UFC 206 went down live last night (Saturday December 10, 2016) from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and it featured a great middleweight showdown between Kelvin Gastelum and Tim Kennedy. Gastelum, the No. 11-ranked welterweight in the UFC, unfortunately couldn’t make 170 pounds for his previously scheduled bout with Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone
UFC 206 went down live last night (Saturday December 10, 2016) from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and it featured a great middleweight showdown between Kelvin Gastelum and Tim Kennedy.
Gastelum, the No. 11-ranked welterweight in the UFC, unfortunately couldn’t make 170 pounds for his previously scheduled bout with Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone in New York last month, and was forced to pull out of the contest altogether.
When Kennedy was left without a dancing partner for UFC 206 after Rashad Evans was forced to pull out, Gastelum gladly moved up 15 pounds to take on the special forces sniper.
Kennedy had not competed since 2014 in a third round knockout loss to current No. 1-ranked middleweight Yoel Romero. Unfortunately for Kennedy the former Ultimate Fighter winner, Gastelum, was at the top of his game in Toronto, and was able to put away the UFC veteran in the third round.
You can check out the full fight video highlights here:
A middleweight tilt between former Strikeforce title challenger Tim Kennedy (18-6) and The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) season 17 winner Kelvin Gastelum (13-2) served as the second bout on the main card of UFC 206 inside the Air Canada Centre in Toronto. Once Gastelum got into a groove, Kennedy didn’t stand a chance. Kennedy went high
A middleweight tilt between former Strikeforce title challenger Tim Kennedy (18-6) and The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) season 17 winner Kelvin Gastelum (13-2) served as the second bout on the main card of UFC 206 inside the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.
Once Gastelum got into a groove, Kennedy didn’t stand a chance.
Kennedy went high with a kick early. Gastelum caught the leg and threw leather. Kennedy landed a right hand and drove his opponent against the fence. He took Gastelum down briefly. He remained in control and looked to take the back. Gastelum got back up, but wasn’t free from the clinch and took some knees to his legs. The TUF winner broke free and landed a left hand. Gastelum landed a knee to the body on the break. Kennedy’s right eye began to swell. Gastelum teed off on Kennedy before the round ended.
A kick to the body from Gastelum landed to open the second round. Kennedy’s takedown defense was stuffed and this time it was Gastelum who moved towards the back. Kennedy avoided the bad position and got control of the clinch. Gastelum broke free and fired a combination. A lunging uppercut connected found the chin of Kennedy. Gastelum reversed a position and gained control on the ground before they returned standing. A left hook left Kennedy a little wobbly. A one-two combination for Gastelum ended the round.
The final frame opened with Gastelum running towards his opponent. He fired a barrage of punches and went high with a kick. A hard jab stunned Kennedy. The TUF winner landed a jab. A spinning wheel kick from Kennedy missed. Gastelum landed another lead uppercut and dropped his opponent with a massive punch to end the fight.
Final Result: Kelvin Gastelum def. Tim Kennedy via TKO (Strikes) – R3, 2:45
UFC 206 will go down live on pay-per-view (PPV) tonight (Saturday December 10, 2016) from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and will feature an interim featherweight title bout between No. 2-ranked Max Holloway and No. 5-ranked Anthony ‘Showtime’ Pettis. You can check out the full fight card and start time information for
UFC 206 will go down live on pay-per-view (PPV) tonight (Saturday December 10, 2016) from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and will feature an interim featherweight title bout between No. 2-ranked Max Holloway and No. 5-ranked Anthony ‘Showtime’ Pettis.
You can check out the full fight card and start time information for UFC 206 here below:
Pay-per-view (PPV) 10 p.m. ET: Interim Featherweight title bout: Max Holloway vs. Anthony Pettis **only Holloway can win interim title since Pettis missed weight** Welterweight:Donald Cerrone vs. Matt Brown Featherweight: Cub Swanson vs. Doo Ho Choi Middleweight: Tim Kennedy vs. Kelvin Gastelum Welterweight: Jordan Mein vs. Emil Meek
Preliminary Card airs (FOX Sports 1) 8 p.m. ET: Light heavyweight: Nikita Krylov vs. Misha Cirkunov Lightweight: Olivier Aubin-Mercier vs. Drew Dober Catchweight (117.5 pounds) Valerite Letourneau vs. Viviane Pereira Bantamweight: Mitch Gagnon vs. Matthew Lopez
Prelims (UFC Fight Pass) 6:30 p.m. ET: Lightweight: John Makdessi vs. Lando Vannata Catchweight (158 pounds): Jason Saggo vs. Rustam Khabilov Flyweight: Zach Makovsky vs. Dustin Ortiz
One week ago today (Wed., November 30, 2016) a group of UFC fighters lead by Georges St-Pierre and Bellator founder Bjorn Rebney unveiled the formation of the aptly-named Mixed Martial Arts Athletes Association (MMAAA) in an effort to secure UFC athletes the compensation and treatment they deserve for putting their livelihoods and wellbeing on the line
One week ago today (Wed., November 30, 2016) a group of UFC fighters lead by Georges St-Pierre and Bellator founder Bjorn Rebney unveiled the formation of the aptly-named Mixed Martial Arts Athletes Association (MMAAA) in an effort to secure UFC athletes the compensation and treatment they deserve for putting their livelihoods and wellbeing on the line each time out to the Octagon.
The association, which is the third of its kind and also includes well-known UFC fighters Donald Cerrone, Cain Velasquez, TJ Dillashaw, and Tim Kennedy on their initial five-fighter board, certainly had the best of intentions during a nearly two-hour press conference which revealed their intent to bring the supposedly evil business practices of new UFC owners WME-IMG to a screeching halt. On paper, it was certainly just what the sport needed, as anti-UFC sentiment has reached an all-time high among both athletes and fans.
However, in the one week since the announcement, I’d argue that things couldn’t have gone much worse for the newly-founded association. It starts with the issue of just where the funding for the association is from, which Rebney essentially brushed off even in the face of accusations that the MMAAA was simply an anti-WME venture funded by CAA, WME-IMG’s direct competitor who, interestingly enough, also represents all of the fighters on the initial board except Cerrone.
On top of those unknown but certainly valid questions, Rebney received a cease-and-desist order from the legal team of the class action lawsuit headed by Cung Le, Jon Fitch, and others against the UFC, which he vehemently denied he would accept in a confrontational manner.
That only served to further the apprehension and doubt about Rebney’s involvement in the entire project. He’s never been the most trusted of promoters, but he was supposedly brought on in a purely advisory role. He’s always had a bone to pick with the UFC, and he only reaffirmed that notion when he outrightblasted them to Ariel Helwani on ‘The MMA Hour’ this week. That style was in turn denounced by flagship MMAAA fighter board rep Kennedy in an interview with MMA Fighting:
Rebeny’s involvement and strategy of calling out the UFC may be questionable but the wheels have truly fallen off of the MMAAA’s initial efforts based on the reactions of the fighters involved, the people who truly matter most in this instance. Kennedy’s callout of Rebney is one thing that doesn’t exactly paint a picture of happiness amongst the ranks, but the latest news about Cerrone and St-Pierre is even more concerning.
First, UFC President Dana White was heard spouting off at the MMAAA in a predictably-worded outcry on the UFC Unfiltered podcast, basically a public forum for any and all things White wants to scream and yell about with no repercussion. While that behavior is no doubt a major reason why there is need for an association like the MMAAA, it seems he took it to an all-new level, even for himself. In the outburst, White blasted Cerrone, who has saved multiple cards with his fight-anyone-at-anytime mentality, for only headlining three Fight Night cards his entire career and scolded him for a time when he paid $100,000 of his legal fees for a run-in with an angry boater.
Credit: Dave Mandel Sherdog
It was a new low for White (or maybe there simply is no such thing anymore), but the subsequent response from ‘Cowboy’ showed just why the MMAAA might not accomplish much. Fighting Matt Brown in the co-main event of Saturday night’s UFC 206 from Toronto, Cerrone said he ‘didn’t know he was on a board’ and that White had ‘saved his ass’ so he should have called him and told him what he was doing in an interview after the open workouts.
Those words only tell me one thing, that Cerrone didn’t know what he was getting himself into. He admitted he was scared but would fight for what was right and stand up for fighters, even recently offering his name as the head of a fighters’ union. However, he clearly didn’t think things through. And if the MMAAA didn’t tell him he was on a board of fighters representing them, well, this thing is a bigger mess than I think it is, and that’s saying something.
But back to Cerrone. He clearly wants to be paid what he’s worth, and seems willing enough to fight for it. He simply has to be all-in for one side, however. You can’t have both in this instance. Either you’re with the MMAAA or against them, because it’s clear White will say anything about anyone to drag their name on the ground, no matter what you may have done for him or the company in the past. Saying you didn’t know what you were getting yourself into makes you look uneducated and fleeting; like you’re playing both sides of the fence because you can’t make up your mind. That’s the kind of attitude that is going to halt the MMAAA’s efforts in their tracks before it even has a chance to get the ball rolling.
That’s both confusing and concerning at the same time, and even more evidence surfaced this morning that the fighters involved may be softening their stance after speaking with the UFC. News arrived that St-Pierre and his legal advisors had resumed talks with the UFC in an effort to finally sign him and get him back in the Octagon. That’s good for fans, yes, but the UFC and WME seemed to want little to do with St-Pierre and his demands before he unveiled his involvement with the MMAAA. The fact they wouldn’t meet him in the middle was most likely one of the biggest motivating factors in his decision to join the association.
So he plays a little hardball with his involvement in the MMAAA, and all of the sudden, they want to talk. Predictable. And what’s more, he’s willing. That’s fine, and he should be able to come back to fighting if he so desires. But reaching an amicable agreement while at the same time fighting the UFC head-on doesn’t seem like a dynamic that will work effectively, so like Cerrone, St-Pierre will have to decide where his allegiances lie. It’s an unfortunate byproduct of coming out and publicly stating you’re waging war on the UFC’s business practices.
Is it fair? Maybe not, but it’s the name of the game right now. And based on how the two most famous fighters involved with MMAAA have responded to the UFC’s inevitable initial backlash, the association doesn’t look like it’s going to go anywhere if they refuse to throw down in the fight they were all boasting of during last week’s conference.
The MMAAA obviously needs some time to implement their efforts and bring more and more fighters to their side, but this wishy-washy gameplan just makes them look like they rushed into the entire thing without looking ahead to the inevitable ramifications. And at the heart of it all, an ‘association’ isn’t going to work with the fighters backtracking and fighting amongst each other only one week after the endeavor was announced.
Last week former Bellator President and CEO Bjorn Rebney and five of the UFC’s biggest stars in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, including No. 5-ranked welterweight Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone, announced the formation of the Mixed Martial Arts Athletes Association (MMAAA), in effort to fight for better working conditions for fighters in the UFC. The announcement comes
Last week former Bellator President and CEO Bjorn Rebney and five of the UFC’s biggest stars in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, including No. 5-ranked welterweight Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone, announced the formation of the Mixed Martial Arts Athletes Association (MMAAA), in effort to fight for better working conditions for fighters in the UFC.
The announcement comes at the horizon of ‘Cowboy’s’ scheduled meeting with Matt Brown at this weekend’s (Saturday December 10, 2016) UFC 206 pay-per-view (PPV) event from Toronto, as Cerrone is on an impressive three-fight finishing streak since making the jump up to 170 pounds.
During a recent media scrum after the open workouts at Massey Hall earlier today (Wednesday December 7, 2016), courtesy of MMA Fighting, Cerrone stated that he didn’t know he was sitting on a board when he accepted the invitation from Georges St-Pierre and Tim Kennedy to be a part of the MMAAA:
“As far as the Association goes man, Georges [St-Pierre] and Tim [Kennedy] called me and asked me to be part of it,” Cerrone said. “I didn’t know I was sitting on a board. That kind of took me by surprise, sitting there like, oh wow. I spoke to Dana [White] today on the phone. He’s coming to town, and we’re going to go out to dinner and talk. There’s a lot of things I think this sport needs, you know, retirement pension, health care, things I think we need.”
Cerrone still plans to stand beside his MMAAA brethren and fight for better work accommodations from the UFC such as health care and retirement pension. Despite this, ‘Cowboy’ claims that he and the UFC’s relationship is still a great one and that he is on good terms with UFC President Dana White who he revealed at one point paid for ‘the best lawyers you can pay’ and got him out of a ‘bind’ he found himself in:
“I wasn’t sitting there saying, ‘we’re moving forward today, we’re going on strike, we need more money,” he said. “That wasn’t coming out of mouth at all. There were a couple of people that were there that I don’t plan on working with and being a part of, not mentioning any names. I was there mostly just, not saying I’m leading a board or I’m sitting on a board, but more voicing my opinion of what this sport needs.
“Moving forward, I’m still going to stand strong with those and say this is what I believe we need. I believe as a whole we need health care, we need some kind of pension for retirement. The UFC has been nothing but great to me. I can’t complain, they give me what I want. And like Dana said, I called him and he helped me out. That’s true, man. I was in a bind, he got the best lawyers you can pay, and saved my ass.”
‘Cowboy’ says he has spoken to White since the announcement of the MMAAA was made public, and that the UFC President wishes he would have called him first instead of being ‘back-handed in the face’ by the announcement out of left field:
“He said, listen kid, you can do anything you want. We have a good relationship him and I, and he’s right I probably should have called him and said, ‘hey man, I’m going to do this,’ instead of getting back-handed in the face.”
For now Cerrone’s focus will be set on Brown for their co-main event collision this weekend, which could have title implications if the dominoes fall down correctly, and will resume his fight alongside the MMAAA afterwards.
Cerrone and Brown will meet in the co-main event of UFC 206 live on pay-per-view (PPV), from the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada this Saturday (December 10, 2016).
Since the sale of the UFC for a whopping $4.2 billion to WME-IMG, fighter treatment has been magnified further. As high-ranking fighters either jump ship, or take a stand against allegedly unfair payment or treatment by their employers, many questions have been raised. By no means a new issue, the working conditions of the employees
Since the sale of the UFC for a whopping $4.2 billion to WME-IMG, fighter treatment has been magnified further. As high-ranking fighters either jump ship, or take a stand against allegedly unfair payment or treatment by their employers, many questions have been raised. By no means a new issue, the working conditions of the employees under the UFC banner is now hotter than ever. After 16 years of the new UFC era, perhaps we are now seeing a reboot and the beginning of the second phase.
Following the announcement of the MMAAA (mixed martial arts athletes association) many feel the winds of change are coming. Helping that potentially powerful gust come around are a number of well-known current fighters. Ex-champions TJ Dillashaw, Cain Velasquez and Georges St-Pierre, as well as Donald Cerrone and Tim Kennedy lead the association. Also fronting the march on the ‘tyranny’ of the UFC is ex-Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney.
Rebney Hates Bullies
As the former boss of the UFC’s biggest rival, Bellator MMA, Bjorn Rebney has heard and witnessed first hand the complaints of former UFC talent. Arguably the biggest harvester of jilted UFC fighters, Bellator now houses numerous ex-champions from the premier organisation. Speaking during his recent appearance on The MMA Hour, Rebney said he’s sick of seeing the UFC bully the hard-working fighters. Transcription by Marc Raimondi:
“I hate racists and I hate bullies more than anything on Earth,” Rebney said. “They’re bottom feeders. And WME-IMG and UFC today — that conglomerate — they’re bullies. And it may not be with their hands, but it’s with their money and it’s with their power and it’s with their influence.”
“That ($4.2 billion) didn’t come from Dana or Lorenzo,” Rebney said. “That came on the backs of fighters, who packed the arenas, drove the pay-per-view buy rates, drove the international and domestic television, the sponsorship, the closed circuit, etc., etc. They deserve to get paid what’s fair. And to be able to fight that fight, to be able to be in the middle of that and also to be able to Superman punch bullies in the back of the head, that’s a very attractive proposition for me just given my personality.”
Backlash
Although he is now helping fighters in their battle with the UFC, Rebney is facing some backlash. Jon Jones’ manager said he was not interested in joining the MMAAA if Rebney was involved, calling the ex-Bellator man ‘anti-fighter.’ Rebney said this kind of negative feedback comes as no surprise:
“I expected it,” Rebney said. “I was the second largest mixed martial promoter in the world for a number of years. I didn’t expect people would look at me and go, ‘Oh my god, what a natural transition that is.’”
“I didn’t expect people to go, ‘Oh that’s awesome, what a great dude,’” Rebney said “I expected people to go ‘Ahh, why is he doing this? That guy was part of the problem. Why is he now part of the solution?’ Yeah, I expected that. The good news is the negative vibe has been focused on me, which is exactly where it should be. But the better news is that the reaction has been big.”
Per Haljestam for USA TODAY Sports
“No Aftercare”
“There’s nothing in place and this is the most violent sport on the face of the Earth,” Rebney said. “The repercussions for a mixed martial artist far surpass those from hockey or football or, for god sakes, even boxing. Even boxing. And boxing has got a real ugly progressive step for its athletes. And you’ve got nothing in place? No.”
“I see what happens to combat sports athletes when they’re 35 and 40 and 45,” he said. “And it’s frightening. Not for everybody, but for a lot of these guys that evolution is a very, very scary evolution.”