‘I Have A Date, I’ll Let Boss Man Dana Announce That’

“Bones” might be back sooner rather than later.
Since Jon Jones tore his pectoral muscle before his scheduled UFC 295 fight against Stipe Mioicic, everyone has been wondering when the UFC Heavyweight champion will make his highl…


MMA: MAR 04 UFC 285

“Bones” might be back sooner rather than later.

Since Jon Jones tore his pectoral muscle before his scheduled UFC 295 fight against Stipe Mioicic, everyone has been wondering when the UFC Heavyweight champion will make his highly anticipated return.

On Saturday, Jones took to his Twitter during the UFC 301 pay-per-view (PPV) to tease some fight news.

“I have a date, I’ll let boss man Dana announce that,” Jones wrote.

Jones added that he couldn’t name his opponent because “as [of] right now it’s just a verbal agreement.”

Jones has been very clear that he still has his eyes set on former UFC Heavyweight champion Miocic. However, in the past week, “Bones” has expressed interest in fighting current Light Heavyweight champion Alex Pereira.

He has no interest in fighting current interim Heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall because “he only matters in the U.K.”

The real question is, when does Jones return? Because the UFC PPV slate is kind of set. July is Manchester, August is Perth, September is Noche UFC, and October is Abu Dhabi. Does UFC put Jones back in New York in November? Or does he end the year in Las Vegas?

The end of the year feels like the correct place for him, but he also has to be cleared from any wrongdoing for his alleged ‘death threat’ to a drug test employee.

Hopefully, he stays out of trouble … it’s only May.


De La Hoya Reacts To Canelo Beating Munguia

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De La Hoya likened Munguia’s loss against Alvarez to Canelo’s loss to Mayweather — a bump in the road en route to taking over as the next superstar of boxing. Saul “Canelo” Alvar…


Canelo Alvarez v Jaime Munguia
Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images

De La Hoya likened Munguia’s loss against Alvarez to Canelo’s loss to Mayweather — a bump in the road en route to taking over as the next superstar of boxing.

Saul “Canelo” Alvarez took the fight to Jaime Munguia on Saturday night, defending his unified super middleweight title and handing the up-and-coming 27 year old fighter his first knockdown and first career loss (watch the highlights here).

Leading up to the battle between two Mexicans on Cinco de Mayo weekend, it seemed like Canelo was targeting Munguia’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya as much as he was Munguia himself. De La Hoya and Canelo spat acid at each other during the pre-fight press conference to the point where Oscar said a defamation lawsuit is forthcoming against Alvarez.

During the post-fight press conference, De La Hoya was relatively respectful of Canelo, while framing Munguia’s loss as similar to Saul’s 2013 loss to Floyd Mayweather.

“I thought Jaime did excellent against the current face of boxing right now,” De La Hoya said. “I strongly feel that — I take nothing away from Canelo, I’ve always said he’s a good fighter in the ring. But this experience for Jaime will just take him to another level.”

“It’s just like Mayweather and Canelo. It’s the same thing. Canelo got school and then he became the face of boxing. Same thing with Munguia. He gained experience. He didn’t get schooled. He gains experience and becomes a better fighter. This is just the beginning for Jaime.”

Jaime Munguia also spoke to the press about his first loss at the post-fight press conference. He said it wasn’t the damage caused by the uppercut knockdown in the fourth that led to his defeat, but the loss of his composure.

“When he hit me with the uppercut I was more surprised than hurt,” Munguia said through an interpreter. “I was not hurt, but it was a good punch … He was in great shape and condition. I was winning the first rounds, and then after the knockdown I fell into his game and he started to beat me with his spirit. “

“I think I got desperate to recover from that knockdown and I started changing my game, and I think with his experience, he started getting into his game with the counter-punches.”

At just 27 years old and now 44-1, Munguia will have many opportunities to show what he’s learned from this experience with one of the best boxers in the world. He may be the future, but Canelo Alvarez is still the man today.

Bonuses! Back-Flipping Pereira Banks $50K

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Alexandre Pantoja narrowly edged out a super impressive Steve Erceg last night (Sat., May 4, 2024) at UFC 301 live on ESPN+ PPV from inside Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro,…


UFC 299: Pereira v Oleksiejczuk
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Alexandre Pantoja narrowly edged out a super impressive Steve Erceg last night (Sat., May 4, 2024) at UFC 301 live on ESPN+ PPV from inside Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to retain his undisputed UFC flyweight championship.

In addition to the flyweight headliner, UFC’s return to Rio de Janeiro featured a collection of memorable performances and finishes. Check them out below and let us know which ones stood out the most:

  • Mauricio Ruffy looked like a “young Conor McGregor” in his memorable TKO win over lightweight Jamie Mullarkey (see HERE)
  • Flyweight prospect Alessandro Costa sparked the “Prelims” undercard with a blistering leg kick TKO win against Kevin Borjas
  • Joanderson Brito opened up a brutal cut on Jack Shore’s leg that put a stop to their “Prelims” headliner (watch HERE)
  • Michel Pereira dodged a potential disqualification for an illegal backflip knee to earn an eventual submission finish
  • Former UFC title challenger Anthony Smith proved his doubters wrong with an upset submission finish over Vitor Petrino (highlights HERE)
  • Surging middleweight contender Caio Borralho put a brutal stop to veteran Paul Craig with a second-round KO

To sift through the action and see which fighters took home an extra $50,000, we take a closer look at the official UFC 301 post-fight bonus winners below:

  • Performance of the Night: Michel Pereira
  • Performance of the Night: Caio Borralho
  • Performance of the Night: Mauricio Ruffy
  • Performance of the Night: Alessandro Costa

For complete UFC 301 results, coverage, and highlights click HERE.

Resurgent Aldo Teases Second Run At UFC Title

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Former UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo returned to the Octagon for the UFC 301 pay-per-view (PPV) co-main event last night (Sat., May 4, 2024) at Farmasi Arena in Rio d…


UFC 301: Pantoja v Erceg
Photo by Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Former UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo returned to the Octagon for the UFC 301 pay-per-view (PPV) co-main event last night (Sat., May 4, 2024) at Farmasi Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, taking on No. 12-ranked bantamweight contender Jonathan Martinez. After three rounds of action, “Junior” took home a decisive unanimous decision victory, both out-striking and out-wrestling the much younger “Dragon.”

Get a complete recap of Aldo’s victory in our UFC 301 results post here.

Aldo, now 37, had not competed since a lopsided decision loss to top contender Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 278 nearly two years back, a fight that sent the Brazilian into early retirement. But “Junior” found his way back to the Octagon because he still had one fight left on his UFC contract, which means he was barred from competing in any other form of combat sports without the promotion’s permission.

Not only did Aldo win his fight at UFC 301, he also won his freedom.

“I’m looking at maybe a big boxing fight maybe somewhere down the line later this year,” Aldo told MMA Junkie before his UFC 301 return. “But we’ll revisit that with the UFC once this fight is done with Jonathan Martinez. There’s a big event [between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson] on Netflix later this year. Hopefully, I can get on that. But we’ll have to see. There’s a lot of options floating.”

UFC is not a big fan of letting its fighters dabble in the “sweet science.”

“My next step is sitting with Dana [White] and we’ll see where it goes,” Aldo told Daniel Cormier during his post-fight interview. “I said this wasn’t going to be my last fight. I still have the physique and I’m at the age I can still fight. I see that I can still go for it so maybe we can come back in here and become the champion.”

Aldo certainly helped raise his asking price with the victory over Martinez.

At the same, time, “Junior” has the ability to do something a lot of former champions cannot and that’s retire on top. Without taking anything away from his Martinez victory, we should also recognize that “Dragon” was not ranked in the Top 10 and Aldo already lost to a pair of fighters currently holding real estate in the Top 5: Dvalishvili and Petr Yan. Then again, this rematch is probably still on the table at some point.

Either way, Aldo proved he’s still got the goods.

I wouldn’t be surprised to see the former champ pass on a UFC contract (for now) in favor of boxing. I’m sure the promotion will be willing to re-sign Aldo whenever he’s ready to return (if that day comes) because he’s still a big name and adds tremendous value to the Brazilian market. As for another run at the title … probably not in the cards, but I’d still pay to see him sling leather with Sean O’Malley anyway.

For more UFC 301 results and highlights click here.

Alexandre Pantoja retains title in Brazil return, beats Steve Ercog in thin decision win – UFC 301 Highlights

Alexandre Pantoja retains title in Brazil return beats Steve Erceg in hard fought win UFC 301Undisputed flyweight champion, Alexandre Pantoja made good on his first outing on home soil since his move to the…

Alexandre Pantoja retains title in Brazil return beats Steve Erceg in hard fought win UFC 301

Undisputed flyweight champion, Alexandre Pantoja made good on his first outing on home soil since his move to the Octagon — successfully retaining his divisional title with a unanimous decision (48-47, 48-46, 49-46) over challenger, Steve Erceg in their UFC 301 main event clash.

Pantoja, the current undisputed flyweight titleholder, headlined tonight’s return to Rio de Janeiro at UFC 301, having successfully defended his crown at UFC 296 back in December in a rematch judging victory against Brandon Royval.

Pantoja Erceg UFC 301

As for Erceg, the Australian — who was three-fights deep into a winning run and his Octagon stint to boot, earned his title fight with Pantoja tonight off the back of a stunning KO win over Matt Schnell just a month ago.

Pantoja Erceg 4

And beginning in typical aggressive fashion, Pantoja managed to scramble with success throughout his five round back-and-forth against Perth native, Erceg.

Pantoja UFC 301

However, dealing with a massive cut across his forehead, Pantoja took his foot off the gas considerably in the fourth round — and managed to swing the bout in his favor in the fifth and final frame to successfully retain his throne atop the 125lbs division.

Below, catch the highlights from Alexandre Pantoja’s title defense against Steve Erceg

The Real Winners and Losers From UFC 301

The UFC will be back on our screens on Saturday night with the under the radar UFC 301 card out of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. As expected, the line-up was loaded…

The UFC will be back on our screens on Saturday night with the under the radar UFC 301 card out of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. As expected, the line-up was loaded…