Mike Goldberg Denies Drug Rehab Rumor, Cites Other Health Issues For Missing UFC 155


(As Goldie himself might say, the precision of those rumors was not very precise.)

When long-time UFC play-by-play announcer Mike Goldberg missed UFC 155 for undisclosed reasons, it didn’t take long for the rumor mill to churn out reports of him being addicted to Adderall and taking a leave of absence to attend drug rehab.* MMA Fighting contacted Goldberg directly on Friday, asking for comment on his health, and the commentator denied the pill addiction rumor and said he hopes to return to work by the next UFC on Fox event later this month.

“Those rumors out there are not true,” Goldberg said via text to MMA Fighting. “I’m dealing with a complicated health issue but feeling better and hoping to be back to 100 percent by Jan. 26.”

Goldberg did not provide more details about his health issues but reporter Ariel Helwani also wrote that “according to multiple sources close to Goldberg, who all asked to remain anonymous, the broadcaster suffered from a severe upper respiratory infection in October…


(As Goldie himself might say, the precision of those rumors was not very precise.)

When long-time UFC play-by-play announcer Mike Goldberg missed UFC 155 for undisclosed reasons, it didn’t take long for the rumor mill to churn out reports of him being addicted to Adderall and taking a leave of absence to attend drug rehab.* MMA Fighting contacted Goldberg directly on Friday, asking for comment on his health, and the commentator denied the pill addiction rumor and said he hopes to return to work by the next UFC on Fox event later this month.

“Those rumors out there are not true,” Goldberg said via text to MMA Fighting. ”I’m dealing with a complicated health issue but feeling better and hoping to be back to 100 percent by Jan. 26.”

Goldberg did not provide more details about his health issues but reporter Ariel Helwani also wrote that “according to multiple sources close to Goldberg, who all asked to remain anonymous, the broadcaster suffered from a severe upper respiratory infection in October.”

“The already-asthmatic Goldberg was then treated with large doses of medication to open the airway and treat  the infection. Goldberg’s doctor later confirmed that the medication taken to treat the infection in combination with his normal asthma medication caused severe side effects that affected his ability to work, which according to the same sources, was the reason he missed UFC 155,” he continued.

* In light of Goldberg’s latest statement, we’ve taken down our previous post about the rehab rumor. Whatever’s he’s dealing with, we wish Mike a full and speedy recovery.

Elias Cepeda

MMA Daily Grind: UFC 155 Prelims Draw Big Numbers and More Hot News

The UFC 155 prelims on FX, which featured a bantamweight bout between Eddie Wineland and Brad Pickett, were viewed by 1.4 million people (via MMAFighting.com). That audience was the fourth largest since the organization began airing preliminary cards o…

The UFC 155 prelims on FX, which featured a bantamweight bout between Eddie Wineland and Brad Pickett, were viewed by 1.4 million people (via MMAFighting.com). That audience was the fourth largest since the organization began airing preliminary cards on FX and the biggest since the UFC 148 prelims in July.

A heavyweight title fight between Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos headlined UFC 155, for which pay-view-buys have not yet been determined. However, with such high ratings for the FX-aired prelims, it appears likely that the main card was also watched by many.

In addition to the release of ratings for the UFC 155 prelims, plenty of other MMA news has broken in the past 24 hours. Let’s take a look at what you may have missed.

 

Biggest Stories

Costa Philippou Wants Brian Stann vs. Wanderlei Silva Winner Next

 Fresh off of the biggest win of his career, a knockout against Tim Boetsch, Costa Philippou is already looking ahead. Now considered a middleweight title contender, Philippou would like to continue his rise against the winner of a March bout between Brian Stann and Wanderlei Silva (via MMAWeekly.com).

Paulo Filho Signs with World Series of Fighting

 Coming off of a win over Murilo Rua, Paulo Filho has become the newest addition to the up-and-coming World Series of Fighting organization (via MMAWeekly.com). The former WEC champion was considered one of the best middleweights in the world before falling off of the map after a loss to Chael Sonnen in November 2008.

Conor McGregor Becomes Two-Division Cage Warriors Champions

 Ireland’s Conor McGregor captured the lightweight title under the banner of long-running British promotion Cage Warriors by knocking out Ivan Buchinger (via Cage Warriors TV). McGregor also holds the organization’s featherweight championship and owns an eight-fight winning streak.

 

Fights Booked

Legacy FC 17: Dan Hornbuckle vs. Pete Spratt (via MMAJunkie.com)

 

Video of the Day

Veteran photographer Esther Lin offers an artistic view of her images from UFC 155 fight week (via MMAFighting.com).

 

Photo of the Day

Rose Namajunas jokes around with boyfriend Pat Barry in advance of her Invicta FC debut against Emily Kagan on Saturday.

 

Tweet of the Day

 

Comment of the Day

“I like Junior [dos Santos] and all, but he needs to rack up a win or two before he starts talking rematch. If the fight was close, then that would have been different. But this wasn’t the case, as Cain had his way with Dos Santos for 25 minutes.”—Tim Manning on How Would a Cain Velasquez-Junior Dos Santos Rubber Match Play Out?

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Michael Bisping Totally Trashes Alan Belcher ‘Back to the Undercard, Sunshine’

One of MMA’s most outspoken combatants has once more opened his mouth to hurl insults in the direction of his peers. Michael Bisping has made a career of outworking foes, as well as launching vicious verbal tirades at virtually any man to mention…

One of MMA’s most outspoken combatants has once more opened his mouth to hurl insults in the direction of his peers. Michael Bisping has made a career of outworking foes, as well as launching vicious verbal tirades at virtually any man to mention him.

Alan Belcher—who had recently requested a fight with Bisping, should Mike’s UFC on FX 7 opponent, Vitor Belfort, find himself unable to battle the brash Brit—found himself on the receiving end of quite the outburst from “The Count”.

To an extent, I can understand Bisping’s frustration, as Belcher now looks a tad silly having apparently looked beyond UFC 155. Any man who meets Yushin Okami in the cage should keep the future out of mind, and focus solely on the nightmarish grinder known as “Thunder”.

Bisping jotted down an assortment of thoughts for Yahoo! Sports hours ago, and as is his tradition, he pulled no verbal punches. Rather, he unleashed insult to accompany any injuries Alan Belcher may have sustained in his UFC 155 fight with the Japanese standout.

Get a load of this thrashing, and note that Tim Boetsch didn‘t escape this rant unscathed either…

Obviously commiserations are in order for my former fellow top five contenders Alan Belcher and Tim Boetsch, who both came up short in big fight at UFC 155 on December 29. Belcher lost to Yushin Okami and Boetsch lost to Costa Philippou. I respect all my fellow fighters, and I know the agony of defeat, so heartfelt commiserations to both of these two fine, upstanding gentlemen.

Now I’ve got that obligatory fluffy stuff out of the way, I’d like to say I’m looking forward to these two simpletons keeping their pie holes shut about me for a little while. Those two have been calling me out and talking crap for months, and I would have got some real enjoyment beating them in the Octagon but two no-marks took that glory.

Belcher lost every minute of every round in a fight so boring I was afraid my brain was going to melt and start to dribble out of my ears. It was like someone detonated a nuclear bomb of boredom in the arena – everyone in the seats around me was playing Angry Birds.

What delusions of grandeur Belcher has. This is a guy who didn’t fight for a year after giving himself career-threatening eye-strain by watching too much internet porn, and he thinks he’s god’s gift to MMA. He even told UFC president Dana White that after he beat Okami, he’d fight me on January 19 if something happens to Belfort. This is a guy who got his arse kicked by two guys I smashed (Yoshihiro Akiyama and Jason Day) but he thinks he can not only beat me on a couple weeks’ training, but also assumed he was getting passed Okami, who is not to be underestimated.

Anyway, now we don’t have to listen to this guy anymore. Back to the undercard, sunshine!

Those sound like fighting words to me.

 

Follow me on Twitter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 155: How Would a Cain Velasquez-Junior Dos Santos Rubber Match Play Out?

Junior dos Santos should temper his desire to fight Cain Velasquez again seeing as a rubber match between the two wouldn’t go his way.After a brutal loss at UFC 155 that saw the former heavyweight champ dominated like never before, Dos Santos spoke wit…

Junior dos Santos should temper his desire to fight Cain Velasquez again seeing as a rubber match between the two wouldn’t go his way.

After a brutal loss at UFC 155 that saw the former heavyweight champ dominated like never before, Dos Santos spoke with Brazilian media outlet SporTV about how he already longed for a rematch. 

“I want [a rematch] now, soon,” he said. “I won the first and he had a rematch. Now I lost and I want my rematch. I’m saying I want this fight. I’ll get my belt.”

Bold words from a man who had his face rearranged for 25 minutes.

Velasquez nearly knocked out dos Santos in the first round, then controlled the Brazilian with superior wrestling and periodically battered him with strikes. In fact, Velasquez’s performance was so dominant that it was record-setting

However, dos Santos has already realized what went wrong for him during the fight: 

I used the wrong strategy. I was very worried about his entry in my legs and left face unprotected. So he hit me. When I was on the floor, I should have used more jiu-jitsu, I trained so much. But I tried to (get) back up, and it hurt me too, but on the ground [he] is very good, very strong. I did not connect any punches good, even. It was bad because I was feeling very well, did a great training camp, everything was just right.

Dos Santos is right in some ways, but realizing what went wrong and actively being able to change it are two different things.

At JDS-Velasquez I, Velasquez made the mistake of not closing the distance fast enough. Standing right in dos Santo’s range even for a minute was too costly an error. Velasquez paid for it with his consciousness. 

Velasquez adopted a smarter approach in the second fight.

He constantly pressured and smothered JDS from start to finish. Dos Santos eluded the first few takedown attempts. He also managed to spring back up from Velasquez’s initial successful takedowns

However, like he said above, Velasquez’s constant pressure forced him to focus too much on the takedowns. It made him forget about his forte—striking. 

A rematch wouldn’t be different.

Velasquez has the tools to beat dos Santos, and at UFC 155 he found the strategy: pressure, pressure, pressure.

If dos Santos doesn’t have the space to land his trademark uppercut or any other power-punch—or if he’s on his back—he can’t win.

In JDS‘ talk with SporTV he did mention his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, but we’ve never actually seen him use it. Furthermore, it’s unlikely that he’d be able to submit a strong, dominant wrestler like Velasquez.

Thus, dos Santos’ only hope in a potential rubber match would be to clip Velasquez while he comes in close for a takedown or clinch. 

But in all likelihood, a JDS-Velasquez III ends in another unanimous for Cain Velasquez, he’s just tailor-made to beat a fighter like Junior dos Santos.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 155: Cain Velasquez Delivers Record Setting Performance in Win over JDS

At UFC 155, Cain Velasquez famously gave Junior dos Santos the beating of a lifetime to recapture the UFC Heavyweight championship. According to a report from FightMetric, it was the most well-rounded beating in UFC history, as Velasquez became th…

At UFC 155, Cain Velasquez famously gave Junior dos Santos the beating of a lifetime to recapture the UFC Heavyweight championship. According to a report from FightMetric, it was the most well-rounded beating in UFC history, as Velasquez became the first man in UFC history to score triple digits in the significant strikes department (111) and double digits in takedowns (11) in the same fight. 

Considering that dos Santos went into the fight with the apparent possession of the best boxing skills in all of mixed martial arts, it’s shocking to many that he could be on the receiving end of such a record breaking performance.

Prior to the contest, the UFC presented another statistic that makes this record hard to believe. In all of his previous UFC bouts combined, Junior dos Santos had only spent a total of 13 seconds on his back

The closest that any fighter had come to achieving this feat was at UFC 141 when Jimy Hettes dominated Nam Phan. Although it was only a three round fight, Hettes matched the wrestling output of Cain by scoring 11 takedowns, but only recording 81 significant strikes.

Despite the devastating loss, the former champion is anxious to get back into the cage with Velasquez for an inevitable rubber match.

“I won the first and he had a rematch. Now I lost and I want my rematch. I’m saying I want this fight. I’ll get my belt.”

“Cigano” is going to need a major win before getting another crack at the title, as there are a pair of potential contenders blocking his path. If Alistair Overeem or Fabricio Werdum are successful in their next bouts (against Bigfoot Silva and Big Nog, respectively), they will most certainly be ahead of him in the pecking order.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC: Every Current Champion’s Best Fight to Date

Being a UFC champion is about as high an honor as a martial artist can earn. It shows that, for men your size on this planet, you are the best there is at kicking behind and taking names. And along that path, there are plenty of memorable fights. From …

Being a UFC champion is about as high an honor as a martial artist can earn. It shows that, for men your size on this planet, you are the best there is at kicking behind and taking names.

And along that path, there are plenty of memorable fights. From the stepping stones to the all out wars, the road to a championship is paved with the overmatched and the evenly matched alike.

Here is a look at the best fight each present UFC champion has found themselves in.

Begin Slideshow