What's the next step for Moses Ituama after latest emphatic KO victory?
The Boys in the Back kick off with a look at Movsar Evloev's tough road to getting a UFC title shot, before previewing UFC Vegas 107. Plus, the Boys make picks, give their P4P MMA haircuts, listen to your voicemails, and answer Super Chats.
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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Brian Ortega hopes to 'bang it out' with Aljamain Sterling at UFC Shanghai
Brian Ortega hopes for a standup war against Aljamain Sterling at UFC Fight Night 257. Former two-time UFC featherweight title challenger Ortega (16-4 MMA, 8-4 UFC) takes on Sterling (24-5 MMA, 16-5 UFC) in Saturday's five-round co-main event at Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai, China. After losing to Diego Lopes in his most recent outing at UFC 306 this past September, Ortega said he needed to make some moves to get better. So what's changed? "Just hired one new coach," Ortega told MMA Junkie. "In this sport, you can't get too excited and try to get better at everything because it's just impossible, but it was getting my life better. That's always been a thing for me. It's always just better, my life outside of the gym. So we were doing that, we were locking in that aspect, and once we locked in there, it was good. We were able to bring the people that needed to be around us and just start working. ... It's striking. "I re-hired someone that we had – not a bad fallout, but we went our own ways and then we had a good conversation about things in the past. We just talked it over and fixed that and patched that. The boxing coach, it was new. We gave him a shot, and I started learning again. I started learning things all over again. My striking has evolved and then talking to the wrestling coach about who should we bring in as partners. We just started bringing in high-level wrestlers, NCAA champs and stuff like that." In a matchup between two elite grapplers, many are salivating at the potential scrambles. However, if it were up to Ortega, the fight wouldn't hit the ground. "If it was my choice, we bang it out," Ortega said. "Simple as that. You see me, I kind of rarely shoot in. I'm not really the guy to shoot in. So, if it was up to me, we would bang it out on our feet and give the fans a hell of a fight. But something's telling me he's going to shoot in. ... He's good at keeping his distance and his range with those kicks, but yeah, it's something that we've trained for. We watch the fights, we study film.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
UFC signs Luke Riley, a Cage Warriors star and Paddy Pimblett protege
A post shared by Luke Riley (@lukerileymma) Luke Riley is finally UFC bound. The exciting and outspoken Cage Warriors star has signed with the promotion, he and his manager Graham Boylan announced Wednesday on social media after an initial report by Eurosport NL. No debut date or opponent has yet been announced. Riley (11-0 MMA, 0-0 UFC) represents the next generation of Next Generation MMA, the gym that has produced the likes of Paddy Pimblett and Molly McCann among others. The UFC had previously tried to hire his services for Dana White's Contender Series in 2024 but visa issues prevented it from happening. Out of 11 professional victories, eight of them have come by knockout. His most recent five wins have come against 10-3, 5-0, 17-11, 6-2, and 9-2 opponents respectively. Riley, 26, is a lifelong martial artist who prioritized fighting over schooling during his youth. He's long been in the spotlight and has embraced the constantly-increasing spotlight. "Today, I could step in the octagon against anyone in the 145-pound division and win," Riley told MMA Junkie in September. "Mate, I'm willing to f*cking fight anyone. I believe I would beat anyone. I wouldn't be in this sport to be f*cking having a 9-5.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Khamzat flies to Chechnya, surrenders UFC title to revulsive Ramzan Kadyrov — ‘Belt is important for my country'
Khamzat Chimaev worked his entire career for the UFC middleweight title. Just a couple of days after winning it from Dricus du Plessis atop the UFC 319 pay-per-view (PPV) event in Chicago, 'Borz' flew to Chechnya to surrender the strap to human rights hurter and head of the Chechen Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov. If you're unfamiliar with Kadyrov's highlight reel, he's the maniac who opened a concentration camp for homosexuals back in 2017. That lasted about as long as his fight club for toddlers. 'Belt is important for my country,' Chimaev told Joe Rogan at UFC 319. Kadyrov attended Chimaev's wedding in 2022 and frequently trains with the UFC middleweight champ, which is one of the reasons 'Borz' had issues entering the United States. Fortunately for Chimaev, UFC CEO, Dana White, is buddy-buddy with U.S. President, Donald Trump. Problem solved. Hopefully Chimaev fares better than Kadyrov's previous ward, UFC light heavyweight Abdul-Kerim Edilov, who died under 'mysterious circumstances' just a few years back.