Tag Archives: Gane

Tom Aspinall Reacts Ciryl Gane Not Acknowledging Him At UFC Paris: ‘I’m Not A Bully, If He Doesn’t Want The F… – MMA Mania

  1. Tom Aspinall Reacts Ciryl Gane Not Acknowledging Him At UFC Paris: ‘I’m Not A Bully, If He Doesn’t Want The F… MMA Mania
  2. Ciryl Gane responds to Tom Aspinall’s callout, discusses next step after UFC Paris win MMA Fighting
  3. Mick Maynard’s Shoes: What’s next for Ciryl Gane after UFC Fight Night 226 win? MMA Junkie
  4. “That’s Not Really Easy…”: Despite Popular Belief, Ciryl Gane Doesn’t Believe Sergei Pavlovich Will Be Next in Line for Title After the Jon Jones vs Stipe Miocic Fight EssentiallySports
  5. After ‘Painful’ Jon Jones Loss, Ciryl Gane Admits to Facing Pressure at UFC Paris Sherdog.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jon Jones Sizes Up Ciryl Gane In Press Conference Staredown | UFC 285 | MMA Fighting – MMAFightingonSBN

  1. Jon Jones Sizes Up Ciryl Gane In Press Conference Staredown | UFC 285 | MMA Fighting MMAFightingonSBN
  2. Take a first look at Jon Jones’ heavyweight physique ahead of UFC 285 MMA Junkie
  3. Jon Jones: How Jones Feels at Heavyweight “Losing is NOT an OPTION” MMAWeekly.com
  4. Jon Jones fires back at critics after debuting new heavyweight physique: ‘Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding … MMA Fighting
  5. Jon Jones responds to critics about his new heavyweight physique: “Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding competition” BJPENN.COM
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UFC 285 video: Jon Jones sizes up Ciryl Gane in first faceoff at pre-fight press conference – MMA Junkie

  1. UFC 285 video: Jon Jones sizes up Ciryl Gane in first faceoff at pre-fight press conference MMA Junkie
  2. Jon Jones fires back at critics after debuting new heavyweight physique: ‘Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding … MMA Fighting
  3. Jon Jones: How Jones Feels at Heavyweight “Losing is NOT an OPTION” MMAWeekly.com
  4. Take a first look at Jon Jones’ heavyweight physique ahead of UFC 285 MMA Junkie
  5. Jon Jones responds to critics about his new heavyweight physique: “Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding competition” BJPENN.COM
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UFC 285: Jones vs. Gane Pre-Fight Press Conference | LIVE – MMA Junkie

  1. UFC 285: Jones vs. Gane Pre-Fight Press Conference | LIVE MMA Junkie
  2. Take a first look at Jon Jones’ heavyweight physique ahead of UFC 285 MMA Junkie
  3. Jon Jones fires back at critics after debuting new heavyweight physique: ‘Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding … MMA Fighting
  4. Jon Jones responds to critics about his new heavyweight physique: “Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding competition” BJPENN.COM
  5. UFC 285: Ciryl Gane promises he’s prepared for whatever Jon Jones might bring Yahoo Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UFC 285: Ciryl Gane promises he’s prepared for whatever Jon Jones might bring – Yahoo Sports

  1. UFC 285: Ciryl Gane promises he’s prepared for whatever Jon Jones might bring Yahoo Sports
  2. Jon Jones fires back at critics after debuting new heavyweight physique: ‘Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding … MMA Fighting
  3. Jon Jones: How Jones Feels at Heavyweight “Losing is NOT an OPTION” MMAWeekly.com
  4. Take a clear first look at Jon Jones’ heavyweight physique ahead of UFC 285 Yahoo Sports
  5. Jon Jones responds to critics about his new heavyweight physique: “Good thing it’s not a bodybuilding competition” BJPENN.COM
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UFC 285: Jones vs. Gane Media Day Live Stream | Wed. 10:30 a.m. PT/ 1:30 p.m. ET – MMA Junkie

  1. UFC 285: Jones vs. Gane Media Day Live Stream | Wed. 10:30 a.m. PT/ 1:30 p.m. ET MMA Junkie
  2. Is Jon Jones injured? ‘His bones and joints are weak’ heading into UFC 285 MMA Mania
  3. UFC 285: Why there are legitimate reasons to be concerned about Jon Jones’ heavyweight debut CBS Sports
  4. Ciryl Gane’s head coach clarifies ‘lazy’ comments ahead of Jon Jones title fight at UFC 285 MMA Fighting
  5. Ciryl Gane not sure why Jon Jones had harder fights at end of light heavyweight run: ‘Maybe he’s not in his p… MMA Mania
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UFC 270 live results and analysis — Francis Ngannou vs. Ciryl Gane

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Francis Ngannou and Ciryl Gane are former sparring partners. That might be the only thing the two agree on at this point.

At a news conference Thursday, Ngannou and Gane argued if they were actually ever “teammates.” They couldn’t agree whether Ngannou knocked Gane out with a head kick or just hurt him temporarily. And whatever relationship they once had has certainly been frayed by Ngannou’s messy falling-out with his former coach — and Gane’s current coach at MMA Factory in Paris — Fernand Lopez.

None of that will really matter Saturday night. Ngannou, the UFC heavyweight champion, and Gane, the interim champ, will fight to unify the UFC heavyweight title in the main event of UFC 270 at the Honda Center. The back-and-forth barbs will be decided in the Octagon. ESPN has Ngannou tied for No. 4 on its pound-for-pound top MMA fighters list. At heavyweight, ESPN ranks Ngannou No. 1 and Gane No. 2.

There are other storylines at play here, too. Ngannou would become a restricted free agent if he loses to Gane. He has indicated that he plans on venturing into the boxing world at some point. Even if Ngannou wins and holds on to the title, which would extend his contract, he has said that he does not plan on competing again under this current deal.

Ngannou (16-3) knocked out Stipe Miocic to win the UFC heavyweight title at UFC 260 last March. The Cameroon-born fighter has won five straight, all by KO/TKO. The 6-foot-4 Ngannou, 35, is considered one of the most fearsome power punchers in MMA history. Gane (10-0) won the interim heavyweight title by stopping Derrick Lewis via third-round TKO at UFC 265 in August. The French fighter is a perfect 7-0 in the UFC.

Gane, 31, is a former Muay Thai star and TKO heavyweight champion in MMA. He has said that he believes this fight will be about his technique against Ngannou’s power and strength.

In the co-main event, Brandon Moreno defends his UFC flyweight title against former champ Deiveson Figueiredo in a trilogy bout. Moreno (19-5-2), the UFC’s first Mexican-born champion, beat Figueiredo (20-2-1) by third-round submission at UFC 263 in June to win the title. The two fought to a draw in their first meeting at UFC 256 in December 2020. Moreno is ranked No. 8 on ESPN’s pound-for-pound list. He is ranked No. 1 at flyweight, with Figueiredo slotted at No. 2.

Also on the card, the always-exciting Michel Pereira takes on Andre Fialho at welterweight, Cody Stamann draws Said Nurmagomedov in a featherweight bout and Australian prospect Jack Della Maddalena meets Pete Rodriguez at welterweight.

Follow along as Brett Okamoto, Marc Raimondi and Jeff Wagenheim recap the action, or watch the fights live on ESPN+ PPV.


Fight in progress: Men’s bantamweight: Raoni Barcelos (16-2, 5-1 UFC, -500) vs. Victor Henry (21-5, 0-0 UFC, +380)


Results:

Welterweight: Jack Della Maddalena (11-2, 1-0 UFC) def. Pete Rodriguez (4-1, 0-1 UFC) by first-round TKO

Those in the know about Australian MMA think Della Maddalena has a chance to be a big star. It was pretty clear to see why Saturday evening.

In his UFC debut, Della Maddalena used his slick boxing to earn a TKO win at 2:59 of the first round over Rodriguez. The finishing blow, after Della Maddalena already bloodied Rodriguez’s nose, was a step-back straight left hand that dropped Rodriguez. Referee Frank Trigg was quick to step in and stop the fight without Della Maddalena needing to land another shot.

“I was waiting for the jitters and they never came,” Della Maddalena. “Same as usual.”

Della Maddalena used his southpaw boxing skills to perfection, working a nice jab and landing hard right hooks and straight lefts. The jab bloodied up Rodriguez’s nose. Della Maddalena landed a hard left and a right hook prior to the left-hand finish.

Della Maddalena, 25, has not lost since his first two pro bouts in 2016, a streak of 11 straight victories. The Australia native earned his way into the UFC via Dana White’s Contender Series. He beat Ange Loosa via unanimous decision back in September.

Rodriguez, a 25-year-old Arizona resident, had four knockouts in four career fights coming in.


Men’s bantamweight: Tony Gravely (22-7, 3-2 UFC) vs. Saimon Oliveira (18-4, 0-1 UFC) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Gravely, of Virginia, turned Saturday’s bantamweight bout into a wrestling match, as he racked up 11 total takedowns and 11:28 worth of control time. Judges awarded the 30-year-old efforts with unanimous scores of 30-27.

Oliveira was clearly the more dangerous man on the feet, but he simply couldn’t keep the fight there. He repeatedly attacked Gravely with the guillotine choke — a maneuver he has finished multiple fights with in his career — but could never quite secure it.

Gravely spent the majority of the fight either on top or clinched with Oliveira along the fence. It was not the most scintillating performance, but is still the result Gravely was looking for. He suffered a second-round knockout loss to Nate Maness in his last bout in September. Oliveira threatened Gravely with a few big shots here and there, including a flying knee and spinning backfist, but it was Gravely’s fight for the most part.

Oliveira is now 0-1 in the Octagon, as this was his UFC debut.. He earned a contract on the Contender Series last year.


Lightweight: Matt Frevola (9-3-1, 3-3-1 UFC) def. Genaro Valdez (10-1, 0-1 UFC) by first-round TKO (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Frevola swung. Valdez swung. For 195 seconds, that is what they did in the slobberknocker to end all slobberknockers.

Frevola got the better of a wild exchange midway through the round to get a knockdown, but Valdez bounced right back up, wobbly but still swinging for the fences.

But Frevola, who is 31 and fights out of Huntington, New York, didn’t stop his attack and kept knocking his opponent to the canvas. He was credited with four knockdowns but it seemed like more. Even so, the four knockdowns would be a UFC record for a fight ending in the first round.

Unable to turn out the lights on Valdez, Frevola finally got a dominant position on top of his opponent, rendered him defenseless on his stomach and dropped punch after punch until referee Mike Beltran jumped in to end it at 3:15. The win halted Frevola’s two-fight skid and gave him his first finish since 2017.

Valdez, a 30-year-old Mexican, suffered the first defeat of his career in his UFC debut.


Strawweight: Vanessa Demopoulos (7-4, 1-1 UFC) def. Silvana Gomez Juarez (10-4, 0-2 UFC) by first-round submission (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Demopoulos made a very, very early bid for MMA comeback of the year.

After Gomez Juarez dropped her hard with a right hand, Demopoulos kept her composure and locked in an armbar submission finish at 2:25 of the first round.

Demopoulos jumped into interviewer Joe Rogan’s arms in jubilation following her postfight interview.

“I woke up on the ground for a second,” Demopoulos said of getting cracked with the right hand.

But Demopoulos came to very quickly, realized she had an underhook from the bottom and used that to leverage herself into an armbar from the bottom. Demopoulos then swept into top position, still with the armbar intact, and finished the fight beautifully.

“I love jiu-jitsu,” Demopoulos said. “I could do jiu-jitsu all day long every single time.”

Demopoulos, 33, picked up her first UFC victory after dropping her debut against JJ Aldrich last August. The Ohio native, who fights out of Fight Ready in Arizona, earned just her second win in her last five fights.

Gomez Juarez, a 37-year-old Argentinean fighting out of Mexico, is now 0-2 in the UFC.


Women’s flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius (7-1, 1-0 UFC) def. Kay Hansen (7-5, 1-2 UFC) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

This fight was a step up to something bigger for both women. Jasudavicius was making her UFC debut. Hansen was competing at 125 pounds for the first time after making her first two Octagon appearances at strawweight.

But Hansen also had something else to overcome: inactivity. She was fighting for the first time since November 2020.

Jasudavicius, 32, from Ontario, Canada, was the sharper fighter, fending off four Hansen takedown attempts in the first round. She earned one of her own, then maintained control the rest of the way. One judge scored all three rounds for Jasudavicius, while the other two had it 29-28. This was Jasudavicius’ third win in a row.

Hansen, a 22-year-old from Fullerton, California, lost her second fight in a row after a three-fight winning streak.


Still to come:

Heavyweight championship: Francis Ngannou (c) (16-3, 11-2 UFC, +130) vs. Ciryl Gane (ic) (10-0, 7-0 UFC, -155)
Men’s flyweight championship: Brandon Moreno (c) (19-5-2, 7-2-2 UFC, -175) vs. Deiveson Figueiredo (20-2-1, 9-2-1 UFC, +150)
Welterweight: Michel Pereira (26-11 2 NC, 4-2 NC UFC, -280) vs. Andre Fialho (14-3 1 NC, 0-0 UFC, +230)
Men’s bantamweight: Cody Stamann (19-4-1, 4-3-1 UFC, +160) vs. Said Nurmagomedov (14-2, 3-1 UFC, -190)
Welterweight: Trevin Giles (14-3, 5-3 UFC, +100) vs. Michael Morales (12-0, 0-0 UFC, -120)

(c) = defending champion; (ic) = interim champion



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Derrick Lewis vs. Ciryl Gane full fight video highlights

Watch Derrick Lewis vs. Ciryl Gane full fight video highlights from their UFC 265 showdown above, courtesy of the UFC and other outlets.

Lewis vs. Gane took place Aug. 7 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. Derrick Lewis (25-8, 1 no-contest) and Ciryl Gane (10-0) collided in the UFC 265 main event. The fight aired live on ESPN+ pay-per-view. Catch more video highlights below.

For more on Lewis v. Gane, check out live blog from MMA Fighting’s Jed Meshew.

Round 1

Gane comes out southpaw and Lewis in orthodox and Gane is bouncy and light on his feet right from the start. The first action of the night is a high kick from Lewis where he slips but he’s back up. Gane is slowly backing Lewis up to the fence and probing with some side kicks. Gane’s hands are very low which is his style but man, that feels risky.

Gane pokes about five light low kicks on Lewis and then draws Lewis out into the center. Gane is controlling the range here and being very patient. Lewis too is waiting for his opportunity, barely doing anything. Now Lewis comes forward quickly but Gane simply runs away and resets.

With three minutes down, Gane is now committing to some low kicks at long range. Lewis has landed literally zero strikes though so Gane is ahead even though those kicks aren’t much. A stray kick from Lewis grazes the cup for Gane and the action is paused. Gane shakes it off after a minute and they’re back.

Despite having not done much, Lewis is sweating like Patrick Ewing in a playoff game right now. Gane, meanwhile could be taking a stroll in the park. Gane misses a kick and spins through but Lewis is on him and so Gane runs away. It’s not fan friendly but it’s working. Now Gane lands a hard leg kick and both men exchange punches to the eye. Not a ton happened that round but a clear Gane round.

MMA Fighting scores the round 10-9 Gane.

Round 2

Lewis’ coach not thrilled with his first round. Reasonable.

Gane looking extremely loose to start this round. Lewis is having to explode to cover distance and land offense and Gane is just running away when that happens. Until it does though, Gane is content to chip away with leg kicks and the occasional long jab or cross.

Gotta give Gane credit, for a relative MMA novice, he does not care a bit about pleasing the fans. He’s here to win. Lewis charges forward and gets a clinch but Gane is out before it even begins and Lewis is now starting to charge in more. Gane not willing to counter him, just playing for safety and that’s really minimizing Lewis’ opportunities.

Gane jumps in with a knee and Lewis grabs a clinch but Gane is proving to be the stronger man in this positions. Unclear if it’s power, technique, or both, but Gane spins Lewis to the fence with ease and lands some knees before breaking.

Honestly, not much to say about this fight. Gane is landing a leg kick or jab every 10 seconds or so and Lewis cannot get anything going. Gane gets a clinch and after doing nothing for a second, he breaks with a good elbow. That’s the best strike of the fight.

Derrick Lewis is 2 for 17 on his strike attempts thus far. That says it all.

MMA Fighting scores the round 10-9 Gane, 20-18 Gane overall.

Round 3

This is the big round for Lewis. He often holds something back and then starts getting to work in the third and he needs that now because Gane is comfortably ahead.

Unfortunately though, early it’s not looking like that. Lewis is coming forward more but now Gane is circling and landing actual leg kicks and Lewis is starting to react to those. Lewis still can’t get anything going.

Lewis gets a clinch and is deep on underhooks but he cannot finish a takedown. Gane is so strong in the clinch and Lewis is looking a bit defeated in there. Gane is now starting to really dig into those leg kicks and Lewis is hurt!

Gane trying to pour it on and Gane lands a big shot that hurts Lewis! Lewis is covering up! Gane is dropping big shots! Lewis explodes back but can’t land the big shot. Gane with a monster knee! Lewis is dropped! Miragliotta giving him every chance! Lewis stands up and swings but Gane not relenting.

WHAT! Miragliotta stops the action to replace Lewis’ mouthpiece?!? Restart. Gane firing shots again. Lewis swings but but Gane cracks him. Lewis drops again and he’s done. Wow.

Cyril Gane stops Derrick Lewis in the third.

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