Brian Ortega Wouldn’t Feel Like A Champion Without Beating Max Holloway

OrtegaBrian Ortega won’t feel like a champion until he defeats Max Holloway. Ortega returns to action on March 27 when he challenges Alexander Volkanovski for the featherweight title in the co-main event of UFC 260. It will be his second attempt at the 145-pound strap after suffering a brutal fourth-round TKO defeat to Holloway in […]

Ortega

Brian Ortega won’t feel like a champion until he defeats Max Holloway.

Ortega returns to action on March 27 when he challenges Alexander Volkanovski for the featherweight title in the co-main event of UFC 260.

It will be his second attempt at the 145-pound strap after suffering a brutal fourth-round TKO defeat to Holloway in their title fight back in December 2018.

And while beating Volkanovski and inflicting the Aussie’s first UFC defeat would be some achievement, Ortega still can’t feel “100 percent the champ” until he exacts revenge on Holloway.

“I’ve been thinking about that a lot lately,” Ortega told ESPN (via MMA Junkie). “It’s like, OK, you win, you’re the champ, but this man beat you. I wouldn’t feel 100 percent the champ if I didn’t run it back. That man has that on his resume. He gave you your first loss, something you can never take from him. So now it’s like, well, we gotta make this right. So, yes, it would be amazing (to win the title) because there’s no credit taken from Alex Volkanovski. This man won twice over Max despite what everyone wants to talk about or say.

“Obviously it would be amazing to be a champ and say mission accomplished. You told yourself you’re gonna get this belt, and you did it. Congratulations. Now f*ck this belt – Max. I’m a fighter, bro. I think he said it, ‘Bro, you beat me one time, I’m gonna want to fight you again. You beat me two times, I’m gonna want to fight you 80 times so I can beat you,’ and that’s the same mentality that I have. You f*ck me up 20 times, I’m gonna come back the 21st time. I still want something. I’m stubborn or a competitor, whatever you want to call it, but I have that fire in me, and that’s how I got better in the gym.”

Of course, this is all under the assumption that Ortega beats Volkanovski.

That hasn’t happened as of yet, and “T-City” is not underestimating the current featherweight king at all.

“I feel like he’s very technical,” Ortega added. “I feel like it’s gonna be somewhat of that type of fight. The man is a specimen when he goes in there and how he moves and how he creates his opportunities and how he goes and wins rounds and does what he does. Then when you try and push the pace and someone knows how to stop you, you also get respect.

“So he’s an interesting one. So now it’s time to go in there and decipher this puzzle. Who knows what it’s gonna take? I still have to get punched by him and feel what it has to take or share the octagon with him, but it’s something I look forward to.”

Do you think Ortega can become featherweight champion and go on to face Holloway in a rematch?

MMA Match Fixing

OctagonLike all great sports, mixed martial arts has had its share of nasty rumours over the years. From the very beginning, the MMA has been on the back foot and branded a fake. The similarities between the sport and wrestling meant people assumed it was all choreography like its cousin. But over time, as its […]

Octagon

Like all great sports, mixed martial arts has had its share of nasty rumours over the years. From the very beginning, the MMA has been on the back foot and branded a fake. The similarities between the sport and wrestling meant people assumed it was all choreography like its cousin. But over time, as its reputation strengthened in the public eye and the popularity increased, new rumours surfaced that although as real as any sport, MMA was rife with dodgy deals and pre-determined results.

The Temptation of Gambling

It is no secret that gambling represents a temptation that many illustrious sports personalities have fallen prey to, and MMA is unfortunately no exception. While for the average gambler a reputable comparison page for gambling sites can help separate the wheat from the chaff, for elite athletes and sportsmen there is always so much more at stakes than just money. Gambling sites and bookmakers make it even more appealing to throw a fight as the reward for doing so can be so high. And it’s that dangling carrot that has seen many sportsmen turn their backs on the honour of the game for short term wealth. We’ve seen it in many sports over the years, from boxing to cricket to darts, and to think that any sport has been spared this disgrace is naive thinking at best. 

Match Fixing Certainties

We mentioned earlier about how mixing money and sports created the birth of match fixing, and MMA has certainly had its share. In 2017, South Korean fighter Tae Hyun Bang fought Leo Kuntz in Seoul, with huge sways in post-match odds setting off alarm bells that something was afoot. Bang was the favourite to win but as huge bets poured on Kuntz to win in the hours before the fight, the UFC was notably concerned Bang was set to take a dive.

As the fight progressed, Bang came out swinging, and although he didn’t take the fight by knockout, he was the clear winner. So what happened? Bang had been offered to throw the fight by some shady criminals who threatened him harm. As they bet on his opponent in droves, the UFC noticed the irregularity and questioned Bang in the lead up to the fight. Caught between a rock and hard place, Bang decided last minute that he had lost either way and fought for honour instead.

After his win was confirmed and those shady criminals came knocking, he spilled the beans to the authorities to save his life. His confession led to jail time and a lifetime ban from the sport he loved. So why did he agree to it? Bang was lured by the prospect of easy money and although he is one of few in the UFC to ever be caught, many fights have thrown up some serious cause for concern over the years.

Match Fixing Possibilities

The thing about sports is that the passion to win is nearly as high as the passion to become wealthy. Especially in ageing fighters, where opportunity to take the title has long passed so why not look to set themselves up financially. But aren’t they paid for their fights? Of course, and paid well. But it’s that thought of easy money again that is often too hard to turn down. 

Whilst no concrete evidence has been presented, the following two fights certainly created a few whispers in the UFC:

Sonnen vs Ortiz 

Ortiz was a legend of the sport and his last fight was certainly not lacking any hype. The fights build up was full of all the scaling remarks and finger pointing that promoters love. Although Ortiz was a 2-1 underdog, many still bet his way just to see the hero win one last time. But no one really thought he could pull it off. And then the fight started.

Rallying from an attempted choke from Sonnen, Ortiz proceeded to win the fight with a choke of his own, bowing out on top for the last time. But when you look back and see that it appeared Ortiz not only may have tapped out earlier, but had Sonnen roll into his winning choke, that seed of doubt has definitely been sown.

Coleman vs Takada

One of the first fights in my memory and the also the worst. Again, promoters have done their job well and hype was at an all-time high for this immense battle against the “Godfather of Ground and Pound”. But when Coleman took down Takada and chose to pound away on his thighs rather than his head, you had to wonder. The fight ended with Takada the victor and Coleman will forever be remembered for his wrestling like waves of terror before tapping out. Hulk Hogan would have been proud.

Conclusion

The thing about match fixing is that it’s incredibly hard to know for certain without a confession of guilt. And when you’re a famous sporting personality, the shame that comes with that confession is guaranteed to make it a last resort. As only one side needs to be corrupted, the match can easily look as though it’s just not your day.

MMA fighters are elite sportsman, they are paid well for their craft and put on high pedestals when winning. That’s a lot of pressure. But until the day that money and sport are mutually exclusive, there will always be corruption. Let’s just hope that the UFC can keep its nose clean as much as possible in the future.

Paulo Costa Coach Gives Reason For Withdrawl From Whittaker Fight

Paulo CostaThe reason for Paulo Costa’s withdrawal from his fight against Robert Whittaker on April 17 has finally emerged. Multiple people with knowledge of the situation told MMA Fighting on Monday night that Costa opted to withdraw from the UFC Fight Night headliner due to a severe flu, and his brother and coach Carlos Costa provided additional information on […]

Paulo Costa

The reason for Paulo Costa’s withdrawal from his fight against Robert Whittaker on April 17 has finally emerged.

Multiple people with knowledge of the situation told MMA Fighting on Monday night that Costa opted to withdraw from the UFC Fight Night headliner due to a severe flu, and his brother and coach Carlos Costa provided additional information on his status. (H/T MMAFighting.com)

“We just want to postpone [the fight] a week or two so ‘Borrachinha’ can recover. “He had COVID and then had the flu, and the flu is taking a long time to go away. We just want to postpone [the fight].”

Carlos Costa also said that Paulo tested positive for COVID-19 about a month ago, as well as his girlfriend and mother.

“[Paulo’s] symptoms were moderate,” Carlos said. “But there’s an issue: He never stopped training. He continued training and hasn’t fully recovered since then.

“He had sore throat, and then a huge secretion in the chest. His physical conditioning dropped a little bit, and then a few weeks ago he had this severe flu. We’ll get [a] chest X-ray and other exams done to see if COVID has affected anything.”

The UFC has already replaced Costa with Kelvin Gastelum for the main event on April 17, so their team will have to look elsewhere for a fight.

Costa is still looking to bounce back from the first loss of his professional career in September at UFC 253 in Abu Dhabi to Israel Adesanya for the middleweight title.

He has been on record saying that he got drunk the night before that fight and was suffering from a hangover.

Even through all this, Costa continues to post workout videos across all of his social media. According to his brother, “We’re training, but way lightly.”

Who do you think Paulo Costa should fight next after recovering from his illness?

Israel Adesanya Still Calls For Jon Jones Fight: I’m Coming For That Ass

Israel AdesanyaWell, despite his unsuccessful bid to add the UFC light heavyweight crown to current middleweight spoils, Israel Adesanya is still fixated on a potential future pairing with rival, incoming heavyweight title chaser, Jon Jones — detailing how he’s still interest in that matchup. Headlining UFC 259 two weeks ago against defending 205-pound champion, Jan Blachowicz, […]

Israel Adesanya

Well, despite his unsuccessful bid to add the UFC light heavyweight crown to current middleweight spoils, Israel Adesanya is still fixated on a potential future pairing with rival, incoming heavyweight title chaser, Jon Jones — detailing how he’s still interest in that matchup.

Headlining UFC 259 two weeks ago against defending 205-pound champion, Jan Blachowicz, Adesanya dropped his first professional defeat to the Pole, suffering a unanimous decision loss, with two fight altering takedowns in both the fourth and fifth rounds swaying the contest in the favour of the defending gold holder. 

The defeat marked Adesanya’s first ever loss in professional mixed martial arts — snapping his promotional perfect run of nine consecutive wins since his debut at UFC 221 in February of 2018, with his résumé currently sitting at 20-1. 

Despite the defeat, and the questioning of his sheer size for the light heavyweight division, never mind the heavyweight ranks, Adesanya told ESPN MMA reporter, Ariel Helwani recently that he’s still got sights set on Jones — who himself is expected to debut at heavyweight this summer.

Hell no,” Adesanya said. “This is just a valley in my sport. In any movie, in any anime series, you always have the valleys and you rise up from that. This is just mine and it’s like, all right, cool, bet. I’m taking this very well, and I know exactly what I have to do to get back to my true self, so yeah, I’m doing just that. But nah, that fight’s (with Jon Jones) not dead. I’m coming for that ass.

This is deeper than fighting now,” Adesanya explained. “He (Jones) knows, we know, we all know what he’s like. We all know how fake he is, it’s not even gonna take long before he fu*ks his life up again if he hasn’t already and kept it low key and swept it under the rug. You had quarantine Izzy (Israel Adesanya) last time going at him and just giving facts, straight facts, so I’m just taking my time right now, doing my own thing, focusing on myself. But, he should do the same because his life could be in shambles.” (H/T MMA Junkie)

While a contender for Adesanya’s middleweight championship is expected to come from an April 10 matchup of Darren Till and Marvin Vettori, or an April 17 clash of Robert Whittaker and Kelvin Gastelum — Jones is widely expected to challenge either UFC 260 heavyweight title victor, Stipe Miocic or Francis Ngannou for divisional gold in his heavyweight bow sometime this summer. 

Georges St-Pierre Wishes He ‘Made Peace’ With Nick Diaz Following 2013 Clash

Georges St-PierreOn the eight-year anniversary of his unanimous decision, UFC welterweight title defence against Nick Diaz, former two-weight champion, Georges St-Pierre has claimed he’s burdened by the fact that’s never “made peace” with the Stockton native following their “personal” March 2013 battle. St-Pierre, who has yet to feature in the Octagon following a hiatus snapping return […]

Georges St-Pierre

On the eight-year anniversary of his unanimous decision, UFC welterweight title defence against Nick Diaz, former two-weight champion, Georges St-Pierre has claimed he’s burdened by the fact that’s never “made peace” with the Stockton native following their “personal” March 2013 battle.

St-Pierre, who has yet to feature in the Octagon following a hiatus snapping return at UFC 217 back in November of 2017, has been continuously linked with returns to professional mixed martial arts, with the often floated ‘superfight’ with current lightweight gold holder, Khabib Nurmagomedov continuing to rumble in the background. 

Snapping a four-year stint on the sidelines at the Madison Square Garden event in late 2017, St-Pierre returned in a main event title challenge against then-undisputed middleweight kingpin, Michael Bisping — stopping the polarizing veteran with a third round rear-naked choke to become a two-weight UFC champion. 

Leaving the promotion in less than ceremonious circumstances back in November of 2013, St-Pierre narrowly edged out former welterweight titleholder, Johny Hendricks to lodge his ninth successful title defence, before vacating his championship, claiming he needed to take some time off away from mixed martial arts, with UFC president, Dana White openly criticizing the Canadian’s decision to walk away from the sport. White infamously detailed how St-Pierre owed the UFC, Hendricks, the fans, and the welterweight championship another fight.

Recently claiming how he hated fighting professionally, St-Pierre spoke with ESPN MMA reporter, Ariel Helwani recently, reflecting on his “business” versus “personal” clash with former WEC and Strikeforce champion, Diaz, noting how he’s been bothered by the fact he never “made peace” with the outspoken Californian.

Well, it felt to me — it’s not really the fight, it felt like I never made peace with Nick Diaz,” St-Pierre said. “And it’s a little bit unfortunate in the way that I feel — I feel like he took that (fight), not only like a business, he took it like very personal. For him, a fight was very personal. But for me it was very (like) business, you know what I mean?

And I never had a chance to see Nick Diaz after we fought, but if I ever cross path with him, I’ll go see him and shake his hand, and say, ‘Hey man, I don’t hold any grudge. I hope you don’t as well.’ Maybe he’s going to want to fight me, I don’t know what he feels. But to tell you the truth, I just like to have some form of camaraderie with my opponents because we share a moment — we make money and we share a moment, and we have a moment. And for me, he’s one of the guys that I never had a chance to talk with after the fight, and I feel like it’s missing a little bit in my life.

Mike Perry Spars Jake Paul: ‘It’s Not Looking Good For Ben Askren’

Mike PerryMike Perry has been training with YouTube celebrity Jake Paul ahead of his boxing bout with former Bellator and ONE Championship titleholder Ben Askren on April 17. Dana White is so confident Askren would beat Paul he revealed he is hoping to bet $1 million on the fight. “Let’s be honest: Jake Paul is not […]

Mike Perry

Mike Perry has been training with YouTube celebrity Jake Paul ahead of his boxing bout with former Bellator and ONE Championship titleholder Ben Askren on April 17.

Dana White is so confident Askren would beat Paul he revealed he is hoping to bet $1 million on the fight.

“Let’s be honest: Jake Paul is not a f*cking boxer – this guy’s a f*cking YouTube kid,” White said on the “Hotboxin’ with Mike Tyson” podcast. “Let me tell you about this kid: So the kid he’s going to fight is a wrestler, a real good wrestler, a decorated wrestler, but he’s actually fought real guys. He’s been a world champion in other organizations.”

“He talks a lot of sh*t,” White said of Paul. “We’re going to find out. I hope you can bet on this thing because I’ll f*cking bet a million dollars that he loses this f*cking fight. A million dollars that he loses this fight.” 

Paul and Snoop Dogg have since tried to up the stakes with the UFC president.

Both men want to bet $2 million on the fight with White.

Perry took to social media yesterday to warn his boss against putting to much money down on Askren.

‘Platinum’ is one of many MMA fighters who have been sparring Paul ahead of his fight with ‘Funky’.

Paul transitioned to boxing in 2020 and has looked good against extremely low-level opposition.

The 24-year-old most notably knocked out former NBA player, Nate Robinson on the undercard of Mike Tyson vs. Roy Jones Jr.

Askren retired from MMA in 2020 due to a lingering hip injury.

Before walking away from the sport ‘Funky’ lost back-to-back fights against Demian Maia and Jorge Masvidal.

He’ll be making his boxing debut on April 17.

Do you think Mike Perry is right? Is Ben Askren in trouble when he fights Jake Paul?