Dustin Poirier confirms plans for fighting return at UFC 300 next year: ‘It’s kind of a cool opportunity’

Dustin Poirier confirms plans for UFC 300 return next year it's a cool opportunityFormer interim lightweight champion, Dustin Poirier has confirmed his plans to make a fighting return as soon as two…

Dustin Poirier confirms plans for UFC 300 return next year it's a cool opportunity

Former interim lightweight champion, Dustin Poirier has confirmed his plans to make a fighting return as soon as two months time, however, claimed a comeback at UFC 300 in April of next year most definitely an “enticing” option for him.

Poirier, a former interim lightweight titleholder and the current number three ranked divisional challenger, has been sidelined since he featured in the main event of UFC 291 back in July in Salt Lake City, suffering a staggering second round high-kick KO loss to Justin Gaethje in the pair’s symbolic BMF championship rematch in ‘The Beehive State’.

Revealing earlier this week how he had been contacted on short-notice to potentially fight undisputed lightweight champion, Islam Makhachev at UFC 294 back in October following the withdrawal of former opponent, Charles Oliveira, Poirier then revealed that the promotion elected against replying to him despite him accepting a fight with the Russian.

“… My phone rings, I see it’s Hunter (Campbell), and I’m all jacked up on Celsius,” Dustin Poirier explained. “I answer the phone, let’s go. I said, ‘What perfect timing, this is how life works.’ I just landed in Florida, my whole team is here, my coaches are in town, this happened for a reason. He asked me my weight, and I [told him] I can make the weight in 11 days, no problem. I thought that was it. He told me give him one day.”

“The next day, I didn’t hear back,” Dustin Poirier explained. “I’m like, ‘Hey, bro, I said yes, let’s go I got my team here, let’s book these flights, I need to get out there ASAP.’ Then he kept quiet for a while, and then all the news started breaking. But he didn’t tell me, ‘Hey, you’re the guy.’ He asked me if I would do it, I said yes, he told me to give him one day, and I guess he was waiting on Alexander (Volkanovski) to commit.”

Dustin Poirier eyes fighting comeback at UFC 300

With a quickfire return against Makhachev ultimately scuppered, Lafayette veteran, Poirier outlined his intentions to return in the opening quarter of 2024 – ideally at a monumental UFC 300 card in April.

“I think I fit where I have for the last decade,” Dustin Poirier explained during an interview with MMA Fighting. “I’ve been a top 10, top five fighter, and my track record proves that, for the last 10 years plus. So, I’m never far away from the biggest fights possible, and I train every day like it.”

“Right now, my current mindset, I’d fight in six weeks, I’d fight in eight weeks if the fight made sense and I was excited about it,” Poirier continued. “Other than that, the chance to fight on UFC 300 is a big feal. I’ve been in the UFC since UFC 125, I missed 200 I know I’m not gonna be around for 400 – so, it’s kind of a cool opportunity if it comes together… UFC 300 is enticing.” (H/T MMA News)

Who would you like to see Dustin Poirier fight in his return to the Octagon?

On This Day in MMA History: Zuffa Promotes First UFC Event, Pulver Becomes a UFC Champ and Tito Gets the Only KO of His Career


(Damn, graphic design has come a long way in 11 years.)

On this day in MMA history 11 years ago, Zuffa LLC, the Las Vegas-based owners of the UFC took its newly-purchased traveling spectacle on the road for the first time to Atlantic City for UFC 30: Battle on the Boardwalk. The card featured five of the promotion’s present and future titleholders and was one of the better events in recent UFC history (at the time).

The main event of the night featured a middleweight (which would be later named the light-heavyweight division) championship bout between then-champ Tito Ortiz and the late Evan Tanner. Unfortunately for fans who were expecting a drag-out war between the pair, the fighter formerly known as “The Huntington Beach Badboy” had other plans. After a brief feeling out process, Ortiz scooped Tanner up, slamming the Team Quest fighter on his back and knocking him unconscious, adding a couple of stiff punches on the ground for good measure. The knockout would stand as the only one of Ortiz’s career.


(Damn, graphic design has come a long way in 11 years.)

On this day in MMA history 11 years ago, Zuffa LLC, the Las Vegas-based owners of the UFC took its newly-purchased traveling spectacle on the road for the first time to Atlantic City for UFC 30: Battle on the Boardwalk. The card featured five of the promotion’s present and future titleholders and was one of the better events in recent UFC history (at the time).

The main event of the night featured a middleweight (which would be later named the light-heavyweight division) championship bout between then-champ Tito Ortiz and the late Evan Tanner. Unfortunately for fans who were expecting a drag-out war between the pair, the fighter formerly known as “The Huntington Beach Badboy” had other plans. After a brief feeling out process, Ortiz scooped Tanner up, slamming the Team Quest fighter on his back and knocking him unconscious, adding a couple of stiff punches on the ground for good measure. The knockout would stand as the only one of Ortiz’s career.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/NeilJunz)

This video also featured the only known footage of Frank Shamrock being humble and complimenting Tito.

The co-main event saw Jens Pulver in a five-round fight for the first time in his career. Pulver, who had needed just 15 seconds to dispose of John Lewis in his first UFC bout at UFC 28 three months prior, went the distance with highly-ranked Japanese fighter Caol Uno and came out on top with a majority decision and the UFC bantamweight (145-pound) strap after 25 minutes.


(Video courtesy of VK/Andrey Slavin)

Also on the card, Sean Sherk defeated future Mr. Arianny Celeste, Tiki Ghosn, Phil Baroni decisioned Curtis Stout, Pedro Rizzo knocked out Josh Barnett and Elvis Sinosic tapped Jeremy Horn.

———-

UFC 130
February, 23, 2001
Trump Taj Mahal
Atlantic City, New Jersey

UFC Middleweight Championship Bout
Tito Ortiz def. Evan Tanner — KO, 0:30 – R1

UFC Bantamweight Championship Bout
Jens Pulver def. Caol Uno — majority decision

Fabiano Iha def. Phil Jones — submission (armbar), 1:47 – R1

Elvis Sinosic def. Jeremy Horn — submission (armbar), 2:59 – R1

Pedro Rizzo def. Josh Barnett — KO, 4:21 – R2

Bobby Hoffman def. Mark Robinson — KO, 3:27 – R1

Phil Baroni def. Curtis Stout — unanimous decision

Sean Sherk def. Tiki Ghosn — verbal submission, 4:47 – R2