of “ducking,” and they may be right. Jones, however, responds to that claim in the above video. Saying that he wants a match against the rapidly ascending Daniel Cormier, he does not feel that the ducking argument holds water. 

His response isn’t exactly kind, either.

Note: Jones deleted the video on his Instagram account shortly after posting.

[Jon Jones]

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Fans Deserve to See Jon Jones Fight Alexander Gustafsson, Daniel Cormier

At just 26 years old, Jon Jones is the greatest fighter on the planet.
Some, including this author, might say that the reigning light heavyweight champion has placed Anderson Silva and Fedor Emelianenko in his rear-view mirror, effectively becoming the…

At just 26 years old, Jon Jones is the greatest fighter on the planet.

Some, including this author, might say that the reigning light heavyweight champion has placed Anderson Silva and Fedor Emelianenko in his rear-view mirror, effectively becoming the greatest fighter the world has ever seen.

Being the pound-for-pound best doesn’t come without widespread, sometimes well-deserved criticism, though.

Whether it’s refusing to fight Chael Sonnen on short notice, being arrested for DWI or declining to sign a fight contract that would ensure a sequel to one of the greatest fights in the history of the light heavyweight championship, he’s long been a target of fans’ ire.

The first was questionable. The second was inexcusable. The third is unacceptable. 

Fans of Jon Jones deserve more.

Spin it however you’d like, but there’s reason for boxing diehards to disregard Floyd Mayweather Jr. as the greatest fighter to ever live. A perfect record and impenetrable defense is great and all, but many will ceaselessly question why a bout between Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao never came to fruition. 

Color it a dispute over revenue. Call it a clash over performance-enhancing drugs. Know it as a shame—MMA fans cannot let Jones make the same career-defining mistake.

Without a genuine statement from Jones, there’s no real way of understanding what’s preventing him from signing on for the rematch with Alexander Gustafsson. Some have speculated that he wants more money. Dana White has stated that Jones would rather fight Daniel Cormier instead. On his Facebook accountGustafsson has gone as far as to claim Jones was “running” from him.

Jon ‘Bones’ Jones, be a man, be a champ and sign that bout agreement and stop running. Keep in mind that after I beat you and become the champ I might be doing the same for you when you chase me for a rematch, as a revenge for not accepting my challenge. Sooner or later you will have to face me, just make it sooner! The fans want this fight, UFC wants this fight and I want this fight, and I damn deserve it.

Impatient with the champ’s reluctance to defend his strap, Cormier, the UFC’s No. 2-ranked light heavyweight, has opened himself up to a fight with Gustafssona fight that would determine the UFC interim light heavyweight champion. 

Cormier could lose his perfect record, and Gustafsson could lose that near-invincible aura he developed since going on a tear back in 2010this fight wouldn’t be a good idea.

Jones should fight both because he’s the best to ever be, and some still don’t believe it.

Decisive victories against Gustafsson, the only man who fought him five rounds en route to a questionable decision, and Cormier, another man who many consider to be the only one who could consistently put Jones on his back, would cement his legacy and silence all the naysayers. 

So, please, Jon, sign the contract and continue on your ascendance to unforeseen heightsyour fans deserve it.

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UFC’s Public Attempts at Humiliating Jon Jones Could Backfire in a Big Way

If there is one thing we know about UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, it’s that we don’t know anything.
Even among those of us who have spent a considerable amount of time in his presence, Jones remains a mystery. You get the sense that this is…

If there is one thing we know about UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, it’s that we don’t know anything.

Even among those of us who have spent a considerable amount of time in his presence, Jones remains a mystery. You get the sense that this is partially by design. Jones often expresses his desire to be a role model and a type of human bridge between the dark area where mixed martial arts still resides and the glorious mainstream. But so much of him is unknowable, and he keeps the public he often seems to be courting off-balance through a never-ending series of contrary actions and statements.

We do know one thing about Jones: He is an athlete unlike any before him in mixed martial arts. From a skill perspective, he may already be the greatest fighter in the history of mixed martial arts. His record is littered with the carcasses of former champions and top contenders, most of whom were dispatched with ease and sometimes with haste. The two men generally considered contenders for the mantle of “greatest ever” are Anderson Silva and Fedor Emelianenko; neither can boast the quality of across-the-board opposition Jones has faced and defeated.

We also know Jones is a businessman. Fighters come from all sorts of backgrounds, but the one thing most of them have in common is that they fight because they have some sort of issue in their past that needed to be worked out, and they discovered that violence was as good a way as any to alleviate anger. As a general rule, people who decide to physically fight another human being in a cage probably had something broken inside them at one point or another; they may have resolved those issues years ago and come to a place of professionalism, but the decision to fight is usually not made out of financial peace and mental well-being.

For Jones, this is not the case. He was brought up in a happy home with loving parents and two brothers with whom he remains close today. Jones began fighting purely out of a financial need to do so.

It wasn’t anger that drove Jones to the cage. It was money, at first, and then it was greatness.

Jones wanted to be the best fighter in the history of the sport, and he set about doing so in methodical fashion. He treated his career as a profession, not as a hobby that he got paid for doing. He loved the art of mixed martial arts, a love instilled in him by Greg Jackson and Brandon Gibson and others who have given him a sense of peace and self that is almost completely unrecognizable in prize fighting.

The monetary side of his career is treated the same way: cold, calculating and with his best interests in mind at all times. If the UFC loses an entire event because his team didn’t feel one week was enough time to prepare for a replacement opponent, well, that’s tough. Even when his boss elected to publicly castrate him—an unthinkable notion in any other line of entertainment work—Jones would stick to his guns in a way no other mixed martial artist ever has.

Jones is still sticking to his guns. Last week, the UFC took the unprecedented step of announcing a fight they’d only half-completed. They told the world that Alexander Gustafsson, the man Jones beat last fall, had signed a bout agreement for a rematch in August. All that waited, they said, was Jones’ signature on the contract. They shifted the pressure on Jones in a very public manner, much like they’d done nearly two years ago when Jones opted out of UFC 151.

The same night they made the announcement, Dana White told those of us in the media who assembled for the post-UFC 173 scrum that the holdup on Jones’ side was a new contract they were working on for the light heavyweight champion.

“We’re doing a new deal with him,” White said. In their new “Embedded” series, the UFC even showed negotiations beginning at the UFC offices with White, Lorenzo Fertitta and Wayne Harriman, a Las Vegas businessman with deep ties to both Jones and the UFC.

A week later, White’s story changed. Here’s what he told UFC.com, which is both a UFC mouthpiece and a publication White controls, essentially making this a press release disguised as an interview:

“Just to clear up a couple things, people think we’re in contract negotiations with Jon Jones – we’re not,” he said. “Jon Jones still has five fights left on his contract. So what we’re doing right now is trying to get him to sign the bout agreement for Gustafsson. He doesn’t want to fight Gustafsson. … Lorenzo and I have a meeting with Jones on Thursday to get him to sign the bout agreement, and he’s asking to fight Cormier instead.”

Perhaps people think the UFC is in negotiations with Jones on a new contract because, well, White said a week ago that the UFC was working on a new deal with Jones?

The truth is that all of this—from laying the blame for the cancellation of UFC 151, to claiming that anyone but Jones is seemingly the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, to hinting that Jones is scared to fight Gustafsson again—is a very public form of shaming. Jones is a big star and a dominant champion, and all of the negotiating power lies on his side of the table. This puts the UFC in the awkward situation of having to kowtow to his demands, and they don’t like being put in such a situation because they are used to having the power of the UFC initials being the only thing that matters.

And so White all but says Jones is scared to fight Gustafsson (even though he’s already beaten him once) and that he’d prefer to fight Cormier (who is actually a much tougher matchup for Jones) instead. And the public eats it up, because of course they do. UFC fans are a smarter group of people than they’re given credit for, but nuanced reactions are not one of their strong suits.

I don’t care if Jones fights Gustafsson or Cormier. Ideally, I’d like to see both of those fights, because I think both are neccessary bouts for Jones to overcome if he wants to be considered the greatest of all time by every single onlooker of the sport. The order in which they occur does not matter to me.

One thing I’d like to see less of, however, is the backhanded attempts at public humilation from the UFC. Jones has established himself as the greatest athlete of this generation in the UFC, and the UFC brass treats him like a coward who won’t fight the man they have determined to be the most deserving (because Gustafsson also happens to be the man who would sell the most pay-per-view buys when standing across from Jones).

Instead of celebrating his greatness, they claim he maybe isn’t as great as he thinks he is, and they do so because he isn’t easy to deal with at the negotiating table. That’s a stupid reason to continually alienate the man who might be the single best athlete to ever make his way up the UFC ranks.

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