Myles Jury Quiet Before Fight with Cerrone: ‘The Results Will Do the Talking’

You’d think we’d know Myles “Fury” Jury by now. 
The 26-year-old Michigan native boasts a 15-0 record as a professional mixed martial artist—a metric that inflates to 21-0 if you include his amateur bouts. 
Casual fans, however, first m…

You’d think we’d know Myles “Fury” Jury by now. 

The 26-year-old Michigan native boasts a 15-0 record as a professional mixed martial artist—a metric that inflates to 21-0 if you include his amateur bouts. 

Casual fans, however, first met Jury on the UFC’s reality show The Ultimate Fighter. 

After dropping out of The Ultimate Fighter 13 with a knee injury, Jury returned for Season 15, where he lost a preliminary-round bout to eventual finalist Al Iaquinta via split decision. That loss fueled him, and since then, Jury ascended to a new level. 

Despite losing early on TUF 15, Jury received a call to participate on the show’s finale card in Las Vegas on June 1, 2012. He defeated Chris Saunders via guillotine choke in that bout, and his official UFC career rocketed from there. 

After five more victories in a row, Jury earned a shot at his toughest test to date: No. 4-ranked lightweight and fan favorite Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone

We’ve seen Jury for years now, on The Ultimate Fighter and inside the Octagon chucking leather and shins, but this is the fight in many fans’ and critics’ eyes that will unveil his true self. Just who is Myles Jury, and how will he handle the established veteran Cerrone

To Jury, the questions mean nothing once the cage door closes on Jan. 3, and his focus is on himself, his game and his considerable skill set. 

“I have daily goals that keep me busy to make sure I’m getting better and learning every day, otherwise it’s a day wasted,” Jury told Bleacher Report. “I don’t let an opponent or fight affect my daily obligations that advance my career and life. To be honest, even when the fight was set, it didn’t change anything until the coaches started my camp. I’m not one to let others dictate what I do, where I’m at, where I’m going or anything at all.” 

With a win over Cerrone, “where he’s going” might just be to a showdown with UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis

While Jury is currently ranked No. 8 in the division, a win over Cerrone would elevate his stock and put him in the title conversation.

Cerrone is on a tear of his own, winning five straight, four in 2014 alone. Jury agrees with the public’s perception on this matter: He’s fighting a top guy now, and he cherishes the opportunity. 

“Cerrone is by far the best and most dangerous fighter over this past year, and I feel (he) is above everyone in the division right now,” Jury said. “That’s why I’m so excited for this, because to be the best, you have to fight the best. A win over Cerrone for sure puts me in a championship bout.”

The UFC’s process for handing out title shots, however, doesn’t always make sense. Recently, the promotion promised welterweight fighter Rory MacDonald the winner of UFC 181’s main event between Johny Hendricks and Robbie Lawler.  

However, after the fight—a close split-decision victory for Lawlerthe title shot was ripped away from the Canadian standout, setting up an apparent trilogy between Hendricks and Lawler instead. 

Even if Jury demolishes Cerrone in the first round, a title shot is no guarantee. The Alliance MMA star recognizes this fact, but he maintains a positive (if a bit dismissive) attitude toward it. 

“I’m always prepared for the worst-case scenarios and (I) work my ass off to make them the best-case scenarios,” Jury said. “I don’t control that, so it’s not something I’m going to waste my time thinking about. Whatever happens, happens.” 

Right now, Jury’s full focus remains on Cerrone, on the No. 4-ranked lightweight in the UFC and on his potential ticket to superstardom. 

He’s already fought Cowboy several times in his head and in practice by taking on sparring partners specifically chosen to emulate Cerrone‘s style, and he’s ready to showcase the results of a calculated, scientific training camp at UFC 182

Unfortunately for Cerrone, Jury is evolving every day and believes the best is yet to come. 

“Since I started 14 years ago, I can honestly say I am always better than I was the day before and constantly getting better,” Jury said. “I don’t focus on one area because I’m not one-dimensional. There is not one area in my MMA career or my overall life that doesn’t get constant maintenance to advance. I’m having fun and feel I’m still far from my prime and already toward the top.

“I match up great regardless of where the fight goes, and I expect Cowboy to be at his best no matter when or where.” 

As for a prediction, Jury maintains his composure and closed-mouth style there, too. He’s not going to trash talk his way into the public’s eye, but he will deliver a zinger with a steely reserve and a confidence borne through hard training sessions at Alliance MMA and a 21-fight winning streak. 

“We will see on Jan. 3,” Jury said. “I’m not one to get into the ‘what-ifs’ or show my cards before a fight. The results will do the talking.” 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jon Jones Wants You to Know That He is the *Real* Victim of All This UFC 182 Fight Hype

(“Hey pussy, are you still there?” via…who are we kidding, it’s already been taken down.)

The lead-up to Jon Jones‘ title tilt with Daniel Cormier at UFC 182 has been an unusually heated affair for the long-standing light heavyweight champion. While we’ve seen Jones irked in the past, we’ve never seen him break kayfabe in the form of a full-on fist fight at a press conference before, which usually marks the beginning of a new chapter in a person’s life. The beef between Bones and Cormier appears to be legitimate and has earned the matchup a ton of additional eyes, so it would be a huge mistake on the UFC’s part *not* to use this hate-filled storyline to market the fight, right? Especially while in the midst of a(nother) pay-per-view slump?

The Grudge Match™ has been one of the most reliable marketing gimmicks of the Zuffa era — second only to “If ___ beats ___, then pound-for-pound.” — and surely a scheme that will likely earn Jones a hefty bump in his cut of the PPV revenue. But according to the champ himself, all the money in the world isn’t worth everyone knowing that he is a two-faced, fakey fakerson. (Ed note: Sorry, my 7-year-old nephew is in town for the holidays and keeps jacking my laptop.)

As Bones recently told UFC Tonight (via MMAMania):

When I first saw [the now infamous ad for UFC 182] I was a little offended by it. That UFC — someone who is supposed to be backing my brand and making me look good — would put up something like that for the general public to see. I don’t think it’s really healthy for the world to see their champion — for the world to see UFC’s champion — saying I would kill someone. That really took me off guard. I didn’t really think it was in my best interest, but it was for UFC’s best interest, so I kind of had to swallow my pride. I said it.


(“Hey pussy, are you still there?” via…who are we kidding, it’s already been taken down.)

The lead-up to Jon Jones‘ title tilt with Daniel Cormier at UFC 182 has been an unusually heated affair for the long-standing light heavyweight champion. While we’ve seen Jones irked in the past, we’ve never seen him break kayfabe in the form of a full-on fist fight at a press conference before, which usually marks the beginning of a new chapter in a person’s life. The beef between Bones and Cormier appears to be legitimate and has earned the matchup a ton of additional eyes, so it would be a huge mistake on the UFC’s part *not* to use this hate-filled storyline to market the fight, right? Especially while in the midst of a(nother) pay-per-view slump?

The Grudge Match™ has been one of the most reliable marketing gimmicks of the Zuffa era — second only to “If ___ beats ___, then pound-for-pound.” — and surely a scheme that will likely earn Jones a hefty bump in his cut of the PPV revenue. But according to the champ himself, all the money in the world isn’t worth everyone knowing that he is a two-faced, fakey fakerson. (Ed note: Sorry, my 7-year-old nephew is in town for the holidays and keeps jacking my laptop.)

As Bones recently told UFC Tonight (via MMAMania):

When I first saw [the now infamous ad for UFC 182] I was a little offended by it. That UFC — someone who is supposed to be backing my brand and making me look good — would put up something like that for the general public to see. I don’t think it’s really healthy for the world to see their champion — for the world to see UFC’s champion — saying I would kill someone. That really took me off guard. I didn’t really think it was in my best interest, but it was for UFC’s best interest, so I kind of had to swallow my pride. I said it.

Oh, so you don’t wike it dat da UFC is makin’ you wook bad? WELL LOOK AT POWAH WITTLE JAWN. (Ed note: God dammit, Milo! You know that our WordPress can’t handle all these edits!!)

Knock Jones all you want, but you simply have to respect his consistency when it comes to shirking all responsibility for an incident he played a definitive role in and then martyring himself after the fact. For Christ’s sake, Jones said he was caught off guard…by the things he said! What a world!

“I, Jon Jones, am truly the victim here. Yeah, I might have threatened a man’s life on live television moments after starting a fight that I definitely wasn’t proud of, but for the UFC to promote my fight with those things I said and did? To make money? WON’T YOU THINK OF THE CHILDREN, DANA!!!!”

Who knows, maybe this interview was just the latest in what has been a series of blatantly trollish moves by the light heavyweight champion. But if Jones really is still banking on the idea that the masses will suddenly accept him as a genuine, down-to-earth guy at this point in his career, than maybe he’s not trolling us at all. Maybe Jon Jones is just f*cking crazy. And I honestly, I like crazy (minus that whole “defending Bill Cosby” thing).

I guess it isn’t really worth putting that much thought into. If Jones beats DC on January 4th, he’ll probably come out saying what a “really smart personal career decision” this whole thing was and everyone will somehow find it in them to hate him even more.

J. Jones

Jon Jones Receives Random Drug Test Ahead of UFC 182 Fight with Daniel Cormier

It seems as if the Nevada State Athletic Commission is testing to make sure none of the bad blood between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier has led to bad blood within the champion himself. 
Jones, who is currently training for his eighth straight titl…

It seems as if the Nevada State Athletic Commission is testing to make sure none of the bad blood between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier has led to bad blood within the champion himself. 

Jones, who is currently training for his eighth straight title defense against Cormier at UFC 182, was paid a random visit by the NSAC to conduct a random drug test, according to Jones’ Instagram account. 

Jones’ photo caption read:

“The Nevada State athletic commission just stopped by my house and hit me with that random.. Only thing I’m on is that #PHW pure hard work! They are probably wondering how my chicken legs are so strong. I’ve had a few @muscletech products but that’s all legal :)”

It’s likely Cormier gets tested before the fight as well. Considering the former United States Olympian was comfortable with being tested before, seeing his reaction to the UFC and the athletic commissions taking a firmer stand against performance-enhancing drug use wasn’t very surprising.

As far as Jones has publicly admitted, this is the second straight title defense in which he’s been tested—the first coming during his UFC 172 training camp for his bout against now-No. 6 light heavyweight Glover Teixeira. 

The champ went out of his way to publicly request the test the first time around, claiming a hunger for more transparency in his title fights. He told Ariel Helwani on UFC Tonight (h/t MMAJunkie.com) back in April: 

It was something me and my management team asked for several months ago. We thought it would be great to make sure everyone was playing fair in this fight. I’m not accusing my opponent of anything, but it’d just be great to see. … I just think it’d be great to know that the athletes that are competing are competing clean. I’ve never taken any kind of performance-enhancing drug and I don’t think any of my opponents should. I know that I’ve probably fought people in the past that have, and I’ve still come up with a way to win, but I just think it’s important that it goes away.

Jones and Cormier will take the center of the Octagon on Jan. 3 in Las Vegas. 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report MMA. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Watch the UFC 182 Extended Preview Because Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier Hate Each Other and Myles Jury Is Out of Lollipops or Something

(Props: UFC on YouTube)

And here we have the nine-minute extended video trailer for UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier, which goes down January 3rd in Las Vegas. The verbal beefin’ between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier is nothing new, but hey, there’s more of it here. Plus, we get a segment on the lightweight co-main between undefeated 26-year-old Myles Jury and red-hot veteran Donald Cerrone. Myles Jury kind of seems like a real-life version of that “bring a rocket-launcher” guy from the NOS commercials. As for Cerrone…well, you already know who that dude is.


(Props: UFC on YouTube)

And here we have the nine-minute extended video trailer for UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier, which goes down January 3rd in Las Vegas. The verbal beefin’ between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier is nothing new, but hey, there’s more of it here. Plus, we get a segment on the lightweight co-main between undefeated 26-year-old Myles Jury and red-hot veteran Donald Cerrone. Myles Jury kind of seems like a real-life version of that “bring a rocket-launcher” guy from the NOS commercials. As for Cerrone…well, you already know who that dude is.

UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier — The Official “Hey Pussy, Are You Still There?” Trailer [VIDEO]

(Props: MiddleEasy)

I don’t know what else to call this thing. It incorporates so much about Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier‘s rivalry — the aggressive trash-talk, the infamous casino lobby brawl, the MMA quote of the year. After their long-awaited light-heavyweight title fight was postponed the first time due to Jones suffering an injury, it’s finally going to happen at UFC 182, January 3rd in Las Vegas.

Watch the official trailer above, which aired Saturday night during UFC 181, and get appropriately hyped.


(Props: MiddleEasy)

I don’t know what else to call this thing. It incorporates so much about Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier‘s rivalry — the aggressive trash-talk, the infamous casino lobby brawl, the MMA quote of the year. After their long-awaited light-heavyweight title fight was postponed the first time due to Jones suffering an injury, it’s finally going to happen at UFC 182, January 3rd in Las Vegas.

Watch the official trailer above, which aired Saturday night during UFC 181, and get appropriately hyped.

UFC Utopia: Ranking the 15 Best Fights Between UFC 181 and UFC 184

The UFC is set for a historic run of top-notch fight cards. Ten events will take us through the end of 2014 and to the beginning of 2015.
What are the best fights you’ll have to watch? That’s what we are here to tell you.
The UFC has been criticized as…

The UFC is set for a historic run of top-notch fight cards. Ten events will take us through the end of 2014 and to the beginning of 2015.

What are the best fights you’ll have to watch? That’s what we are here to tell you.

The UFC has been criticized as of late for poor events, but that won’t be the case over the next three months. They have loaded the next 90 days with a fantastic slate of fights for us all.

Exciting stylistic matchups, title tilts and much more help round out the action. This isn’t a scientific list, and you may have your own favorite upcoming fights. Title bouts and interesting storylines helped to elevate some matchups up the list.

This ranking features fights in seven different weight classes.

These are the top 15 fights you’ll see starting Saturday through February’s UFC 184 pay-per-view.

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