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Missed Fists: Authorities storm cage to break up post-fight brawl

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Missed Fists: Authorities storm cage to break up post-fight brawl

Welcome to the latest edition of Missed Fists where we shine a light on fights from across the globe that may have been overlooked in these hectic times where it seems like there’s an MMA show every other day.

MMA is supposed to be fun!

That’s been my personal mantra for years and though there are times (days, weeks, months even) where the combat sports cycle can be a bit of a drag, in the end, I like to think we all hang on to this crazy business because we love it.

That said, sometimes, MMA can be a little too fun or unpredictable or crazy (or some combination of those and numerous other adjectives) and a firm hand has to step in to settle things down.

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In other words: Somebody call the cops!

(Big thanks as always to @Barrelelapierna for their weekly lists of the best KOs and submissions, and to @Grabaka_Hitman for uploading many of the clips you see here. Give them a follow and chip in on Patreon if you can.)

Fakhriddin Hashimzhonov vs. Amanbekov Dastan
Talant Musakeev vs. Magomedov Magomed

This past Sunday’s Ertaimash Fighting Championship show in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, saw two instances of folks having to intervene to prevent a situation from completely breaking down.

First, let’s look at this fight between Fakhriddin Hashimzhonov and Amanbekov Dastan that was mostly uneventful until the final seconds of the fight (and the few seconds after it).

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The majority of this three-round contest saw Hashimzhonov using his superior size and grappling to ground Dastan and prevent him from really getting anything off. One might say there were shades of Josh Koscheck vs. Paul Daley and, sure enough, Dastan went full Daley after the bell rang, chasing Hashimzhonov and attempting to punch his head.

It wasn’t long before a damn-near army of uniformed officers spilled into the cage to restore order. Afterwards, Dastan appeared to apologize to Hashimzhonov and all was well.

Later in the evening, a fight between Talant Musakeev and Magomedov Magomed proved to be just as volatile, with the seeds of chaos planted earlier.

Magomed was rocked in Round 1 and had a cut opened above his eyes, which resulted in a lengthy pause in the action to clean it up. This created tension between Magomed and the referee, but everything was fine until Round 3, when Magomed—who at another point in the fight had wiped his own blood all over his face—had his cut opened up again, resulting in a stoppage.

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A dazed Magomed didn’t take the news well and had to be physically restrained by the referee.

The losing fighter refused to return to the center of the cage for the raising of his opponent’s hand, though he and Musakeev dapped it up after. Both fighters also had the chance to do a post-fight interview, complete with Magomed’s face still covered in blood.

You can watch a free replay of EFC 49 on YouTube.

Mike Bardsley vs. Alexei Bell

At National Fighting Championship 168 in Atlanta, Mike Bardsley and Alexei Bell were testing the waters with their jabs before Bardsley just decided to cannonball into the pool and end this.

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Head kick beats jab more often than not, methinks.

This was an emotional win for Bardsley, who dedicated the fight to his brother that recently passed.

Ronald Paradeiser vs. Acoidan Duque

Ronald Paradeiser scored one of the most important wins of the weekend as he continued his Oktagon lightweight tournament run by smoking Acoidan Duque in just under 90 seconds.

That sweet finish sets Paradeiser up for a massive semifinal matchup with Losene Keita, which takes place at Oktagon 65 on Dec. 29. Mark your calendars.

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Davon Duncan vs. Matheus Dino Jones
Alish Smith vs. Rhi Rhi Hudson
Marin Vetrila vs. Adam Shelley
Luke Riley vs. Alexandre Junior
George McManus vs. Dara Ward
Jair Ordinola vs. Gabriel Diaz
Cheyanne Bowers vs. Veronika Borisova
Jackson McVey vs. Ben Fowler
Tony Toro vs. Juan Alvarez
Alivia Bierley vs. Nadia Chmil

There’s no elegant way to say this: A lot of shit went down on UFC Fight Pass last weekend.

Let’s go to Davon Duncan, who shut Matheus Dino Jones down with a spinning body kick at a Shooto Brasil show in Rio de Janeiro.

There’s no shaking that one off. Jones had a delayed reaction to the finishing blow, but probably knew right away he was about to drop at any second.

Cage Warriors held two shows in Manchester, England, both of which delivered highlights in spades.

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There was this boop knockout by Alish Smith…

And then another boop delivered by Marin Vetrila in the very next fight…

That’s back-to-back BOOPS! Soak it in.

Undefeated featherweight prospect Luke Riley headlined the second Manchester show and didn’t disappoint, putting Alexandre Junior away with strikes in about two minutes.

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I can’t believe Junior was conscious after that knockdown shot. Riley was an astronomical favorite heading into this fight, so a step-up in competition should be around the corner whether it’s in Cage Warriors or if he signs with an American promotion.

Here’s a weird one.

Officially, this result goes down as an armbar submission win for George McManus. But it wasn’t nearly that simple. McManus forced a tap from Ward in the second round, the problem being that the referee wasn’t in position to see it. So the bout continued, the round ended, and then they went to video review.

And then McManus was retroactively awarded the submission win. Wait, we can do this? UFC, PFL, ONE, someone, get on it!

Speaking of easy-to-miss submissions, I had to watch this clip a few times to figure out what Jair Ordinola did.

From Fusion FC 81 in Lima, Peru:

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That is a sneaky, sneaky armbar, and a clever way for Ordinola to put away his stubborn foe.

The best submission of the weekend may have come from new interim LFA flyweight champion Cheyanne Bowers, who claimed the title by reversing her fortunes to snag Veronika Borisova’s arm and earn a tap-out.

Club and subs are commonplace, but it’s rare we get to enjoy a “clubbed and sub.”

It remains to be seen if this performance nets Bowers a Contender Series booking or if she’ll meet Shannon Clark in a unification bout. Clark recently had her own Contender Series tryout in which she was heavily favored only to end up on the wrong end of a shocking knockout loss.

From that same LFA event, Jackson McVey scored a submission every grappler dreams of, converting a perfectly timed sprawl into an instant choke-out.

Thirty-three seconds, that’s all it took.

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Lastly, we saw two fighters show off some exemplary fisticuffs with Tony Toro going berserk on Juan Alvarez, and Alivia Bierley ending her fight with a resounding THUD.

And from the ICYMI department, make sure you check out UFC veteran Damir Ismagulov doing some serious damage on the Kazakhstan fight scene. Once a ranked lightweight, Ismagulov kept his rep intact by spin kicking Oberdan Tenorio’s face off.

Poll

What was the most memorable Missed Fists moment this week?

  • 0%
    Chaos in Kyrgyzstan

    (0 votes)

  • 0%
    Mike Bardsley’s emotional head kick

    (0 votes)

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  • 0%
    George McManus’ retroactive submission

    (0 votes)

  • 0%
    Cheyanne Bowers clubbed and sub

    (0 votes)

  • 0%
    Damir Ismagulov spin kick to the face

    (0 votes)

  • 0%
    Other (leave comment below)

    (0 votes)

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0 votes total

Vote Now


If you know of a recent fight or event that you think may have been overlooked, or a promotion that could use some attention, please let us know on X — @AlexanderKLee — using the hashtag #MissedFists.

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MMA

Stephen Thompson releases statement after vicious UFC 307 knockout loss

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Stephen Thompson releases statement after vicious UFC 307 knockout loss

Stephen Thompson was having success on the feet against Joaquin Buckley, looking to get back on track after losing three of his past four at Saturday night’s UFC 307, but Buckley has the last laugh with a monster right hook that knocked him unconscious midway through rounds three in Salt Lake City (watch the finish).

Now down to 1-4 since 2021 — and 4-7-1 since challenging for UFC gold in 2016 —, “Wonderboy” took on social media to thanks the support of fans. In good spirits, the 41-year-old veteran also joked about not remembering how he got back to the hotel after such a vicious knockout.

Check the video below.

“Not much to say other than I sincerely appreciate all of the love and support I felt from the fans tonight and always the love you’ve shown me really fills my heart,” Thompson wrote on the post. “The roar of the crowd as I walked out to the cage and my name was announced is something I’ll cherish forever. I’m sorry I didn’t get it done tonight. Much love to you all and much love to SLC.”

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Football

Corry Evans: Northern Ireland midfielder signs short-term deal with Bradford City

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Corry Evans: Northern Ireland midfielder signs short-term deal with Bradford City


Northern Ireland international Corry Evans has signed a short-term deal with League Two side Bradford City until January.

Evans, who has won 72 caps for his country, has been a free agent since leaving Championship side Sunderland in the summer.

He made 67 appearances and captained the Black Cats in his three seasons at the club.

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The 34-year-old previously had spells at Manchester United, Hull City and Blackburn Rovers, who he played for more than 200 times.

Bradford are 14th in League Two and their manager Graham Alexander was delighted to be able secure Evans’ signature.

“We’re bringing Corry in on a short-term deal to help us with his experience and quality,” Alexander told the club’s website.

“He’s another option in the midfield that can compliment the personnel we already have in there.”

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The midfielder also expressed his excitement to join the club.

“I’m absolutely thrilled to join Bradford City. It’s a massive club with a passionate fanbase, and I can’t wait to get started.”



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Pereira, Jones, Cormier, and more

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Pereira, Jones, Cormier, and more


(This story was updated to add new information.)

The light heavyweight title was on the line in the UFC 303 main event, and dominant champion Alex Pereira (11-2 MMA, 8-1 UFC) put away challenger and former champ Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1 MMA, 4-2 UFC) with a vicious second-round knockout.

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Pereira has had the fastest rise to mega-success in UFC history. He won the middleweight title in just his fourth fight in the UFC, then moved to 205 pounds and won the title there. Now he’s talking about a move to heavyweight for an unprecedented third UFC title.

Take a look at a chronological history of the UFC light heavyweight belt.

Frank Shamrock

Frank Shamrock

Date: Dec. 21, 1997
Event: UFC Japan
Opponent: Kevin Jackson
Total reign: 703 days
Title defenses: Igor Zinoviev (UFC 16), Jeremy Horn (UFC 17), John Lober (UFC Brazil), Tito Ortiz (UFC 22)
Notes: Fight light heavyweight champion in UFC history. Vacated when he retired in November 1999.

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Tito Ortiz

Tito Ortiz

Date: April 14, 2000
Event: UFC 25
Opponent: Wanderlei Silva
Total reign: 1,260 days
Title defenses: Yuki Kondo (UFC 29), Evan Tanner (UFC 30), Elvis Sinosic (UFC 32), Vladimir Matyushenko (UFC 33), Ken Shamrock (UFC 40)

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Randy Couture (interim)

Randy Couture

Date: June 6, 2003
Event: UFC 43
Opponent: Chuck Liddell
Notes: Couture beat Liddell for an interim belt while Ortiz was out. It was the first of three legendary fights between the two.

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Randy Couture

Randy Couture

Date: Sept. 26, 2003
Event: UFC 44
Opponent: Tito Ortiz
Total reign: 127 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Couture, then a former heavyweight champion, became the first fighter to win UFC titles in two divisions.

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Vitor Belfort

Vitor Belfort

Date: Jan. 31, 2004
Event: UFC 46
Opponent: Randy Couture
Total reign: 203 days
Title defenses: None

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Randy Couture

Randy Couture

Date: Aug. 21, 2004
Event: UFC 49
Opponent: Vitor Belfort
Total reign: 238 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Couture became a two-time 205-pound champion with a win in a rematch.

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Chuck Liddell

May 7, 2022; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Former UFC fighter Chuck Liddell in attendance during UFC 274 at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Date: April 16, 2005
Event: UFC 52
Opponent: Randy Couture
Total reign: 770 days
Title defenses: Jeremy Horn (UFC 54), Randy Couture (UFC 57), Renato Sobral (UFC 62), Tito Ortiz (UFC 66)
Notes: Liddell won the title in his second fight in the famed trilogy with Couture, then beat him a third time to close out the rivalry.

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Quinton Jackson

Quinton Jackson vs. Wanderlei Silva, UFC 92

Date: May 26, 2007
Event: UFC 71
Opponent: Chuck Liddell
Total reign: 406 days
Title defenses: Dan Henderson (UFC 75)
Notes: The “Rampage” win over Liddell was a rematch of their 2003 PRIDE title fight. When he beat Henderson, it effectively unified the PRIDE and UFC light heavyweight titles.

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Forrest Griffin

Forrest Griffin

Date: July 5, 2008
Event: UFC 86
Opponent: Quinton Jackson
Total reign: 175 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Griffin won a UFC title a little more than three years after he was the “TUF 1” winner at light heavyweight.

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Rashad Evans

Rashad Evans

Date: Dec. 27, 2008
Event: UFC 92
Opponent: Forrest Griffin
Total reign: 147 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Like Griffin, Evans was an “Ultimate Fighter” winner.”

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Lyoto Machida

Lyoto Machida

Date: May 23, 2009
Event: UFC 98
Opponent: Rashad Evans
Total reign: 350 days
Title defenses: Mauricio Rua (UFC 104)
Notes: Machida was unbeaten heading into the title fight at 14-0.

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Mauricio Rua

Mar 11, 2017; Fortazela, Brazil, USA; Mauricio Rua (red gloves) defeats Gian Villante (blue gloves) during UFC Fight Night at Centro de Formacao Olimpica de Fortaleza. Mandatory Credit: Jason Silva-USA TODAY Sports

Date: May 8, 2010
Event: UFC 113
Opponent: Lyoto Machida
Total reign: 315 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: “Shogun” Rua needed a second shot at it, but knocked out his fellow Brazilian in their rematch to win the title.

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Jon Jones

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – MARCH 04: Jon Jones looks on during the UFC heavyweight championship fight against Ciryl Gane of France during the UFC 285 event at T-Mobile Arena on March 04, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Date: March 19, 2011
Event: UFC 128
Opponent: Mauricio Rua
Total reign: 1,501 days
Title defenses: Quinton Jackson (UFC 135), Lyoto Machida (UFC 140), Rashad Evans (UFC 145), Vitor Belfort (UFC 152), Chael Sonnen (UFC 159), Alexander Gustafsson (UFC 165), Glover Teixeira (UFC 172), Daniel Cormier (UFC 182)
Notes: Stripped of the title for the first time in April 2015 after a hit-and-run accident.

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Daniel Cormier

Daniel Cormier

Date: May 23, 2015
Event: UFC 187
Opponent: Anthony Johnson
Total reign: 1,315 days
Title defenses: Alexander Gustafsson (UFC 192), Anthony Johnson (UFC 210), Volkan Oezdemir (UFC 220)
Notes: Cormier won the vacant title after Jones was stripped of it.

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Jon Jones (interim)

Apr 23, 2016; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Jon Jones (red gloves) reacts after defeating Ovince Saint Preux (blue gloves) during UFC 197 at MGM Grand Garden Arena. Mandatory Credit: Joshua Dahl-USA TODAY Sports

Date: April 23, 2016
Event: UFC 197
Opponent: Ovince Saint Preux
Notes: Jones won an interim title, then failed a drug test and was suspended and stripped of the interim belt. He then beat Cormier at UFC 214 to unify the titles and was stripped when he failed another drug test. Cormier was reinstated as champion, then vacated the belt when he won the heavyweight title.

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Jon Jones

Dec 29, 2018; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Jon Jones (red gloves) exits the octogon after his victory over Alexander Gustafsson (not pictured) during UFC 232 at The Forum. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

Date: Dec. 29, 1018
Event: UFC 232
Opponent: Alexander Gustafsson
Total reign: 2,098 days
Title defenses: Anthony Smith (UFC 235), Thiago Santos (UFC 239), Dominick Reyes (UFC 247)
Notes: Jones started his second reign as champion, then vacated in August 2020 during a UFC contract dispute.

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Jan Blachowicz

Jan Blachowicz vs. Dominick Reyes, UFC 253

Date: Sept. 27, 2020
Event: UFC 253
Opponent: Dominick Reyes
Total reign: 398 days
Title defenses: Israel Adesanya (UFC 259)
Notes: Blachowicz’s win over Reyes was for the vacant belt after Jon Jones announced his intention to move to heavyweight. His lone title defense came against middleweight Adesanya, who moved up in an attempt to win a second title.

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Glover Teixeira

Glover Teixeira

Date: Oct. 30, 2021
Event: UFC 267
Opponent: Jan Blachowicz
Total reign: 225
Title defenses: None
Notes: At 42, Teixeira became the oldest first-time champion in UFC history with the win.

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Jiri Prochazka

SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE – JUNE 12: Jiri Prochazka of the Czech Republic celebrates with the light heavyweight title belt after submitting Glover Teixeira of Brazil in the fifth round during UFC 275 at Singapore Indoor Stadium on June 12, 2022 in Singapore. (Photo by Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

Date: June 12, 2022
Event: UFC 275
Opponent: Glover Teixeira
Total reign: 164 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Prochazka vacated the title in November 2022 after he suffered a shoulder injury that he expected would keep him out for a year. After he vacated the title, Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev fought at UFC 282 for the vacant belt, but their bout was a draw.

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Jamahal Hill

Jan 21, 2023; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Jamahal Hill (blue gloves) reacts after the fight against Glover Teixeira (red gloves) during UFC 283 at Jeunesse Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jason da Silva-USA TODAY Sports

Date: Jan. 21, 2023
Event: UFC 283
Opponent: Glover Teixeira
Total reign: 174 days
Title defenses: None
Notes: Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev first fought at UFC 282 for the vacant belt, but their bout was a draw. Hill and Teixeira were next to get a crack at it. But Hill vacated the title in July 2023 after he suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon playing a pickup basketball game with fighters in Las Vegas.

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Alex Pereira

Oct 5, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Alex Pereira (red gloves) reacts after defeating Khalil Rountree Jr. (not pictured) in a light heavyweight title bout during UFC 307 at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Date: Nov. 11, 2023
Event: UFC 295
Opponent: Jiri Prochazka
Total reign: Incumbent
Title defenses: Jamahal Hill (UFC 300), Jiri Prochazka (UFC 303), Khalil Rountree (UFC 307)
Notes: Pereira won a title in a second division quicker than anyone in UFC history. His three 205-pound title defenses in 175 days are a UFC record.

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Be sure to visit the MMA Junkie Instagram page and YouTube channel to discuss this and more content with fans of mixed martial arts.

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Who’s next for new champ Julianna Peña?

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Who’s next for new champ Julianna Peña?


Julianna Pena waited more than two years to get back into the octagon for a chance to fight for the title, and that time paid off when she recaptured the women’s bantamweight belt from Raquel Pennington in the UFC 307 co-main event.

Although the sentiment from the overwhelming majority in the MMA community is that Peña (11-5 MMA, 8-2 UFC) was gifted the gold with a controversial split decision over Pennington at Delta Center in Salt Lake City, she is the winner nonetheless and is certainly going to bring more spice to the weight class.

How long will Peña be able to hold the throne, though? Whether her Amanda Nunes trilogy request comes to life or Kayla Harrison gets her crack at the belt, it’s almost certain Peña will be a sizeable betting underdog when she attempts to defend for the first time.

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Which direction is the division headed? Watch the video above for thoughts and analysis on Peña’s future after her UFC 307 title victory.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 307.

Be sure to visit the MMA Junkie Instagram page and YouTube channel to discuss this and more content with fans of mixed martial arts.

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Mario Bautista fires back at Conor McGregor after UFC 307 win over Jose Aldo: ‘He can kiss my a**’

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Mario Bautista fires back at Conor McGregor after UFC 307 win over Jose Aldo: ‘He can kiss my a**’

Mario Bautista scored the biggest victory of his career Saturday, winning a close split decision against UFC Hall of Famer Jose Aldo at UFC 307 in Salt Lake City, but many people disagreed with the judges’ call — including MMA superstar Conor McGregor.

“The Notorious” took on social media Saturday night to call the result a “dirt” and “bullsh*t” decision, and Bautista responded during his UFC 307 post-fight media scrum.

“Conor can kiss my a** and he can fight whenever he’s supposed to,” Bautista said. “Take the fight against [Michael] Chandler. Shut up.”

McGregor complained on social media that Bautista “was shooting in just to hold him against the fence”, and “that’s not good enough”. The Irishman believes the referee Mike Beltran should have separated them because there is “no point prolonging these positions as if they haven’t taken place exactly the same way prior and nothing has taken place but [stalling].”

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Bautista explained his strategy, citing Merab Dvalishvili’s performance against Aldo — also in Salt Lake City — as reference.

“The performance is what it is. Had to do what I had to do,” Bautista said. “I got cut in the second round. I got hit with something pretty good. I was able to drive him through the fence. He has good takedown defense, but he cannot get off the cage. That’s not my fault, you know? If that was me, I’m able to circle off the cage. So whatever the crowd thinks, whatever everyone thinks, I mean, that’s on him.

“He wasn’t getting off the fence and I’m not gonna let him off the fence. And I try to take him down, he’s good right there. And like you said, that’s something Marab did, and now look at him, he’s the champ. … I thought I did enough. Striking wise he was getting after a little bit but like I said, he just gave up a lot of time on the cage, so that that’s on him.”

Bautista said he was not worried about the boos because boors os cheers, “it’s energy” for him. Now 15-2 as a professional and riding a long winning streak, Bautista said he’s open to facing Henry Cejudo next.

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“We’ll see who comes up,” Bautista said. “I was thinking [Cory] Sandhagen, but he’s kind of coming off a loss I’m a seven in a row now. Someone that’s been calling out [Sean] O’Malley, [and] O’Malley just lost, so if Henry Cejudo wants to fight, we could do that too.”

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Hurzeler delighted with 'deserved' comeback win

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Hurzeler delighted with 'deserved' comeback win



Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler is delighted by how his side came back from two goals down to claim a “deserved” 3-2 win over Tottenham at Amex Stadium.



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