Quick Quote of the Day: Jose Aldo Would Fight a Teammate If It Made Dollars and Cents


(Photographic proof of how the UFC contributed to  Aldo’s injury. That’s a slam dunk insurance claim right there.)

With the UFC featherweight title picture out of focus until champ Jose Aldo heals from a nagging shoulder injury, a question that was recently brought up was what happens if Diego Nunes beats Kenny Florian Saturday night at UFC 131? Surely, he won’t fight a teammate, since that’s a faux pas in Brazil, right?

Think again.

According to Aldo’s longtime trainer and Nova Uniao founder Andre Pederneiras, “Everyone from Nova Uniao knows that if they have to fight against each other, they will.”


(Photographic proof of how the UFC contributed to  Aldo’s injury. That’s a slam dunk insurance claim right there.)

With the UFC featherweight title picture out of focus until champ Jose Aldo heals from a nagging shoulder injury, a question that was recently brought up was what happens if Diego Nunes beats Kenny Florian Saturday night at UFC 131? Surely, he won’t fight a teammate, since that’s a faux pas in Brazil, right?

Think again.

According to Aldo’s longtime trainer and Nova Uniao founder Andre Pederneiras, “Everyone from Nova Uniao knows that if they have to fight against each other, they will.”

It’s no secret that the UFC has given Florian his fair share of title shots and that his recent move to 145 was likely prompted by a promise of a future crack at UFC featherweight gold, but Aldo says he shouldn’t sleep on an undefeated prospect like Nunes.

“I believe Diego will defeat Kenny Florian,” Aldo told Sherdog recently. “Diego is well-prepared. He has ‘blood in his eyes’ for that fight and he’s ready to reach the top of the division. He has enough talent to fight for the title.”

As far as facing Nunes in the future if he still holds the strap, Aldo says it’s a possibility if the UFC makes it worth their while.

“If that [title fight] happens with us, we’ll sit and talk to see how we deal with that,” Aldo explains. “I don’t know if I would fight him. It depends more on our agents and on [Nova Uniao leader] Andre Pederneiras. If the UFC wants to see that, they’ll have to pay real good money.”

The fighter who has next dibs on Aldo could miss out on the opportunity if he loses the bout he took in the meantime against submission wiz Rani Yahya.

Not satisfied with sitting on the sidelines waiting for Aldo to heal up, Chad Mendes chose instead to face Yahya at UFC 133 in August. Although his recent 1-2 skid doesn’t show it, Yahya is a dangerous fighter having beaten the likes of Mike Brown, Mark Hominick and Eddie Wineland.

Aldo says he isn’t exactly sure why Mendes took the high-risk fight, but noted he’s rooting for his fellow countryman in Philadelphia.

“I don’t know exactly what Chad’s thing was. He was set to be my next challenger, and I understand his decision not to wait for me. We didn’t sign anything, so he was free,” explained Aldo. “I believe it will be a huge fight, but as a Brazilian, I will cheer for Rani.”

After aggravating the lingering shoulder injury in training, Aldo took the advice of his doctor who told him that rest would be the best medicine for the wonky joint and has stayed out of the gym. He anticipates a return to training in the next two to three weeks.

“My recovery is going great,” Aldo affirmed. “I haven’t done anything but physical therapy for the last four weeks and I’m really looking forward to training again. I miss it a lot. Next week, my doctors and physiotherapists will talk to me and probably release me. Obviously I won’t return at 100 percent. I’ll maybe need around two more weeks to be completely recovered and training hard.”

Kenny Florian on Cut to Featherweight: ‘I’ve Never Felt Better’

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia — MMA Fighting spoke to Kenny Florian on Wednesday about featherweight debut at UFC 131 against Diego Nunes, why he is moving to 145 pounds, how difficult the cut has been for him, fighting in Vancouver when his hometown Boston Bruins are playing the Canucks in the Stanley Cup Finals and his recent Twitter argument with Quinton Rampage Jackson after Jackson took exception with something Florian said on MMA Live.

 

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia — MMA Fighting spoke to Kenny Florian on Wednesday about featherweight debut at UFC 131 against Diego Nunes, why he is moving to 145 pounds, how difficult the cut has been for him, fighting in Vancouver when his hometown Boston Bruins are playing the Canucks in the Stanley Cup Finals and his recent Twitter argument with Quinton Rampage Jackson after Jackson took exception with something Florian said on MMA Live.

 

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UFC 131: Another Class for Kenny Florian to Explore; Featherweight Title Hopes

Kenny “KenFlo” Florian will be fighting in yet another division at UFC 131, as he makes his Featherweight debut against Diego Nunes.Florian has shown that he’s a world-class fighter, and that he can do it in four weight classes.We all remember when Flo…

Kenny “KenFlo” Florian will be fighting in yet another division at UFC 131, as he makes his Featherweight debut against Diego Nunes.

Florian has shown that he’s a world-class fighter, and that he can do it in four weight classes.

We all remember when Florian was part of the first season of The Ultimate Fighter, fighting as a middleweight, but he went on to lose to Diego Sanchez in the finale.

The drop from middleweight to welterweight was a given, middleweight wasn’t his ideal class and he only fought there in order to join the show.

At welterweight, Florian looked impressive, defeating Alex Karalexis and Kit Cope before the lightweight division was reinstated into the UFC.

Florian handily beat Sam Stout in the first round of their fight with a rear-naked choke, which earned him a shot at the then-vacant UFC Lightweight title.

He lost that bout to Sean Sherk, and was forced to start over from scratch. Florian eventually clawed his way back to earn another title shot, never losing his outspoken identity.

Florian’s comments usually revolved around the manner in which he finished his fights. Few of his fights ever went to the scorecard, and he finished five of six (four by submission) during his climb back into contention. Florian finally earned a shot at then-Lightweight champion B.J. Penn at UFC 101.

Florian’s climb back up ended in disappointment, as he was choked out in the fourth round by Penn. Florian, yet again, came out disappointed after a title fight.

After two straight wins over Clay Guida and Takanori Gomi, Florian came up against Gray Maynard at UFC 118.  In the time leading up to this bout, Frankie Edgar became the new Lightweight Champion, and Maynard was poised for a rematch with the champion, a man he had already defeated.

That motivation, it seemed, propelled Maynard to push the pace a bit more, and it worked.  Florian fell in yet another lightweight bout, and Maynard became the new No. 1 contender.

UFC 131 will mark another new beginning for Florian, and with UFC President Dana White claiming he has a title shot against Jose Aldo in his future (if he can beat Nunes) Florian may have found a new home in the UFC’s Featherweight division.

Florian has fought almost all the contenders at lightweight, so this change may be a good thing.

He can fight his way up to the Featherweight belt and hold on to it for dear life, and he’ll have plenty of top contenders to fight in the coming years with all the fighters coming over from the WEC.

Guys like Mark Hominick, The Ultimate Fighter Season 2 champion Joe Stevenson, The Ultimate Fighter Season 5 finalist Manny Gamburyan, Chad Mendes, Josh Grispi and a host of others provide plenty of talent in the division, and with Florian in the mix, the Featherweight division should be must-see TV for years to come.

What do you think?

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Wednesday Morning MMA Link Club

(Legal Disclaimer: Actual Bud Light contest winners will not be nearly as attractive as the people featured in this commercial. Props: officialbudlight)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere. E-mail [email protected] for details on how your site can join the MMA Link Club…

– Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza to Defend Strikeforce Title Against Luke Rockhold (5thRound)

– UFC 131 Tickets ‘Cannibalized’ by Vancouver Canucks NHL Finals Run and More (MMA Mania)

– Shane Carwin on Dos Santos: I’m Going to Knock Him Out or Tap Him Out and Feel No Remorse For It (LowKick)

– UFC 131 ‘Dos Santos vs. Carwin’ Pre-Fight Interview: Kenny Florian (MMA Convert)

– The 13 Strangest Fighting Styles to Ever Grace UFC’s Octagon (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

– Five Lessons: ‘TUF 13’ (NBC Sports MMA)

– Downes, Cope, and Kingsbury Top TUF 13 Finale Medical Suspensions (Five Ounces of Pain)

– Fight Journal: ‘Mayhem’ Miller Edition (MMA Fighting)

– Now You Can Watch Hector Lombard Give Joe Doerksen a Harry Potter Scar (MiddleEasy)

– “Combate Extremo” CEO Michael Shoffner talks about MMA in Mexico (TheFightNerd)


(Legal Disclaimer: Actual Bud Light contest winners will not be nearly as attractive as the people featured in this commercial. Props: officialbudlight)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere. E-mail [email protected] for details on how your site can join the MMA Link Club…

– Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza to Defend Strikeforce Title Against Luke Rockhold (5thRound)

– UFC 131 Tickets ‘Cannibalized’ by Vancouver Canucks NHL Finals Run and More (MMA Mania)

– Shane Carwin on Dos Santos: I’m Going to Knock Him Out or Tap Him Out and Feel No Remorse For It (LowKick)

– UFC 131 ‘Dos Santos vs. Carwin’ Pre-Fight Interview: Kenny Florian (MMA Convert)

– The 13 Strangest Fighting Styles to Ever Grace UFC’s Octagon (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

– Five Lessons: ‘TUF 13′ (NBC Sports MMA)

– Downes, Cope, and Kingsbury Top TUF 13 Finale Medical Suspensions (Five Ounces of Pain)

– Fight Journal: ‘Mayhem’ Miller Edition (MMA Fighting)

– Now You Can Watch Hector Lombard Give Joe Doerksen a Harry Potter Scar (MiddleEasy)

– “Combate Extremo” CEO Michael Shoffner talks about MMA in Mexico (TheFightNerd)

UFC 131 Fight Card: What If Diego Nunes Beats Kenny Florian?

Mixed Martial Arts is unpredictable to where sometimes the most unfathomable of events can become a reality, but some people forget that anything and everything can and will happen in this sport.Maybe we’re convinced that fights are going to go a certa…

Mixed Martial Arts is unpredictable to where sometimes the most unfathomable of events can become a reality, but some people forget that anything and everything can and will happen in this sport.

Maybe we’re convinced that fights are going to go a certain way, maybe we just like one guy more than the other, and maybe we’re just going by the name recognition when we pick, but for some reason, we sometimes find ourselves judging certain fights before they happen.

Case in point: Kenny “KenFlo” Florian’s UFC 131 Featherweight bout against Diego “The Gun” Nunes.

Florian is not the Jaime Jara of the lighter weights–he’s not the first (and so far, only) man in MMA history to have won titles in four divisions, nor does he have any sick tattoos or the Stone Cold Steve Austin-like stare in his eyes or a reputation in Gladiator Challenge.

Florian is merely the first person in the UFC to have fought in four divisions, and all to get his hands on one UFC title.

Perhaps that’s the reason why he’s such a heavy favorite to not only defeat, but make convincingly short work of Nunes–because many feel his Jiu-Jitsu, Boxing, and Muay Thai will look its best at the Featherweight level.

However, what if Diego Nunes not only wins against Florian, but beats him decisively?

Does a win put him in the upper echelon, or anywhere close to the top of the heap at 145 pounds?

Well, perhaps, but Florian is untested at 145 and a win may not affect his position, but it could alter Nunes’ rank simply because it’s Florian.

What it does mean is that while Nunes might be perceived as untested, it also means that Nunes has been tested against a qualified fighter–qualified in the sense of his ability to put Nunes in legitimate danger.

Florian is untested at 145, but as an overall fighter, Florian is no joke.

He’s a TUF 1 veteran who has fought at 185, 170, 155, and now 145–and he has proven himself to be a legitimate threat at the Welterweight and Lightweight level despite never winning the belt in either of the two divisions.

He will look to achieve the same success against Nunes, but what if he can’t even get by his divisional debut?

It’s possible that, whether we admit it or not, Florian may suffer an upset loss come UFC 131 this Saturday.

This fight is supposed to welcome Florian into the 145-pound division and eventually set up a showdown with Jose Aldo, but when it comes to this fight, we could be looking at something that is a full 10,000 miles from a title fight with Aldo.

If Diego Nunes beats Kenny Florian this Saturday, it’s possible that Nunes will have completely derailed the Kenny Florian hype train and made it clear that he is the future of not only the UFC’s Featherweight class, but the future of MMA’s Featherweight scene as a whole.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 131: Does Kenny Florian Deserve a Title Shot with a Win Against Diego Nunes?

While most of the hype around UFC 131 is centered on the main event between Junior Dos Santos and Shane Carwin, there is another fighter who is likely a win away from a title shot this Sunday. Kenny Florian is making his featherweight debut against Die…

While most of the hype around UFC 131 is centered on the main event between Junior Dos Santos and Shane Carwin, there is another fighter who is likely a win away from a title shot this Sunday.

Kenny Florian is making his featherweight debut against Diego Nunes this weekend, and due to fortunate circumstances and marketability alone, he’ll likely get a title shot with a win.

But does he deserve it?

Florian has already gotten two shots at UFC gold and came up short both times, getting dominated by Sean Sherk and looking sluggish before being submitted by BJ Penn back at UFC 101.

Florian worked his way back into the title picture by August of last year, but was controlled by Gray Maynard at UFC 118, losing a shot at the title in front of his hometown crowd.

After the loss to Maynard, Florian decided to make the cut to 145.

Due to Chad Mendes passing on a title shot with Jose Aldo in favor of staying active and fighting Rani Yahya in August, there is no clear contender for the featherweight belt when Aldo returns, which is likely to happen in the Fall.

With the most recognizable name in the division and the ability to finish a fight both standing and on the feet, Florian is an attractive option for the UFC to throw into the fire against Aldo.

While Mendes is clearly the second-best guy at 145, and Florian will own just one win in the division if he beats Nunes, he still might be the most qualified fighter available to fight Aldo this fall.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com