From Homeless to UFC’s Next Big Thing: Francis Ngannou’s Amazing Journey

Francis Ngannou’s new apartment has a spectacular view.         
From his small third-floor balcony, Ngannou can look out over the western edge of Las Vegas and see the rugged cliffs of Red Rock Canyon cutting a line across the…

Francis Ngannou’s new apartment has a spectacular view.         

From his small third-floor balcony, Ngannou can look out over the western edge of Las Vegas and see the rugged cliffs of Red Rock Canyon cutting a line across the horizon. The view is one of the things Ngannou likes best about the apartment, which represents the culmination of a meticulously planned move from France to the U.S. six months ago.

The wide-open Nevada landscape fills him with a sense of freedom, he says. For most of his life, having a place like this was an impossible dream. The fact he’s made it here at all must seem like a miracle.

Yet Ngannou knows not to stare too long.

“This doesn’t mean anything [yet],” he says, dismissing his brand-new leather couch, glass-topped coffee table and flatscreen TV with the flip of one absurdly long arm. “This isn’t what I want. I want something very big.

“I can’t allow myself to be happy with this. This is not bad at all. It’s a good thing. But it’s not enough to make me stop.”

Not enough because this isn’t the dream. The dream, what Ngannou really wants, is to become UFC heavyweight champion.

Once he’s champ, maybe he’ll be able to take a moment to reflect on how far he’s come. Until then, the apartment isn’t a place he spends a lot of time. Right now, for example, he’s in the thick of training for a high-stakes contender bout against Alistair Overeem at UFC 218 on Saturday. He spends most days at the nearby UFC Performance Institute, surrounded by a revolving door of coaches and training partners.

His interior-decorating choices reflect that spartan lifestyle. The flashiest piece of furniture in his apartment is a glowing mini-fridge emblazoned with the logo of a sports drink company owned by Kobe Bryant, which recently became one of the UFC’s newest corporate sponsors.

The dining table is cluttered with cellphones, a laptop and a dogeared copy of the Nevada State driver’s handbook. The only visible piece of art is a small, unframed canvas square reading: Never Let Go of Your Dreams.

On a sunny Sunday morning, Ngannou and longtime head coach Fernand Lopez are huddled underneath that canvas, taking a brief break from making battle plans. Lopez has been in Vegas less than 24 hours, arriving from Paris just in time to help Ngannou put the finishing touches on his preparations for Overeem. The coach has been monitoring the camp from afar, and now the two will put their heads together on how to get past this fight and on to the true prize—a meeting with champion Stipe Miocic early in 2018.

“Everybody is trying to sell what they have,” Lopez says, of the handful of heavyweights who could be in the mix for the next shot at Miocic, “but nobody has as long a stretch of winning as Francis, and in spectacular fashion every time in the first round. Who doesn’t want to see that fight?”

This will be the pair’s first fight since Ngannou moved to the U.S. Nearly all the work has been done with the two men on opposite sides of the globe, but if the long-distance relationship is less than ideal, they aren’t about to say so.

“We know each other and how we work,” Ngannou says. “He knows me [better] than any of these guys [in the U.S.]”

Perhaps they’ve each had enough time to get used to the arrangement. From the moment Ngannou made his Octagon debut in December 2015, he suspected he’d have to relocate to the U.S. The shallow and perennially unstable UFC heavyweight division just doesn’t get many fighters like him.

At 6’4″, 255 pounds, the 31-year-old striker possesses a lithe athleticism that sets him apart from his slower, more plodding contemporaries. Add in his mammoth 83-inch reach and uncanny ability to quickly absorb the game’s most complex nuances, and Ngannou shapes up as the most exciting heavyweight prospect since Brock Lesnar.

“He’s a rare kind of athlete,” MMA analyst Patrick Wyman says. “He has an incredible frame. He’s really tall, he’s got incredibly long arms, and he’s exceptionally light on his feet for such a big guy. It’s very rare to find somebody who can move like that, especially in MMA, where the heavyweight division isn’t drawing from the deep end of the talent pool.”

Ngannou has the look, too. While jetting to a 5-0 record in the UFC, he’s taken to showing up to events in flashy bespoke suits and dramatic oversized sunglasses. With a jagged lightning bolt bleached into one side of his hair, it’s as though he stepped out of a central casting call for the role “MMA star.”

All told, Ngannou enjoys the sort of potential he couldn’t maximize from France. He spent nearly two years getting the paperwork in order to make the move, saving the money and scouting locations.

Now, he says he’s happy with his new life in the U.S. He likes Las Vegas, and the apartment is starting to feel like home.

That’s not something Ngannou will ever take for granted.

“When you’re used to having nothing,” he says, “the first time you have something you get really focused. You know if you lose it, it may not be easy to get it back.”


 

Ask Ngannou to describe his life growing up in Cameroon, and he momentarily becomes lost for words. The fighter is solidly bilingual—speaking both French and English—but the problem here isn’t any kind of language barrier. It’s the impossibility of the question.

“There kind of are no words,” Lopez offers.

Ngannou nods. “It’s just survival,” he says. “Just survival.”

His tiny hometown of Batie was sometimes called “The Sand Village” after its most bountiful export. Even today, the average Cameroonian gets by on less than $1,500.00 per year.

When Ngannou was born in September of 1986, the country had no free national education system. That combination of poverty and lack of opportunity were suffocating, he says. Many children went to work from the moment they were able, just to make enough money to go to school.

“In Cameroon, kids have many problems,” Ngannou says. “They think everything is lost before they are born. It seems like they are not allowed to dream. They are not allowed to be ambitious. They just accept being the victim of their life.”

When he was six, Ngannou’s parents divorced, leaving him shuffling from the home of one shoestring relative to the next, along with his mother, three brothers and sister. Though he was grateful to have his family, Ngannou says the other kids he lived with often teased him. They never let him forget that he was an outsider.

“They would always remind you…’you are from a bad family,'” he says. “They would always remind you that you were a stranger in their house.”

Watching his mom struggle to support him and his siblings was one of his earliest motivations to become a professional fighter, Ngannou says. Even today, when he starts to feel the grind of a training camp, he imagines his mom sick and unable to afford medical care in Cameroon. He reminds himself he’s not just fighting for himself, but for the lives of the family he left behind.

As a kid, however, nobody took Ngannou’s dreams seriously. He grew up idolizing Mike Tyson, but in Batie there was no place to learn to box. The people there had never heard of someone from their village becoming a professional athlete. When Ngannou would talk about it, they would laugh at him.

“It just sounded crazy,” he says. “People were like, ‘Calm down, man, you dream too big.'”

Frequently unable to afford the cost of school, Ngannou says he started working in the sand mines at age 12. It was grueling and dangerous work, spending hours shoveling sand into the backs of trucks so it could be shipped to big cities for use in construction. Sometimes he would stand all day in water up to his shins, scooping sand out of the riverbed. Other days would be spent at the bottom of a steep quarry, where large chunks of earth often broke free from the high cliffs and tumbled down onto workers.

Ngannou’s father was a notorious street fighter who had deserted his family after the divorce. Ngannou says his dad was always in trouble with the law, and that early on—because of his own size and strength—people in Batie expected Ngannou to turn out the same way.

“He had a bad reputation,” Ngannou says. “So when [people] saw me—and I was a big kid, with power—they would always tell me, ‘You’ll be like your dad.’ They would always tell me like that, and I hated that feeling. … I really felt shame for that. I thought, I’ll never become like this guy. Never.”

At the same time, Ngannou liked to fight and knew his ferocious natural strength made him good at it. He decided his best option was to use those gifts in a legitimate way. At age 22, he left Batie for Cameroon’s largest city of Douala, where he began studying boxing while working hefting heavy bags of clothes in the garment manufacturing industry.

After just a few years though, Ngannou knew he’d outgrown what was possible even in Douala. He made plans to leave Cameroon for France, believing it was his only chance to get the sort of training he’d need to make it big as a fighter. The people around him once again made fun of the idea, warning Ngannou not to get his hopes up.

“People told me, ‘You talk about Europe like it’s heaven. It’s not heaven,'” he says. “I said, ‘Yes, but I don’t need heaven. I’m going to make my own heaven. I’m going to struggle for it. I’m going to fight to earn everything I dream about.'”

“That’s beautiful, man,” Lopez chimes in. “That’s really beautiful.”

Together, Ngannou and his coach share a nod, and then they both start to laugh.


 

On his first full day living on the streets of Paris, Ngannou did three things: He learned where to go to eat, where to sleep, and then he went out to find a boxing gym.

His plan was simple. He walked through different neighborhoods asking strangers on the street if they knew of a gym in the area. When he found one that looked promising, he would go in and tell the boxing coach: “I just moved here. I’m homeless and I don’t have any money—but I’m not here to beg. I just need some place to train because I’m going to become world champion.”

For any ordinary person, this approach would likely get them laughed right back out the front door. But when you walk into a fight gym looking like Ngannou, it doesn’t take long to find a sympathetic audience.

Ngannou quickly located a coach who agreed to let him train at his gym. He used the $50 the coach gave him during their first meeting to buy a backpack, one workout shirt, one pair of shorts and one towel.

“I didn’t have hand wraps, no mouth piece, anything, but I didn’t give a s–t about that,” Ngannou says. “I was just really excited to start, like, right then.”

His new coach was impressed with his boxing skills, but people at the gym told him if he wanted to make money in combat sports, he should try MMA. Boxing was a closed world, they said, and without connections to powerful promoters or trainers, he’d be better off in the renegade mixed-rules sport.

Ngannou had one question: What in the world was MMA?

“They explained it to me, and I just laughed,” he says. “What’s that? I’m not going to go wrestle and all that crap. It was very strange to me and very weird. I said, ‘I will not do this.'”

He was making good progress in training. The problem was, his gym closed on holidays and weekends. On those days, Ngannou had nowhere to go but Paris’ various homeless shelters. After asking around for a place that stayed open more often, he heard about Lopez’s MMA Factory gym. On one of the holidays when his normal place was closed, Ngannou walked over to check it out.

Luckily, he got his usual reception.

“They looked at me and said, ‘I’m pretty sure Fernand will be very happy to see you,'” Ngannou says.

Lopez was happy to see him. Another native of Cameroon, Lopez had become a veteran of the French MMA scene from 2006 to 2010. The two men bonded immediately. After listening to Ngannou’s story, Lopez gave him a bag full of gear and offered to let him start sleeping at the gym. Ngannou eagerly accepted. Inside a couple of hours of watching him work out, Lopez says he knew Ngannou was a special talent.

“When you see people training, you can tell,” Lopez says. “You’re not a magician, but you can tell if [somebody] has the X-factor. For MMA, he had what it takes.”

Lopez recalls an early training session where Ngannou sparred with Bellator MMA light heavyweight champion Christian M’Pumbu. The inexperienced Ngannou wasn’t exactly competitive with M’Pumbu, but Lopez noticed that Ngannou was absorbing things at a breakneck pace. Concepts that would normally take a beginner months to learn and assimilate, Ngannou was figuring out on the fly in just a few minutes.

Still, though, he was stubborn about focusing on MMA. After spending his childhood dreaming of becoming a boxer, he was reluctant to give up on it. Lopez says he didn’t try to convince Ngannou to become an MMA fighter. He just booked him a couple of MMA fights to let him get a taste for it—and the money he’d make in the fights.

The plan worked. Ngannou went 5-1 fighting on the independent MMA scene. He also discovered MMA played to his natural strengths and was excited to have some cash coming in. He and Lopez looked around Paris and eventually found Ngannou his own place to live.

Ngannou was officially on the rise, but it didn’t take long before fighters in France stopped accepting bouts with him. Lopez says he went as far as putting an open challenge on his Facebook page, asking, “Will anybody in Europe fight Francis?”

They tried to book him in boxing matches, kickboxing matches and MMA fights, but almost always found no takers. Then, on Ngannou’s 29th birthday, he got a phone call from Lopez that changed his life forever.

“He said, ‘What gift can make you the happiest?'” Ngannou says. “I thought, maybe he has a computer for me? I said, ‘I don’t know, surprise me.’ He said, ‘What if I tell you you just got your UFC contract? The first fight will be in four months, in December, in Dallas, in the U.S.'”

Ngannou took the fight—against Luis Henrique at UFC on Fox 17—and won it by second-round knockout.

Then he won again.

And again.

And again.

And again.


 

The absolute worst news for the rest of the UFC’s heavyweight roster?

Ngannou is still getting better.

His most recent fight, against former champion Andrei Arlovski in January, was supposed to be a stiff test for the younger fighter. Instead, Ngannou toppled Arlovski with an off-balance counter uppercut and pounded out a TKO victory in just one minute, 32 seconds. The MMA analyst Wyman estimates that considering his age and level of experience, Ngannou has a long way to go before reaching his full potential.

“I would guess he’s got three more years at least of still making big improvements from fight to fight,” Wyman says. “How terrifying is that, right? It’s hard for me to overstate how impressed I am with him.”

The ability Lopez noticed during their early training sessions—to synthesize information and use it to solve problems almost immediately—is still paying off for Ngannou. Opponents might fool him with something in a fight, but they’re never going to catch him with the same trick twice.

This is one big reason why both Wyman and Lopez insist that, despite his impressive physical stature, Ngannou’s greatest attribute as a fighter is his unique psychology. In person, he is stoic and thoughtful, his rumbling baritone voice so relaxed you occasionally have to lean forward to make sure you’re catching every word. Overall, Ngannou gives the impression of a quiet man who would rather sit and learn than shoot his own mouth off.

That attitude has made him tenacious but unflappable thus far in the UFC. Ngannou uses the early stages of his fights to take his opponents’ measure. He waits patiently for openings before uncorking one of his crushing power shots. His innate knack for nuance typically means that when a window of opportunity presents itself, he doesn’t miss. His attacks are accurate. His counters are sharp and fluid. He’s learning and adapting so quickly that the few holes in his game are rapidly closing.

“I’d say, three years, he’s probably the champion,” Wyman says. “It’s rare to make that kind of prediction, but I’d say given the thinness of the division and the lack of up-and-coming talent—the other dudes may just age out while he’s still getting better. He might just hit it at the right time.”

The UFC seems to agree, already taking steps to establish Ngannou as a future star—booking him in advertising campaigns, fan Q&As and media events.

“I like Francis Ngannou,” UFC President Dana White told The TSN MMA Show recently (via MMA Mania). “I think Francis Ngannou can be the next big thing, literally and figuratively.”

Meanwhile, Ngannou has used his early success to give back to Cameroon. He’s started a charity to benefit the people of Batie and is also opening a gym there. He wants the young athletes of his hometown to have the opportunity he never had—to follow their dreams without having to move thousands of miles from home.

“I still remember when I was young, I was like, ‘Why can’t someone just make a boxing gym here?'” Ngannou says. “That was my biggest dream. … Today, it seems normal in my village if a kid says, ‘I’m going to do boxing.’ They say, ‘Yes, it is possible, because Francis did it.'”

If there is any reason to temper the over-the-top expectations for Ngannou’s future, it might be Overeem. The Dutch fighter represents the most compelling stylistic matchup of his short career so far. Their bout will tell one of the oldest stories in fight sports—pitting a rising star against a crafty elder statesman.

At 37 years old and a veteran of nearly 60 professional MMA fights, Overeem is no longer the fearsome and athletic headhunter he was a few years ago. Instead, he’s refashioned himself as a cunning strategist. He likes to set traps on the feet, lure his opponents in and then use his world-class kickboxing skill to take them out.

On paper, the fight shapes up as a slugfest, but if Ngannou doesn’t stop Overeem early, it may turn into more of a chess match. It remains to be seen if Overeem’s wiles will be too much for the inexperienced Ngannou.

“Overeem at this point has all the craft in the world,” Wyman says. “If there’s a fighter in the division who is really going to trouble Ngannou outside of Miocic, I think it’s going to be Overeem simply because of the depth of skill.”

Ngannou says he fully understands the risks. He still has a lot to accomplish. He thinks about the task before him every time he imagines his mother and his family back home in Cameroon.

He thinks about it every time he stands inside his new home in Las Vegas and looks out at his terrific view.

He’s not about to let Overeem take all that away from him.

“My entire life I’ve been a fighter…” Ngannou says. “My entire life I’ve struggled and worked for nothing. Now, I can work for something, so you can guess how big my motivation will be.”

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WWE Champ-Turned-MMA Prospect Jake Hager: The Next Brock Lesnar or Next CM Punk?

Jake Hager can still remember the roar of the crowd, more than 80,000 strong, when he challenged Alberto Del Rio for the WWE championship at WrestleMania 29. As Jack Swagger, he had polarized the WWE audience with his strong anti-immigration views, emp…

Jake Hager can still remember the roar of the crowd, more than 80,000 strong, when he challenged Alberto Del Rio for the WWE championship at WrestleMania 29. As Jack Swagger, he had polarized the WWE audience with his strong anti-immigration views, employing the catchphrase “we the people” and eventually ending up in a brief online feud with political commentator Glenn Beck.         

It was the most exciting time of his professional wrestling career, a time when all the pieces he’d carefully put together to form a fully realized character were paying off. It was, it seemed, the start of something special.

Unfortunately for Hager, that was back in 2013 and, in the world of wrestling, four years might as well be an eon. He’d spent most of his time since in seemingly pointless feuds or, worse in his mind, aimlessly drifting on WWE’s B-programming, present but not taking part.

“Toward the end, getting segments cut and having nothing really planned, it really starts to weigh on you,” Hager told Bleacher Report recently. “You put your body into it, you put your heart into it and you want to have an impact on the end product. And it’s frustrating when you don’t.

“You want to be in the main events. To be successful in WWE, you have to love what you do. You have to want to steal the show every time you go out. It’s also an opportunity to create a better life for your family. And when you’re up there doing what you feel is a better and better job over the years and you still don’t get the opportunity to earn more money and a better place on the card, it gets very frustrating.”

It was time for something new. But what? While trading wins back and forth on the deep undercard (Jack Swagger compiled a record of 63-62 in 2016, according to the Internet Wrestling Database), Hager found himself returning again and again to a fantasy he’d harbored for years. As a college wrestler at the University of Oklahoma, he’d competed against the likes of Cain Velasquez and Cole Konrad. Heck, he’d even beaten Velasquez, a future UFC champion, in a grueling overtime preseason match.

“It was quite the endurance test,” he remembers more than a decade later. “Cain is known for his gas tank, for not getting tired. But I was too stubborn to quit. Luckily, I caught a takedown on him at the end.” 

Why couldn’t I, Hager wondered, have just as much success in the cage as my contemporaries? He’d been competitive against men who went on to championship glory in both Bellator and UFC and was even an NCAA All-American in his senior year back in 2006. His fiercest rival, Steve Mocco, had represented America in the Olympics. Why couldn’t he, even years removed from athletics, compete with just about anyone out there?

He pitched the idea to WWE, asking the company to allow Jack Swagger to strut his stuff in real competition, returning victorious the next Monday on Raw. It wasn’t really using him anyway, he reasoned. Why not take a chance and see what happened?

WWE wasn’t interested in such a scheme, especially after fellow WWE star Brock Lesnar was released for a UFC fight in 2016 only to fail a subsequent drug test. The company wasn’t interested, it seemed to him, in anything Hager pitched its way. 

But the MMA dream refused to die. Much like fellow amateur standouts-turned-WWE stars such as Lesnar, Bobby Lashley and even Kurt Angle, it was hard for Hager to accept a career solely competing in staged fighting. In March 2017, he and WWE agreed to terms for his release. His MMA training, with former Ultimate Fighter cast member Josh Rafferty, began almost immediately. So did negotiations for his first MMA fight.

“When I heard he was seriously interested in competing in MMA and when you look at what he did at the collegiate level, I was very interested in having him on our roster,” Bellator President Scott Coker said in a statement to the press. “I think Jake will expose new fans to Bellator from his previous run with WWE, and he will be given every opportunity to prove that he’s the real deal inside the cage.”

Though Hager and manager Daniel Rubenstein had preliminary discussions with UFC, Bellator was the perfect, obvious fit. It’s an organization capable of both maximizing his pre-existing celebrity and finding him the right fights to thrive over a multiyear, six-bout deal, which starts in 2018.

“Bellator is usually good about building talent slowly,” FloSlam managing editor Brent Brookhouse said. “He has that strong wrestling base, which is still arguably the absolute best base to enter MMA with. If he can defend himself on the feet enough to close distance, put guys on their backs and knows how to keep himself out of bad positions on the ground, he can probably ground-and-pound his way through a lot of the chaff at the lower end of the roster.

“He’s huge. This is a guy who is 6’5″ and will likely have to cut weight to make the heavyweight limit. He’ll probably pick up a few wins over lower-tier opposition in his first 12-18 months in the cage. From there, it’s on him to learn and grow as a fighter.”

Last year, Hager’s former WWE colleague CM Punk made his UFC debut in a bout that ended disastrously for the former wrestling icon. Complete with a hefty price tag and even larger name, Punk was given no chance to test the waters gently. Thrown in the deep end, on pay-per-view, Punk suffered an embarrassing loss at UFC 203 that was as high-profile as they come.

Did Punk poison the well for the next wrestling star who’ll attempt to cross over? MMA Fighting deputy managing editor Marc Raimondi doesn’t think so.

“Wrestling fans won’t have to pay $60 to watch Hager scrap, so I’d suspect his initial offering will do fairly well on cable,” Raimondi said. “Unlike the UFC, Bellator is in a position where it can slowly build up prospects—even 35-year-old ones. A gigantic, all-American heavyweight who can talk, with a built-in fan following, will be given every chance to succeed in Bellator. They will not be sending him to the wolves.” 

Hager is no CM Punk, something that’s both a blessing and bane for Bellator. Punk, Hager readily points out, was a much bigger star than he ever was. Punk also had no athletic pedigree of any kind outside of pro wrestling. It quickly showed in a one-sided bout with Mickey Gall, where he was immediately taken to the mat and decimated. He failed to land even a single blow, per FightMetric. 

“I’m more Lesnar than Punk,” Hager said, careful not to criticize either man. “Punk was much more popular than I ever was. But I’ve been wrestling since I was five years old and [at] a very high level.

“The success that amateur wrestlers have had crossing into MMA—people from my era like Cain, Ryan Bader, Johny Hendricks and Ben Askren—gives me confidence, sure. A lot of great fighters were amateur wrestlers first and you can study them on film to see how they adapted the techniques. That’s a lot of help. But I have to keep it in perspective and remember that my last competitive match was more than 10 years ago.”

The building blocks, however, are clearly there, both for initial and long-term success.

Hager isn’t willing to proclaim himself a future world champion. Not yet. But his body feels good after months of training with Rafferty at the Ybor City Jiu-Jitsu Club in Tampa, Florida. He’s looking forward to testing himself again, in a venue where his own talents, and not a writers’ room or booker, will decide how far he can go.

“The level of difficulty in most areas of MMA is very high,” Hager said. “It’s a high learning curve. The footwork in boxing alone takes years to master. I will rely heavily on my amateur wrestling to get out of bad situations and take me from defense to offense. I’ll try to dictate the fight on my terms.

“People want to see fighters who can put on a little show and then back it up. Hopefully I can do both of those things. I look at my amateur wrestling career and then my time in the pros as being great training to become a professional fighter in this day and age. This isn’t the normal path. I went about it in a different way, but hopefully the end result is the same.”

         

Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.

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UFC Fight Night 122: The Real Winners and Losers from Bisping vs. Gastelum

The UFC made its first trip to mainland China as they took over Shanghai at the Mercedes-Benz Arena.
Former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping was seeking to rid himself of the taste of defeat following UFC 217’s showing against Georges St-Pierr…

The UFC made its first trip to mainland China as they took over Shanghai at the Mercedes-Benz Arena.

Former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping was seeking to rid himself of the taste of defeat following UFC 217’s showing against Georges St-Pierre, but instead, he took a worse loss at the fist of Kelvin Gastelum. He got viciously knocked out in the first round.

Gastelum made a statement and moved right back into the hunt at middleweight.

The storied career of the Brit seems to be drawing to a close, but MMA waits for no fighter. When one fighter is on his way out there are a handful of wild dogs fighting in the alley for any piece of leftover Thanksgiving food.

The other bouts were not much of note, but the athletes still brought their A-game. The 12-fight card saw seven other finishes along with Gastelum’s first-round KO. It was an exciting evening from start-to-finish.

Who came out as the real winners and losers as the UFC begins to close of the year? Well, let’s answer that question.

Full card results from UFC Fight Night 122 will be at the end.

Begin Slideshow

Fabricio Werdum’s Win Caps Off Just Another Saturday UFC Night

I don’t know if you heard, but Fabricio Werdum had a pretty interesting week in Australia. 
First, there was the whole thing with Colby Covington and the boomerang. Trust me, it’s just as funny as it sounds. 
The short version: Covington…

I don’t know if you heard, but Fabricio Werdum had a pretty interesting week in Australia. 

First, there was the whole thing with Colby Covington and the boomerang. Trust me, it’s just as funny as it sounds. 

The short version: Covington is trying hard to be what would happen if Chael Sonnen and Conor McGregor were able to make a baby, except not as smart and with a heaping helping of xenophobia.

Anyway, Covington cut a promo after his last win wherein he called all Brazilians “filthy animals,” which was pretty revolting, all things considered.

Werdum, being Brazilian, didn’t think this was funny. I know, right? What a surprise to find this out. 

So when he came face-to-face with Covington in Australia during fight week, Werdum chucked a boomerang at Covington’s head. Yes, a boomerang. The thing you throw to yourself on a sandy beach. 

I told you it was an interesting week in Australia.

Unfortunately, the interesting bits were all finished before the UFC card started on Saturday night.

Werdum capped off his week by going in the Octagon and participating in a lackluster sparring match with Marcin Tybura on a lackluster card.

Werdum was a late replacement for Mark Hunt, who was pulled from the fight for—depending on whose account you believe—writing about how his chosen career path has affected his brain or because he’s suing the UFC and the promotion’s president, Dana White, hates him. Take your pick. Either option is fair and logical. 

The Brazilian, fresh off his win over Walt Harris at UFC 216, sauntered in the cage sporting his best dad bod and essentially cruised to an easy decision win over five insufferable rounds. For all the problematic things Werdum does outside the cage (his liberal usage of homophobic slurs in both real life and in his Instagram trolling and his penchant for finding himself in scuffles with much smaller men than himself), he is still a special athlete inside it.

Truth be told, he probably deserves serious consideration as one of the best heavyweights in the history of the sport, if not the best. He was the first man to truly beat Fedor Emelianenko, and he did it back when it was surprising and not just a thing that happened on a random Saturday night with regularity.

Werdum clearly remains a threat to any heavyweight on the planet—as long as he’s motivated. But on Saturday in Australia (well, Saturday in the U.S. and Sunday in Australia because of the time difference), Werdum collected a paycheck, fighting down to the lower half of the heavyweight division’s farcical top 10 rankings.

He went through the motions.

But that’s par for the course at events like this one, where it seems the UFC is promoting an event just because it is supposed to be promoting an event. Nights like this one, with hours upon hours of fight time and a maddeningly never-ending television broadcast, are one of the top complaints fans have about the sport. There’s just too much product.

Who can be expected to keep up with all of this? Even the most hardcore of those of a hardcore persuasion becomes jaded after being subjected to endless waves of fight cards that are filled to overflowing with mediocre talent.

Saturday’s co-main event featured Bec Rawlings taking on UFC debutant Jessica-Rose Clark. This was a bona fide contender for worst UFC co-main event of all time. And it gets worse with UFC Shanghai on Nov. 25, which might be the worst UFC card in history and is headlined by Michael Bisping despite Bisping being battered and finished by Georges St-Pierre as recently as Nov. 4.

Just as it’s time for Werdum to stop finding himself in squabbles with men he outweighs by 75 pounds, so too is it time for the UFC to take a step back. It’s time to trim the roster and to start making the product feel special again. It’s time to space things out, to give the fans time to anticipate and miss the product.

Because there was a time when I looked forward to seeing Fabricio Werdum in the Octagon.

Now?

It’s just another Saturday night.

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Dustin Poirier Demands to Be a Contender in Stacked UFC 155-Pound Division

Dustin Poirier is no longer asking to be taken seriously as a title contender in the stacked UFC lightweight division.
After Saturday’s third-round submission victory over Anthony Pettis in the main event of UFC Fight Night 120, he’s demanding it.
“I’m…

Dustin Poirier is no longer asking to be taken seriously as a title contender in the stacked UFC lightweight division.

After Saturday’s third-round submission victory over Anthony Pettis in the main event of UFC Fight Night 120, he’s demanding it.

“I’m not gonna ask for a fight, I’m gonna tell you right now who I’m going to fight [next],” Poirier told UFC play-by-play announcer Jon Anik in the cage after the fight. “I’m going to fight the winner of Eddie Alvarez-Justin Gaethje, then I’ll fight for the belt. There, I laid it out for you.”

The victory over Pettis moved Poirier to 6-1-1 since returning to lightweight in April 2015. He came into this fight No. 8 on the fight company’s official 155-pound rankings, and emerging victorious in a bloody, Fight of the Night-caliber brawl with Pettis will only improve his stock.

After Pettis tapped because of pain from an apparent broken rib a bit more than two minutes into the third round of their headlining fight at Ted Constant Convocation Center in Norfolk, Virginia, Poirier jumped up and stalked to the side of the Octagon. Peering through the chain link at UFC matchmaker Sean Shelby, Poirier shouted that he wanted the winner of Alvarez-Gaethje as well as one of the company’s $50,000 performance-based bonuses.

The UFC took care of Poirier’s first request following the event, awarding both him and Pettis bonus checks for putting on the evening’s best scrap.

As for Poirier’s other ultimatum?

That one might be a bit tougher to pull off.

Alvarez and Gaethje are scheduled to throw down on Dec. 2 at UFC 218. If Poirier gets his way, the next big contender fight at 155 pounds is already booked a few weeks before that fight even happens.

But as usual, things at lightweight are complicated.

Poirier has been plenty good over the course of the last few years, but his division is historically the UFC’s deepest and most competitive weight class. To be considered on the short list for an upcoming title fight might take another fight or two, as well as a couple of lucky breaks in his favor.

Can Poirier sustain his success at the highest level long enough to make it happen?

He certainly seems to think so.

“Everybody points the finger and says I slip up in big fights,” Poirier told Anik. “But that’s two champions in a row I just beat—so what’s up?”

Fact check: In fact, Poirer’s most recent previous fight—against former champ Alvarez at UFC 211 in May—was officially ruled a no-contest after Alvarez landed illegal knee’s to Poirer’s head while he was on the ground.

Lightweight champion Conor McGregor has yet to defend his title after taking it from Alvarez via second-round TKO in November 2016. Instead of diving back into the rank and file of his division, McGregor responded to the Alvarez victory by announcing a lengthy paternity leave from combat sports.

When he did return this summer, it wasn’t to the UFC’s cage. Instead, he fought Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a boxing match that became arguably the biggest sports spectacle of 2017. McGregor lost the fight by 10th-round TKO and is currently in negotiations to return to the UFC for his next bout.

This weekend, however, McGregor showed up at a Bellator MMA event in his hometown of Dublin, Ireland, and caused a scene by jumping into the cage to celebrate with victorious teammate Charlie Ward. During the ruckus, McGregor could be seen on video slapping an event official who tried to keep him from entering the cage.

He and referee Marc Goddard also had a brief physical altercation.

It’s not clear yet how McGregor will be punished, either by the UFC or any state athletic commission in America. If he’s suspended, it would obviously be bad news for guys like Poirier, who would be forced to keep picking each other off in the champion’s absence.

McGregor’s disappearing act has already gone on long enough that the UFC put an interim 155-pound title on Tony Ferguson following his win over Kevin Lee at UFC 216 in October. If and when McGergor does return, smart money has been trending in the direction of a unification bout with Ferguson.

Even behind that pairing, there is a gaggle of contenders such as the perennially injured Khabib Nurmagomedov, Edson Barboza and longtime McGregor rival Nate Diaz. Any one of them might score a shot at the title before Poirier gets his chance.

As usual, during the McGregor era, the UFC’s official rankings will likely fall by the wayside in favor of the champion’s whims. McGregor will pick and choose his opponents according to his own rules.

That too could set Poirier back in the pecking order, since he lost to McGregor via TKO in a featherweight fight back in September 2014. If there’s no enormous pile of money to be made in a rematch, it’s unlikely McGregor would be interested in a second engagement.

For Poirier, however, you can’t argue with his most recent results.

His performance against Pettis was an impressive one, battering the former champ on the feet and mixing in some timely takedowns en route to victory.

He cut Pettis open near the left eye with a counterpunch in the first round and wobbled the 30-year-old Wisconsin native with a combination just before the bell. In the second, he scored with a big slam and avoided a pair of triangle chokes as the blood from Pettis’ cut made it too slippery to lock up a submission.

In the third, the end came after the two had returned to the mat, with Poirier controlling Pettis from the back. As Poirier moved to transition to mount, Pettis tapped from pain in his ribs. At first, the finishing sequence provided an anticlimactic ending to their back-and-forth brawl, though the replay appeared to show Pettis injure his ribs as Poirier moved around him on the ground.

Exactly what happens next for Poirer is unknown. With more the seven years under his belt as a UFC/WEC veteran, he is certainly no stranger to high-profile bouts.

UFC fans regard him as an exciting, likable fighter, but a guy who has never quite broken though to championship contention.

This latest run could change that perception of Poirier, though he’ll have to keep it going while the McGregor-centric logjam at the top works itself out.

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Did Brazil’s Next UFC Legend Just Take Over NYC?

There he was—a former champion looking to be in the best physical shape he’d seen for quite some time.
Bizarre weigh-in day antics notwithstanding, he was more taut and fit and had a training camp behind him with a new team of coaches—some …

There he was—a former champion looking to be in the best physical shape he’d seen for quite some time.

Bizarre weigh-in day antics notwithstanding, he was more taut and fit and had a training camp behind him with a new team of coaches—some of the best in the world. Give him a year at Jackson Wink MMA Academy and no one would beat him, he said.

Someone did, though. Fast. It took a little over six minutes.

That former champion was Johny Hendricks, and on the enormous stage of UFC 217 in New York City, the man to beat him was Paulo Costa, Brazil’s next big thing.

Perhaps Brazil’s next UFC legend.

Paulo Costa, otherwise known as Paulo Borrachinha until a sudden rebranding struck his fancy under the lights of Manhattan, is It with a capital “I.” He’s the man Brazilian fans have been waiting for, the fighter to take the mantle of his country’s great fighting hope from names like Jose Aldo and Anderson Silva and Vitor Belfort and Royce Gracie before him.

Chiseled from granite and with the looks of a model, Costa is 11-0 with 11 stoppages in his MMA career. Only two men have gotten out of the first round with him, and only one wasn’t knocked out for daring to tackle “The Eraser.”

His athleticism is impressive and, while he was a bulldozer in his earlier days, he showed against Hendricks that he understands the value of a measured approach to the game. For a competitor of such musculature, he did not burn himself out, waiting to finish the fight at the right time after breaking up explosive attacks with more deliberate stretches of offense.

It was the type of thing that athletes with 40 fights sometimes struggle with, that great champions have had to overcome or adjust to. To see a relatively green fighter understand his body so well, in such an environment and against such an opponent, was highly promising.

After his win, he got on the mic with Joe Rogan and, as is always well-received by the North American audience, attempted to communicate his jubilation.

The fans responded, just as they did when Anderson Silva, Lyoto Machida, Junior dos Santos and a host of other Brazilian stars have attempted to speak in their second language. And suddenly Costa had officially taken over the world’s most famous city.

The performance was the type to get him attention beyond the fanbase as well.

It scored him an exclusive in-studio interview with Ariel Helwani on a special edition of The MMA Hour, one of the sport’s foremost interview shows. The only other man to appear on that episode? New middleweight champion and living legend Georges St-Pierre.

Pretty good company to keep.

After Costa’s 217 bout, top-ranked middleweight Derek Brunson—fresh off blowing Machida away on a card in Brazil a couple of weeks ago—took to Twitter to sass Costa. Emoji steroid accusations and proclamations of easy money buoyed that sass, along with a picture of Costa sporting a questionable choice of hairstyle.

Costa fired back, saying he’d make Brunson famous in his “score of knockouts.”

It’s the stuff great MMA feuds are made of.

But whether it’s Brunson or another middleweight contender, Costa has arrived. He’s undeniably a work in progress at 26 years old, but he’s one of the most promising projects Brazil has had on its hands in years.

Unlike the faux prospects that came before him, filling out The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil and riding the UFC hype machine for as long as they were trying to expand their South American footprint, Costa did it the right way.

He appeared on the show, lost and then took five more regional fights to round himself out before getting another crack at the big show. This is not a creation of the UFC, a man they decided to push in the name of selling shows to Globo TV—this is a legitimate talent who built himself the way the greats that came before him did. 

He showed it Saturday, when the results spoke for themselves. Continue on that path, and he may very well see his name up there next to those greats before long.

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

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