ARCHIVES: Jose Aldo Posts Video Of McGregor “Running Away From Him”

The UFC Featherweight Champion shows off his sense of humor.
Continue Reading ARCHIVES: Jose Aldo Posts Video Of McGregor “Running Away From Him” at MMA News.

The UFC Featherweight Champion shows off his sense of humor.

Continue Reading ARCHIVES: Jose Aldo Posts Video Of McGregor “Running Away From Him” at MMA News.

Pic: Jon Jones Faces Off With Massive ‘Rumble’ Johnson

Legendary but troubled former UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones is awaiting the resolution of his failed USADA drug test in connection with his UFC 214 knockout victory over rival Daniel Cormier. Jones has teased a pending return on social media quite often lately, making fans believe that a pending “Bones” fight could be on […]

The post Pic: Jon Jones Faces Off With Massive ‘Rumble’ Johnson appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Legendary but troubled former UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones is awaiting the resolution of his failed USADA drug test in connection with his UFC 214 knockout victory over rival Daniel Cormier.

Jones has teased a pending return on social media quite often lately, making fans believe that a pending “Bones” fight could be on the horizon much sooner than his sordid history with performance-enhancing drugs would suggest.

That’s all speculation at this point, however, as Jones’ punishment could absolutely reach as high as four years because it’s his second offense. He’s also had repeated trouble with both cocaine and drinking and driving, making any return for “Bones” tentative speculation at the very best.

It won’t stop Jones from hoping for the best, of course, and in anticipation of his umpteenth comeback, he’s seemingly making more public appearances. Such was the case at this weekend’s Gatt Supplements expo in Las Vegas this weekend. There, Jones came face-to-face with an opponent he missed out on fighting when he was champion in two-time title contender Anthony “Rumble” Johnson:

Johnson retired from mixed martial arts after his second loss to Cormier at April 2017’s UFC 210. He’s since been seen becoming more focused on bodybuilding, and the results are not only jaw-dropping but also enough to prompt many to speculate that ‘Rumble’s’ been on some “supplements” of his own.

He isn’t being tested by USADA like Jones is, even if they haven’t exactly been knocking his door down this year. Regardless, the controversial great has an uncanny knack to come back from peril that would seemingly damn most other fighters. There was even a rumor that USADA had accepted a bribe to resolve “Bones’” case.

Let’s just hope we find out what will happen to Jones before a lengthy suspension period ends.

The post Pic: Jon Jones Faces Off With Massive ‘Rumble’ Johnson appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Video: Daniel Cormier vs. Anthony “Rumble” Johnson 1 From UFC 187 (Full Fight)

https://youtu.be/EjM1CuTau6k

On The Thanksgiving holiday here in the United States, UFC released a new “Free Fight” that fans will be thankful for.

Featured above is the complete first fight between Daniel Cormier and Anthony “Rumble” Johnson, th…

cormier-rumble-1-fight

https://youtu.be/EjM1CuTau6k

On The Thanksgiving holiday here in the United States, UFC released a new “Free Fight” that fans will be thankful for.

Featured above is the complete first fight between Daniel Cormier and Anthony “Rumble” Johnson, the five-round showdown for the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship that served as the main event for the UFC 187 pay-per-view.

D.C. and Rumble will fight in the rematch, once again a pay-per-view headliner with the 205-pound title on the line, when UFC 206 touches down at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Saturday, December 10th.

Make sure to join us here at MMANews.com on 12/10 for live round-by-round results coverage of the UFC 206 pay-per-view.

Video: Daniel Cormier vs. Anthony “Rumble” Johnson From UFC 187 (Full Fight)

Daniel Cormier’s first real MMA title came last year, as he submitted Anthony Johnson to become UFC light heavyweight champion.

Cormier had previously won the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix, which was sort of a way to crown a new champion in tha…

daniel-cormier

Daniel Cormier’s first real MMA title came last year, as he submitted Anthony Johnson to become UFC light heavyweight champion.

Cormier had previously won the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix, which was sort of a way to crown a new champion in that promotion before Zuffa purchased it.

Regardless of that, check out a complete fight replay of that bout between Cormier and Johnson from UFC 187 in the video below:

Jon Jones Still Casts Long Shadow in Suddenly Thin Light Heavyweight Division

Give credit to Daniel Cormier for saying what we all were thinking.
Cormier wasted little time winning the light heavyweight title on Saturday at UFC 187, snapping Anthony Johnson’s spirit like dry kindling en route to a third-round submission vi…

Give credit to Daniel Cormier for saying what we all were thinking.

Cormier wasted little time winning the light heavyweight title on Saturday at UFC 187, snapping Anthony Johnson’s spirit like dry kindling en route to a third-round submission victory. Cormier had survived an early onslaught of punches from Johnson before his Olympic wrestling won the day, so it made for a nice moment when Johnson insisted on wrapping the UFC belt around his waist.

A few moments later, however, the new champ revealed he had someone else on his mind.

Jon Jones!” Cormier hollered as soon as color commentator Joe Rogan let him get near the microphone. “Get your s–t together! I’m waiting for you!”

From the stands in the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, from our living rooms and from inside sports bars across America, the MMA world nodded along.

Yes, we thought, do that. Get your stuff together, Jon Jones. Get it together and come back to us.

The long-reigning, but suddenly former 205-pound titlist was nowhere to be seen, of course. A bit more than three weeks earlier, he’d been stripped of the championship and banished indefinitely after turning himself in on felony hit-and-run charges in New Mexico.

None of us knew where Jones was at that moment. We didn’t know if he was watching or if he heard Cormier’s words. We just knew that—even in his absence—the man many still believed to be the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world casts a long shadow.

It was just 14 months ago that we were trumpeting the resurgence of the UFC’s marquee weight class. After the instability of the post-Chuck Liddell years and the unchecked dominance of Jones’ early title reign, a suddenly robust crop of contenders were breathing down the champion’s neck.

Jones had survived a squeaker against Alexander Gustafsson at UFC 165 and was headed into a cakewalk versus the thunderously powerful, but one-dimensional, Glover Teixeira. Meanwhile, Gustafsson rebounded with a win over Jimi Manuwa, Cormier was poised to tear through Dan Henderson and Johnson was building a seven-fight win streak at 205 pounds.

Light heavyweight appeared primed for some golden years.

At the time, I even postulated that if Jones could successfully run the gauntlet of Gustafsson (again), Cormier and Johnson during the calendar year of 2015, we’d have no choice but to hail him as the greatest MMA fighter of all time.

Unfortunately, we didn’t get that far.

Jones and Cormier did their part, staging an epic feud that culminated in Jones’ hard-fought, but unanimous decision, victory at UFC 182 in January. He was scheduled to take on Johnson next, but in the wake of the Cormier victory it was revealed he’d tested positive for cocaine. Three-and-a-half months later, Jones allegedly crashed his rental SUV into a car driven by a pregnant woman and then fled the scene on foot.

Public scrutiny around Jones’ perennially beleaguered image abruptly grew too hot. The UFC had no choice but to vacate the title, force Jones into seclusion and insert Cormier against Johnson at UFC 187.

It was the right move in the moment, though, now that we’ve all had a few weeks to let it sink in, a 205-pound division without Jones suddenly seems almost laughably shallow.

That’s how things go in this sport sometimes. An entire weight class can go from renaissance to reclamation project in the time it takes an Albuquerque traffic light to switch from green to red.

Never was this more apparent than at the UFC 187 post-fight press conference, when Cormier did his absolute best to stir up interest in a bout with Ryan Bader. Before Jones’ personal life went kablooey, Cormier and Bader had been scheduled to meet at UFC Fight Night 68 on June 6. No harm in testing the waters to see if it was still viable, Cormier might have figured.

(Warning: NSFW language in video)

“I would love to compete against (Jones),” he told the gathered media, “but he’s going to be away for awhile, so we’ve got to shift our focus. There’s somebody else that needs his a– kicked, too. I think he’s around here. It’s Ryan Bader’s a– and I’m going to beat the s–t out of him next time.”

Bader stormed to the front of the room and had to be held back (sort of) by UFC security, as Cormier stood on the dais and called him “an easy paycheck” and “the easiest fight in the division.” Eventually, Bader was led away and Cormier took his seat. A few feet to the left, the recently defeated Johnson picked up his own microphone, tapped his palm against it and deadpanned: “Any questions for Rumble?”

If Johnson’s quip came off as the highlight of the exchange, there was good reason for that. A potential title match between Cormier and Bader would only underscore how lackluster this weight class seems without Jones.

Bader is riding a four-fight win streak and is No. 3 in the UFC’s unexpectedly Bones-free light heavyweight rankings. But his matchup with Cormier always came off as a comeback fight for the 36-year-old former heavyweight—a bout designed to rehabilitate Cormier’s image after that stinging loss at UFC 182.

The truth is, people are already going to have some difficulty regarding Cormier as the champion. He is one of the most likable fighters in all of MMA, and it felt good to see him finally capture a major title after a career full of coming up just short.

But until Jones returns and those two guys can fight again, we’ll always regard Bones as the best 205-pounder in the world. There’s going to be a lot of this kind of stuff floating around:

Deep down, Cormier knows that. That’s why his first official move as UFC champion was to jump on the mic and challenge Jones all over again.

Bader knows it, too.

“I kind of feel like it’s a little consolation prize,” Bader told the Three Amigos Podcast (h/t Bloody Elbow) of Cormier‘s victory over Johnson this week. “There’s a guy that hasn’t been beat, that has been dominating, and is the pound-for-pound best fighter out there, and he had that belt. … And for Cormier it’s somebody out there that’s better than him and beat him. That’s got to be in his head a little bit.”

Whether or not he meant it merely as trash talk, Bader effectively put his finger on the trouble with the current state of the light heavyweight division. With Gustafsson still mired in the doldrums of his own loss to Johnson, there just isn’t anyone in the weight class who can do much to legitimize Cormier’s title reign.

With no idea how long it will be until Jones returns, we’re not even sure how much energy we should invest in reimagining a 205-pound landscape without him in it.

Frankly, that includes the idea of a title fight against Bader. No offense to the former Arizona State standout, but we’ve never been able to think of Bader as a true top contender after he stumbled through a 3-4 stretch from 2011 to September 2013. He capped his current win streak with a victory over Phil Davis, but it mostly came against middling competition.

The idea that he could suddenly jump to the front of the line and fight for the title seems like a poor status update on the health of light heavyweight. And the notion that Bader could actually become the champion? Well, that seems like a worst-case scenario for the prestige of the UFC’s longtime glamour division.

All of which is sort of ironic, when you think about it.

For years, a lot of MMA fans appeared fixated on how much they disliked Jones. His positive drug test and alleged hit-and-run accident only poured gasoline on those sour feelings. For some, there was a certain glee in the news he’d been stripped of the title and suspended.

But if there’s a lesson in any of this, it might be how badly we need the guy and how lucky we’ll be if we ever get him back.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TIL That Chris Weidman Almost Sh*t Himself Before His UFC 187 Title Fight


(“No, Floyd, I said *shitter*, not *hit her*. What were we even talking about, again?” via Weidman’s instagram)

If you’ve ever heard the story about how Chris Weidman wooed his wife, chances are that you took two things away from it: The middleweight champion is an incredibly honest and upfront person, almost to a fault, and he sometimes has to poo when he gets nervous.

Although he may not have appeared so heading into his title fight with Vitor Belfort last weekend (or while eating a hailstorm of Belfort’s punches), it turns out that UFC 187 was one such time that Weidman came down with a case of the butterflies. He was so nervous, in fact, that just moments before he was set to walkout, he came to the realization that he might become the first UFC fighter to sh*t himself in the octagon (well, second). Had Burt Watson been backstage doing his classic “We rollin!” pump-up routine, we can almost guarantee that the pressure would have gotten to him.

As Wediman told Ariel helwani on yesterday’s edition of The MMA Hour:

The post TIL That Chris Weidman Almost Sh*t Himself Before His UFC 187 Title Fight appeared first on Cagepotato.


(“No, Floyd, I said *shitter*, not *hit her*. What were we even talking about, again?” via Weidman’s instagram)

If you’ve ever heard the story about how Chris Weidman wooed his wife, chances are that you took two things away from it: The middleweight champion is an incredibly honest and upfront person, almost to a fault, and he sometimes has to poo when he gets nervous.

Although he may not have appeared so heading into his title fight with Vitor Belfort last weekend (or while eating a hailstorm of Belfort’s punches), it turns out that UFC 187 was one such time that Weidman came down with a case of the butterflies. He was so nervous, in fact, that just moments before he was set to walkout, he came to the realization that he might become the first UFC fighter to sh*t himself in the octagon (well, second). Had Burt Watson been backstage doing his classic “We rollin!” pump-up routine, we can almost guarantee that the pressure would have gotten to him.

As Wediman told Ariel helwani on yesterday’s edition of The MMA Hour:

I’ll be honest. It was my first time ever that I had to go to the bathroom bad. I could not believe this was going to happen. I’m going to crap myself in the middle of this cage. I didn’t know, as soon as Vitor’s walkout music came on, was concentrating, all I could think about was that I didn’t know if I should run into the bathroom now or hold it. I didn’t know what was going to happen.

That’s really what was going through my mind the whole time walking out. I thought I would be the first person that had to run from a fight to go to the bathroom, or they’d have to hold the fight for me. But, I didn’t want to tell anybody because when you say it out loud it makes things worse. So, when we were getting ready to do the walkout, I gave Ray my flag, usually I hold it, but I gave it to him so I could focus on not crapping myself pretty much. So yeah, you were right, there was definitely something not normal.

An interesting “what could’ve been” no doubt, but I must respectfully disagree with Weidman’s assertion that what he was going through was “not normal” on Saturday. I know if I was about to fight a testosterone-fueled Brazilian with a cross shaved into his head, I would have more than a few butterflies in my stomach. Hell, I’d be looking high and low for a pipe to slip on backstage, or calling Tim Means’ sauna guy to sprinkle a little water on the floor of the bathroom for me to conveniently slip on while giving myself a Jack Donaghy-inspired pep talk. (“It’s quitting time, you cowardly sonofabitch”)

Honestly, when you consider what most fighters put themselves through in the 48 hours before a fight, it makes you wonder how normal Weidman’s experience actually was. All that weight cutting and replenishing fluids and protein shakes and acai…it’s a wonder that most of them aren’t spraying bodily fluids all over fans like a goddamn Penn and Teller show.

I guess the point I’m trying to make is: Cheer up Chris. You didn’t sh*t yourself, and better yet, you didn’t sh*t the bed against Belfort even when he was unloading the 30 seconds of yoke-fisted fury that his body would allow. Sounds like a win-win to me.

The post TIL That Chris Weidman Almost Sh*t Himself Before His UFC 187 Title Fight appeared first on Cagepotato.