Donald Cerrone Backpedals on MMAAA: “I didn’t know I was sitting on a board.”

donald-cerrone-dana-white

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PVp1Q6x0L0

With two of the five board members of the new MMA Athletes Association fighting this weekend at UFC 206 and two more fighting at UFC 207 three weeks later, it’s only natural that the Association is a topic of conversation at the fighter media engagements. What wasn’t necessarily expected was a major development, and we got one on Wednesday at a media day in Toronto. According to an account from MMAFighting, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone told the assembled media that until he heard about it during the MMAAA conference call, he had no idea he was sitting on the Association’s board.

“As far as the Association goes man, Georges [St-Pierre] and Tim [Kennedy] called me and asked me to be part of it,” Cerrone explained. “I didn’t know I was sitting on a board. That kind of took me by surprise, sitting there like, oh wow. I spoke to Dana [White] today on the phone. He’s coming to town, and we’re going to go out to dinner and talk. There’s a lot of things I think this sport needs, you know, retirement pension, health care, things I think we need.”

To hear Cerrone explain it, he was there more to support the message of fighter benefits than anything else, rather than present himself as an official part of a group with advisor Bjorn Rebney and fellow board members Kennedy (his teammate at Jackson-Wink MMA), St-Pierre, T.J. Dillashaw, and Cain Velasquez. He explained that”I wasn’t sitting there saying, ‘we’re moving forward today, we’re going on strike, we need more money. That wasn’t coming out of mouth at all. There were a couple of people that were there that I don’t plan on working with and being a part of, not mentioning any names. I was there mostly just, not saying I’m leading a board or I’m sitting on a board, but more voicing my opinion of what this sport needs.” He specified those needs as “health care” and “some kind of pension for retirement”

Cerrone was highly complimentary of the UFC and Dana White throughout, saying that “The UFC has been nothing but great to me. I can’t complain, they give me what I want. And like Dana said, I called him and he helped me out [with legal issues]. That’s true, man. I was in a bind, he got the best lawyers you can pay, and saved my ass.”

donald-cerrone-dana-white

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PVp1Q6x0L0

With two of the five board members of the new MMA Athletes Association fighting this weekend at UFC 206 and two more fighting at UFC 207 three weeks later, it’s only natural that the Association is a topic of conversation at the fighter media engagements. What wasn’t necessarily expected was a major development, and we got one on Wednesday at a media day in Toronto. According to an account from MMAFighting, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone told the assembled media that until he heard about it during the MMAAA conference call, he had no idea he was sitting on the Association’s board.

“As far as the Association goes man, Georges [St-Pierre] and Tim [Kennedy] called me and asked me to be part of it,” Cerrone explained. “I didn’t know I was sitting on a board. That kind of took me by surprise, sitting there like, oh wow. I spoke to Dana [White] today on the phone. He’s coming to town, and we’re going to go out to dinner and talk. There’s a lot of things I think this sport needs, you know, retirement pension, health care, things I think we need.”

To hear Cerrone explain it, he was there more to support the message of fighter benefits than anything else, rather than present himself as an official part of a group with advisor Bjorn Rebney and fellow board members Kennedy (his teammate at Jackson-Wink MMA), St-Pierre, T.J. Dillashaw, and Cain Velasquez. He explained that”I wasn’t sitting there saying, ‘we’re moving forward today, we’re going on strike, we need more money. That wasn’t coming out of mouth at all. There were a couple of people that were there that I don’t plan on working with and being a part of, not mentioning any names. I was there mostly just, not saying I’m leading a board or I’m sitting on a board, but more voicing my opinion of what this sport needs.” He specified those needs as “health care” and “some kind of pension for retirement”

Cerrone was highly complimentary of the UFC and Dana White throughout, saying that “The UFC has been nothing but great to me. I can’t complain, they give me what I want. And like Dana said, I called him and he helped me out [with legal issues]. That’s true, man. I was in a bind, he got the best lawyers you can pay, and saved my ass.”

Video: Joe Rogan Breaks Down UFC 206 Main Event

https://youtu.be/cmLzSMCxWuo

As UFC 206 fight week rolls on, UFC continues to release content to get fans excited for Saturday’s big event.

Featured above is the latest Joe Rogan Breakdown video, which focuses on the main event for the interim ti…

joe-rogan-ufc-202-breakdown

https://youtu.be/cmLzSMCxWuo

As UFC 206 fight week rolls on, UFC continues to release content to get fans excited for Saturday’s big event.

Featured above is the latest Joe Rogan Breakdown video, which focuses on the main event for the interim title between Anthony Pettis and Max Holloway.

Join us here at MMANews.com this Saturday for live results coverage of the UFC 206 PPV.

Max Holloway: Why Does Everybody Hate On Conor McGregor?

Currently riding a nine-fight win streak, UFC featherweight Max Holloway finally gets a shot at gold this weekend. Although it’s the interim title, a victory will at least guarantee ‘Blessed’ a unification bout in 2017. In a game where nothing is ever certain, at the minimum a junior title is a ticket to the full

The post Max Holloway: Why Does Everybody Hate On Conor McGregor? appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Currently riding a nine-fight win streak, UFC featherweight Max Holloway finally gets a shot at gold this weekend. Although it’s the interim title, a victory will at least guarantee ‘Blessed’ a unification bout in 2017. In a game where nothing is ever certain, at the minimum a junior title is a ticket to the full championship show. Facing Anthony Pettis in the UFC 206 main event, Holloway looks to win his tenth straight UFC fight in just over two years. For a guy who’s only been fighting since 2010, the Hawaiian native’s 16-3 record is very impressive.

During his four-year stint under the UFC banner, Holloway, especially lately, has claimed some big scalps. En route to Saturday’s scrap with Pettis, ‘Blessed’ has defeated Andre Fili, Ricardo Lamas, Cub Swanson, Jeremy Stephens, Charles Oliveira and other tough competition. To say he’s hungry for a title shot right now would be a massive understatement. For some time it looked as though Holloway would face Jose Aldo, but factors at lightweight and light-heavyweight saw that change.

Max Holloway
Credit: Joe Camporeale USA TODAY Sports

Circumstance

Although clearly the most viable contender for the next featherweight title fight, circumstances have been strange at 145. Conor McGregor, after defeating Aldo at UFC 194, spent a year fighting in two other weight classes. That story ended once McGregor had won the lightweight belt at UFC 205, and was later stripped of the featherweight strap. Aldo, now promoted to full boss, is unable to fight until next year. Adding to the complication was the need for an intriguing UFC 206 main event, and so Holloway vs. Pettis for the interim title was born.

Even though McGregor held up the 145-pound division, and holds a win over ‘Blessed,’ Holloway isn’t mad at the Irish striker. Here’s what this weekend’s main event star told Champions.co about McGregor and this weekend’s action:

ufc rankingsmax holloway vs akira corassani

Why The Hate?

“Everybody hates on this guy – for what? If you had the opportunity, you know damn straight you’d take it,”

“If I had the opportunity, yes – it’s history,” Holloway said. “I want to make history. I want to break history. Conor McGregor set this bar, and bars are always meant to be broken. If you’re not trying to shoot or break it, then why are you in the game, then? I’m not trying to be this guy just chugging along. I’m trying to be the leader of the pack.”

Credit: Jake Roth USA Today Sports
Credit: Jake Roth USA Today Sports

“I’m not trying to go for the ‘Fight of the Night’ performance – that means the guy was my equal, and I don’t want an equal in there,” Holloway said. “I go out there and I make people wonder, ‘Why is this guy here? Why did they match me with him? This is a horrible matchup.’ Max is making this guy look easy, and that’s what I plan to do.”

Finalized UFC 206 Fight Card

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The post Max Holloway: Why Does Everybody Hate On Conor McGregor? appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Video: UFC 206 Embedded Episode Two

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOO6OK0tO6c[/embed]

In the second installment of the fight week series “Embedded” for UFC 206, Donald Cerrone begins his journey to Canada for Saturday’s co-main event fight with Matt Brown.

Main event fig…

ufc-206

In the second installment of the fight week series “Embedded” for UFC 206, Donald Cerrone begins his journey to Canada for Saturday’s co-main event fight with Matt Brown.

Main event fighter Anthony Pettis preps for Max Holloway by discussing strategy and notes on “Blessed.” The two meet for the interim UFC featherweight title.

Brown gets in some training for his bout with Cerrone by working the pads with new striking coach Duane Ludwig.

UFC 206 Embedded Episode 2

UFC 206 is less than a week away and the second episode of UFC 206 Embedded was released on the UFC’s YouTube channel. In the episode, welterweight Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone finishes up his fight camp and prepares for the temperature change between Cabo and Canada. Featherweight title contender Anthony “Showtime” Pettis and his team compare

The post UFC 206 Embedded Episode 2 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

UFC 206 is less than a week away and the second episode of UFC 206 Embedded was released on the UFC’s YouTube channel.

In the episode, welterweight Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone finishes up his fight camp and prepares for the temperature change between Cabo and Canada. Featherweight title contender Anthony “Showtime” Pettis and his team compare notes on his upcoming matchup against Max Holloway, who makes a nighttime visit from Toronto to Niagara Falls. Cerrone’s opponent Matt Brown hits the gym with his son and his striking coach, Duane Ludwig. Then Holloway tests his accuracy in a new sport altogether.

You can watch it here:

The post UFC 206 Embedded Episode 2 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

UFC 206 Lineup All Set For Saturday In Toronto

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHWkh69O_FM[/embed]

The fight card for Saturday’s UFC 206 event is now set, as five bouts take place on pay-per-view from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.

In the main event, Max Holloway and Anthony Petti…

ufc-206

The fight card for Saturday’s UFC 206 event is now set, as five bouts take place on pay-per-view from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.

In the main event, Max Holloway and Anthony Pettis meet for the interim UFC featherweight title. The winner is expected to unify the belts vs. Jose Aldo in early 2017.

Also planned is a welterweight co-main event featuring Donald Cerrone and Matt Brown, while 145-pounders Cub Swanson and Doo Ho Choi collide.

The action starts on UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET with three bouts, shifting over to FOX Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET for four fights. Included there will be light heavyweights Misha Cirkunov and Nikita Krylov.

MAIN CARD (PPV/10 p.m. ET)

Interim UFC Featherweight Championship
Anthony Pettis vs. Max Holloway
Welterweight: Donald Cerrone vs. Matt Brown
Featherweight: Cub Swanson vs. Doo Ho Choi
Middleweight: Tim Kennedy vs. Kelvin Gastelum
Welterweight: Jordan Mein vs. Emil Weber Meek

PRELIMINARY CARD (FOX Sports 1/8 p.m. ET)

Light Heavyweight: Misha Cirkunov vs. Nikita Krylov
Lightweight: Olivier Aubin-Mercier vs. Drew Dober
Strawweight: Valerie Letourneau vs. Viviane Pereira
Bantamweight: Mitch Gagnon vs. Matthew Lopez

PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC Fight Pass/6:30 p.m. ET)

Lightweight: John Makdessi vs. Lando Vannata
Lightweight: Rustam Khabilov vs. Jason Saggo
Flyweight: Zach Makovsky vs. Dustin Ortiz