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Khalil Rountree Jr. lists necessary changes made after Alex Pereira UFC title fight loss

Khalil Rountree Jr. lists necessary changes made after Alex Pereira UFC title fight loss

USA Today25-05-2025

Khalil Rountree Jr. lists necessary changes made after Alex Pereira UFC title fight loss
Khalil Rountree Jr. knew changes were necessary in order to capture the UFC light heavyweight title.
Rountree Jr. (13-6 MMA, 9-6 UFC) got his first opportunity to reach that goal at UFC 307, but was outmatched by then-champion Alex Pereira. In the main event of the UFC's first trip to Azerbaijan, Rountree Jr. will have the chance to return to the win column by taking on former champion Jamahal Hill.
As the saying goes, you either win or you learn, and Rountree Jr. appears to have taken many lessons from the fight against Pereira (12-3 MMA, 9-2 UFC). As he prepares for Hill (12-3 MMA, 6-3 UFC), Rountree Jr. reveals he made multiple changes to his fight camp.
"I think one of the most important things after the Alex fight, for me, was to continue to progress," Rountree Jr. said in a video on his YouTube channel. "So, after even talking to my wife and breaking down the video, thinking what could I have done better? Even though I put in a really good camp and I did my best in that camp, but I always try to think there's always room for improvement, no matter what.
"And so, a few of the things, I felt like I could have improved in my strength. I think I could have had an extra ear in my corner to let me know moments when my opponent was hurt that I could have capitalized on. And I think just a little bit more support. So, right after the fight, that's immediately what I went after."
The Fight of the Night battle against Pereira didn't produce the title victory Rountree Jr. hoped for, but he took away many positives from the fight. He is aware that the pinnacle of the light heavyweight division is within reach, but in order to reach it, he couldn't take the same approach. Rountree Jr.'s striking carried him through a five-fight winning streak to earn his first title shot. On the path to a second, he knew that working on his ground game was an important step.
"Another thing that I wanted to improve on was my grappling," Rountree Jr. said. "As I climb the ranks and get closer to becoming the champion, knowing that there's going to be guys coming after me to get the belt, I want to be a well rounded fighter – and I want to be the best version of myself that I can be, in all areas."
For his grappling game, Rountree Jr. added training with coach Bernardo Tavolaro and rolling with BJJ world champion and ONE Championship heavyweight Marucs "Buchecha" Almeida.
Rountree Jr. believes his crowning moment will come one day, and that path begins in Baku against Hill.

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The UFC's relentless schedule and the corporatization of combat sports
The UFC's relentless schedule and the corporatization of combat sports

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The UFC's relentless schedule and the corporatization of combat sports

As we've seen with many publicly traded companies worldwide, the trends of corporatization have left their infectious fingerprints on many of the things we hold near and dear to our hearts. And for me, the UFC is one of those things. As a lifelong martial artist who was old enough to remember the karate and taekwondo booms of the early '90s, the UFC came along and introduced everyone to the world of MMA – a world that I have not stepped away from ever since. I'm incredibly fortunate to be able to cover this sport for a living, but I can't help but wonder: Would I still be around buying pay-per-views and spending 90 percent of my Saturdays glued to a screen for the current quality of UFC offerings if it wasn't my job? According to recent reports, a lot of fans have asked themselves similar questions and answered in kind. There's obviously a ton of things we can point to and ESPN+'s consistent shortcomings as an app and service certainly don't help the matter. 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Even if you're among those who are financially stable enough to attend a live UFC show, where would you go and how often are you even going with their diminished traveling schedule? Or maybe you're not so much of a hardcore fan as you are an avid gambler, which is a lot of what makes up the sports space considering the mass marketing of betting these days. If that is the case, then you, too, should be concerned about the effects of the UFC schedule. As I've said many times before this latest health debacle happened with Barber, it's hard to know just how much of an honest fight you're even getting these days given all the extra pressures and lack of leverage involved with the fighters competing. Sure, I get that no fighter ever steps into the cage fully healthy and fighters fight through issues unknown to us all the time. But akin to my point about fight fallouts, fighters are both attempting and being allowed to fight through things they arguably shouldn't be at a seemingly higher rate than before, likely in part due to the previously mentioned needs of the UFC schedule. So, even if you're a selfish fan who couldn't care less about the fighters' wellbeing, you should still be concerned about the cause and effect of the UFC schedule given where you're spending not just your time every Saturday – but also your money. Whether we're talking about regional promotions or the UFC themselves, the schedule of the world leader affects all. The dominance of the market is so undeniable for the UFC that regional promotions will either look to put on events in lockstep with them or try and avoid competing with them at all costs, depending on their relationship. And even if you are friendly with the UFC as one of their unofficial feeder leagues, we've seen that come with its own costs considering that 'MMA's big brother' can always come knocking at your door to collect your current champions any time their insatiable schedule calls for it. As far as the UFC goes, most people tend to point to Dana White and the top of the company when it comes to complaints and compliments alike. However, mostly everyone sadly forgets to think about all who embody the UFC production staff – the hardest workers of the bunch and arguably the heart and soul of the company. I won't pretend to know the ins and outs of what it's like to work for the UFC, but I can tell you that the company has seen its share of internal turnovers for quite some time now, as I can only imagine the stress of a relentless week-to-week job that throws you multiple curveballs on the regular. 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And though they finally threw in some play-by-play relief in the rotation to avoid burning out one of their most important players Jon Anik, the changes made behind the scenes and in the back of the house have been noticeable. From longtime beloved staples like Stitch Duran and Burt Watson getting the boot for speaking out about these changes to the fact that some of their replacements have even since turned over, it's hard to keep up with it all, much less retain any of the family-like feel of old that many have cited. There are still plenty of quality people working for the UFC today, so I always try my best to separate them from the decisions of the company that are made up top (and hope you can do the same). However, even if everyone at the UFC did want to implement the same changes we from the outside would like to see, how much can we really expect from them considering the content monster they've created? Last but not least, everyone's favorite: the media. I know most of the audience couldn't care less about us (which is totally fine, by the way), but if a lot of people are going to lazily share the same reaction in regards to pointing their fingers at us, then maybe they should at least understand how the media space is both driven and affected by the structural issues at hand. First off, let me state that I'm not a journalist or never claimed to be one, as I am much closer to the fan and fighter perspective of things given my background. That said, I do believe in journalistic ethics and codes, so seeing the outright deterioration of what little journalism we had in this space has been incredibly sad, to say the least. Now, we can't just "blame the UFC schedule" entirely here as this, akin to most things discussed, has a ton of contributing factors. From the UFC's ability to gatekeep credentials by upkeeping access-style media to the not-so-quiet encouragement to not ruffle any feathers in this space for the sake of your job, there are a ton of reasons why you're not seeing the questions you'd like asked or the kind of content and reporting you prefer. As one of the few media members in this space who has regularly done historical work for roughly a decade, I completely agree when people point out this sport's lack of respect and presence for its past. That said, I can also attest to the effects of the UFC schedule as someone who covers it more in-depth than most from week to week, as it's been harder and harder to find time to break away from this grind and the constant curveballs it throws. So, when you consider that most of us who are lucky enough to work in this space have to have multiple jobs just to barely survive, it can be hard to combat the inherent burnout involved (a struggle that I know many of my colleagues experience whether they vocalize it publicly or not). I can't defend all of my colleagues in the space given the fact that most of the media are steadily being overturned by influencers, who, oddly enough, have influenced a style of access media that's just cringy beyond compare. But given that the UFC president has promised he will eventually replace media row with influencers, I guess we shouldn't be surprised to see this shift. Even if a media member does want to ask a pertinent question, some of the only opportunities they have to ask them are at pre-fight press conferences that are full of mouth-breathing morons who will immediately shout down questions and cheer on whatever White's responses are (Where are the anti-Vince McMahon days of the WWE Attitude Era when you need it, right?). Although you can argue that there are much better venues and ways to try and bring real questions to the table, the UFC's relentless schedule makes pressers one of the only opportunities considering that White barely shows up for his own events anymore, as well as the fact that most surviving media companies were already forced to cut down their travel budgets due to the promotion's insane output of events – – the umpteenth example of how the schedule affects quality from all sides. 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Big UFC weekends with multiple shows and extensive fan interaction events whether you're a "Fight Club" member or not? Yeah-no. You now get Power Slap on Friday night and early access to insanely inflated ticket prices for cards that seem like they're being held together by band-aids at this point. Remember all the dunking the UFC did on boxing for having top-heavy cards? Yeah. They don't have that ammunition anymore. Long gone are the Dana White Vlog days of "we make the fights the fans want to see." Long gone is that mafia-like family feel that both the fighters and the fans embraced under a Fertitta-run UFC during the company's golden era when White regularly extended the amount of contracted bonuses during random Fight Night cards when he felt like it. Combat sports can maintain its rebel-like facade as much as you want it to, but not even something as wild as MMA is safe from the corporification that swallows up other spaces. Again: I don't mean to be bleak about all this as I, myself, am still investing and gambling with my career and well being on this sport's behalf. However, this all smacks like the end of the film "Casino," where Robert De Niro talks about the UFC's backyard – Las Vegas – and how nothing was ever the same after the corporations came in and took over. Perhaps it's the parallels of Ace Rothstein's job to mine, but the ending scene of that film serves as such a solid analog to the problems I wrote about in this article that I'll end things by sharing it so you can judge for yourself. This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: The relentless UFC schedule and corporatization of combat | Opinion

Why a 'Bear' Bryant commercial is often shared on social media on Mother's Day
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Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why a 'Bear' Bryant commercial is often shared on social media on Mother's Day

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MMA Junkie Radio #3571: Interviews with Miranda Maverick, John Wood, UFC recap, more

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