Kevin Lee Thinks Boxing Was Already Dying Before Mayweather vs. McGregor

In less than two months, rising lightweight Kevin Lee will meet Tony Ferguson in by far the biggest fight of his MMA career when the two throw down for the 155-pound title at October 7’s UFC 216 from Las Vegas. “The Motown Phenom” earned the high-profile bout after submitting noted grappler Michael Chiesa last June, […]

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In less than two months, rising lightweight Kevin Lee will meet Tony Ferguson in by far the biggest fight of his MMA career when the two throw down for the 155-pound title at October 7’s UFC 216 from Las Vegas.

“The Motown Phenom” earned the high-profile bout after submitting noted grappler Michael Chiesa last June, his fifth straight win in the octagon and ninth overall in 11 UFC bouts. But while it’s certainly clear that Lee is making quite the name for himself fighting, that’s only been amplified by the direct connection he has to this weekend’s (Sat., August 26, 2017) massive Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor boxing match from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nev.

Lee helped Mayweather prepare for the Irish MMA star, and that firsthand eyewitness account not surprisingly has him picking the 49-0 ‘Money’ to outlast ‘The Notorious,’ who does not have a single professional boxing match on his record, during an interview on today’s The MMA Hour. It may not be as one-sided as many boxing fans are predicting, however, as Lee thinks McGregor will still win some rounds:

“You know me, I study the fights well. And being around Floyd and seeing him train, and seeing him spar, I’ve gotta take him. I thought he was gonna be able to stop McGregor in the later rounds, but the closer that the fight get and I kinda see McGregor’s mentality too, I think McGregor will stick it out and Floyd will end up carrying him the last three, four rounds even.

“So I think Mayweather still wins a decision; maybe 8-4, 9-3 something like that. It’s going to be terrible for boxing, I’ll tell you that. It’s going to be terrible for boxing just from the standpoint of there’s no other sport in the world you can go in with the best of the world and actually do good, and McGregor’s going to do good, he’s gonna win rounds, he’s gonna land some punches.”

Photo Credit: Joe Camporeale for USA TODAY Sports

Lee makes a good point in that sense, as you truly don’t see another sport where someone who has never competed professionally in it can come in and fight the so-called greatest of all-time. Now, the fight was obviously made because of the sheer spectacle and mountainous windfall of cash involved, but still, it’s a sobering thought when put in the terms Lee framed them.

He illustrated that point further by proclaiming that while he is the best wrestler in MMA, but he knows he can’t hang with USA Olympic standout Jordan Burroughs for long. He thinks he can box Mayweather for 12 rounds, on the other hand, and that’s why boxing is a fading sport. When the brash McGregor goes the distance with ‘Money,’ Lee believes, the facade will be exposed once and for all:

“There’s no other sport, I’m the best wrestler in MMA. Hands down. I got the numbers to back it up. I can’t go out there with Jordan Burroughs and last more than 30 seconds, like, I just know that. But I can go in there with Floyd Mayweather and I can last for 12 rounds. You feel me?

“So for boxing, as boxing standpoint, I think boxing was already dying anyway, and it’s really just going to show that it’s a bunch of smoke and mirrors too.”

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Report: Jon Jones vs. Alexander Gustafsson II In The Works For UFC 218

The light heavyweight rematch that MMA has been waiting is reportedly being targeted for a pay-per-view card later this year. According to sources obtained by Swedish MMA site MMAnytt.se, champion Jon Jones will face No. 2 Alexander Gustafsson in the main event of December 2’s UFC 218 from Detroit, Michigan. The bout, if booked, would […]

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The light heavyweight rematch that MMA has been waiting is reportedly being targeted for a pay-per-view card later this year.

According to sources obtained by Swedish MMA site MMAnytt.se, champion Jon Jones will face No. 2 Alexander Gustafsson in the main event of December 2’s UFC 218 from Detroit, Michigan.

The bout, if booked, would be a rematch of their scintillating razor-thin first match at September 2013’s UFC 165, one of two UFC bouts where one could say that “Bones” was legitimately tested (the other being his near-submission loss to Vitor Belfort which he ultimately won).

Jones of course just recently won back his long-held title from longtime rival Daniel Cormier in the main event of July 29’s UFC 214 from Anaheim, California, ending their three-year-long rivalry with a swift head kick and brutal follow-up assault in the third round. Jones beat Cormier by unanimous decision in their first fight at UFC 182, but then became embroiled in a controversial and disturbing set of legal and drug-centered trouble that saw his stripped of the belt and suspended by USADA.

Gustafsson, on the other hand, is only 3-3 in his last six bouts but has won his last two, including a jaw-dropping fifth-round stoppage of fellow former title contender Glover Teixeira on May 28. Two of those losses were split decisions to Jones and Cormier, and many MMA fans and media members still believe “The Mauler” won his first controversial fight against “Bones” four years ago.

UFC 218 will go down on December 2, 2017 from Little Caesar’s Arena in Detroit, Michigan.

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Georges St. Pierre Vows To ‘Be More Angry On The Finish’ In Return Bout

Georges St. Pierre hasn’t competed since 2013, but during the height of his legendary welterweight title reign, he was nothing short of dominant, although it wasn’t too often that he finished a fight. Now, “Rush” is set to make his highly anticipated return to action in the main event of UFC 217 on Nov. 4, […]

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Georges St. Pierre hasn’t competed since 2013, but during the height of his legendary welterweight title reign, he was nothing short of dominant, although it wasn’t too often that he finished a fight.

Now, “Rush” is set to make his highly anticipated return to action in the main event of UFC 217 on Nov. 4, 2017 against middleweight champion Michael Bisping. The bout will take place in New York City at Madison Square Garden, and the Canadian recently said that he’ll be looking for the finish:

“I’ve trained a lot of things,” St-Pierre told MMAFighting.com. “I’m gonna be more there to hurt guys and to go for the finish. To submit, to break. To go for the break. To go for the knockout or go for the break if i have a submission. Until he taps. I’m gonna be more opportunistic.”

“I made my training to be more opportunistic,” GSP said, “to be more angry on the finish.”

St. Pierre also admitted that he may have been a bit more cautious towards the tail-end of his run atop the UFC’s 170-pound division:

“They were accepting the defeat,” St-Pierre said of previous opponents. “They knew they were going to lose before the end of the fight. They were fighting to not get beat up too much instead of fighting to win.

“On my side, I was fighting to win, but it’s hard. You know that if you’re exposing yourself [to] useless openings, [you can] get beat up.”

Bisping, however, isn’t an easy man to finish, and “Rush” is well aware of that:

“I made my training to be more opportunistic,” GSP said, “to be more angry on the finish.”

Who do you expect to come out on top when Bisping and St. Pierre finally meet this fall?

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Jorge Masvidal Can’t Believe Stephen Thompson Signed Bout Agreement

Jorge Masvidal is still in disbelief that Stephen Thompson agreed to fight him at UFC 217. The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) recently announced that Masvidal and Thompson will do battle inside Madison Square Garden in New York City on Nov. 4. Both men are coming off losses in high-profile bouts, but both were close match-ups. […]

Jorge Masvidal is still in disbelief that Stephen Thompson agreed to fight him at UFC 217. The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) recently announced that Masvidal and Thompson will do battle inside Madison Square Garden in New York City on Nov. 4. Both men are coming off losses in high-profile bouts, but both were close match-ups. […]

Chris Weidman: I Can’t Take Michael Bisping Seriously

UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping has received quite a bit of criticism from his fellow 185 pounders. Since winning the title with a shocking knockout of Luke Rockhold in June 2016, Bisping has only defended it once, scoring a decision win over Dan Henderson, who was ranked outside of the top 10 at the time, […]

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UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping has received quite a bit of criticism from his fellow 185 pounders.

Since winning the title with a shocking knockout of Luke Rockhold in June 2016, Bisping has only defended it once, scoring a decision win over Dan Henderson, who was ranked outside of the top 10 at the time, last October.

Now, “The Count” will take on another fighter ranked outside of the top 10. In fact, he’ll take on a fighter who has never competed at middleweight, as he’s set to meet former longtime welterweight king Georges St. Pierre at UFC 217 on Nov. 4 in New York City.

One middleweight contender who has gone back-and-forth with Bisping in the media is Chris Weidman, and the ex-champion recently discussed the rivalry, while adding in the fact that he simply can’t take the Brit seriously:

“I’m sure it will be,” Weidman told Submission Radio when asked if running into the champion would be ‘weird.’ “I don’t care. I really can’t get mad at anything Bisping says and I can’t take him seriously. I mean, listen, if the guy comes in my face and he’s screaming, we’re probably gonna end up fighting. But I don’t think – if he really wants to do that type of thing, he’s looking for a fight, I mean, if he comes in my face and creates a problem, there’s going to be a problem, but I’m not looking for a problem with the guy. I don’t really care.”

As far as Bisping’s fight with St. Pierre goes, Weidman, like many other middleweights, feels as if it’s a fight that is holding up the division:

“It’s a crazy thing. I feel this whole thing is probably going to hold up the division for a long time if it works out that way. The way it looks like right now and the possibilities of how long it could take before opportunities for the guys to fight for the belt, it looks a little crazy right now. So hopefully things change a little bit and hopefully they will, cause I know Whittaker’s injured pretty long, I know he has a bad knee surgery, so I don’t know when he’s going to be back.

“And then you got GSP and Bisping. I mean, GSP hasn’t fought in four years and he’s been out for a while, so who knows until when he’d be ready if he was to win to fight again. And then you have Bisping, who also really hasn’t fought too much since he’s had the belt, you know? So I don’t know when even they would fight Whittaker, and then the winner of that, when are you actually gonna fight them, barring injury or not. So it’s a weird weight class right now, so I really don’t know. This whole thing is out of my control, so I just gotta sit back and worry about myself and see what happens.”

What do you make of Weidman’s comments?

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Stephen Thompson vs. Jorge Masvidal Set For UFC 217

According to a report from MMAFighting.com, an intriguing welterweight fight has been added to UFC 217, as former two-time title challenger Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson is set to take on No. 4-ranked Jorge “Gamebred” Masvidal. Thompson is coming off of back-to-back fights against champion Tyron Woodley, but he hasn’t competed since March due to injury. His […]

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According to a report from MMAFighting.com, an intriguing welterweight fight has been added to UFC 217, as former two-time title challenger Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson is set to take on No. 4-ranked Jorge “Gamebred” Masvidal.

Thompson is coming off of back-to-back fights against champion Tyron Woodley, but he hasn’t competed since March due to injury. His first fight with Woodley took place last November at UFC 205, and it turned out to be a five-round instant classic that ended in a majority draw. The two then rematched at UFC 209 just a few months later, although it wasn’t as entertaining as the first bout, and Woodley ended up earning a decision victory.

Masvidal, on the other hand, is coming off of a loss at UFC 211 this past May in a title eliminator against Demian Maia. Prior to that, he had won three consecutive bouts over the likes of Ross Pearson, Jake Ellenberger and Donald Cerrone.

UFC 217 is set to take place on Nov. 4, 2017 at Madison Square Garden in New York City and it will headlined by a middleweight title fight between champion Michael Bisping and returning former longtime welterweight titleholder Georges St. Pierre. Bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt is also set to defend his  title on the card, as he’ll take on bitter rival TJ Dillashaw.

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