Jessica Eye’s Biggest Mistake Wasn’t Marijuana, It Was Not Coming Clean

In retrospect, perhaps we should’ve known things weren’t going to end well for Jessica Eye when she deleted her Twitter account.
Eye abandoned the social media service on Monday after vehemently denying reports that she’d tested posit…

In retrospect, perhaps we should’ve known things weren’t going to end well for Jessica Eye when she deleted her Twitter account.

Eye abandoned the social media service on Monday after vehemently denying reports that she’d tested positive for marijuana at last October’s UFC 166 and amid heated exchanges with fans and the reporter who broke the news.

“Hope we get to meet one day soon so I can personally tell you how I feel,” the UFC women’s bantamweight fighter wrote to Bloody Elbow’s Brent Brookhouse by way of saying goodbye.

At the time it seemed plausible that Eye simply didn’t want to deal with the public criticism as she prepares to fight Alexis Davis at UFC 170 on Feb. 22.

Now that we know the truth, her withdrawal strikes a different tone.

Maybe it wasn’t just the tactless retreat of a fighter trying to get her game face on but, rather, a speedy getaway.

On Monday afternoon, Damon Martin of Fox Sports confirmed Brookhouse’s story that Eye’s positive test had indeed been for marijuana and that she was notified of it by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation in late November.

Further, Martin reported that on Jan. 15 Eye signed and returned a document acknowledging her year-long probationary suspension and agreeing to pay a $1,875 fine—and that she’d already made the first of eight monthly installments.

In other words (and despite earlier reports from Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter that she had tested positive for blood thinners) there’s really no way Eye could’ve been confused about her own situation when she went after Brookhouse on Twitter. She couldn’t have been uninformed last week when she told Fox Sports she planned to appeal the TDLR’s decision to strip her of her four-month-old win over Sarah Kaufman.

Worse yet, she must’ve known exactly what she was doing on Monday when she went on Ariel Helwani’s The MMA Hour and tried to make the whole thing sound like a clerical error.

“I don’t want to say anything for anyone to use against me, but there were some mistakes that I made on my behalf that I didn‘t give enough knowledge (to the commission) ahead of time…,” Eye said. “I’m going to continue to push forward and just not let anything like this ever happen again, or ever leave any kind of allegations out there to be kind of put out there about me.”

We don’t know why Eye said these things—so many words, such little substance—instead of just giving it to us straight: She smoked weed, she got caught, end of story.

Or at least, that’s what we assume now is the real story and if the truth is any different, well, she should’ve told us that, too.

Maybe she was embarrassed, or got some bad advice from her friends or training partners, or just didn’t think the much-maligned “MMA media” was going to find out the truth.

Whatever her reasons, rather than admit what’d she’d done, Eye committed the cardinal sin of public relations. She engaged in a cover-up that was far worse than the actual crime.

Had she just come clean and admitted that she’d tested positive for marijuana when the news broke last week, we probably wouldn’t still be talking about it today.

Instead, Eye put on a clinic in how to make a bad situation even more damaging.

When we think of her now, the first thing we’ll all remember about her is that time she lied to us, and that’s something no public figure wants.

It’s simultaneously bizarre and perfectly fitting that in 2014—nearly 10 years after we all trumpeted the sport’s entry into the mainstream—MMA fighters aren’t getting better public relations advice.

We can only assume that Eye didn’t have a professional to advise her in this situation. Surely, all of this could’ve been prevented had there only been a publicist around to tell Eye not to fudge it.

Or to tell her not to publicly threaten the reporter who broke the story.

Or not to swear up a blue streak on her Twitter before dramatically announcing her departure.

Should Eye have had the common sense not to lead a campaign of double-speak and misinformation through the press during the past few days? Sure, probably, but to the extent media sensitivity is part of her job description, it’s certainly ancillary to striking, grappling and Octagon control. She should have people for that.

We must assume she couldn‘t afford proper representation—a sad commentary on our sport at large, and a larger discussion best left for another day—and that she was on her own. 

Left to her own devices, she couldn’t have known how badly it would look for her after Fox Sports published scans of the actual TDLR documents, complete with her signature. She couldn‘t have had the foresight to know that by lying she was just going to make things worse for herself when she shows up in Las Vegas next week to fight Davis.

Assuming she’ll be licensed and cleared to compete.

Now, there will only be more questions. It will take far longer for her to battle her way out from under this cloud—pun fully intended.

Now, she’ll always be lumped in with Nick Diaz as the two fighters who introduced the word cannabinoids to our daily lexicon.

Now, she’ll have to dodge far more jokes and uncomfortable encounters than if she’d just stayed on Twitter and told us the truth.

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UFC 170: Pedro Munhoz Steps in vs. Raphael Assuncao on Late Notice

UFC lost one of its most important bouts in terms of title contention when Francisco Rivera bowed out against Raphael Assuncao, but the Brazilian contender has picked up a new opponent, according to Guilherme Cruz of MMAFighting.com.
Assuncao now takes…

UFC lost one of its most important bouts in terms of title contention when Francisco Rivera bowed out against Raphael Assuncao, but the Brazilian contender has picked up a new opponent, according to Guilherme Cruz of MMAFighting.com.

Assuncao now takes on RFA Bantamweight Champion and top 135-pound prospect Pedro Munhoz, a guy who can make an immediate impact in the division. If Assuncao can get by this new opponent, one has to assume he is the top contender to Renan Barao.

Assuncao had call outs from former WEC champ and UFC contender Eddie Wineland and former opponent T.J. Dillashaw, both of whom the Brazilian blew off in favor of calling for a title shot. That obviously did not materialize, as Assuncao will still have to earn a crack at the best 135-pounder in the world.

He does not get an easy opponent at UFC 170, though, as Munhoz has proven to be a legit fighter in a division begging for added depth.

At 10-0, Munhoz owns six wins by way of submission and has only gone to decision three times. Though he is mainly a grappler, he has been working with Black House and Kings MMA to tighten up his striking, which has looked better in recent outings.

He hasn’t been fighting chumps, either. He owns victories over WSOF veteran Pablo Alfonso, Bellator tournament vet Mitch Jackson, previously undefeated Billy Daniels and MMA pioneer and UFC-WEC vet Jeff Curran.

He actually presents a similar style to that of Assuncao, as both men are strong grapplers with developing striking ability. This could make for an interesting fight.

Munhoz gets this fight on about two weeks’ notice. His last fight was at the end of January, where he choked out Daniels in 41 seconds to maintain his undefeated status.

Assuncao, on the other hand, got a full training camp for this fight, though it was preparing for a striker in Rivera. He will have the benefit of working with that training and coming in with all his tools sharpened.

This bout will be featured on the Fox Sports 1 prelims, which lead into the pay-per-view. Stay tuned for more news on this card as it becomes available.

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Ronda Rousey Tapped for Two Upcoming Warner Bros. Projects

Ronda Rousey’s star continues to rise as Warner Bros. has tapped the UFC’s top female athlete for two upcoming motion pictures.
Variety reports that the UFC Women’s bantamweight champion will be one of the female leads in the upcoming Entourage movie, …

Ronda Rousey‘s star continues to rise as Warner Bros. has tapped the UFC’s top female athlete for two upcoming motion pictures.

Variety reports that the UFC Women’s bantamweight champion will be one of the female leads in the upcoming Entourage movie, and as the star of The Athena Project:

The story follows a top secret, all-female Delta Force counter-terrorism team code named “The Athena Project” that is sent in to hunt and kill a master terrorist after a bombing in Rome kills 20 Americans. Trouble ensues once the team realizes this is more than a simple bombing.

She will first film the Entourage motion picture as The Athena Project does not yet have a writer attached to the project.

Rousey began her Hollywood career by joining the cast of The Expendables 3, and then followed that up by joining The Fast and Furious 7 cast. Both films were shot in September of 2013.

Her acting chops have cast a shadow over her fighting future.

The MMA bombshell has graced magazine covers, and been a shining star on talk shows. The silver screen was her next natural step.

Rousey responded to her detractors last summer in a explicit tirade after negative reaction to a statement made to MMAJunkie.com. Rousey said that she works in quadrennials and that she thinks she has two years worth of fighting left in her.

If Rousey escapes her next fight without injury, it looks as if she will be ready to defend the UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship again after filming Entourage later this year.

The sport’s biggest star continues to explode onto mainstream media. She continues to raise her profile and that should bring even more new eyes to the sport. Rousey’s infectious personality has gained her acclaim in the land of stars and she seems poised to break out even bigger in 2014.

Rousey is slated to defend her championship against Olympic silver medalist Sara McMann on Feb. 22 in Las Vegas at UFC 170.

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HOT DAMN DIS HONDA HOUSEY PHOTO


(Now *this* is a UFC poster I think we all could get behind.)

If this is how Ronda Rousey plans to gain back the fans she lost over the course of The Ultimate Fighter 18, then consider us back on Team Housey! (*honks old-timey car horn, releases fireworks into pants*)

Set to face Olympian Sarah McMann at UFC 170, Rousey was recently snapped by Brian Bowen Smith and was courteous enough to post a couple of the photos to her Instagram account. While I’m not sure what kind of scenario would lead to the most dangerous woman on the planet being left in her undergarments and in need of a hair-drying, I appreciate Rousey’s commitment to making that scenario a reality. And maybe it’s just me, but in the history of scantily-clad Rousey photos, this ranks just above “Ronda Rousey in a Latex Bodysuit” and just below “Ronda Rousey in Nothing But Wraps” (The Body Issue tops all, obvs).

Check out the fantastic photo above, then join us after the jump for a second, classier photo I like to call “Girl in White Dress on Rusty Fold Out Bed Frame.”


(Now *this* is a UFC poster I think we all could get behind.)

If this is how Ronda Rousey plans to gain back the fans she lost over the course of The Ultimate Fighter 18, then consider us back on Team Housey! (*honks old-timey car horn, releases fireworks into pants*)

Set to face Olympian Sarah McMann at UFC 170, Rousey was recently snapped by Brian Bowen Smith and was courteous enough to post a couple of the photos to her Instagram account. While I’m not sure what kind of scenario would lead to the most dangerous woman on the planet being left in her undergarments and in need of a hair-drying, I appreciate Rousey’s commitment to making that scenario a reality. And maybe it’s just me, but in the history of scantily-clad Rousey photos, this ranks just above “Ronda Rousey in a Latex Bodysuit” and just below “Ronda Rousey in Nothing But Wraps” (The Body Issue tops all, obvs).

Check out the fantastic photo above, then join us after the jump for a second, classier photo I like to call “Girl in White Dress on Rusty Fold Out Bed Frame.”

J. Jones

Sara McMann: Does She Deserve the Title Shot at UFC 170?

Sara McMann will meet UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion Ronda Rousey at UFC 170.
The matchup in Las Vegas will be the first between two Olympic medalists inside the Octagon. It is a matchup that most have been waiting to see, myself included. The two O…

Sara McMann will meet UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion Ronda Rousey at UFC 170.

The matchup in Las Vegas will be the first between two Olympic medalists inside the Octagon. It is a matchup that most have been waiting to see, myself included. The two Olympians have been linked since their amateur careers, and the stylistic matchup will be an intriguing storyline leading into their fight.

However, one must ask—does McMann deserve the title shot?

Cat Zingano is the No. 1 contender in the division, but her injury will keep her sidelined. The UFC needed to find Rousey another opponent, and in such a shallow division there were not a lot of options.

When looking at potential fights for Rousey there were only three names that jumped off the page: McMann, Alexis Davis and Jessica Eye.

McMann had only one previous fight inside the Octagon. It was a dominant victory over natural flyweight Sheila Gaff. After the victory she was scheduled for a fight against Sarah Kaufman. At the time of the scheduled bout Kaufman was ranked No. 2 and McMann No. 4.

McMann dropped out of the bout due to undisclosed reasons, and Kaufman went on to fight former top ranked flyweight Jessica Eye at UFC 166.

In a closely contested battle, Eye got a split-decision win over the No. 2-ranked fighter in the division. It ran her win streak up to eight. While the win itself was a contentious decision it still goes down in the record books as a win. And, objectively, it is a much more impressive victory than McMann‘s.

Eye’s eight straight wins is more than McMann‘s entire career (7-0). The UFC would have been justified in giving Eye the nod.

One of the most overlooked fighters in the division is Alexis Davis.

Davis dropped a decision to Kaufman in March of 2012, on the same night Rousey won the Strikeforce Bantamweight Championship. Since that date she has gone 4-0 with four quality wins.

Davis moved over to Invicta FC for two fights against submission specialists Hitomi Akano and Shayna Baszler. She submitted both. Then she had her Octagon debut against former top-ranked flyweight, and longtime MMA veteran, Rosi Sexton.

It was an unimpressive performance, but one that was one-sided. The victory kept her streak going, and earned her a match against Liz Carmouche on the UFC Fight for the Troops 3 card.

Davis took Carmouche completely out of the fight, and had one of her most impressive performances to date. The win moved her above McMann on the UFC’s official rankings. So, why did she not get the fight?

Based on resume alone McMann should be third of these three women. Yes, she is undefeated, but MMA is a “what have you done for me lately” sport. Both Davis and Eye have done more lately. Luckily for McMann, this is the promotion business.

The Olympic medalist vs. Olympic medalist matchup is a much better storyline. It is an easier sell in an Olympic year. It is likely no coincidence that this fight will take place while the Sochi Olympics are underway.

A combat sport purest would want title fights based on merit more than promotion. This is the real world, and fans do not pay for fights based on merit alone.

Does McMann deserve the title shot? Yes. Is she more deserving than others? That’s debatable.

The bottom line is that she does deserve this fight, and it is by far the most compelling UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship fight the company could put on for UFC 170. It is the easiest decision for the UFC brass, and one the fans will be glad that was made come February 22nd.

Rousey vs. McMann is the right fight. We will be treated to a fantastic fight in a little over a month.

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Sara McMann: Undaunted, Unafraid and Ready for Ronda Rousey

LAS VEGAS — Sara McMann would like to make one thing perfectly clear: She is grateful to Ronda Rousey for helping usher women’s mixed martial arts into the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
“I am literally the first person to say that. Whether you …

LAS VEGAS — Sara McMann would like to make one thing perfectly clear: She is grateful to Ronda Rousey for helping usher women’s mixed martial arts into the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

“I am literally the first person to say that. Whether you like her or not, I absolutely agree,” McMann says. “Dana White was adamant about not adding women to the UFC, even though women had been doing it for over 10 years. These women you see fighting now? They didn’t just see Ronda Rousey and go, ‘Oh, I think I’ll start doing that.’ They had been fighting for a long time. Cyborg, Gina Carano and tons of others.

“But we needed a catalyst. We needed someone to catch the UFC’s eye, to let us do it on that stage. And she was it, and we do owe her a thank you,” she continues. “Even if she was doing it for herself, all of our boats float a little higher when the water is raised.”

McMann, who faces Rousey in the main event of UFC 170 on February 22 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center, is confident in her chances to dethrone the best female fighter in the sport.

Like Rousey, she is unbeaten. Like Rousey, she is a former Olympic medalist. And like Rousey, she has been participating in athletics for nearly her entire life.

She has often been pointed to as a potential opponent who might be able to counteract the prodigious Rousey judo attack that has confounded everyone else thus far.

McMann agrees with that sentiment.

“I think that every girl in the division would have a very hard and long road to learn how to stop a high-level throw. And I don’t have that same problem,” McMann says. “Some girls can defend once they get to the ground. But in MMA, it’s a lot different when you’re on the bottom. You can sustain a whole lot more damage, even if you are doing good jiu-jitsu. It’s a lot harder road once you’re taken down by somebody who has a strong submission game.

“If someone can come in and take her down, you have an advantage if you can get in the mount. But taking her down and making sure you’re not taken down by those high-level positions? That’s tricky.”

Rousey vs. McMann marks the first time that two Olympic medalists will face each other in the Octagon, and it’s happening during an Olympic month. It’s also a short turnaround for Rousey, who just defeated Miesha Tate at UFC 168 and jumped back into training camp a few days later. 

McMann has not competed since last April, when she made her UFC debut with a win over Sheila Gaff. The Olympic wrestler gave an emphatic performance, but the long layoff and what some perceive as a short turnaround time leave many feeling she’ll be at a disadvantage. 

She doesn’t think that’s the case. For starters, she found out about the fight in November, leaving her ample time for a training camp. And though she traveled to Tristar Gym in Montreal to prepare for her debut, this time she’s keeping things closer to home in South Carolina.

She will travel to New York to train with legendary jiu-jitsu player Marcelo Garcia for a week later this month. Outside of that, she’ll be training exclusively at her home gym and feels that a lifetime of wrestling competition will leave her prepared and free of the cage rust that so often affects others after a long time away from the Octagon.

“I’m going to go back in there and do what I have done for so long. I took an entire year off to have a child, and I came back in and I performed well. I went to a wrestling tournament and beat some of the top girls in my weight class,” McMann says. “You don’t forget how to do what you’ve done when you’ve done it that many times. Your coaches make sure it’s seared into your brain so much that you literally hate them sometimes. But then you can do it on a split-second notice. You don’t even recognize what you are doing, but your body does, and you hit positions before you even know you’ve done it. 

“I train year round. If I took a huge break from training, I might feel a little less comfortable. But going in there six days a week? I’m going to compete just fine. “

Daniel Cormier, who has known McMann for 12 years and was a teammate on the 2004 Olympic team, said that Rousey has no idea what she’s stepping in the cage against next month. He concedes that he often favors fellow wrestlers when picking fights—often to his detriment—but says McMann is a different kind of opponent than any Rousey has faced thus far.

“When Ronda grabs Sara, she’s going to feel something she hasn’t felt since the Olympic Games. She’s going to feel a girl—and this is no disrespect to the girls who have competed against Ronda or the rest of the girls who are fighting—she’s going to feel somebody that is a lifetime athlete,” Cormier says.

“Ronda’s biggest advantage is that she is a real athlete. I’m not saying these girls are not real athletes. But Ronda hit the nail on the head when she said, ‘Miesha, you wrestled girls in high school. I went to the Olympic Games.’

“Nothing was ever truer than that. Well, Sara did, too. So when she feels Sara, she’s going to feel something different than she’s felt against anyone else. A real athlete that has competed internationally. That’s why I am excited about the fight: because we have two girls who are high-level athletes competing in the Octagon.”

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