Jon Jones Politely Asks Gustafsson to ‘Stop with the Media Stunts’

Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson were a match made in heaven, but now that Gustafsson is injured and officially out of the UFC 178 title fight, it’s on to the next one for the light heavyweight champ.
The coals fueling the ongoing feud between …

Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson were a match made in heaven, but now that Gustafsson is injured and officially out of the UFC 178 title fight, it’s on to the next one for the light heavyweight champ.

The coals fueling the ongoing feud between Jones and Gustafsson have been burning bright red ever since their epic light heavyweight title fight nearly a year ago.

Gustafsson became an overnight star for rearranging the champ’s face, but Jones was the one who impressed the judges and walked away with his belt still intact.  

The two were slated to meet again in the main event of UFC 178, but Gustafsson was forced to withdraw from the fight card after tearing his meniscus during training camp. Jones is now slated to fight undefeated Olympian Daniel Cormier, who’s since stepped in as a replacement for Gustafsson.

Despite sitting on the sidelines, Gustafsson hasn’t halted his efforts to get under Jones’ skin.

Last week, Jones posted a video on Instagram of a deep gash over his right eye being stitched up after a training accident. The gash apparently reopened lingering scar tissue from the Gustafsson bout. After seeing the injury, the Swede wasted little time in jumping on Instagram to poke fun at his rival.

Jones appears to be growing tired of Gustafsson hanging on to the past. At the end of the day, all three judges scored the fight in his favor. As the saying goes, the first fight with Gustafsson is out of sight and out of mind for Jones.

Jones’ title fight with Cormier is slated to headline UFC 178 on September 27 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon. 

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Yoel Romero Is a Middleweight Title Dark Horse

Chris Weidman’s busy defending his title. Anderson Silva’s busy preparing for his comeback. Vitor Belfort’s busy brushing off his critics. Luke Rockhold’s busy vying to replace Belfort as one of his biggest critics.
Meanwhile, UFC middleweight and form…

Chris Weidman’s busy defending his title. Anderson Silva’s busy preparing for his comeback. Vitor Belfort‘s busy brushing off his critics. Luke Rockhold‘s busy vying to replace Belfort as one of his biggest critics.

Meanwhile, UFC middleweight and former Olympic wrestler Yoel Romero is busy doing his own thing: training to prove that he’s capable of beating anybody at 185 pounds as the division’s dark-horse title contender. 

Romero spent a majority of his life as a wrestler—preparing for the 2000 Summer Olympics in freestyle competition. He made it all the way into the final match before losing to Adam Saitiev and was forced to take home the silver medal. 

After grappling for most of his life, Romero was finally able to let his hands go in 2009 when he stepped away from the wrestling mat and into the cage against Sascha Weinpolter. The fight lasted 48 seconds before Weinpolter had taken enough punishment from Romero.

Surprisingly enough, the former Olympian seemed to have more interest in striking than taking the fight to the mat. 

The Cuban native fighter would amass three more TKO victories before falling victim to a more seasoned and heavy-handed Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante. It wouldn’t be too long before Romero was back to his winning ways—he authored three more TKOs in four victories after the loss to Feijao and joining the UFC. 

Now, just three months removed from the first decision victory the 37-year-old fighter has ever seen, Romero is set to take on fellow rising middleweight Tim Kennedy.

Having already stepped into the cage with the likes of Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, Rockhold, Robbie Lawler and Michael Bisping, it’s no secret that Kennedy is the more experienced cage-fighter. 

But with an impeccable wrestling pedigree and seven TKO victories in eight wins and nine total fights, experience may not matter as muchespecially considering Kennedy may likely face some issues imposing his grind-to-victory style against an elite grappler like Romero. 

Romero’s here to make his way to the top. And he wants to get there fast, because sitting on the wrong side of 30 doesn’t bode well for most fighters, regardless of how many fights they’ve had or not. 

Currently sitting outside of the UFC’s top-10 middleweight ranks, Romero has a chance to make waves and seat himself closer to a title shot with a decisive victory over Kennedy, who currently sits at No. 6.

Beyond his UFC 178 matchup with Kennedy, Romero’s style bodes well against most of the middleweight fighters currently sitting in the top 10. That includes the middleweight king, who may not find it as easy to outwrestle the Olympian for any portion of a five-round tilt. 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.

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Report: Donald Cerrone to Welcome Eddie Alvarez to the Octagon at UFC 178


(You know, I was a little concerned about the idea of standard fighter uniforms in the UFC…until this very moment. Photo via Eddie’s Instagram.)

We don’t mean to jump the gun here, but multiple sources are confirming that Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez is in talks to face Donald Cerrone at the already stacked UFC 178 card in September. To repeat: UFC 178. Eddie Alvarez. Donald f*cking Cer-ro-ne.

This potential meeting of top lightweights is heavily dependent, of course, on whether or not the UFC is able to acquire Alvarez from Bellator, as he is still under contract with his much maligned promotion. But Scott Coker is no Bjorn Rebney, and Alvarez is no Gina Carano, so expect to hear the official word of Alvarez’s signing any day now.


(You know, I was a little concerned about the idea of standard fighter uniforms in the UFC…until this very moment. Photo via Eddie’s Instagram.)

We don’t mean to jump the gun here, but multiple sources are confirming that Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez is in talks to face Donald Cerrone at the already stacked UFC 178 card in September. To repeat: UFC 178. Eddie Alvarez. Donald f*cking Cer-ro-ne.

This potential meeting of top lightweights is heavily dependent, of course, on whether or not the UFC is able to acquire Alvarez from Bellator, as he is still under contract with his much maligned promotion. But Scott Coker is no Bjorn Rebney, and Alvarez is no Gina Carano, so expect to hear the official word of Alvarez’s signing any day now.

Alvarez has not fought since reclaiming the Bellator lightweight championship via a split decision win over Michael Chandler in their rematch at Bellator 106. He was scheduled to face Chandler in a trilogy-completing match at Bellator’s inaugural pay-per-view until a concussion in training took him down and saw him replaced by Will Brooks, who went on to also defeat Chandler by split decision. Despite this fact, Bellator was still targeting Alvarez-Chandler III (under Rebney’s insistence), because that whole “title shots are earned, not given” thing is more of a guideline than a rule.

Cerrone, on the other hand, has been doing what Cerrone do so far in 2014: Beating the living shit out of any non-title contender in the UFC’s lightweight division. Cowboy has fought three times since January, sandwiching a submission victory over Edson Barboza between head kick knockouts of Adriano Martins and Jim Miller at UFC on FOX 10 and Fight Night 45, respectively. A win over Alvarez would easily be enough to earn Cerrone the title shot that has eluded him for some three years now, over the course of which he has fought an incredible 14 times for the UFC.

We’ll let you know as soon as this thing is made official.

J. Jones

Report: Eddie Alvarez Joins UFC, Faces Donald Cerrone at UFC 178

Updates from Thursday, July 31
MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani provides the latest on Eddie Alvarez’s reported move to the UFC:

 
Original Text
According to reports, Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez is now a member of the UFC, and he alr…

Updates from Thursday, July 31

MMA Fighting‘s Ariel Helwani provides the latest on Eddie Alvarez‘s reported move to the UFC:

 

Original Text

According to reports, Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez is now a member of the UFC, and he already has his first fight lined up: a UFC 178 tilt opposite Top 10 staple Donald Cerrone on Sept. 27.

The news was first reported Wednesday night by Sherdog. Per Josh Sanchez of Fansided, rumors have swirled over the last week of a mystery fight being in the works for UFC 178, and some speculated days ago that the UFC had successfully spirited Alvarez into the promotion. 

The news is somewhat surprising given the fact that Alvarez remains the reigning Bellator lightweight champion, and a rubber match with Bellator poster boy Michael Chandler remains one of the biggest fights the promotion can make.

Bellator’s first pay-per-view event, Bellator 120, initially featured Alvarez vs. Chandler 3 as its main event, but the fight was scuttled when Alvarez suffered a concussion before the fight. The bout was replaced by an interim lightweight title fight between Michael Chandler and Will Brooks, which Brooks would win via controversial split decision. 

Still, it is a logical move for the promotion insofar as Alvarez’s contract with Bellator has just one fight remaining. The promotion likely isn’t willing to match the UFC’s offer, which included a substantial cut of pay-per-view buyrates, and the ugly contract dispute between Alvarez and Bellator in 2013 likely made divorce inevitable.

With Bellator leaving weekly shows behind and shaking up its boardroom, setting Alvarez free allows the promotion to invest in its future and sends a strong “brand-new day” message.

With a relatively deep pool of talent that includes Chandler, Brooks, Marcin Held, Patricky Freire, Dave Jansen, Derek Anderson, Rick Hawn and David Rickels, the lightweight division remains one of its best, even without Alvarez.

Cerrone vs. Alvarez is a massive opportunity for both men, and it has serious title ramifications. The winner could easily end up fighting for the belt in 2015 following the upcoming showdown between Anthony Pettis and Gilbert Melendez.

It’s also an absolute treat for fans, as both fighters are known for their finishing skills and exciting styles.

UFC 178 is headlined by the light heavyweight title fight between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier. Where Cerrone vs. Alvarez will be placed on the card is currently unknown, so keep an eye on Bleacher Report for more details as they become available.

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Daniel Cormier to Train with Anderson Silva Ahead of Title Bout with Jon Jones

Daniel Cormier will be stepping into the cage at UFC 178 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to face off against Jon Jones. Jones is the greatest pound-for-pound fighter the sport has ever seen, Cormier told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour.&n…

Daniel Cormier will be stepping into the cage at UFC 178 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to face off against Jon Jones. Jones is the greatest pound-for-pound fighter the sport has ever seen, Cormier told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour

Facing off against the greatest fighter ever will be no easy task regardless of Cormier’s pedigree as an amateur wrestler in the Olympics and his impressive accomplishments in MMA. He’ll look to lean on longtime training partners at the American Kickboxing Academy to help prepare him for the biggest challenge of his MMA career.

I tell Jon Jones, show me two guys who can beat my two main training partners, Cain Velasquez and Luke Rockhold. You show me your two who are going to prepare you better than my two. So I’m going to rely on my guys, man. I’m going to rely on Cain, I’m going to rely on Luke to help me become the UFC champion. I’m going to reach out a little bit, but I’m not going to stray very far from my comfort zone.

Even with all of the talent that the American Kickboxing Academy has to offer, Cormier feels it would be in his best interest to seek out talent outside of the San Jose, California, gym—the “former champion” kind of talent. 

“I’ve got some friends, and they put me in contact with some of the guys down in Southern California, with Anderson Silva and Lyoto Machida,” Cormier first told Helwani. “I may down go there for a week.” 

Long before fans became eager to see Cormier and Jones battle it out, they dreamed of the superfight that should have been—a bout between Silva and Jones that would have the true pound-for-pound king triumph against his greatest challenge. 

It never happened. 

Then came Machida, the only man before Alexander Gustafsson to challenge Jones inside of the cage (albeit for one round). He was quick enough to get past Jones’ pterodactyl-like reach and connect chin to leather. The champion’s force fields were penetrable, his demise was on the horizon. 

That never happened, either. 

Cormier steps in at UFC 178 to accomplish botha superfight between the former Strikeforce heavyweight grand prix champion and the current UFC light heavyweight champion, and the opportunity to get past the reach before knocking the king off his throne. 

Whether Cormier will be able to accomplish what is currently known as the impossible has yet to be determinedthat reach really is no joke. Let’s just keep our fingers crossed that Cormier’s knee holds up in the weeks before the bout, and Jones does his part in keeping this social media war alive. 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.

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Daniel Cormier Excited to Get His Hands on Jon Jones at UFC 178

Daniel Cormier has been gunning for Jon Jones for a long time. Even before the former Olympian ever stepped foot in the light heavyweight division, the Louisiana native made sure to let the pound-for-pound phenom know he was coming for his belt. And it…

Daniel Cormier has been gunning for Jon Jones for a long time. Even before the former Olympian ever stepped foot in the light heavyweight division, the Louisiana native made sure to let the pound-for-pound phenom know he was coming for his belt. And it was a premonition that is about to come true.

While “D.C.” entered the UFC fold as a heavyweight, the AKA staple exited the weight class after a pair of high-profile victories. The 35-year-old defeated former champion Frank Mir and heavy-handed slugger Roy Nelson, respectively, before making the decision to drop down to 205-pounds and make a run at the light heavyweight title. Suddenly, the trash talk Cormier and Jones had been exchanging about a potential showdown clicked up a few notches in the reality department.

Nevertheless, Cormier still needed to make his way up the ladder, and he took solid strides by putting on two dominant performances in his first two showings as a light heavyweight. The Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix winner smashed out short-notice replacement Patrick Cummins at UFC 171 back in February, then followed that performance up by putting a one-sided drubbing on MMA legend Dan Henderson three months later at UFC 173.

The victory over “Hendo” put Cormier within striking distance of a title shot, but the lingering rematch between “Bones” and Alexander Gustafsson seemed to put those hopes on hold. The rangy Swede and the light heavyweight champion put on an “instant classic” at UFC 165 last September, with “The Mauler” taking Jones to the wire in a five-round war. The UFC had committed to making the rematch a reality, and Cormier was content to sit on the sidelines and await his turn.

Yet, mixed martial arts is unpredictable by nature, and on Wednesday afternoon, the opportunity Cormier has been battling toward finally materialized, as Gustafsson was forced to withdraw from his scheduled tilt with Jones at UFC 178 on Sept. 27 due to a torn meniscus, and the undefeated prospect turned title contender was tapped to step in.

Now, the moment Cormier has been working diligently toward has a date set in stone and he couldn’t be happier. 

“Initially it was overwhelming,” Cormier told Bleacher Report. “It has been overwhelming this last day-and-a-half, but it has also been a relief. The thing I’ve been working so hard toward is finally here. A lot of people ask for stuff like this and may not be completely or entirely prepared for it. That’s not the case with me because I’ve worked so hard for so long, and this is finally about to happen.

“It’s actually going to happen. We are going to go in there and try to rip each other’s heads off. There has been so much restraint on both of our parts for so long, being around each other, and now we get to get into a cage and beat each other up for 25 minutes. Thanks, Dana White. Thanks, Lorenzo Fertitta. Thank you, UFC, for having this great sport where you get these little, small gloves and you get to go out and try to punch someone in the face.”

While Cormier and Jones have been trading barbs for some time, it didn’t take long for their grudge to escalate on Wednesday. Shortly after their bout was officially announced, Cormier posted a direct message sent to him from Jones on Twitter, complete with his response to Jones’ slight. Not to be outdone, the light heavyweight champion used his daughter to send a video message to the new No. 1 contender that quickly made its way around the MMA community.

(Note: The following tweet NSFW.)

For his part, Cormier welcomes all the banter and jabs Jones wants to fire his way in the pre-fight buildup because he knows they will get to settle their business man to man at UFC 178. Cormier believes MMA offers the ultimate resolution to any grudge or beef and is thankful he will get the opportunity to square off with Jones in Las Vegas.

“It’s awesome,” Cormier said. “We can tweet and have our children say stuff on the Internet as much as we want. But on September 27, Jon Jones is going to walk into that cage and they are going to close the door behind him. The only people in there are going to be me and him. There will be no Greg Jackson or Mike Winkeljohn. There will be no Bob Cook or Javier Mendez. It’s going to be me and Jon with those guys outside of the cage. But inside the cage it will be me and Jon duking it out like men. I cannot wait.”

While the road to the light heavyweight title showdown will undoubtedly be a high-profile affair, Cormier‘s focus is locked on achieving his ultimate goal of winning a UFC title. Throughout his athletic career, the Lafayette, Louisiana native has consistently pushed, scrapped and sacrificed to make his way to the top of whatever ladder he was climbing, and while he was certainly successful in many aspects, ascending the summit was something he was never able to do.

Nevertheless, Cormier‘s spirit is not one easily broken. He’s been forced to overcome personal tragedy and athletic setbacks along his journey, and while those experiences certainly took pieces of him, he never allowed the hard times to shatter his spirit. Those tragedies and missteps tested his heart and soul as both a man and a competitor, and he has fired back from the shadows of those times with ferocity to reach the doorstep of what he believes would be his greatest achievement. 

Every step on the road to UFC 178 prepared him for what is to come, and Cormier is determined to turn all the hard work into 12 pounds of gold on Sept. 27.

“I’ve been so close throughout my entire athletic career,” Cormier said. “High school nationals very close. NCAA tournament very close. Olympics very close. World Championships very close. Everything I’ve ever done competitively, I’ve always been very close but never quite got it done. Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix prepared me. I know how win the big one now and now I get to tie it all together. All of those experiences I get to tie into doing something a lot of people think can’t be done and that’s beat Jon Jones.

“I’ve had to deal with a lot of stuff. From losing a kid to losing my dad on a holiday to the Olympic games. I’ve had to deal with a lot of stuff, and when you go through life as I have, you don’t fear anything. I don’t fear a spinning elbow. I don’t fear a spinning back kick. I don’t fear getting elbowed if he takes me down. That doesn’t scare me. What scares me is not having Selena, my kids and my family. That is the stuff that scares me, but those are also the things that drive me.

“I want to make sure they have a life that is secure and comfortable. I don’t want to deal with any of the things I dealt with before. That stuff sucked. When it comes to heart, I saw in the Gustafsson fight that Jon Jones has a ton of it. But life has taught me that I can get through just about anything.

“It feels unbelievable to know that on September 27, I get the chance to compete for the biggest prize in all of mixed martial arts,” he added. “It’s also great to know that on September 28, I’m going to board a plane from Las Vegas with my family, who I will be sharing the UFC title with.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise. 

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