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UFC veterans in MMA and bareknuckle boxing action Oct. 25-27

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UFC veterans in MMA and bareknuckle boxing action Oct. 25-27


This week, the UFC travels across the globe for its October pay-per-view event.

UFC 308 takes place at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, featuring a featherweight title fight between Ilia Topuria and Max Holloway.

Elsewhere, many other combat sports events are taking place, featuring several familiar names who have competed under the UFC banner.

Check out which veterans of the global MMA leader are competing Oct. 25-27.

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Scroll below to see how the UFC veterans fared last week, and see the names and details of this weekend’s competitors.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

Last week’s results

  • Khadis Ibragimov: TKO loss vs. Ivan Shtyrkov at RCC 20
  • Collin Anglin: Knockout loss vs. Armando Gjetja at CFFC 137
  • Daichi Abe: TKO loss vs. Tae Young Yoon at Japan Martial Arts Expo Prologue
  • Larissa Pacheco: Unanimous decision loss vs. Cris Cyborg at PFL: Battle of the Giants
  • Cris Cyborg: Unanimous decision win vs. Larissa Pacheco at PFL: Battle of the Giants
  • Francis Ngannou: Knockout win vs. Renan Ferreira at PFL: Battle of the Giants
  • Richie Smullen: Submission win vs. Jose Sanchez at Brave CF 89
  • Vinicius Moreira: Submission win vs. Andre Miranda at Jungle Fight 131
  • Jack May: Oct. 19 vs. Kingsley Ibeh at Kingsley vs. Jack May (boxing) – results pending

Carl Deaton III (17-7 MMA, 0-2 UFC)

  • Next fight: Oct. 25 vs. Ramiro Figueroa at BKFC c67 (bareknuckle boxing)
  • Last MMA fight (also last UFC bout): Unanimous decision loss vs. Alex Munoz at UFC on ESPN 49 on July 15, 2023
  • Record since UFC exit: 0-0

Cameron VanCamp (15-7-1 MMA, 0-2 UFC)

Cameron VanCamp

  • Next fight: Oct. 25 vs. Brandon Girtz at BKFC 67 (bareknuckle boxing)
  • Last MMA fight (also last UFC bout): TKO loss vs. Nikolas Motta at UFC Fight Night 210 on Sept. 17, 2022
  • Record since UFC exit: 1-1 bareknuckle boxing

Chris Camozzi (27-15 MMA, 9-10 UFC)

Chris Camozzi BKFC 50 weigh-ins

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  • Next fight: Oct. 25 vs. Sawyer Deep at BKFC 67 (bareknuckle boxing)
  • Last MMA fight: Unanimous decision win vs. Cory Hendricks at 2021 PFL Playoffs 3 on Aug. 27, 2021
  • Last UFC fight: Unanimous decision loss vs. Trevor Smith at UFC on May 28, 2017
  • Record since UFC exit: 3-2 MMA, 3-2 kickboxing, 2-1 bareknuckle boxing

A.J. Fletcher (10-4 MMA, 1-3 UFC)

A.J. Fletcher

  • Next fight: Oct. 25 vs. Dante Schiro at LFA 195
  • Last MMA fight: Unanimous decision loss vs. Leivon Lewis at Bayou FC 67 on May 25, 2024
  • Last UFC fight: Submission loss vs. Bryan Battle at UFC Fight Night 228 on Sept. 23, 2023
  • Record since UFC exit: 0-1

Chris Fishgold (18-6-1 MMA, 1-3 UFC)

  • Next fight: Oct. 26 vs. Raymart Quintana at Eternal MMA 89
  • Last MMA fight: TKO loss vs. Cezary Oleksiejczuk at FEN 51 on Oct. 14, 2023
  • Last UFC fight: Unanimous decision loss vs. Jared Gordon at UFC on ESPN 13 on July 15, 2020
  • Record since UFC exit: 0-2 MMA, 1-1 bareknuckle boxing

John Allan (17-9 MMA, 0-2 UFC)

  • Next fight: Oct. 26 vs. Anderson Pereira at BOPE Fight
  • Last MMA fight: TKO win vs. Claudio Rocha at SFT 50 on Aug. 17, 2024

  • Last UFC fight: Unanimous decision loss vs. Dustin Jacoby at UFC 268 on Nov. 6, 2021
  • Record since UFC exit: 4-2

Luis Saldana (17-7-1 MMA, 2-1-1)

  • Next fight: Oct. 26 vs. Edward Massey at ACL 5
  • Last MMA fight: Submission win vs. Luis Guillen at ACL 3 on May 11, 2024

  • Last UFC fight: Split draw vs. Sean Woodson at UFC 278 on Aug. 20, 2022
  • Record since UFC exit: 1-0

Tom Breese (18-5 MMA, 5-3 UFC)

Tom Breese 2024 PFL 5 weigh-ins

  • Next fight: Oct. 27 vs. Renato Rangel at LFL 14
  • Last MMA fight: TKO loss vs. Rob Wilkinson at 2024 PFL 2 on April 12, 2024
  • Last UFC fight: Submission loss vs. Omari Akhmedov at UFC on ESPN 20 on Jan. 20, 2021
  • Record since UFC exit: 6-2

Rostem Akman (7-4 MMA, 0-2 UFC)

  • Next fight: Oct. 27 vs. Melvin van Suijdam at LFL 14
  • Last MMA fight: Unanimous decision win vs. Djamil Chan at LFL 7 on Feb. 5, 2023
  • Last UFC fight: Unanimous decision loss vs. Jake Matthews at UFC 243 on Oct. 5, 2019
  • Record since UFC exit: 1-2

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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Video: Robert Whittaker, Khamzat Chimaev exchange icy stares in faceoff ahead of UFC 308

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Video: Robert Whittaker, Khamzat Chimaev exchange icy stares in faceoff ahead of UFC 308

Robert Whittaker and Khamzat Chimaev have been waiting a long time for this.

The middleweight contenders were at maximum intensity as they faced off ahead of their co-main event bout Saturday at UFC 308 in Abu Dhabi. At Friday’s ceremonial weigh-ins, Whittaker and Chimaev engaged in an icy staredown after stepping on the scale, neither man allowing themselves to move an inch or even blink.

Watch the faceoff below.

The two held their ground for some time before being separated and finally cracking a smile. Anticipation for the matchup is understandable given the potential title fight implications and the fact that Whittaker and Chimaev were previously scheduled to fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, this past June, when an illness to Chimaev forced the bout to be postponed.

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Whittaker instead defeated short-notice replacement Ikram Aliskerov. The former middleweight champion seeks a third straight win to secure another shot at championship gold.

Afterwards, both fighters were brief with their post-faceoff comments.

“See you tomorrow, guys,” Chimaev said. “I have nothing to say.”

“I’m coming for war tomorrow night,” Whittaker said. “I’m coming for everything. Hope you guys enjoy.”

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Headliners Ilia Topuria and Max Holloway weren’t as aggressive with their faceoff, but Topuria had a lot to say to Holloway as he spoke to him for several seconds with Holloway just nodding along.

Holloway looks to become just the second two-time featherweight in UFC history (along with Jose Aldo). Like the co-headliners, neither Holloway nor Topuria were interested in dishing out any additional trash talk.

“No more talk, fight tomorrow,” Holloway said. “Let’s go, tune in.”

“Tomorrow night, once again, you’re going to see why I’m the best fighter in the world,” Topuria said.

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Topuria heads into his first championship defense on Saturday after a resounding knockout of Alexander Volkanovski to claim the title at UFC 298 this past February.

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Shohei Ohtani-Aaron Judge rivalry culminates in historic World Series meeting

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Shohei Ohtani-Aaron Judge rivalry culminates in historic World Series meeting


LOS ANGELES — Aaron Judge paused for a moment as he considered a question this week. The Yankees slugger, whose 2022 MVP season was sandwiched in between two from Shohei Ohtani, was asked this week what he admires about his award-winning counterpart “other than the obvious.”

A smile began to form across his face. 

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“Other than the obvious?” Judge repeated with a chuckle before continuing. “I feel like everything’s obvious. He hits for average. He hits for power. The speed, doing what he did this year with the 50 stolen bases, it got talked about a lot, but I don’t think it got talked about enough. He’s an impressive athlete, the best player in the game, and what an ambassador for the sport.”

Ohtani said Thursday, a day before he faces off in a star-studded World Series against the man who paid him the compliment, that he was honored by Judge’s words. 

Most years, no one could question Judge’s proclamation. Because most years, no one in the sport could hit a baseball more than 450 feet while spinning a wicked sweeper and firing triple-digit heat off the mound, the way Ohtani can when he’s functioning at full capacity. 

This year, though, with that latter ability removed from the equation, the title of “best player in the game” is at least up for debate. Unable to pitch, Ohtani still offered a compelling case by delivering MLB’s first ever 50/50 season, finishing his first year with the Dodgers with 54 homers and 59 steals. He led all players in runs scored and total bases in a career year offensively and will soon become the first full-time DH to win MVP. 

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[RELATED: Full coverage of the World Series]

“He stays through the zone for such a long time,” Judge said. “Even when you think you got him, you don’t got him.” 

Judge, meanwhile, outpaced Ohtani in every slash line category and led all qualified players in homers, RBIs, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, OPS, walks and WAR, among a number of statistics. He finished just four home runs shy of the AL-record mark that he set two seasons ago. 

As staggering as his .701 slugging percentage was, Judge’s career-high .322 batting average was just as noteworthy to Ohtani. 

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“Although I’m not as tall as him, I can relate to the fact that being a taller, bigger player, your strike zone’s going to be naturally bigger,” Ohtani said through interpreter Will Ireton. “For him to post a high batting average, he has to be very efficient with what he does, so I’m very impressed at how he’s been able to do both — hit for average and hit for power.”

In doing so, Judge has built a strong case as the best player in the sport this season, even if that’s a title he has already ceded to Ohtani, who will finish the year strictly as a DH. (Despite the progress Ohtani has made in his throwing program this year, manager Dave Roberts confirmed Thursday that there’s “no possibility” he pitches in this Fall Classic.) 

With the two stars now in different leagues, though, it’s a distinction that doesn’t need to be made. They both made a run at a triple crown, and they’re both the runaway favorites to win MVP in their respective leagues, which is one of the many facets that sets this star-studded World Series apart. 

“We had our battles throughout the regular season over the years when he was with the Angels,” Judge said. “It was kind of back and forth, seeing him hit homers over my head and having some good series. But getting a chance to be on the biggest stage in the biggest moments, I think that’s going to be pretty cool to watch.” 

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Juan Soto, already a four-time All-Star and World Series champion, turned 26 years old Friday and could make upward of $600 million in a couple of months. Mookie Betts is an eight-time All-Star and former MVP capable of playing either middle infield spot in addition to right field, where he won six Gold Gloves and is back playing after starting the year at shortstop. Freddie Freeman is an MVP, too, a year removed from leading the majors in doubles. Gerrit Cole, last year’s AL Cy Young Award winner, will take the mound Friday at the same venue where his teammate and fellow Southern California native Giancarlo Stanton, another former MVP, was named the 2022 All-Star Game MVP.

If Freeman is able to suit up, as he intends to do on his hobbled ankle Friday at Dodger Stadium, it will mark the first time ever that five MVPs appear in a World Series. It could have been six had a toe injury not sidelined Clayton Kershaw for the season. 

And yet, in this juggernaut championship matchup, the likes of which the sport has never seen, none of those talents are even the most highly-regarded superstars on their respective teams. 

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Because this World Series — in addition to featuring the two top seeds in each league, from the two most populous cities in the country, in the first Fall Classic between the Dodgers and Yankees in 43 years — will feature Judge and Ohtani, baseball’s two premier talents on the sport’s pinnacle in a premier matchup that will draw the attention of millions, whether they love or hate the teams they’re watching. 

You’d have to go back to Duke Snider’s Dodgers and Mickey Mantle’s Yankees, back in 1956 when the former team was still in Brooklyn, to find the last time a World Series was played with the home run leader from each league. 

“You’re talking about two of the classic franchises, two teams that have the sport’s biggest stars,” Max Muncy said. “On our team, you’ve got Shohei, Freddie, Mookie. On their team, you’ve got Aaron Judge, Giancarlo, Juan Soto. You’re talking about the absolute biggest stars in the game, and now they’re going to be playing on the biggest stage? As a fan, how special is this, man?”

It’s been 12 years since the presumptive MVPs from each league battled in a World Series, when Buster Posey faced Miguel Cabrera in 2012. That year, both AL wild-card teams had more wins than Cabrera’s Detroit Tigers, while Posey’s San Francisco Giants had the fewest wins of the three NL division winners. 

That won’t be the case when Ohtani’s Dodgers and Judge’s Yankees, the two best teams in the sport this season, meet in the World Series for the first time since 1981. They’re not exact replicas of each other, especially considering the status of the Dodgers’ ravaged starting rotation, but their strategies for offensive success are similar. They homered more than any team in their respective leagues. They also chased less and walked more than any other teams in the majors.  

And they were carried by the most prolific offensive forces in the game. 

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“Obviously, I’ve gotten to see Aaron now for seven years, got to know him well,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.  “Just the reverence I have for the person, excited that he’s going to get to go be on this stage. Of course, I know playing against Shohei what an amazing talent he is, and obviously going to the Dodgers this year and having the kind of season he’s put out there, I think it’s great for the sport, great for baseball.”

The Dodgers designated hitter has dominated the sport since coming all the way back from his first Tommy John surgery. He hit 46 homers and went 9-2 with a 3.18 ERA in an MVP 2021 season. Judge followed by passing Roger Maris for an AL-best 62 home runs in an MVP 2022 season. Ohtani answered back last year, still thriving on the mound while enjoying a career year at the plate to earn his second MVP. 

But despite all the success, Ohtani had never been to the playoffs before this year. And Judge, for all that power and production, had never gotten the Yankees to the World Series. He also, to this point, hasn’t replicated his usual offensive output when the calendar flips to October. 

Both have a chance to write new chapters in their prolific careers, the way the Yankees captain imagined when he decided to stay in pinstripes and the way Ohtani envisioned when he joined the Dodgers on a record deal this offseason, a year after winning the World Baseball Classic for Team Japan. 

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“He’s such a great ambassador for this game,” Judge said. “He plays the game the right way. You see him hustling around the diamond, I think that sets such a great example for our youth and all the kids that are going to be watching this series. So, definitely looking forward to this.”

Rowan Kavner is an MLB writer for FOX Sports. He previously covered the L.A. Dodgers, LA Clippers and Dallas Cowboys. An LSU grad, Rowan was born in California, grew up in Texas, then moved back to the West Coast in 2014. Follow him on Twitter at @RowanKavner.

[Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily.]

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UFC 308 final faceoffs with Chimaev-Whittaker, full loaded card

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UFC 308 final faceoffs with Chimaev-Whittaker, full loaded card

Video: UFC 308 ceremonial weigh-in faceoffs with Ankalaev vs. Rakic, ‘Shara Bullet,’ RDA, more

ABU DHABI – UFC 308 ceremonial weigh-ins took place Friday, and the fighters came face-to-face one final time before Saturday’s event.

The weigh-ins took place at Etihad Arena, which hosts Saturday’s event (ESPN+, ESPN+).

Check out the video above to see the athletes from all 14 scheduled matchups come face-to-face, and don’t miss the photo gallery below.

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 308.

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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Whittaker says family priorities have good spillover into MMA

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Whittaker says family priorities have good spillover into MMA

ABU DHABI – Robert Whittaker has been to the top of the mountain, and he could be on the cusp of going back.

And because of that, in part, it’s likely the former UFC middleweight titleholder has found a way to stay grounded in pursuit of another title shot. But he also thinks a dramatic change in his life outside the sport was instrumental.

Figuring out how to balance MMA with kids and family life is what helps set him apart, he thinks.

“The big part of it is all about redefining drives and goals,” Whittaker said at Wednesday’s media day for UFC 308. “I’ve been in the UFC for a long time. You don’t see a lot of fighters stay in the UFC for as long as I have at the caliber and the level that I’ve been at. I think I owe a lot of that to just being able to redefine my goals, redefine my drive.”

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Whittaker (27-7 MMA, 17-5 UFC) on Saturday has just the latest big test in his career when he takes on unbeaten fellow title contender Khamzat Chimaev (13-0 MMA, 7-0 UFC) in the UFC 308 (pay-per-view, ESPN+) co-main event at Etihad Arena.

Chimaev is more than a 2-1 favorite at the betting window, and that part is slightly new to Whittaker. He’s only been an underdog once in the past seven years, and that was his rematch with Israel Adesanya in an attempt to win back the middleweight title he lost to him in 2019.

But the life circumstances Whittker cares most about, he thinks help him in the cage, too.

“When I started my career, I didn’t have kids,” Whittaker said. “So the introduction of kids during that period, it’s mind-blowing. And anyone that has kids will understand – it changes you. I think a lot of fighters struggle with change … But I’ve made those changes to my family.

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“I understand what is important in life. I have my priorities straight, and I guess to sum it up, I understand what I’m fighting for. I fight for my family. It wouldn’t make sense not to spend time with them at the cost of fighting.”

Check out Whittaker’s full media day interview above.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 308.

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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Watch UFC 308’s ceremonial weigh-ins live at 10 a.m. ET

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Watch UFC 308’s ceremonial weigh-ins live at 10 a.m. ET


ABU DHABI – UFC 308 ceremonial fighter weigh-ins take place Friday, and you can catch a live video stream of the proceedings here on MMA Junkie at 10 a.m. ET (7 a.m. PT).

The weigh-ins take place at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi. The same venue hosts Saturday’s event (pay-per-view, ESPN+).

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In addition to the video stream above, you can check out the early and official UFC 308 weigh-in results from earlier in the day.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 308.

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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Football

African Footballer of the Year: Debate after Boniface and Salah left off shortlist

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African Footballer of the Year: Debate after Boniface and Salah left off shortlist


Form at the Afcon finals certainly appears to have been a major factor in Caf’s shortlists.

Brighton forward Simon Adingra, who set up both goals in the final for winners Ivory Coast, is named on the player of the year list alongside Nigeria centre-back William Troost-Ekong and South Africa goalkeeper Ronwen Williams, who both had impressive tournaments.

Soufiane Rahimi was nominated after scoring eight goals in Morocco’s bronze-winning campaign at the Paris 2024 Olympics, with Atlas Lions team-mate Achraf Hakimi also included.

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Ivory Coast lead the nominations in the national team category and Elephants manager Emerse Fae is in the running for coach of the year after masterminding their fairytale Nations Cup triumph on home soil.

Elsewhere, Brighton pair Carlos Baleba and Yankuba Minteh are shortlisted for young player of the year alongside Leicester City midfielder Bilal El Khannouss.

The nominees for the women’s categories are yet to be announced by Caf, with the awards ceremony to be held in Marrakesh, Morocco, on 16 December.



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