Tag Archives: Blachowicz

UFC 282 REACTIONS!!! | Round-Up w/ Paul Felder & Michael Chiesa – UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship

  1. UFC 282 REACTIONS!!! | Round-Up w/ Paul Felder & Michael Chiesa UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  2. ‘Uncrowned champion’ Magomed Ankalaev done with Vegas (not UFC): ‘The judges were horrible’ MMA Mania
  3. ‘It was mistranslated’ – Magomed Ankalaev clarifies post-fight interview after drawing Jan Blachowicz at UFC … Bloody Elbow
  4. Magomed Ankalaev issues statement on his split draw against Jan Blachowicz at UFC 282: “It’s hard to describe the words” BJPENN.COM
  5. Jan Blachowicz defends UFC 282 stalemate, criticizes Magomed Ankalaev’s post-fight comments: ‘One dude cried’ MMA Fighting
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Dana White rips ‘terrible’ UFC 282 main event between Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev

UFC President Dana White didn’t actually score the UFC 282 main event, because he said he tuned out after watching a less-than-thrilling affair between Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev.

The five-round fight was ultimately scored a split draw, which means the UFC light heavyweight title remains vacant after former champion Jiri Prochazka relinquished the belt due to a devastating shoulder injury that prevented him from competing on Saturday.

Reacting to the main event at the UFC 282 post-fight press conference, White didn’t have much complimentary to say to either Blachowicz or Ankalaev – and the same went for the way the bout ultimately ended.

“I don’t even know,” White said when asked how he scored the fight. “I started to zone out after like f****** three rounds.”

Ankalaev was distraught after the decision was read in the cage and said “I don’t know if I’m going to fight for this organization again.” He later added he might return to “take what’s ours,” but it appeared another immediate shot at the title wasn’t in his immediate future.

White heard about Ankalaev’s discontent toward the decision and didn’t understand why there was so much surprise with the split draw.

“I heard Ankalaev is upset or whatever,” White said. “What do you want me to do? You got beat up the first two rounds. You took him to the ground. What are you going to do?”

More than anything, though, White’s anger toward the main event wasn’t necessarily about the result but rather the performances from Ankalaev and Blachowicz. That’s what ultimately led to him making the call to book Glover Teixeira against Jamahal Hill at UFC 283 in Brazil with the vacant light heavyweight title going up for grabs.

“What are you going to do?” White said. “I thought the main event was terrible. What are you going to do? You do Glover vs. Jamahal Hill in Brazil for the vacant title. Done.”

It remains to be seen what comes next for Blachowicz or Ankalaev, though a rematch could still happen — it just seems wildly unlikely that a title will be on the line.

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UFC 282: Blachowicz vs. Ankalaev – Winners and Losers

UFC 282 was building toward something memorable. With the first 10 fights ending via stoppage it seemed as if the stage was set for the two bouts at the top of the card to deliver an event that could have remembered as one of the better pay-per-view cards of the year. That didn’t happen.

Instead of talking about a spectacular night of fights from top to bottom, many of us who watched UFC 282 as it played out – and that includes the UFC commentary team – as well as UFC president Dana White — were left to wonder just what the hell happened to have the event fall apart the way it did with the final two fights.

On the bright side, all the fighters who earned stoppages took home $50,000 in bonus money.

And while UFC 282 ended on a bit of a downer, it was not all doom and gloom. Read on for the winners and losers from the fight card, which took place at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The UFC 282 main card streamed on ESPN+ pay-per-view following prelims on ESPN2 and early prelims on ESPN+.

Winners:

Glover Teixeira and Jamahal Hill: UFC president Dana White has often said he doesn’t do matchmaking on fight night, so I assume we should all take what White said at the stat of the UFC 282 post-fight press conference with a grain of salt.

White was unhappy with the main event between Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev and with that when asked what he and the UFC will do after UFC 282 in the light heavyweight division, White replied, “You do Glover (Teixeira) vs. Jamahal Hill in Brazil for the vacant title. Done.”

Santiago Ponzinibbio: Things were not looking good for Santiago Ponzinibbio at UFC 282 against Alex Morono, but that all changed with two big right hands. The third-round knockout win ended a two-fight losing skid for Ponzinibbio, who went 7-0 between December 2015 and November 2018.

Alex Morono: Alex Morono accepted his UFC 282 fight against Santiago Ponzinibbio five days before the event. Morono was ahead on two of the scorecards and tied on the third when things went south for him in the third round.

The loss ended a four-fight winning streak for Morono.

Dricus du Plessis: Dricus du Plessis moved to 4-0 in the UFC with a submission win over Darren Till at UFC 282. The victory should move Du Plessis up the official middleweight rankings as he began the fight at No. 14 to Till’s No. 10.

The jury is still out on the upside of Du Plessis. While he has had some impressive moments in his UFC fights, he has also had moments where his cardio has failed him. With the move into top-10 competition, Du Plessis needs to shore up that cardio as he can expect his next foe to try to push the pace on him early.

Ilia Topuria: Ilia Topuria is a bad man. The 25-year-old dominated the previously unbeaten Bryce Mitchell in the striking department and then, as if to prove a point, he fought to Mitchell’s strength on the mat and got the submission finish.

Topuria overwhelmed Mitchell on the feet and controlled the pace and location of the fight and when Mitchell did take his opponent to the mat, Topuria’s defense prevented Mitchell from mounting any offense.

The one thing that gave me some pause about Topuria was that, at times during this fight, he seemed to let his success get to his head at points. When that happened, he fought with too much aggression. I can’t say I blame him for this, but against elite competition, that cocksure attitude could come back to bite him. Outside of that, Topuria looked excellent in moving to 13-0 and earning his fourth straight UFC finish.

Raul Rosas Jr.: Raul Rosas Jr. looked excellent in dispatching Jay Perrin inside the first round at UFC 282. At 18, Rosas has skills and a lot of hype behind him. The key for Rosas, his management and the UFC is not to rush the young man. At 18, Rosas has a lot of time to develop and live up to the praise the UFC is lavishing on him — and man, were the UFC commentary team of Daniel Cormier and Joe Rogan all in on Rosas during the broadcast.

It seemed fitting that Rosas made his debut on a fight card where a young fighter who was not handled properly — Edmen Shahbazyan — ended a three-fight losing skid.

Jairzinho Rozenstruik: Jairzinho Rozenstruik came out incredibly fast in his fight opposite Chris Daukaus. Daukaus landed one strike in the early moments of the contest, but after that, it was all Rozenstruik who hurt Daukaus with a jab and then swarmed with a flurry of blows that ended the fight 23 seconds into the first round.

The knockout win ended a two-fight losing skid for the 34-year-old Rozenstruik.

If this fast-start model of Rozenstruik is the version of him that we will see going forward, he will be a problem for his heavyweight opponents — at least early in the first round.

Edmen Shahbazyan: UFC 282 marked the first fight for the 25-year-old Edmen Shahbazyan since a November 2021 knockout loss to Nassourdine Imavov put him on a three-fight losing skid.

Shahbazyan was a little laid back in the early going of his UFC 282 bout opposite Dalcha Lungiambula, but he was a better technical striker than his opponent in this contest. He also smartly used his footwork and movement to avoid the power of Lungiambula while effectively employing body kicks throughout the fight.

That laid-back approach dropped away when Shahbazyan hurt Lungiambula with a knee in the second round. Sensing he had his opponent hurt, Shahbazyan unleashed a flurry of strikes to finish the fight. This win, his first since he knocked out Brad Tavares in 2019, should be a huge confidence booster for the still young middleweight.

Chris Curtis: Chris Curtis bounced back from a July 2022 loss to Jack Hermansson with a nasty knockout win over Joaquin Buckley. Curtis was not very active during this bout, but his power proved to be the equalizer.

Billy Quarantillo: Lesson to future opponents of Billy Quarantillo, unless you are 100 percent sure your cardio can last 15 minutes, or you can get the finish inside the first round, don’t test his cardio. Quarantillo’s fight against Alex Hernandez exemplifies why that approach is a fool’s errand.

Hernandez put a fast pace on Quarantillo in the first round and had a lot of success doing that. However, Hernandez did not sustain his pace. As soon as Quarantillo sensed that Hernandez was running on fumes, he took over the fight and pieced up his opponent to get the second-round finish.

Quarantillo had not fought since he lost a decision to Shane Burgos in November 2021.

Cameron Saaiman and Steven Koslow: This fight was an outstanding prospect matchup until Cameron Saaiman landed an illegal knee to the head of Steven Koslow.

The 25-year-old Koslow displayed impressive ground skills from top position and off his back. As for Saaiman, the 21-year-old has good positional awareness, but his skills still need to catch up to that knowledge.

The promotion has two developing 135-pounders in Saaiman and Koslow and it would do well to bring them along slowly, especially the younger Saaiman, who picked up the TKO win.

Steven Koslow: For this exchange with referee Chris Tognoni after getting kneed in the head:

Ref: “I couldn’t tell exactly where it landed, so that’s why we’re doing the replay.”

Koslow: “It landed on my f–king face.

Losers:

Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev: UFC president Dana White said of the main event, which ended in a split draw and left the UFC light heavyweight title vacant, “I started to zone out, like f–king three rounds. I heard that Ankalaev is upset and whatever, what do you want me to do? You know? You got beat up the first two rounds and, you know, you took him to the ground you started… What are you gonna do?”

Not long after that, White announced that Teixeira and Hill would get the next shot at the vacant UFC light heavyweight title.

Judging from how Ankalaev handled the outcome of the fight during his post-fight interview, he and his team will not be happy with the UFC’s decision not to run back the UFC 282 main event.

Judges: I don’t score the fights as I watch them live and here’s why: If I can’t give a fight my undivided attention, I don’t offer a score on it. Sometimes I’ll go back and pick apart a fight with the scoring criteria beside me and with the ability to watch things frame-by-frame and in slow motion and with the sound off, but my job on fight night is not to deliver my scoring opinion. With that being said, there are a few media members I trust in scoring these fights and each of those members had Jared Gordon winning the co-main event and Magomed Ankalaev winning the main event.

With the UFC under the microscope for betting irregularities around UFC Vegas 64, the outcome of the headlining fights at UFC 282 won’t reduce the spotlight shining on the promotion.

Fans: Oh boy, the UFC 282 fight card started out so well, with 10 straight finishes, but then a controversial win in the co-main event and a split draw in the headliner, which left the UFC light heavyweight vacant, brought things to a screeching halt. I can’t expect the fans nor the UFC brass are happy that the final pay-per-view card of 2022 played out in this manner.

Jared Gordon: I didn’t watch the Paddy Pimblett vs. Jared Gordon fight with an eye on scoring it, but judging from the outrage, including from some media members who are usually not outspoken about such things, Gordon has to be wondering how he ended up on the wrong end of the decision at UFC 282.

Darren Till: During this first round of his fight against Dricus du Plessis, Darren Till spent a lot of time getting punched in the head and far too much time telling referee Mark Smith that he was still in the fight. Till had a much better second round, but Till’s most significant weaknesses, his takedown defense and lack of a ground game came back to bite him.

With the loss, Till, who has still yet to turn 30, fell to 1-5 in his past six outings. His only win since September 2018 was a November 2019 split decision victory over Kelvin Gastelum.

Bryce Mitchell: Bryce Mitchell has a solid grappling game. What he didn’t have against Ilia Topuria was the ability to take his opponent to the mat and keep him there. Mitchell’s deficiency in the striking department was also glaring at UFC 282.

I wouldn’t say that Mitchell was exposed in his first career loss, but I will note that he and his team should walk away from his defeat to Ilia Topuria with a list of items they need to work on if they want the 28-year-old to reach elite status.

Mitchell will be able to beat most fighters thanks to his ground skills, but without a complete game, Mitchell might have hit his ceiling.

Chris Daukaus: Chris Daukaus has fought three times under the UFC banner in the past year. All three of those fights have ended with him on the wrong side of a knockout.

Daukaus began his UFC run with four knockout wins and three consecutive “Performance of the Night” bonuses. However, he has not had his hand raised in victory since he stopped Shamil Abdurakhimov in September 2021.

Dalcha Lungiambula: With four straight losses and an overall UFC record of 2-5 since he signed with the promotion in 2019, don’t be surprised if UFC 282 marks the end of Lungiambula run with the UFC.

Four of Lungiambula’s losses have come via stoppage, including his TKO defeat to Edmen Shahbazyan on Saturday.

Joaquin Buckley: Joaquin Buckley looked to be in control of his fight against Chris Curtis right up to the point where he wasn’t.

Buckley did a good job in controlling the location and pace of the fight, he mixed up his striking techniques and targets, but all that became moot when Curtis caught Buckley’s leg and then landed a massive left-hand counter that dropped Buckley to the mat.

Alexander Hernandez: Alexander Hernandez looked good out of the gate during his UFC featherweight debut (he opened his career at 145 pounds, but moved to 155 in 2014). He showed good energy and nice power, but he was too aggressive in trying to show he could out cardio an opponent known for his cardio in Billy Quarantillo. Hernandez paid the price when Quarantillo finished him in the second round.

Hernandez is on the first losing skid of his UFC career with the loss to Quarantillo. His previous bout was a second-round submission defeat to Renato Moicano in February.

Jon Anik: During T.J. Brown’s walkout, UFC commentator Jon Anik said that Brown’s coach, James Krause was available for this event.

“James Krause was going to be in his corner here tonight, but for obvious reasons, he is not,” said Anik.

I understand the UFC doesn’t want to advertise a coach is under investigation for betting irregularities, but to say Krause was absent “for obvious reasons” assumes everyone who tuned into the UFC 282 prelims knows what’s going on outside of fight night. That’s a huge assumption and one that a broadcaster with Anik’s resume should know he should not make.

UFC commentary team: This is something that happens a lot in MMA. When a fighter lands an illegal blow, in this case, Cameron Saaiman’s knee to the downed Steven Koslow, the commentators are quick to stress how the impact was “inadvertent” or “accidental.” Sorry, but the only person who knows if this is true is the fighter. Folks, you’re not mind readers; report what you see. At UFC 282 we saw an illegal knee to a downed opponent.

Misc: Anyone who offered the opinion that Steven Koslow didn’t want to continue after Cameron Saaiman blasted him in the head with an illegal knee.

Neither:

Paddy Pimblett: Pimblett has charisma, confidence and star power. He also has admirable offensive striking skills and a nasty ground game. What he doesn’t have is striking defense or the ability to fight a grinding fight against the fence. One day that will bite him. Should that day have been Saturday? Perhaps, but the judges didn’t see it that way.

That said, even though Pimblett got the win at UFC 282, that was not the type of win that should give the UFC confidence that Pimblett’s star will continue to rise once he begins to face top-15 opposition.



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Magomed Ankalaev-Jan Blachowicz title fight ends in bizarre split draw

LAS VEGAS — There will be no light heavyweight champion for at least several months after Magomed Ankalaev and Jan Blachowicz, inexplicably, fought to a split draw Saturday in the main event of UFC 282 at T-Mobile Arena in their bout for the vacant title.

Judges scored it 48-46 Ankalaev, 48-47 Blachowicz and 47-47. The belt became vacant last month when champion Jiri Prochazka vacated it after a serious shoulder injury that could keep him out for up to a year.

The UFC ordered Ankalaev and Blachowicz to fight for the vacant belt and it appeared that Ankalaev had done enough to win. Yahoo Sports had it 48-47 for Ankalaev, giving him Rounds 1, 4 and 5.

But the judges’ couldn’t agree and everyone was stunned by the outcome. That included Blachowicz.

He said he didn’t feel he won and the belt should be given to Ankalaev.

Ankalaev was fighting back tears as he walked back to the locker room after pouring his heart out in the cage. He felt he’d won the fight and couldn’t understand the scoring.

“I don’t know if I’m going to fight for this organization again because I don’t know what happened,” he said.

Earlier, he said, “I won that belt. I don’t know what to say.”

Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev react after their UFC light heavyweight championship fight resulted in a split draw. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Ankalaev’s strikes carried the day early, but Blachowicz was chopping at Ankalaev’s legs and caused Ankalaev to struggle to stand and pivot.

Ankalaev did what he had to do and took Blachowicz down in the fourth and then for most of the fifth, keeping him there.

But on a night filled with great fights, the card was marred by highly dubious decisions. Paddy Pimblett won the co-main event 29-28 on all cards though most observers felt Jared Gordon won.

It didn’t seem as if it could get more bizarre, but it did in the main event.

Magomed Ankalaev of Russia controls the body of Jan Blachowicz in their UFC light heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 282 event at T-Mobile Arena on Dec. 10, 2022 in Las Vegas. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

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Highlights, updates and analysis as Jan Blachowicz, Magomed Ankalaev square off

Saturday’s main event at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas features a title fight that wasn’t even supposed to happen.

In mid-November, light heavyweight champion Jiri Prochazka suffered a significant shoulder injury and was forced to pull out of his UFC 282 headliner versus Glover Teixeira. Then, facing a long recovery, Prochazka vacated his belt in order to not hold up the division. Teixeira declined an opportunity to fight someone else for the title, so the UFC elevated the fight between former champion Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev to the main event and put the vacated belt on the line.

Blachowicz is ranked No. 2 and Ankalaev No. 3 in the UFC’s current light heavyweight rankings. Ankalaev is 18-1 overall and has won nine in a row in the UFC since his only career defeat, a triangle choke submission loss to Paul Craig on March 17, 2018, in London in his UFC debut.

Blachowicz is the former UFC champion who lost his belt to Teixeira on Oct. 30, 2021. He returned to win one fight, defeating Aleksandar Rakic via TKO on May 14 in Las Vegas. Rakic suffered a knee injury which forced the end of that bout.

The new co-main event at UFC 282 is a lightweight scrap between rising prospect Paddy Pimblett (19-3) and Jared Gordon (19-5). Both are elite finishers, and in 27 combined fights, they have 20 finishes. Mitchell is 15-0 with nine of his wins coming by submission, though only one of his six UFC wins was by submission. That, though, was a memorable one, a victory via twister over Matt Sayles in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 7, 2019.

Topuria is 12-0 with 11 finishes, including three wins by KO in his four UFC bouts. Topuria is a slight favorite at BetMGM, coming in at -140 with Mitchell at +115 on the buyback.

Yahoo Sports’ Kevin Iole is cageside and will provide live updates and analysis in our tracker below:

UFC 282 live results, highlights, analysis

UFC 282 main card, odds (Live now on ESPN+ PPV)

  • Light heavyweight: Jan Blachowicz (+260) vs. Magomed Ankalaev (-350)

  • Lightweight: Paddy Pimblett def. Jared Gordon by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

  • Catchweight (180 lbs): Santiago Ponzinibbio def. Alex Morono by TKO (punches) at 2:29 of R3:

UFC 282 prelim card, odds (Live now on ESPN2/ESPN+)

UFC 282 early prelim card full results

Jan Blachowicz of Poland and Magomed Ankalaev of Russia face off during the UFC 282 ceremonial weigh-in at MGM Grand Garden Arena on Dec. 9, 2022 in Las Vegas. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

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Jiri Prochazka out of UFC 282, vacates title; Magomed Ankalaev vs. Jan Blachowicz new main event

Jiri Prochazka’s rematch with Glover Teixeira will not take place at UFC 282 after Prochazka suffered “a shoulder injury that will require a significant rehabilitation period,” the UFC announced on Wednesday following an initial report from Yahoo! Sports.

As a result of the scratch, Prochazka has vacated the UFC light heavyweight title and the UFC has promoted a light heavyweight fight between ex-champ Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankaleav to the main event of the Dec. 10 pay-per-view, which takes place at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The UFC is offering refunds to ticketholders of the original main event.

“Out of respect to the athletes and the division, Prochazka has elected to vacate his title and will compete for the belt as soon as he is medically cleared,” the UFC stated in a prepared release sent to MMA Fighting.

According to ESPN.com, the nature of the injury could possibly require up to one year of recovery time. A person close to Prochazka, who declined to be named publicly due to the sensitivity of the fighter’s situation, confirmed the injury was to the now ex-champ’s shoulder. The person said the injury will require surgery and added it “will be a long road back unfortunately.”

MMA Fighting was not immediately able to reach Teixeira for comment on the shakeup.

The reportedly former light heavyweight champ was set to make his first title defense in a rematch of a “Fight of the Year” candidate against ex-champ Teixeira, who lost via fifth-round submission in their first meeting, a back-and-forth slugfest in June at UFC 275.

The Blachowicz vs. Ankalaev matchup put the winner in prime position to vie for the title. Blachowicz, who ceded the belt to Teixeira in 2021, called out Prochazka immediately after the Czech fighter’s title win. But the new champ decided instead to run back his fight with Teixeira, wanting to correct what he felt was his worst career performance.

Below is the UFC’s full statement on Prochazka’s injury and the new UFC 282 main event:

UFC light heavyweight champion Jiri Prochazka has suffered a shoulder injury that will require a significant rehabilitation period. Out of respect to the athletes and the division, Prochazka has elected to vacate his title and will compete for the belt as soon as he is medically cleared.

As a result, the new UFC 282 main event will see former champion and No. 2 ranked Jan Blachowicz take on surging No. 3 ranked Magomed Ankalaev for the vacant, undisputed UFC light heavyweight championship.

A Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt with legendary knockout power, Blachowicz has finished four of his last six wins in emphatic fashion and looks to recapture his lost crown with another signature victory. Ankalaev is currently riding the second-longest win streak in UFC light heavyweight history with nine victories, including five via finish, and plans to extend his streak by claiming his first UFC title.

Due to a change in the main event, refunds will be available at point of sale. UFC 282: BLACHOWICZ vs ANKALAEV takes place Saturday, December 10 from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.



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Jan Blachowicz wins after Aleksandar Rakic suffers devastating knee injury at UFC Vegas 54

Jan Blachowicz was looking to chop down Aleksandar Rakic with leg kicks, but it was ultimately a devastating knee injury that gave the former light heavyweight champion the win in UFC Vegas 54’s main event.

From the start of the fight, Blachowicz chipped away at Rakic with a series of nasty kicks to the calf, but as he pressed forward in the third round, the Austrian fighter took a step back and his knee just buckled. Rakic fell to the ground in obvious pain as the referee rushed in to stop the fight at 1:11 into the third round.

While it probably wasn’t the way he wanted to win, Blachowicz can still celebrate his victory as he vanquishes another top contender, with hopes that he’ll soon get the chance to compete for UFC gold again.

“This is what I expect,” Blachowicz said afterward. “The first round, something happened with my eye. But I feel the first round was really good. He has an injury, it is what it is. S*** happens sometimes. I cannot wait to step inside again. I hope the UFC gives me the next title shot.”

With a chance to make a statement in the light heavyweight division, both fighters came out firing early, with Rakic opening a cut under Blachowicz’s eye during the first exchange with a right hand straight down the middle. Undeterred, Blachowicz came right back at him with a left to the body followed by a huge right over the top that snapped Rakic’s head back.

That’s when Blachowicz also started targeting the lead leg with a series of devastating calf kicks, which immediate did damage as Rakic switched stances to stave off the constant attacks. The Polish powerhouse used the kicks to then set up his hands as he began making Rakic pay with his boxing combinations.

With significant swelling on his leg, Rakic looked for a takedown off a head kick attempt to slow Blachowicz down, although he had to fight off a triangle choke attempt from the bottom. Once he escaped, however, Rakic started peppering away with punches from the top with Blachowicz stuck underneath him.

Rakic maintained control, dropping down occasional elbows and making Blachowicz defend off his back until the second round ended.

With a reset on the feet to start the third, Blachowicz once again targeted the leg and threw with tremendous force behind every kick. There was significant swelling and bruising on the front of Rakic’s calf, showing how much damage Blachowicz inflicted throughout the fight.

As Blachowicz stepped into another combination with his hands, Rakic backed up — and that’s when his knee seemed to just give out on him.

Replays showed what appeared to be his knee popping as Rakic landed on his back foot, which led to him falling to the ground in agonizing pain.

Following the fight, Blachowicz shared some words of encouragement with Rakic and promised that he would become a champion one day.

As for the result in the fight, Blachowicz gets the win as he looks to jump right back into title contention after falling to Glover Teixeira to lose the belt this past October.

With Teixeira already calling for a rematch in the future, Blachowicz was more than happy to accept, as he’ll now root for the Brazilian to get a win of his own over Jiri Prochazka in the UFC 275 main event in June.

“Glover, I keep fingers [crossed] for you,” Blachowicz said. “I hope so we are going to fight again.”



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UFC 267 Jan Blachowicz vs. Glover Teixeira: Live results and analysis

ABU DHABI — The UFC has two title fights on tap as it returns to Abu Dhabi for a second event in 2021.

Light heavyweight champ Jan Blachowicz (28-8), of Poland, will seek to defend his belt against Brazil’s Glover Teixeira (32-7). Blachowicz won the title in September 2020 with a knockout victory over Dominick Reyes, then defended the belt against middleweight champion Israel Adesanya earlier this year. He has won nine of his past 10 fights.

Teixeira is arguably turning in the best performances of his career at age 42. This is his second shot at the UFC light heavyweight title, with a loss to Jon Jones in 2014 well in his past. It will be 2,744 days in between title shots for Teixeira, who is determined not to let this opportunity slip away.

In the co-main event, former champion Petr Yan (15-2) faces Cory Sandhagen (14-3) for the interim bantamweight championship. Yan lost the bantamweight title to Aljamain Sterling and was expecting a rematch at UFC 267, but Sterling was removed from the card due to injury. Sandhagen is coming off a loss to former bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw but had made his name as a top challenger in the division since 2019.

Also on the card, lightweight title contender Islam Makhachev (20-1) will face Dan Hooker (21-10) and welterweight Khamzat Chimaev (9-0) will make his first appearance of 2021, against Li Jingliang (18-6).

Follow along with Brett Okamoto, Marc Raimondi and Jeff Wagenheim as they recap all the action and/or watch the fights on ESPN+.


Fight in progress: Men’s featherweight: Ricardo Ramos (15-3, 6-2 UFC, +145) vs. Zubaira Tukhugov (19-5-1, 4-2-1 UFC, -170)


Results:

Middleweight: Albert Duraev (15-3, 1-0 UFC) def. Roman Kopylov (8-2, 1-2 UFC) by unanimous decision

Duraev remained undefeated in a bout that by the third round was playing out in slow motion, with one fighter’s face a mask of blood and the other wearing a purple, swollen bruise closing his left eye.

That damaged slowdown was brought about by the draining action in the first two rounds, during which Duraev seized control on his way to earning a decision (30-27, 29-27, 29-27) in his UFC debut, his 10th straight victory.

A key moment in this meeting of Russian fighters came midway through Round 2 when Kopylov, who had just absorbed some damage, was stuck against the cage and avoided a takedown by grabbing the cage. Referee Jason Herzog saw this, stopped the action, and put the fighters back in the clinch, whereupon Duraev, 32, completed his takedown. It was all downhill from there for Kopylov, 30, who has lost two in a row in the UFC, his only career losses. His debut came in 2019.


Welterweight: Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos (23-7, 9-3 UFC) def. Benoit Saint-Denis (8-1, 0-1 UFC) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Zaleski picked up his first win of 2021 via judges scores of 29-26, 29-26 and 29-26 — but unfortunately, referee Vyacheslav Kiselev emerged as the main story of the fight.

Zaleski, of Brazil, should have earned a TKO win in the second round, as he battered Saint Denis around the Octagon for nearly the entire five minutes. He wobbled him with two right hands and followed him to the fence, where he unloaded punches and knees to the body.

At one point, Saint Denis did nothing else but cover up and lean weakly on the fence, but Kiselev refused to call the fight. Eventually Saint Denis did manage to slow Zaleski down a bit with a takedown attempt and defend himself slightly better, but it was one-way traffic for the final two rounds.

According to unofficial UFC Stats, Zaleski out-landed him in total strikes 110 to 51. It was Saint Denis’ first career loss.


Light heavyweight: Michal Oleksiejczuk (16-4 1 NC, 4-2 1 NC UFC) def. Shamil Gamzatov (14-1, 1-1 UFC) by first-round TKO (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Oleksiejczuk never took a step backward. He ate a few punches as he advanced but dished out a lot more, and the punishment and pressure soon began to show on Gamzatov’s face as he was stalked and hounded until a left uppercut dropped him and led to a ground-and-pound finish at 3:31. It was Gamzatov’s first loss.

Oleksiejczuk, a 26-year-old from Poland, scored his 11th career knockout, the eighth in the first round. He has won two in a row after suffering through a two-fight losing streak.

Gamzatov, 31, from Russia, had not fought since making his UFC debut in 2019. He was on his back foot the whole way, trading punches while trying to get out of the way of Oleksiejczuk’s aggression. He could not do it and eventually got caught.


Middleweight: Men’s featherweight: Lerone Murphy (11-0-1, 3-0-1 UFC) def. Makwan Amirkhani (16-7, 6-5 UFC) by second-round knockout (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Murphy knew Amirkhani was going to shoot for a takedown. And boy, he did not miss.

Amirkhani ducked in for a double-leg takedown and Murphy absolutely blasted him with a right knee to the head. Amirkhani was knocked out on contact. The finish of the bout came at 14 seconds of the second round. Amirkhani was down for a significant amount of time after the KO, but was able to sit up on the stool after coming to.

“After that first left hand, I seen him dip, dip and I knew that knee was going to be there,” Murphy said in his postfight interview.

In the first round, Amirkhani completely dominated with his wrestling and grappling. He took Murphy down right off the bat and stuck to him the rest of the round. At the beginning of the second, Murphy was clearly aware a takedown was coming and he timed the knee perfectly.

The undefeated Murphy, 30, is 3-0-1 in the UFC. The England native looks to have potential in the featherweight division. Amirkhani, a 32-year-old Iran native fighting out of Finland, has lost three in a row and four of five.


Middleweight: Andre Petroski (7-2, 2-0 UFC) def. Hu Yaozong (3-2, 0-3 UFC) by third-round submission (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Petroski spent 14 minutes and 46 seconds in full control, landing hard punches, landing takedowns and seizing dominant positions to threaten with submission attempts. Hu hung in there through it all, until finally, with 14 seconds left in the final round, an arm triangle choke got the job done for Petroski.

For Petroski, 30, from Philadelphia, it was his second third-round finish in two UFC fights. All seven of his victories have come by finish. This one was the tied for third-latest finish ever in a three-round UFC middleweight bout.

Hu has lost all three fights in the Octagon after entering the UFC with a 2-0 record. The 26-year-old from China had not competed since 2018, and that most recent fight was at light heavyweight. The fight before that, Hu’s UFC debut, was at heavyweight.


Men’s flyweight: Tagir Ulanbekov (14-1, 2-0 UFC) def. Allan Nascimento (17-6, 0-1 UFC) by split decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Ulanbekov’s takedowns and top game outweighed Nascimento’s submission attempts and aggressive guard in the eyes of the judges.

Ulanbekov squeaked out a split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28) win with relentless takedowns and grappling. Nascimento had moments, including kimura and armbar attempts in the second round with elbows mixed in from the bottom. But the judges seemed to prefer Ulanbekov’s ability to change the location of the fight most.

The best moments of the fight for Ulanbekov came in the first round when he nearly submitted Nascimento with a guillotine in mount. Nascimento was able to escape somehow.

Ulanbekov, 30, has won five straight, including his first two in the UFC. The Dagestan native has established as someone to watch at flyweight. Nascimento, a 30-year-old Brazilian, was making his UFC debut here.


Still to come:

Light heavyweight championship: Jan Blachowicz (c) (28-8, 11-5 UFC, -300) vs. Glover Teixeira (32-7. 15-5 UFC, +240)
Men’s bantamweight interim championship: Petr Yan (15-2, 7-1 UFC, -220) vs. Cory Sandhagen (14-3, 7-2 UFC, +180)
Lightweight: Islam Makhachev (20-1, 9-1 UFC, -625) vs. Dan Hooker (21-10, 11-6 UFC, +450)
Heavyweight: Alexander Volkov (33-9, 7-3 UFC, -300) vs. Marcin Tybura (22-6, 9-5 UFC, +240)
Welterweight: Li Jingliang (18-6, 10-4 UFC, +425) vs. Khamzat Chimaev (9-0, 3-0 UFC, -575)
Light heavyweight: Magomed Ankalaev (15-1, 6-1 UFC, -310) vs. Volkan Oezdemir (17-5, 5-4 UFC, +250)
Strawweight: Amanda Ribas (10-2, 4-1 UFC, -160) vs. Virna Jandiroba (17-2, 3-2 UFC, +135)

(c) = defending champion



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Jon Jones live tweets UFC 259 main event, heckles Israel Adesanya for loss to Jan Blachowicz

Former UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones live-tweeted the UFC 259 headliner between Israel Adesanya and Jan Blachowicz and heckled the middleweight champ’s attempt to win a second belt.

Blachowicz outpointed Adesanya via unanimous decision on Saturday at UFC APEX. But long before the scorecards were announced, Jones had written off his rival Adesanya’s efforts on Twitter, where he’s repeatedly sparred with “The Last Stylebender” over the past year.

Adesanya had talked up a showdown with Jones by year’s end. But “Bones,” who’s expected to meet the winner of the UFC 260 title rematch between heavyweight champ Stipe Miocic and Francis Ngannou, scoffed at the idea after UFC 259’s ending.

Here’s what Jones had to say about the fight as it played out.




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UFC 259 results, highlights: Jan Blachowicz upsets Israel Adesanya to retain light heavyweight title

Jan Blachowicz has been doubted at every turn on his rise to becoming the light heavyweight champion, and it continued ahead of his first title defense on Saturday. But once again, Blachowicz defied the odds and retained his championship in the main event of UFC 259 with a win over middleweight champion Israel Adesanya in the Kiwi’s bid to become a two-division champion.

Blachowicz and Adesanya fought a tense first three rounds, with both men looking to minimize mistakes and make the other pay. While Adesanya was the better technical striker, as expected, Blachowicz continued to throw punches and kicks with the former high-level kickboxing standout.

The feints of Adesanya seemed to trouble Blachowicz as much as any landed strikes. In fact, Blachowicz outlanded Adesanya in total strikes in every round of the fight according to the UFC’s official stats.

While Blachowicz teased some grappling in the first three rounds, he was unable to take Adesanya down for any meaningful amount of time. It was in the championship rounds that Blachowicz showed off his bona fides, finally using his size and strength advantage to take down Adesanya and grind away with ground and pound.

Piling away the points in those big closing rounds allowed Blachowicz to pull away on the scorecards, earning the victory by scores of 49-46, 49-45 and 49-45. Two of the three judges gave Blachowicz a 10-8 round in Round 5, rewarding him for dominant ground work, including closing the fight in mount and dropping heavy punches to the face of the middleweight champ.

“I thought that he would be a little bit faster, but he don’t hit so hard,” Blachowicz said following his victory. “He was slower, but he hit harder, this was something I don’t expect. I should do my left hand a little bit more, I should do more jabs, put more pressure on him. But game plan is one, and fight is second, a different thing.”

As for what’s next for the champion? Blachowicz believes the next man up should be veteran light heavyweight Glover Teixeira.

“I think [Teixeira] deserves it,” Blachowicz said. “He’ll have to wait a little bit, so I can rest and be with my family. But he will wait, he will be next.”

In defeat, Adesanya was respectful of Blachowicz, acknowledging the night was “like a bad day at the gym.”

“It didn’t go the way I wanted it to go, but dare to be great,” Adesanya said. “The critics are the ones on the sidelines, but I’m the one putting it on the line.”

Adesanya said he would eventually return to the light heavyweight division. First, however, will come a return to the middleweight division to defend his belt.

“I rule them with an iron black fist,” Adesanya said. “I’m going to go back down and handle business.”

Blachowicz is now 9-4 in his UFC career when competing as an underdog, and he entered the Octagon as an underdog in his three most recent fights, including winning the vacant championship against Dominick Reyes.

“Now I think I deserve full respect,” Blachowicz said of any doubters of his place in the sport. “I was the true champion before and I am the true champion now.”

CBS Sports was with you the entire way on Saturday bringing you all the results and highlights from the UFC 259 below.

UFC 259 card and results

  • Jan Blachowicz (c) def. Israel Adesanya via unanimous decision (49-46, 49-45, 49-45)
  • Amanda Nunes (c) def. Megan Anderson via first-round submission (armbar)
  • Aljamain Sterling (c) def. Petr Yan via DQ in the fourth round (illegal knee)
  • Islam Makhachev def. Drew Dober via third-round submission (arm triangle)
  • Aleksandar Rakic def. Thiago Santos via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
  • Dominick Cruz def. Casey Kenney via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)
  • Kyler Phillips def. Song Yadong via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Askar Askarov def. Joseph Benavidez via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-26)
  • Kai Kara-France def. Rogerio Bontorin via first-round TKO (punch)

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