Charles Johnson Slams Commentary Team Over Call For UFC Fight Night Denver Win: ‘Put Some F*cking Respect On My Name’

Charles Johnson continued his excellent winning form in the UFC’s flyweight division this past weekend in Denver. In one of the sleeper fights of the entire UFC Fight Night lineup, he faced Joshua Van in a great contest that saw Johnson secure a devastating finish in the third round. This win makes him undefeated in […]

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Charles Johnson continued his excellent winning form in the UFC’s flyweight division this past weekend in Denver.

In one of the sleeper fights of the entire UFC Fight Night lineup, he faced Joshua Van in a great contest that saw Johnson secure a devastating finish in the third round.

This win makes him undefeated in his last three Octagon appearances after previously losing three in a row in 2023 before putting that in the rear-view mirror so far this year.

Despite his excellent performance against Van, Johnson did have one issue when he came to watch back the fight and that was the commentary, as he revealed in a recent interview on SiriusXM’s MMA Today.

“The only thing that kinda surprised me was hearing the commentary after the fight. But other than that, and hearing the judging, betting lines and stuff. But, at the end of the day, the only thing that matters is I went in there and did exactly what I said I was gonna do.”

Charles Johnson Says UFC Commentary Didn’t Give Him The Credit He Was Due

Johnson went on to explain where his issues with the commentary came from, believing he wasn’t give enough credit for the work he did inside the Octagon.

“InnerG” specifically referencef the first round, which he believes he comfortably won despite a judge scoring it for his opponent and the commentators spending more time talking about Van’s work in the opening five minutes.

“We’re three minutes into the first round and I’ve landed 28 strikes to his four and all you’ve heard up until that point is, ‘This is what Van does, Van is applying pressure. Van is doing this.’ That’s all you heard. The round ends and I’m 40-16 on strikes and, for me, I try to separate personal but everything’s personal to me, that’s just me, that’s how I am.

“Business, everything, everything’s personal, but I know how much those opinions matter in judging, in everything. They hear it, they can hear it too. So hearing it after the fight when I felt like I was in full control from the moment the fight started, never worried about anything. He threw big punches, never really landed anything.”

Johnson also referenced how he was excited to watch back the fight in order to hear Dominick Cruz’s thoughts on the fight having been a big fan of the bantamweight legend as a fighter and analyst over the years.

Ultimately, he doesn’t believe that he received the praise he deserved for that performance.

“The type of guy I was walking into, I’ve fought higher caliber guys. I fought two guys that are ranked in the top 10 in my career already and lost close decisions to them, you know? It’s just put some f****** respect on my name, basically.”

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Abdul Razak Alhassan Slams Cody Brundage After No Contest At UFC Fight Night Denver: ‘Crazy Day…Trump Got Shot & I Got Robbed’

UFC middleweight powerhouse Abdul Razak Alhassan is far from pleased with how his appearance in the Octagon concluded this past weekend. Alhassan opened the main card of Saturday’s UFC Fight Night in Denver, with the Ball Arena playing host to his first fight in nine months. The Ghanaian was tasked with getting the better of […]

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UFC middleweight powerhouse Abdul Razak Alhassan is far from pleased with how his appearance in the Octagon concluded this past weekend.

Alhassan opened the main card of Saturday’s UFC Fight Night in Denver, with the Ball Arena playing host to his first fight in nine months. The Ghanaian was tasked with getting the better of Cody Brundage if he was to bounce back from a loss to Joe Pyfer last time out.

In the opening seconds, “Judo Thunder” looked on track to doing so as he launched a barrage of shots at Brundage with his usual fast-starting style. But as it appeared a finish was approaching, Alhassan lost control of his offense and landed shots to the back of his opponent’s head.

When another followed a warning from Dan Miragliotta, the referee intervened. That turned out to be all she wrote, with Brundage telling the ringside physicians he could no longer continue.

The result went down as a no contest, and suffice to say, Alhassan was left fuming…

Alhassan Insists ‘P*ssy’ Brundage ‘Definitely Could Have Continued’

After showing clear frustration inside the cage, Alhassan let his anger out on social media soon after.

In an Instagram Story, the Ghanaian 38-year-old placed his setback in Denver alongside the apparent assassination attempt on Donald Trump to brand Saturday a “crazy day.”

And Brundage received the brunt of Alhassan’s anger, with the knockout artist insisting that his American counterpart was fine to continue and simply looked for a way out of the fight.

“Sorry to all my fans, all my people,” Alhassan said (h/t MMA Fighting). “I wanted this bad. I wanted this win. I wanted this fight so bad. I have so much anger and so much energy in me right now that I wanted to use but I wasn’t able to use it. I guess today is a crazy day. Trump got shot and I got robbed.

“I know definitely he could have continued. He just decided to be a p*ssy and didn’t want to fight anymore. It is what it is. I hope him a speedy recovery,” Alhassan concluded.

But Alhassan can perhaps also feel fortunate not to have exited the cage with a defeat on the night, with some in the community suggesting Miragliotta should have disqualified him for continuing the illegal blows after a warning.

Regardless, “Judo Thunder” avoided a losing skid, but he is now on a two-fight winless run. He’ll no doubt look to break that by having his hand raised soon enough, with a quick turnaround likely on the table having taken no damage in the 37 seconds before the unfortunate stoppage at Ball Arena.

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Tracy Cortez Gives First Reaction To Rose Namajunas Loss At UFC Fight Night Denver: ‘If I Had A Full Camp…’

Tracy Cortez had a big task in front of her with a short-notice main event bout against former two-time strawweight champion Rose Namajunas at UFC Fight Night Denver. Though she managed to go the distance, Cortez was largely dominated from the opening minute of the contest, going on to lose via unanimous decision. While coming […]

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Tracy Cortez had a big task in front of her with a short-notice main event bout against former two-time strawweight champion Rose Namajunas at UFC Fight Night Denver.

Though she managed to go the distance, Cortez was largely dominated from the opening minute of the contest, going on to lose via unanimous decision.

While coming up on the short end and not getting the result she’d hoped for left a better sting, Cortez told ESPN MMA’s Megan Olivi that she felt proud of being able to last a full five rounds with someone as highly regarded as Namajunas.

Cortez added that perhaps the fight could have played out differently with a full fight camp.

“I took it on two weeks’ notice, unprepared,” Cortez said. “I gave it all I have. I know if I were to have had a full camp, prepared…I mean, my cardio was there. I think I would have done a lot better with a good gameplan.

“But I think I proved myself tonight that I can go full fives [rounds]. Looking forward to the next one,” Cortez added.

Tracy Cortez Feels Early Pacing Of Self May Have Cost Her Fight

Cortez was dropped early into the first round, with Namajunas putting on a beautiful striking display. The #11-ranked contender tried to battle back in the second round with her grappling skills, but Namajunas’ strikes remained on point and she showed her grappling ability in the third to counter Cortez.

The late-notice replacement fighter looked for a mountain of offense in the fifth round, but it wasn’t enough.

“Because it was five fives, I was really trying to pace myself the first and second round,” Cortez said. “I just realized…give it all I have. It’s all or nothing. I think I waited a little too long to really push it on her.”

Cortez isn’t letting this loss deter her, however. She wants to use this experience and get back into the cage as soon as possible.

“Last time I fought, I went on a killer streak,” Cortez noted. “I’m not here to prove [to] the world, I’m here to prove [to] myself.”

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4 Positives & 2 Negatives From UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez

On Saturday, the mixed martial arts leader returned for its latest event, UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez. After a rare weekend off in the aftermath of the UFC 303 pay-per-view late last month, the promotion kicked off its schedule for July by bringing the Octagon back to Denver. The main event came […]

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On Saturday, the mixed martial arts leader returned for its latest event, UFC Fight Night: Rose Namajunas vs. Tracy Cortez.

After a rare weekend off in the aftermath of the UFC 303 pay-per-view late last month, the promotion kicked off its schedule for July by bringing the Octagon back to Denver. The main event came in the women’s flyweight division, with surging prospect Tracy Cortez receiving a major opportunity to climb the ranks against Rose Namajunas.

“Thug Rose,” a former two-time strawweight champion, was originally set to do battle with top five contender Maycee Barber. But with “The Future” out injured, the #11-ranked Cortez filled in on short notice, looking to extend her undefeated UFC record by adding the biggest scalp to her résumé thus far.

Elsewhere on the card, prominent names like welterweight veteran Santiago Ponzinibbio, always entertaining lightweight Drew Dober, and middleweight knockout artist Abdul Razak Alhassan were among those making the walk inside Ball Arena.

But did those athletes come together to put on an entertaining night of MMA? Let’s find out with all the positives and negatives from UFC Fight Night: Namajunas vs. Cortez.


Positive – The Flyweight Revolution

For a while now, the strawweights have quite clearly made up the premier women’s division in the UFC. Before its demise last year, featherweight was virtually non-existent anyway. As far as bantamweight goes, aside from Kayla Harrison and a few names like Irena Aldana, underwhelming. Flyweight? Well…

Across a number of years, the 125-pound weight class could be summed up as Valentina Shevchenko destroying her competition and a group of largely uninteresting contenders battling for a second place that not many paid attention to.

Now, with a new champion at the helm, a fresh crop of actually high-level and intriguing contenders, and some seriously talented up-and-comers, the tide has firmly turned in the women’s flyweight division.

When it comes to the third of those groups, one of the leading names was in action on Saturday night as Luana Santos moved to 3-0 on MMA’s biggest stage. The Brazilian welcomed Mariya Agapova back to the cage after a two-year layoff. Just like her previous fight in 2022, the Kazakh was left getting the life squeezed out of her while locked in a gruesomely tight rear-naked choke.

Despite her best efforts to fight the hands, Agapova was forced to tap out. And with that, Santos has joined Natália Silva and Karine Silva as another Brazilian prospect threatening to shake up a flyweight title picture that already boasts rising names like Manon Fiorot, Erin Blanchfield, and Maycee Barber.

Oh, and a fourth category I forgot to mention: gritty flyweights who will just throw down. Thanks Jasmine Jasudavicius and the debuting Fatima Kline for reminding me with one of the night’s best fights.

Speaking of Jasudavicius, however…


Negative – Dirty

So are we just going to ignore what Jasudavicius did at the end of her fight?

Jasudavicius once again delivered the goods inside the Octagon, pitching a shutout against a highly regarded newcomer in Kline. Unfortunately, she pulled off a dirty and classless move to add a stain to the result.

After attempting a choke in the final seconds, the horn sounded. Instead of releasing the hold and returning to her feet following the conclusion of the fight, the Canadian released it and launched an elbow at her opponent’s head.

In a similar case earlier in the night, Andre Petroski had already began to throw his punch at Josh Fremd when the first-round horn sounded. Jasudavicius had not. Just like Kline was aware that the fight had ended when she was released from the submission attempt, Jasudavicius knew that the fight had ended when she opted to take a cheap shot at her opponent.

For whatever reason, not much was said by the commentary team about the illegal shot, and it wasn’t exactly a hot topic on social media either. Perhaps that’s down to Kline’s reaction, which saw her avoid any animosity and simply move on.

But having also pulled the hair of Tracy Cortez in their 2023 fight, Jasudavicius is going the right away about gaining a reputation for ugly antics.


Positive – ‘Quik?’ Yeah, You Don’t Say…

Montel Jackson has something in his hands reminiscent of dynamite.

The 32-year-old Wisconsin native has long been one of the bantamweight division’s most intriguing prospects. But that’s been the case for years, with inactivity preventing him from rising the ranks toward those in contention at 135 pounds and fulfilling his potential.

Prior to Saturday’s event in Denver, Jackson hadn’t competed in 15 months since a statement knockout of Rani Yahya at the Apex. With those kind of gaps between fights, an emphatic performance is required in a return fight to remind the division.

“Quik” did that quikly (intentional, thanks. Please don’t email us a correction), sending Da’Mon Blackshear to sleep with a clean left hand after just 18 seconds — the second fastest knockout in the division’s history.

I’d say reminder to the division firmly sent, wouldn’t you?

That’s now five straight wins for Jackson and eight in his last nine. That form should bag a chance to climb the ladder next time out, providing that “Quik” is able to get back in the cage relatively soon.

For the sake of his own career and for the enjoyment of us, the fans, the quiker (intentional, again…) he makes the walk again, the better.


Positive – Uppercut From Hell

The term ‘turn up for the books’ comes to mind…

One of the most intriguing matchups on Saturday’s UFC Fight Night card pitted the highly touted Joshua Van against former LFA champion Charles Johnson in the featured prelim. The Burmese prospect entered the Octagon with a perfect 3-0 UFC record in tow and many predicting big things for him.

And through two rounds, it appeared the unblemished nature of his Octagon slate and big forecasts for success down the line would continue. Van was simply too good for Johnson in most exchanges and should have raced to a lead on the scorecards (he somehow didn’t, with one judge instead having Johnson up two rounds).

In round three, though, tables turned in a gigantic way. “InnerG” came out from his corner to throw down, and “The Fearless” lived up to his moniker by obliging. That ultimately led to his downfall, however, as he found himself backpedaling after getting rocked.

Van was not given any time to recover, with Johnson pouncing to land a truly vicious uppercut that sent the Burmese 22-year-old to the canvas with such a thud that the referee immediately scrambled to intervene.

From what we’ve seen, it’s hard to say that Johnson has the talent to make a real run up the 125-pound pecking order. But with three wins from three fights in 2024, and having turned away the challenges of promising prospects like Van and Azat Maksum, it’s easy to acknowledge “InnerG” as one of the flyweight division’s most entertaining names.


Negative – Not An Ideal Start

When it comes to setting the tone, the main card opener in Denver firmly failed.

The middleweight matchup between Abdul Razak Alhassan and Cody Brundage always looked likely to deliver a quick finish. And it was the Ghanaian powerhouse on track to finding it after putting pedal to the metal from the word go.

Unfortunately, “Judo Thunder” soon began losing control of his offense and finding the back of Brundage’s head. Despite referee Dan Miragliotta’s warnings, Alhassan threw another particularly egregious elbow to the back of the head, leading to an intervention.

Now, I neither want to guess the effect the blatantly illegal blows had on Brundage nor accuse him of looking for a way out. But as soon as the fight was paused, there was zero doubt in my mind that it wouldn’t restart. Perhaps that was due to the memory of Brundage’s disqualification win over Jacob Malkoun last year.

On this occasion, the American didn’t get a free win. And while it wouldn’t be ideal for him to have had another DQ win added to his record, I find it hard to see the logic in Miragliotta not ruling it as such. At one point do multiple illegal shots post-numerous warnings become not accidental? And even if the argument is that Alhassan was just careless, should that not be better punished?

The accurate and consistent enforcement of rules in MMA remains an uncrossed bridge toward absolute sporting legitimacy.


Positive – As Advertised

Some fights just can’t possibly underdeliver on how they appear on paper. Drew Dober vs. Jean Silva is among ‘some fights’.

Silva has had some two weeks. First, he had the disappointment of missing weight ahead of UFC 303, but that asterisk on his International Fight Week outing was largely erased when he put in a violent showing to knock out Charles Jourdain.

A move up to lightweight was not surprising, but just 14 days later to square off against a formerly ranked contender at 155 pounds like Dober? Yeah, that was a shock.

It’s hard to think of many assignments for a divisional debut that come tougher than Dober, but “Lord Assassin” did not make it look as such. From the very first seconds, he found a home for his shots, leaving his veteran opponent leaking from above the right eye in the first round.

In round two, Dober gave as good as he got at times, even landing the kind flush superman punch that brings out a joyous giggle from hardcore fans. But toward the end of the frame, a stiff spinning elbow from Silva (joyous giggle 2.0) further opened up the cut above the American’s eye.

Speaking of spinning elbows, the Brazilian landed another in round three, and that was all she wrote. The ringside physician rightly took one look at the gaping hole in Dober’s eyebrow and said enough was enough.

Would we have liked a final-round brawl to cap off the clear Fight of the Night? Of course, but we got that for the best part of two and a half rounds, so let’s be grateful. Welcome to 155 pounds, “Lord Assassin.”

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‘What Happens When You Toss A Knife & Wrench Into A Blender’ – Fans React To Jean Silva Winning Wild Brawl With Drew Dober At UFC Fight Night Denver

Just two weeks after pulling off a highlight knockout at UFC 303, Jean Silva put on another spectacular performance with a hard-fought victory over Drew Dober at UFC Fight Night Denver. Dober put on a striking clinic in the fight, being creative in his strikes and well-timed with his attacks. For all that Silva dished […]

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Just two weeks after pulling off a highlight knockout at UFC 303, Jean Silva put on another spectacular performance with a hard-fought victory over Drew Dober at UFC Fight Night Denver.

Dober put on a striking clinic in the fight, being creative in his strikes and well-timed with his attacks. For all that Silva dished out, however, the veteran fan favorite took it and then some, continuing to come forward with his attack in spite of the damage Silva was placing on him. Dober, in fact, was already bleeding in the first round.

Despite a strong second-round performance, Silva rocked Dober at the end of the round with an elbow, with the formerly ranked contender arguably being saved by the bell.

Dober was cleared by doctors to continue into the third round, but an elbow less than two minutes into that final frame brought the action to a conclusion due to a gnarly cut.

Fans React As Jean Silva Scores Second Finish In Two Weeks At UFC Fight Night Denver

Silva is now 3-0 in the UFC. The Dana White’s Contender Series alumnus fought just two weeks ago, scoring a second-round knockout of Charles Jourdain at the International Fight Week pay-per-view.

Dober, meanwhile, has now lost three of four following a three-fight win streak.

Continue Reading ‘What Happens When You Toss A Knife & Wrench Into A Blender’ – Fans React To Jean Silva Winning Wild Brawl With Drew Dober At UFC Fight Night Denver at MMA News.

UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Rose Namajunas Decisions Tracy Cortez

UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights!  In the main event, former two-time strawweight champ Rose Namajunas took on #11-ranked women’s flyweight Tracy Cortez. While in the co-main event, Santiago Ponzinibbio faced Muslim Salikhov in a welterweight […]

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UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

In the main event, former two-time strawweight champ Rose Namajunas took on #11-ranked women’s flyweight Tracy Cortez. While in the co-main event, Santiago Ponzinibbio faced Muslim Salikhov in a welterweight matchup. 

Make sure to catch all the UFC Fight Night results and highlights as they happen below! 

UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

  • Women’s flyweight Main Event: Rose Namajunas def. Tracy Cortez via unanimous decision (49-46×2, 48-47)
  • Welterweight Co-Main Event: Muslim Salikhov def. Santiago Ponzinibbio via split decision (29-28×2, 28-29)
  • Lightweight: Jean Silva def. Drew Dober via TKO (doctor’s stoppage): R3, 1.28
  • Welterweight: Gabriel Bonfim def. Ange Loosa via unanimous decision (30-27×2, 29-28)
  • Featherweight: Julian Erosa def. Christian Rodriguez via submission: R1, 4.49
  • Middleweight: Abdul Razak Alhassan vs. Cody Brundage ends in no contest (illegal elbows by Alhassan): R1, 0.37

Preliminary Card

  • Flyweight: Charles Johnson def. Joshua Van via KO: R3, 0.20
  • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Fatima Kline via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
  • Bantamweight: Montel Jackson def. Da’Mon Blackshear via KO: R1, 0.18
  • Women’s Flyweight: Luana Santos def. Mariya Agapova via submission: R1, 3.27
  • Middleweight: Andre Petroski def. Josh Fremd via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
  • Welterweight: Evan Elder def. Darrius Flowers via submission: R2, 1.46

Preliminary Card Highlights

Evan Elder def. Darrius Flowers

In this welterweight matchup, Evan Elder got it done with a submission of Darrius Flowers in the second round.

Luana Santos def. Mariya Agapova

Luana Santos locked in a rear-naked choke to get the win against Mariya Agapova in the first round of their flyweight bout.

Montel Jackson def. Da’Mon Blackshear

Montel Jackson unleashed a huge left to KO Da’Mon Blackshear after just 18 seconds of their bantamweight bout.

Charles Johnson def. Joshua Van

In this flyweight matchup, Charles Johnson earned a KO of Joshua Van 20 seconds into round three.

Abdul Razak Alhassan vs. Cody Brundage ends in no contest

This middleweight bout ended in a no contest after Abdul Razak Alhassan landed elbows to the back of Cody Brundage’s head, who was not able to continue.

Julian Erosa def. Christian Rodriguez

Julian Erosa locked in a guillotine to submit Christian Rodriguez at the end of round one in their featherweight contest.

Gabriel Bonfim def. Ange Loosa

Gabriel Bonfim earned a unanimous decision win against Ange Loosa in their welterweight bout.

Jean Silva def. Drew Dober

In this lightweight bout, Jean Silva was awarded a TKO victory after inflicting a nasty cut above Drew Dober’s right eye that caused the ringside doctor to stop the fight.

Muslim Salikhov def. Santiago Ponzinibbio

In the co-main event, Muslim Salikhov earned a split decision victory against Santiago Ponzinibbio.

Rose Namajunas def. Tracy Cortez

In the main event, Rose Namajunas earned a unanimous decision against Tracy Cortez to make it two wins in a row in the flyweight division.

Continue Reading UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Rose Namajunas Decisions Tracy Cortez at MMA News.