Yancy Medeiros on Max Holloway: ‘That’s One Tough Hawaiian’

Yancy Medeiros knows better than most the capabilities of Max Holloway. Holloway is the current Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title holder. “Blessed” became the undisputed 145-pound king when he finished Jose Aldo earlier this month at UFC 212. Medeiros trains with Holloway and has always shown his confidence in the champion. He went on […]

Yancy Medeiros knows better than most the capabilities of Max Holloway. Holloway is the current Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title holder. “Blessed” became the undisputed 145-pound king when he finished Jose Aldo earlier this month at UFC 212. Medeiros trains with Holloway and has always shown his confidence in the champion. He went on […]

Max Holloway on Jose Aldo: ‘I’m Sure He’ll do Many More Great Things’

Max Holloway is showing respect to Jose Aldo, who he defeated to capture the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title. In a statement delivered after his UFC 212 win, Holloway called Aldo a “GOAT.” Speaking with Flo Combat, “Blessed” said he and his team had to come up with the perfect game plan to […]

Max Holloway is showing respect to Jose Aldo, who he defeated to capture the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title. In a statement delivered after his UFC 212 win, Holloway called Aldo a “GOAT.” Speaking with Flo Combat, “Blessed” said he and his team had to come up with the perfect game plan to […]

Max Holloway on Title Win: ‘Everything Comes Full Circle’

Max Holloway is the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title holder and it’s something he saw coming for a long time. “Blessed” took the title from Jose Aldo in the third round of their UFC 212 clash. The stand-up, followed by relentless ground-and-pound is what sealed the deal. In a recent interview with Flo […]

Max Holloway is the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title holder and it’s something he saw coming for a long time. “Blessed” took the title from Jose Aldo in the third round of their UFC 212 clash. The stand-up, followed by relentless ground-and-pound is what sealed the deal. In a recent interview with Flo […]

UFC Rankings Update: Max Holloway Rises Up P4P List

As always, the UFC rankings have been updated and the most notable change involved newly minted UFC featherweight champion Max Holloway. Holloway scored the biggest victory of his career last weekend (June 3, 2017), stopping Jose Aldo in the third round of their UFC 212 main event to become the undisputed 145-pound champion. The win […]

The post UFC Rankings Update: Max Holloway Rises Up P4P List appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

As always, the UFC rankings have been updated and the most notable change involved newly minted UFC featherweight champion Max Holloway.

Holloway scored the biggest victory of his career last weekend (June 3, 2017), stopping Jose Aldo in the third round of their UFC 212 main event to become the undisputed 145-pound champion. The win marked the 11th consecutive victory for the 25-year-old Holloway and he now sits at No. 5 on the pound-for-pound list.

Aldo, on the other hand, dropped to No. 10 on the pound-for-pound list after suffering his second stoppage loss in his last three bouts.

Check out the updated rankings below courtesy of UFC.com:

POUND-FOR-POUND

1. Demetrious Johnson

2. Conor McGregor

3. Daniel Cormier

4. Stipe Miocic +1

5. Max Holloway +7

6. Cody Garbrandt

7. Joanna Jedrzejczyk

8. Dominick Cruz

9. Tyron Woodley

10. Jose Aldo -6

11. Michael Bisping -1

12. Amanda Nunes -1

13. T.J. Dillashaw

14. Khabib Nurmagomedov

15. Frankie Edgar

FLYWEIGHT

Champion: Demetrious Johnson

1. Joseph Benavidez

2. Henry Cejudo

3. Ray Borg

4. Wilson Reis

5. Jussier Formiga

6. Sergio Pettis

7. Brandon Moreno

8. Tim Elliott

9. Ian McCall

10. Dustin Ortiz

11. John Moraga

12. Ben Nguyen

13. Louis Smolka

14. Alexandre Pantoja

15. Ryan Benoit

BANTAMWEIGHT

Champion: Cody Garbrandt

1. Dominick Cruz

2. T.J. Dillashaw

3. Raphael Assuncao

4. John Lineker

5. Jimmie Rivera

6. Bryan Caraway

7. John Dodson

8. Aljamain Sterling

9. Thomas Almeida

10. Marlon Moraes *NR

11. Pedro Munhoz +1

12. Eddie Wineland -1

13. Matthew Lopez *NR

14. Johnny Eduardo -4

15. Rob Font

FEATHERWEIGHT

Champion: Max Holloway

1. Jose Aldo -1

2. Frankie Edgar

3. Ricardo Lamas

4. Cub Swanson

5. Chan Sung Jung

6. Anthony Pettis

7. Yair Rodriguez

8. Jeremy Stephens

9. Brian Ortega

10. Dennis Bermudez

11. Renato Moicano

12. Darren Elkins

13. Dooho Choi

14. Mirsad Bektic

15. Renan Barao

LIGHTWEIGHT

Champion: Conor McGregor

1. Khabib Nurmagomedov

2. Tony Ferguson

3. Eddie Alvarez

4. Edson Barboza

5. Rafael dos Anjos

6. Michael Johnson

7. Michael Chiesa

8. Nate Diaz

9. Dustin Poirier

10. Beneil Dariush

11. Al Iaquinta

12. Kevin Lee

13. Evan Dunham

14. Gilbert Melendez

15. Francisco Trinaldo

WELTERWEIGHT

Champion: Tyron Woodley

1 Demian Maia

2 Stephen Thompson

3 Robbie Lawler

4 Jorge Masvidal

5 Neil Magny

6 Carlos Condit

7 Dong Hyun Kim

8 Donald Cerrone

9 Gunnar Nelson

10 Kamaru Usman

11 Tarec Saffiedine

12 Ryan LaFlare

13 Santiago Ponzinibbio

14 Leon Edwards +1

15 Matt Brown -1

MIDDLEWEIGHT

Champion: Michael Bisping

1. Yoel Romero

2. Luke Rockhold

3. Robert Whittaker

4. Gegard Mousasi

5. Jacare Souza

6. Chris Weidman

7. Anderson Silva

8. Derek Brunson

9. David Branch +1

10. Krzysztof Jotko -1

11. Vitor Belfort

12. Thales Leites

13. Uriah Hall

14. Sam Alvey

15. Daniel Kelly

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT

Champion: Daniel Cormier

1. Alexander Gustafsson

2. Jimi Manuwa

3. Glover Teixeira

4. Volkan Oezdemir

5. Mauricio Rua -1

6. Corey Anderson

7. Ovince Saint Preux

8. Misha Cirkunov

9. Ilir Latifi

10. Rogerio Nogueira

11. Patrick Cummins

12. Tyson Pedro

13. Gian Villante

14. Jan Blachowicz

15. Gadzhimurad Antigulov

HEAVYWEIGHT

Champion: Stipe Miocic

1. Fabricio Werdum

2. Cain Velasquez

3. Alistair Overeem

4. Junior dos Santos

5. Francis Ngannou

6. Derrick Lewis

7. Mark Hunt

8. Andrei Arlovski

9. Travis Browne

10. Alexander Volkov

11. Stefan Struve

12. Tim Johnson

13. Marcin Tybura

14. Aleksei Oleinik

15. Daniel Omielanczuk

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT

Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk

1. Claudia Gadelha

2. Karolina Kowalkiewicz

3. Rose Namajunas

4. Jessica Andrade

5. Tecia Torres

6. Michelle Waterson

7. Joanne Calderwood

8. Carla Esparza

9. Randa Markos

10. Maryna Moroz

11. Cortney Casey

12. Paige VanZant

13. Felice Herrig

14. Cynthia Calvillo

15. Jessica Aguilar

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT

Champion: Amanda Nunes

1. Valentina Shevchenko

2. Julianna Pena

3. Ronda Rousey

4. Raquel Pennington

5. Holly Holm

6. Sara McMann

7. Cat Zingano

8. Liz Carmouche

9. Alexis Davis

10. Germaine de Randamie

11. Bethe Correia

12. Marion Reneau

13. Katlyn Chookagian +1

14. Ketlen Vieira -1

15. Ashlee Evans-Smith

The post UFC Rankings Update: Max Holloway Rises Up P4P List appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Max Holloway: ‘Let’s Get Some Big Checks Signed’

Max Holloway is seeing the dollar signs after capturing the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title. Holloway is coming off a third-round finish of former 145-pound kingpin Jose Aldo. “Blessed” earned a TKO victory in enemy territory and is now eyeing a title defense in Hawaii. Another thing Holloway is looking for is a […]

Max Holloway is seeing the dollar signs after capturing the undisputed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) featherweight title. Holloway is coming off a third-round finish of former 145-pound kingpin Jose Aldo. “Blessed” earned a TKO victory in enemy territory and is now eyeing a title defense in Hawaii. Another thing Holloway is looking for is a […]

The Time Is Now for a Jose Aldo Reinvention

The smoke has cleared and Jose Aldo is no longer the UFC featherweight champion.
He’s no longer champion thanks to being on the wrong end of one of the crispest 1-2 combinations ever landed in a UFC bout, thrown by new champion Max Holloway in the clos…

The smoke has cleared and Jose Aldo is no longer the UFC featherweight champion.

He’s no longer champion thanks to being on the wrong end of one of the crispest 1-2 combinations ever landed in a UFC bout, thrown by new champion Max Holloway in the closing moments of their UFC 212 scrap.

The sport is left to wonder whether Aldo is GOAT or goat considering his 1-2 run since late 2015, and the memorable means by which he’s taken to losing fights, but that may not be the story in all of this.

The story may be that this is the best thing to ever happen to him.

Though you wouldn’t know it from watching him weep as he passed by press row last Saturday, there is an unquestionable case that Aldo has been stagnating atop the featherweight division for some time. A lengthy run of tepid performances where he would mostly counterstrike and win on points supported that case, and supported fan frustration as well.

It didn’t help that he got a reputation for pulling out of bouts after seemingly only defending his belt on every triennial winter solstice, and the dubious circumstances of how he became champion again almost immediately after losing his belt to Conor McGregor only empowered detractors to speak more loudly.

But now, thanks to getting a little too comfortable on the center line in front of Holloway and waking up with a flashlight in his face for that comfort, he’s got a chance to turn a big mistake into a big opportunity.

Say hello to Jose Aldo: lightweight contender.

For years there has been talk Aldo is too big for featherweight, that his lazy performances and late round disappearing acts had more to do with a brutal weight cut than any skill discrepancy. That’s always been a pretty probable explanation, given the number of horrendous weight cuts MMA sees and the fact that no one ever questioned whether Aldo was good at fighting.

So here, in his darkest moment, with no obvious right to an immediate rematch against Holloway and no clear options at 145 pounds, why not embrace that narrative and go up in weight?

He could spin it as a new beginning, a chance to claim a title in a second weight class that he probably should have been fighting in since 2011. He could perhaps set his sights on McGregor, his ultimate nemesis and present lightweight champion who so boldly ended his first reign and has been so belligerent towards him for so long.

He could come back bigger and meaner, hunting for finishes the way he did when he was a hungry young contender on the rise in his WEC days.

And people would love it.

The problem with Aldo hasn’t ever been that people don’t want to get behind him. It’s been that he’s made it so hard.

Outside of his native Brazil, people generally seem to take him as a whiny malcontent disinterested in North American media promotion beyond occasionally slagging the UFC.

They feel cheated that someone with so much skill seems so content to coast to successful scorecards when he’s been so obviously ahead of his contemporaries for so long.

They want more from him, if for no other reason than that his “more” might be beyond anything ever seen in the sport.

He can give it at lightweight, find big fights for big money and collect more big accolades there.

He can re-establish himself as a GOAT, all-caps and feared by all instead of a goat, lowercase and with horns. 

For a man who’s lost everything and has no means of gaining it back any time soon, you’d have to think that sounds pretty good.

     

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

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