logo
On crutches, Stephen Thompson\u00a0says shin was 'split to the bone' in UFC Nashville loss

On crutches, Stephen Thompson\u00a0says shin was 'split to the bone' in UFC Nashville loss

USA Today13-07-2025
Nashville you are amazing! To my fans, I love y'all!! Thank you for your love and support always ❤️Pops, thank you for always being in my corner, love you!To my team back home, thank you for all of your help for this fight camp. I felt great out there 🙏Thank you to my… pic.twitter.com/Hem8MVqYXg
Stephen Thompson will leave Nashville a little worse for the wear, and with crutches.
The two-time welterweight title challenger dropped a split decision in the UFC on ESPN 70 co-main event Saturday – and it wasn't the only split of his night. He also split his left shin open when a kick was checked, and the gash needed medical attention.
Gabriel Bonfim (18-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC) outworked Thompson (17-9-1 MMA, 12-9-1 UFC) at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, and after the fight, "Wonderboy" posted a short video on social media – on crutches – showing his shin wrapped and saying that it was "split to the bone."
Thompson lost for the fifth time in six fights. After a 13-1 start to his pro career, the decorated striker got a title shot against then-champ Tyron Woodley. He droppped a majority draw. In a rematch four months later in early 2017, he lost a majority decision. Starting with those title fights, it's been a rough road with a 4-8-1 record. Thompson has just one win by stoppage in the past nine years, and that was a Kevin Holland retirement on the stool.
Check out Thompson's post below.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lerone Murphy views Aaron Pico UFC 319 co-main event at No. 1 contender fight
Lerone Murphy views Aaron Pico UFC 319 co-main event at No. 1 contender fight

USA Today

time15 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Lerone Murphy views Aaron Pico UFC 319 co-main event at No. 1 contender fight

CHICAGO – Lerone Murphy views his upcoming fight against UFC newcomer Aaron Pico as a title eliminator. The bout serves as the co-feature of UFC 319 (ESPN+ pay-per-view) at United Center, and Murphy (16-0-1 MMA, 8-0-1 UFC) is taking it as if he's fighting a top 5 opponent, even though Pico (13-4 MMA, 0-0 UFC) has never fought in the promotion. "I don't think rankings have anything to do with it," Murphy told reporters at media day. "Most of the time, they don't mean anything. So, everybody knows his level in the world, and he's got a big name, so for me, he's ranked No. 3, or wherever. That's how I'm looking at it. He's a solid opponent and a great matchup." Pico is the latest big name to come from the Bellator-PFL banner. Others who recently made the same move such as Patricio Freire and Patchy Mix, did not have success in their debuts. The infamous "octagon jitters" may have been a factor in their UFC debut setbacks, but Murphy isn't counting on that being the case with Pico. "Everybody is different, everybody handles pressure differently as well," Murphy said. "So, I'm not banking on that to happen, but it's a possibility. This is the biggest show in the world, and what an arena to make your debut. So yeah, that could play a factor. It could be a factor. This is the place to be, the UFC. "... You go back to the likes of Patchy Mix and stuff like that, I just think that comes down to matchup. Also, these other guys that have come over that have not performed may not have been in their prime. I think Aaron Pico's in his prime. So, I expect to see the best version of him." With a win, Murphy will have secured his second win in 2025, and his ninth overall under the UFC banner. Currently ranked No. 6 by the promotion in the featherweight division, Murphy believes a win here will elevate him to a shot against Alexander Volkanovski, because Pico was set to fight No. 1 contender Movsar Evloev before his withdrawal. "Beating Aaron Pico is going to put me in that No. 1 contender spot," Murphy said. "He was supposed to fight Movsar, like you know, and Movsar got hurt or sick or whatever happened. So, I'm the replacement now. This is a No. 1 contender fight."

Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev
Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev

Dricus Du Plessis has an opportunity to tie Chris Weidman's record of middleweight title defenses at UFC 319. Du Plessis (23-2 MMA, 9-0 UFC) defends his 185-pound title against Khamzat Chimaev (14-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) in Saturday's main event (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) at United Center in Chicago. Weidman defended his belt three times during his reign, notching wins over Anderson Silva, Lyoto Machida, and Vitor Belfort. The only two fighters with more consecutive middleweight title defenses are Israel Adesanya at five and Silva at 10. "I'm big into title defenses," Weidman told MMA Junkie. "That's how it's always been to me in my mind of who is the best in the weight class because of how hard it is to get the championship. It was guys like Anderson Silva. That was the most impressive thing and what you had to try to chase if you wanted to become the GOAT of the weight class. "Adesanya has five title defenses, I have three title defenses. This is now DDP's third title defense. If he gets three, he's tied with me for title defenses. It's up in the air. If you want to throw him in ahead of me, if you want to put him right behind me, I would say that's probably fair." Du Plessis dethroned Sean Strickland to become middleweight champion at UFC 297. He then submitted Adesanya for his first title defense at UFC 305 before defeating Strickland a second time in his most recent outing at UFC 312. This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC 319: Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due

Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev
Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Chris Weidman prepared to give Dricus Du Plessis his due with win over Khamzat Chimaev

Dricus Du Plessis has an opportunity to tie Chris Weidman's record of middleweight title defenses at UFC 319. Du Plessis (23-2 MMA, 9-0 UFC) defends his 185-pound title against Khamzat Chimaev (14-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) in Saturday's main event (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) at United Center in Chicago. Weidman defended his belt three times during his reign, notching wins over Anderson Silva, Lyoto Machida, and Vitor Belfort. The only two fighters with more consecutive middleweight title defenses are Israel Adesanya at five and Silva at 10. "I'm big into title defenses," Weidman told MMA Junkie. "That's how it's always been to me in my mind of who is the best in the weight class because of how hard it is to get the championship. It was guys like Anderson Silva. That was the most impressive thing and what you had to try to chase if you wanted to become the GOAT of the weight class. "Adesanya has five title defenses, I have three title defenses. This is now DDP's third title defense. If he gets three, he's tied with me for title defenses. It's up in the air. If you want to throw him in ahead of me, if you want to put him right behind me, I would say that's probably fair." Du Plessis dethroned Sean Strickland to become middleweight champion at UFC 297. He then submitted Adesanya for his first title defense at UFC 305 before defeating Strickland a second time in his most recent outing at UFC 312.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store