
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Surge shine in CDL Stage 3 Major qualifying opener
Jul 21, 2019; Miami Beach, FL, USA; A general view of gaming controllers on display during the Call of Duty League Finals e-sports event at Miami Beach Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images The Vancouver Surge recorded the lone sweep as qualifying for the Call of Duty League’s Stage 3 got underway on Friday.
The Surge topped G2 Minnesota 3-0, albeit in three tight maps. In the opening day’s other results, the Paris Gentle Mates downed the Carolina Royal Ravens 3-1, and the Los Angeles Thieves topped the Miami Heretics 3-1.
The 12 Call of Duty League teams are playing a full qualifying round robin to determine seeding for the third major of the season, to be held May 15-17 as part of the DreamHack Atlanta event.
On Friday, Vancouver eked past Minnesota 250-249 on Gridlock Hardpoint, 6-4 on Raid Search and Destroy and 7-5 on Scar Overload.
Carolina opened with a 250-138 victory on Gridlock Hardpoint, but Paris responded by capturing Den Search and Destroy 6-3, Den Overload 4-1 and Sake Hardpoint 250-188.
The Thieves began by claiming Sake Hardpoint 250-137 and Fringe Search and Destroy 6-5. The Heretics extended the match by taking Scar Overload 5-3, but Los Angeles wrapped up the win by prevailing 250-197 on Colossus Hardpoint.
The weekend schedule:
Saturday
–FaZe Vegas vs. Boston Breach
–Toronto KOI vs. Riyadh Falcons
–Paris Gentle Mates vs. G2 Minnesota
–Vancouver Surge vs. Carolina Royal Ravens
Sunday
–Toronto KOI vs. Boston Breach
–Riyadh Falcons vs. FaZe Vegas
–OpTic Texas vs. Cloud9 New York Call of Duty League Stage 3 Major qualifying, with match record and map differential
1. Vancouver Surge, 1-0, 3-0
T2. Los Angeles Thieves, 1-0, 3-1
T2. Paris Gentle Mates, 1-0, 3-1 T4. Boston Breach, 0-0, 0-0
T4. Cloud9 New York, 0-0, 0-0
T4. FaZe Vegas, 0-0, 0-0
T4. OpTic Texas, 0-0, 0-0 T4. Riyadh Falcons, 0-0, 0-0
T4. Toronto KOI, 0-0, 0-0
T10. Carolina Royal Ravens, 0-1, 1-3
T10. Miami Heretics, 0-1, 1-3 12. G2 Minnesota, 0-1, 0-3
–Field Level Media
Sports
Overall No. 1 NFL Draft Picks for Programs from the West
Atotal of 89 players have gone No. 1 in the NFL Draft since it premiered in 1936, with 19 of those top picks coming from schools in the West.
USC leads the way with six top picks, followed by Stanford with four and Cal with two.
Here is a table of all the players from the region who have been drafted as the top pick.
There is a breakdown by program at the bottom.
Overall No. 1 NFL Draft Picks for Programs from the West
| Year | Player | College | Season Team | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Caleb Williams | USC | Chicago Bears | QB |
| 2016 | Jared Goff | California | Los Angeles Rams | QB |
| 2012 | Andrew Luck | Stanford | Indianapolis Colts | QB |
| 2005 | Alex Smith | Utah | San Francisco 49ers | QB |
| 2003 | Carson Palmer | USC | Cincinnati Bengals | QB |
| 2002 | David Carr | Fresno State | Houston Texans | QB |
| 1996 | Keyshawn Johnson | USC | New York Jets | WR |
| 1993 | Drew Bledsoe | Washington State | New England Patriots | QB |
| 1992 | Steve Emtman | Washington | Indianapolis Colts | DT |
| 1989 | Troy Aikman | UCLA | Dallas Cowboys | QB |
| 1983 | John Elway | Stanford | Baltimore Colts | QB |
| 1977 | Ricky Bell | USC | Tampa Bay Bucs | RB |
| 1975 | Steve Bartkowski | California | Atlanta Falcons | QB |
| 1971 | Jim Plunkett | Stanford | New England Patriots | QB |
| 1969 | O.J. Simpson | USC | Buffalo Bills | RB |
| 1968 | Ron Yary | USC | Minnesota Vikings | OT |
| 1963 | Terry Baker | Oregon State | Los Angeles Rams | QB |
| 1955 | George Shaw | Oregon | Baltimore Colts | QB |
| 1954 | Bobby Garrett | Stanford | Cleveland Browns | QB |
Breakdown of No. 1 Picks by Program
| No. 1 Picks | School | Year(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 6 | USC | 2024, 2003, 1996, 1977, 1969, 1968 |
| 4 | Stanford | 2012, 1983, 1971, 1954 |
| 2 | Cal | 2016, 1975 |
| 1 | Fresno St | 2002 |
| 1 | Oregon | 1955 |
| 1 | Ore St | 1963 |
| 1 | UCLA | 1989 |
| 1 | Utah | 2005 |
| 1 | Washington | 1992 |
| 1 | WSU | 1993 |
Sports
Amir Khan predicts Fury vs Joshua after Makhmudov performance: “He can take him”
Amir Khan has offered his take on a “mega fight” between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua, which could finally come to fruition later this year.
The pair went toe-to-toe in a verbal exchange on Saturday, shortly after Fury marked his return with a unanimous decision victory over Arslanbek Makhmudov.
Their heavyweight clash took place at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where ‘The Gypsy King’ ended his near 16-month layoff by claiming scores of 119-109 and 120-108, twice.
While not producing his most accomplished performance, Fury nonetheless fiddled his way through 12 rounds against Makhmudov, who was coming off a convincing points victory over Dave Allen in October.
The real story of the night, however, occurred when the 37-year-old delivered a WWE-style call-out to Joshua, who was minding his own business at ringside.
Uninterested in entering the ring for a face-off, AJ instead reminded his rival of the sparring session they shared over 15 years ago, when Fury admitted to almost being knocked out.
Since then, the two-time world champions have become the leading British heavyweights of their generation, but regrettably never faced each other in their primes.
Hoping to see the pair finally lock horns, Khan has given a slight edge to Fury but remains open to be proven wrong.
Speaking with Seconds Out, Khan highlighted the tragic car crash in which Joshua was involved in December, when two of his closest friends lost their lives.
“I still think Tyson could take it, but AJ is looking strong [in the gym]. I wanna see how AJ’s gonna be coming back now
“Obviously he’s gone through a lot, with the loss of his friends, but I’m sure it would be a mega fight [with Fury]. What a massive fight that would be.”
Joshua has not fought since his sixth-round finish over Jake Paul in December, while his last meaningful outing saw him suffer a fifth-round stoppage defeat to Daniel Dubois in September 2024.
Sports
J.J. McCarthy Trade Theory, DeAndre Hopkins, CB in the Draft
The Minnesota Vikings’ rumor mill never stops, and it especially doesn’t stop on the weekend before the draft. Here’s a look at the current lay of the land.
Draft week has arrived, and the Vikings have no shortage of talking points.
The draft gets underway in Pittsburgh on Thursday night, and here’s the speculative Vikings stuff to know in the meantime.
Three Storylines Framing Minnesota’s Latest Rumor Cycle
The Purple Rumor Mill for April 18th, 2026.
Rumor: J.J. McCarthy makes sense as a trade candidate for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Vikings have shown no interest in moving McCarthy, but NFL writer Sayre Bedinger mapped out potential landing spots this week, pointing to the Steelers, New York Jets, and Los Angeles Rams.
He noted about McCarthy to Pittsburgh, “The long-term outlook at the quarterback position for the Pittsburgh Steelers is extremely unclear. Aaron Rodgers is probably going to come back for the 2026 season, but after this year, who knows what the Steelers are going to do? They’ll be at the mercy of wherever they fall in the draft, or stuck in the purgatory that is cycling through veteran retreads.”
“There is no long-term vision right now, which is why taking a shot on McCarthy’s upside and getting him in the building with Mike McCarthy could make a lot of sense. He’d be able to spend a year learning from Aaron Rodgers, getting acclimated to the offense, and really giving the Steelers a reason to not be desperate in next year’s draft. It also keeps them flexible there.”
If McCarthy requested a trade, the Steelers might make sense as a destination, but until then, it’s reasonable to expect that McCarthy will stay in Minnesota. He’s only 23 and has time to watch and learn.
Rumor: DeAndre Hopkins, indeed, will be a free-agent option for the Vikings after the draft.
Star Tribune’s Ben Goessling re-floated Hopkins as a post-draft wide receiver solution for the Vikings, and the idea still has some traction.
He joined Paul Allen’s show on KFAN this week, and Allen inquired: “So the Jalen Nailor spot, do the Vikings want a veteran wide receiver … or do you think O’Connell and the gang are sitting on something sneaky they love in the draft?”
Goessling replied, “I’m going to answer that yes — to both. I think, if they could find a veteran — I mean, DeAndre Hopkins’ name has come up. If you could get a guy in here like a Hopkins, that has rapport with Kyler Murray — it depends on what he wants to play for, it depends on what he wants his role to be.”
If Hopkins signs a cheap contract, which seems likely, the move offers considerable upside. The Vikings need a reliable WR3, a role Hopkins suits well, and training camp would determine the receiving corps’ hierarchy, with a younger player potentially surpassing him.
Hopkins’ established redzone prowess tends to endure, and even in a limited role, he would provide a dependable scoring threat. A deal in the $2–3 million range would represent a sensible investment for this potential payoff.
Rumor: A Round 1 cornerback probably isn’t a priority for Minnesota.
Not so fast on the idea of the Vikings picking a Round 1 cornerback next week.
Analyzing the draft, The Athletic‘s Alec Lewis weighed in this week, “Coaching input will be weighed heavily. And unlike previous seasons, the Vikings have a bevy of picks in the top 100. The team’s leadership knows it needs to find hits.”
“The Vikings haven’t used a first- or second-round pick on a cornerback since Brian Flores arrived, and I don’t expect them to start now, especially after signing free agent James Pierre.”
Before Lewis’s assertion, cornerback tracked as a draft need — and it likely still holds that label. It’s just that Flores doesn’t seem to need cornerbacks for his defense to cook.
Lewis’s opinion has credence when viewed in the context of recent Vikings draft history. In 2023, rather than selecting a cornerback in the 1st Round, they chose Jordan Addison. They repeated this pattern in 2024, opting for J.J. McCarthy and Dallas Turner, and again in 2025 when they drafted Donovan Jackson.
Despite cornerback consistently being a position of need during each of those draft cycles, Minnesota waited until after the 1st Round to address it — or just ignored the position altogether.
It wouldn’t be shocking if the Vikings were content with Byron Murphy Jr., Isaiah Rodgers, and the aforementioned Pierre. Perhaps Minnesota will find a cornerback in the middle or late rounds of the draft and call it good.
Sports
World Cup fans will have to pay $150 for NY stadium train ticket, officials say
World Cup fans will have to pay $150 for the 58-km roundtrip train ride between New York and Meadowlands stadium when it hosts eight matches including the final, local officials said Friday.
Just 40,000 train tickets will be available for each of the games to be played at the New Jersey sports complex, a return rail trip to which is typically just $12.90, officials said at a briefing.
“We are going to charge $150 for our roundtrip ticket on our system. So from New York to MetLife, MetLife back to New York,” said Kris Kolluri, the president and CEO of NJ Transit, using another name for the stadium.
Read moreAmnesty warns 2026 World Cup across North America risks becoming a ‘stage for repression’
After reports first emerged in The Athletic of the plans to charge World Cup fans far in excess of normal fares, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill blamed FIFA for the price hikes.
She pointed to a $48 million bill the state faces to ensure the safety of fans going to the eight games at the MetLife stadium.
“I won’t stick New Jersey commuters for that tab for years to come, that’s not fair,” Sherrill wrote on social media, adding that FIFA stood to make $11 billion at the World Cup.
“So here’s the bottom line: Fifa should pay for the rides, but if they don’t, I’m not going to let New Jersey commuters get taken for one.”
‘Quite surprised’
That sentiment was echoed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who wrote on social media on Tuesday that FIFA should foot the bill for transport costs to World Cup venues.
FIFA, which is already facing severe criticism over the sky-high cost of many match ticket prices, issued a strongly-worded statement criticising the transport price hike.
FIFA said that the original host city agreements “required free transportation for fans to all matches”.
At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, fans could use the Doha Metro for free with their matchday tickets.
A re-negotiation stipulated that transport would be offered “at cost” on match days, FIFA added.
“We are quite surprised by the NJ Governor’s approach on fan transportation,” FIFA said.
“The FIFA World Cup will bring millions of fans to North America along with the related economic impact.”
It added: “FIFA is not aware of any other major event previously held at NYNJ Stadium, including other major sports, global concert tours, etc., where organisers were required to pay for fan transportation.”
New York Governor Kathy Hochul was another to take aim at the reported price hike.
“Charging over $100 for a short train ride sounds awfully high to me,” Hochul wrote on X.
Some $100 million in US federal funding has been allocated to host cities for transit network costs, including $8.7 million for Boston and Massachusetts, and $10.4 million for the New York-New Jersey area, according to local media reports.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
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10 gifts this golf mom would love to receive
Sports
Arne Slot hopes Liverpool can pick up pace in Premier League after cup exits
Arne Slot believes Liverpool’s exit from the Champions League could help them in their quest to qualify for the competition again next season.
The Reds’ sole focus now will be on trying to secure a spot in the Premier League’s top five following their 4-0 aggregate loss to Paris St Germain in the quarter-finals.
That came hot on the heels of an equally heavy defeat against Manchester City in the FA Cup but does leave Slot’s men with a lighter schedule than some of their rivals.
Last weekend’s 2-0 win over Fulham means they sit in fifth place, four points ahead of Chelsea and three behind Aston Villa and Manchester United with six games remaining.
Reds boss Slot said: “If you look at the 15, 20, 25 players with the most minutes this season, a lot of them are from us.
“That tells you a lot and one of the reasons why we have been a bit inconsistent, maybe why we have conceded so many late goals, because it is always the same players.
“Maybe from that perspective, it is a good thing we are not in Europe any more, but I would definitely prefer to play in Europe because that also gives an energy to the group if you go to the semi-final of the Champions League.
“I don’t see it as a positive thing we are out but it is the reality and we have a bit more training time now.”
The first of those six games comes on Sunday against derby rivals Everton, with Liverpool making a first trip to the Hill Dickinson Stadium.
“It is always a very special game, doesn’t matter if it is the 60th being played in the stadium, but, if it is the last one being played in a stadium or a first one, it makes it even more special, if that’s even possible,” said Slot.
“Of course, they are in a very good place at the moment. It will always be a very special game for them, but also for us.”
Slot’s first visit to Everton last season saw a blockbuster encounter in the final derby at Goodison Park, with James Tarkowski equalising eight minutes into stoppage time.
Slot, assistant Sipke Hulshoff, Everton’s Abdoulaye Doucoure and Liverpool midfielder Curtis Jones were all sent off in fractious scenes, with the Reds boss furious with referee Michael Oliver.
“The crowd didn’t affect me last season, the referee’s decisions affected me,” said Slot when asked whether he expected the atmosphere to be different in Everton’s new home.
“Last season was my first Merseyside derby in that stadium so, if we played in the same stadium, I would probably know what to expect. But I don’t think a stadium is loud, it is usually fans that are loud.
“How much of a difference it will be, I will tell you after the weekend. I think their fans will be loud, as our fans will be as well.”
Sports
Blue Jays’ Eric Lauer on following an opener: ‘I hate it’
To say that Eric Lauer didn’t enjoy coming out of the bullpen behind an opener on Friday would be an understatement.
After working five innings of three-run ball against the Arizona Diamondbacks and taking the loss, Lauer voiced his frustrations with the Toronto Blue Jays‘ decision to have Braydon Fisher pitch the first inning — rather than let the 30-year-old operate as a regular starter.
“It’s definitely different. To be real blunt, I hate it. I can’t stand it,” Lauer told reporters after a 6-3 Blue Jays loss. “You work with what you got. Part of it, too, we’re trying to mix some things up. We’re trying to find ways to win, so I think it’s a game plan we had, and I think we went out there and tried to execute the best we could.
“That’s really all you can do.”
The plan appeared to work out of the gates for the Blue Jays, as Fisher worked a scoreless first inning, allowing just one hit before turning the ball over to Lauer in the second.
From there, Lauer looked to get back on track from a pair of rough outings. The 30-year-old didn’t allow a runner past first in the second or third against the Diamondbacks, but ran into trouble after that.
After Toronto took a 1-0 lead in the top of the fourth, Nolan Arenado delivered a quick response for Arizona with a solo shot off Lauer. Then, in the fifth, Corbin Carroll and Jose Fernandez brought home two more runs off Lauer, giving the Diamondbacks a lead of their own.
And while Lauer went on to work a scoreless sixth, it didn’t change his opinion on the opener strategy.
“It messes with your pre-game routine,” he said. “We’re creatures of habit. It changes the rhythm and routine. It’s a little harder to time things out…
“You can make it work the best you can. Hopefully, it’s not something that we will continue doing. But that’s above my pay grade.”
The three earned runs actually lowered Lauer’s ERA to 7.13 on the season.
The eight-year MLB veteran has had a tough go of things following his nine-strikeout performance to open the season.
Lauer surrendered nine combined runs between his starts against the Chicago White Sox and Minnesota Twins — the first of which was limited to two innings by a bout of the flu.
If the Blue Jays stay on turn for their next trip through the rotation, Lauer’s next start will come on Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.
Sports
IPL 2026: ‘Mission is to lift trophy’: Shreyas Iyer’s bold statement as PBKS eye maiden title | Cricket News
Punjab Kings (PBKS) captain Shreyas Iyer has made it clear that while the ultimate goal is to lift the IPL 2026 trophy, the team is firmly focused on staying in the present and taking one game at a time. Under the leadership of Iyer and head coach Ricky Ponting, PBKS have emerged as one of the standout teams this season. They remain the only unbeaten side so far, having won four of their five matches, with one game washed out due to rain.Speaking on JioStar, Iyer emphasised the importance of mindset and consistency over long-term thinking.“The mission, obviously, is to lift the trophy. But I always feel that the more you stay in the present, the more you stay in control of what is in your hands at that moment and you just have to go full throttle. You don’t have to think too far ahead or dwell on the past,” Iyer said.
He added that the team is focused on self-improvement rather than external pressure.”I reiterate the same point to my teammates as well, that when we are out there, we are playing for ourselves, not against the opponents. We just want to improve each day and make sure we put our best foot forward. When everything comes together and that synergy builds, everything falls into place,” he added. PBKS came close to glory last season but fell short in the IPL 2025 final, losing to Royal Challengers Bengaluru by six runs at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. The narrow defeat has only strengthened their resolve this year.In their most recent outing, Punjab Kings delivered a dominant all-round performance against Mumbai Indians. Batting first, MI posted a competitive 195/6, powered by Quinton de Kock’s unbeaten 112 off 60 balls and a 122-run partnership with Naman Dhir, who scored a quick-fire 50.However, PBKS bowlers, led by Arshdeep Singh, kept things in check. The left-arm pacer delivered a match-winning spell of 3/22 in his four overs, earning the Player of the Match award.In reply, PBKS chased down the target comfortably in just 16.3 overs, finishing at 198/3. Prabhsimran Singh starred with a blistering unbeaten 80 off 39 balls, while Iyer anchored the innings with a fluent 66 off 35 deliveries. The pair stitched together a crucial partnership after early setbacks, ensuring there were no late hiccups.Despite Allah Ghazanfar picking up two wickets for MI, the bowling unit struggled to contain PBKS’ aggressive batting lineup.
Sports
Uzbekistan’s new star part of Asia’s continued rise
The outcome was decided in the penultimate round. A draw against his closest rival, Anish Giri of the Netherlands, was enough for Javokhir Sindarov to win the World Chess Candidates Tournament in Cyprus.
“Every round was very, very tough, and the past week was the hardest of my life,” the new chess superstar said after his breakthrough victory. “I slept really badly and I’m glad it’s over.”
Winning the Candidates Tournament means Sindarov, 20, will now face the reigning world champion Dommaraju Gukesh of India for the World Chess Championship title in late 2026. With Gukesh just 19, it will be a duel between two young stars from the emerging chess nations of India and Uzbekistan.
Chess stars reaching peak earlier
Sindarov, who became a grandmaster at the age of 12 and has been in impressive form for months, dominated the Candidates Tournament from the start. The first decisive moment came as early as the fourth of 14 rounds, when he outplayed Fabiano Caruana, the top US favorite and 2018 World Chess vice-champion.
With that, the Uzbek took the lead in the standings and never relinquished it. In the first six games, he achieved a sensational five wins — a feat no chess player had ever accomplished in a high-level Candidates tournament.
Sindarov represents a continuation of a trend towards younger players reaching the top of the sport from outside the traditional chess-playing nations of Europe. Primarily these prodigies are from Asia and that continent’s dominance in chess was also evident in Cyprus in the women’s competition. India’s Vaishali Rameshbabu won the Candidates Tournament by beating Russia’s Kateryna Lagno in the final round and earning the right to challenge world champion Ju Wenjun of China.
It comes as no surprise that Uzbekistan is now establishing itself as a chess powerhouse alongside China and India. “The young talents in Uzbekistan are really, really strong,” Rustam Kasimjanov, a former elite player from Uzbekistan, told DW recently.
Kasimjanov, who has lived near Bonn for many years, is considered the catalyst for the chess boom in the central Asian country and has personally trained many of Uzbekistan’s young chess stars. The conditions for top-level chess in his homeland are now very good: “In Uzbekistan, the state has been supporting the sport of chess with substantial funding for several years,” he added.
German influence
Former champion Kasimjanov isn’t Sindarov’s only connection to Germany. His head coach, Roman Vidonyak, was born in Ukraine but lived in Munich for many years. He has been coaching Sindarov for about a year.
“We still have big plans,” he told chess news site Chessbase following his protege’s victory. Now the goal is to win the world championship title and then try to establish Sindarov as the dominant player of his generation. The man standing in the way of that mission is the reigning world champion Gukesh, who, at 19, is even younger than Sindarov.
Since winning the title in late 2024, things haven’t been going well for Gukesh. He currently ranks only 15th in the world. Sindarov’s chances of becoming world champion this winter are therefore fairly strong. The Norwegian Magnus Carlsen is still considered the best chess player around, but he no longer competes in world championship games, preferring other formats.
Germany struggling to keep up with Asia
Aside from Sindarov, Germany’s Matthias Blübaum also enjoyed a strong tournament. “The lone wolf from Lemgo,” as the chess magazine New in Chess labeled him, was a surprise qualifier for the Candidates Tournament and became the first German to compete in it for over 35 years.
As an underdog, Blübaum took few risks in Cyprus, defending prudently, and steering his games towards a draw round after round. Even rising star Sindarov could not manage more than two draws against him. Blübaum suffered only two losses.
“It’s amazing how confidently Matthias Blübaum plays against the world’s best players,” Ingrid Lauterbach, president of the German Chess Federation, told DW. With Blübaum and top-10 player Vincent Keymer, Germany is currently the only chess nation in Europe that can get anywhere close to India and Uzbekistan.
“In Uzbekistan, as in India, we see what happens when a lot of money is invested in chess,” Lauterbach added. But for the time being, she can only dream of such developments in Germany.
Blübaum’s success has so far failed to produce the powerful sponsor hoped for by the cash-strapped sport in Germany. Nevertheless, around EUR 90,000 in support were ultimately raised for Blübaum. The funds came in part from the German Chess Federation, and there was also a special round of state funding. In the end, to make sure that Blübaum could take his own coaches to the tournament the chess officials even organized a crowdfunding campaign online.
This article was originally published in German.
Sports
UFC champion Carlos Ulberg says he lost his title belt after UFC 327
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UFC champion Carlos Ulberg says he lost his championship belt that he just won after capturing the light heavyweight title at UCF 327.
He told Fox Sports Australia Monday he misplaced his golden title belt while celebrating his victory.
“I’ve lost the belt, bro,” Ulberg told FOX Sports. “Initially after winning, the plan was to not have a drink. But you know how these things go, right?” he said.
“First, someone gives you a champagne to celebrate. Then one thing leads to another, and you’re doing shots.”
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Carlos Ulberg of New Zealand celebrates his knockout victory over Jiri Prochazka in a light heavyweight title bout at UFC 327 in Miami, Fla., April 11, 2026. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
The 35-year-old from New Zealand fought through a knee injury to defeat Jiri Prochazka in the main event at UFC 327 by knockout this weekend in Miami to become the new champion of the light heavyweight division.
His injury could keep him sidelined for a year, meaning he will have to give up his champion status anyway, with UCF holding an interim title fight to take his place.

Carlos Ulberg of New Zealand celebrates his knockout victory over Jiri Prochazka in a light heavyweight title bout during UFC 327 at the Kaseya Center in Miami, Fla., April 11, 2026. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
But Ulberg said he’s fairly confident his belt will be found before he heads to Las Vegas to get further evaluation from doctors on his knee. He then plans to spend time at the UFC Performance Institute before returning to New Zealand to be with family.
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“I didn’t want to be carrying the belt around, so I think it’s still there at the apartment somewhere. One of the boys probably has it in bed with him,” Ulberg said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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