UFC 315 results: Jose Aldo retires after losing thriller to Aiemann Zahabi — 'I just can't do this anymore'
Jose Aldo may not have gone out on top, but if Saturday was indeed the final chapter we'll see from the former UFC featherweight champion, it was a fitting sendoff for an all-time great.
Aldo announced his retirement on Saturday following a thrilling three-round bout against Aiemann Zahabi at UFC 315 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada. After a torrid Zahabi comeback in the final minutes, all three judges scored the bout 29-28 in Zahabi's favor, sending Aldo out on a two-fight losing streak.
Advertisement
Afterward, Aldo removed his gloves and announced his second retirement from the sport.
"I don't think I have it in me anymore," Aldo (32-10) said through a translator. "It wasn't just about the cutting of the weight and everything else. I just felt there were so many things that happened. It was very tough to go through all of this. There was one point this week — this was a very tough week — that I felt that I didn't have it in me, I didn't want to cut it anymore. My body said no and I just don't think I have it anymore. I don't want to go into war all the time and go through this, I just don't have it in my heart anymore. I think this is the last time you're going to see me, I just can't do this anymore."
Notably, Aldo was unable to make the bantamweight limit on Friday and thus the bout was switched from bantamweight to a featherweight affair.
Advertisement
Already a member of the UFC Hall of Fame, Aldo is widely considered one of the greatest — if not the greatest — featherweight to ever lace up a pair of four-ounce gloves. With Saturday's result, the living legend moved to 1-2 over his three fights since coming back from a short-lived MMA retirement in 2024.
Aldo, 38, looked like his vintage self in the early going of his UFC sendoff. The Brazilian former champion peppered Zahabi (13-2) with wicked combinations and kept his Canadian counterpart on the back foot for the majority of the opening round, standing in the pocket and trading hard shots with reckless abandon. Aldo also ripped Zahabi, 37, to the body early and often, however the pace slowed in the second round as Zahabi settled in and began pressing forward, hunting for his own offense.
The action hit a fever pitch in a chaotic third round as Aldo blasted Zahabi with a stiff right hand and then a knee to the head, followed by a head kick that sent Zahabi spilling to the canvas. Aldo pursued the finish with an old-school fury, even rocking Zahabi again with a running kick to the face.
Advertisement
Zahabi survived, however, and immediately turned the tide back in his favor, leaping onto a suddenly gassed Aldo and barraging him with punches and kicks. After a desperation takedown from Aldo failed, Zahabi spent the final half of the round raining down monster punches and elbows onto Aldo's skull, splitting him open across his forehead and leaving the UFC Hall of Famer coated in his own blood.
"It feels amazing," Zahabi said after his win. "I did all the work, I accepted the fight. He was eight pounds overweight, I took it anyway.
"I was rocked, for sure. I was a bit disorientated. But my mindset coach tells me to prepare for these moments, so I just told myself recover and win the next exchange, recover and win the next 15 seconds."
Advertisement
Afterward, Zahabi called out one-time title challenger Marlon "Chito" Vera for his next bout.
Zahabi is the younger brother of Firas Zahabi, the head coach of Montreal's famed Tristar Gym. He now rides a six-fight win streak dating back to 2021, which includes wins over Pedro Munhoz and Javid Basharat.
Get full UFC 315 results, highlights and play-by-play of the pay-per-view main card here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
UFC 316's Waldo Cortes-Acosta plans Serghei Spivac KO, enter heavyweight title contention
Waldo Cortes-Acosta feels he's on the cusp of title contention, and it's hard to disagree. The Dominican heavyweight has quietly put together an impressive run in the UFC, picking up six wins in the seven fights he's had since joining the promotion. These victories include two knockouts, and several notable names such as Ryan Spann, Robelis Despaigne, Chase Sherman and former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski. Advertisement This Saturday at UFC 316, Cortes-Acosta (13-1 MMA, 6-1 UFC) looks to continue to bolster that resume and go on a five-fight winning streak when he takes on top-10 ranked heavyweight Serghei Spivac. He thinks a win over Spivac (17-5 MMA, 8-5 UFC) will open up big opportunities for him in the division. "Yeah, I do feel the attention and the importance of the event," Cortes-Acosta told Hablemos MMA in Spanish. "This fight can push me, can catapult me to the top, and put me in the title conversation. Maybe I win this one, one more after that, and I'm ready for a title shot, God willing." Cortes-Acosta has his path to victory mapped out for Spivac. Avoid the ground game and keep the fight in his realm. "I see it as a striker vs. wrestler," Cortes-Acosta said. "I don't think he has the hands to match me in the octagon. Like I've said, every fight I'm evolving. I never stop evolving. I feel stronger and I'm heavier now." Advertisement There are high expectations for Cortes-Acosta in this matchup. He sees himself finishing the "Polar Bear" "I expect the knockout," Waldo-Acosta said. "Come Saturday, I'll be knocking on the door, and it will be opened." This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC 316's Waldo Cortes-Acosta plans to KO Serghei Spivac


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
UFC 316's Waldo Cortes-Acosta plans Serghei Spivac KO, enter heavyweight title contention
UFC 316's Waldo Cortes-Acosta plans Serghei Spivac KO, enter heavyweight title contention Waldo Cortes-Acosta sees a big opportunity at UFC 316. Waldo Cortes-Acosta feels he's on the cusp of title contention, and it's hard to disagree. The Dominican heavyweight has quietly put together an impressive run in the UFC, picking up six wins in the seven fights he's had since joining the promotion. These victories include two knockouts, and several notable names such as Ryan Spann, Robelis Despaigne, Chase Sherman and former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski. This Saturday at UFC 316, Cortes-Acosta (13-1 MMA, 6-1 UFC) looks to continue to bolster that resume and go on a five-fight winning streak when he takes on top-10 ranked heavyweight Serghei Spivac. He thinks a win over Spivac (17-5 MMA, 8-5 UFC) will open up big opportunities for him in the division. "Yeah, I do feel the attention and the importance of the event," Cortes-Acosta told Hablemos MMA in Spanish. "This fight can push me, can catapult me to the top, and put me in the title conversation. Maybe I win this one, one more after that, and I'm ready for a title shot, God willing." Cortes-Acosta has his path to victory mapped out for Spivac. Avoid the ground game and keep the fight in his realm. "I see it as a striker vs. wrestler," Cortes-Acosta said. "I don't think he has the hands to match me in the octagon. Like I've said, every fight I'm evolving. I never stop evolving. I feel stronger and I'm heavier now." There are high expectations for Cortes-Acosta in this matchup. He sees himself finishing the "Polar Bear" "I expect the knockout," Waldo-Acosta said. "Come Saturday, I'll be knocking on the door, and it will be opened."


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Stanley Cup Final 2025 Game 2 live updates: Panthers lead Oilers 4-3 at end of second period
Follow live updates from Game 2 of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final as Edmonton looks to grab a 2-0 series lead over Florida Getty Images Game 2 of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final is underway, with the Oilers looking to double their advantage after beating the Panthers in overtime in the series opener. Follow along as our reporters on the ground in Edmonton and team of NHL experts across the continent have you covered with the latest insight and analysis. Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms P2 10:29 - Panthers 3, Oilers 3 The Oilers need to weather this Panthers onslaught. Florida loves scoring goals in the second period. They've piled up goals in succession during these playoffs in the second frame. Can Edmonton withstand the Florida pressure unscathed? Getty Images Former Oiler Dmitry Kulikov ties the game with a shot from the point. Matthew Tkachuk gets bumped into Stuart Skinner. The Oilers opt not to challenge. Tie game. It's 3-3. P2 12:01 - Oilers 3, Panthers 3 Dmitry Kulikov silences the crowd. He fires a shot through traffic, which Stuart Skinner couldn't see. The Oilers get burned for an extended shift from Connor McDavid, Evan Bouchard and Mattias Ekholm. The Florida Panthers tie the game again. Getty Images That save by Bobrovsky on Evan Bouchard was sensational to keep the Panthers deficit at only one. It was yet another great play by Connor McDavid to set that chance up, but Bobrovsky's lateral movement is second to none. I'm shocked at how easily the Oilers have generated rush offense over the first half of this game. The Panthers' gaps in the neutral zone haven't been good, and the result is tons of open ice for Edmonton's skilled skaters to utilize. This game could be out of hand already if not for Bobrovsky. Getty Images P2 14:28 - Oilers 3, Panthers 2 It looks like the referees are letting the players play in this period. Sam Bennett gets cross-checked but the referee doesn't call a penalty on Edmonton. Dmitry Kulikov fires a snap shot from the point which Stuart Skinner gobbles up. Edmonton still leads by one. P2 15:37 - Oilers 3, Panthers 2 It's an onslaught of Panthers pressure in the offensive zone. They've been in the attacking zone for over a minute and Stuart Skinner makes two critical saves on Sam Reinhart and Aleksander Barkov. Massive for Edmonton to escape that without giving up a goal. Getty Images P2 18:04 - Oilers 3, Panthers Oh my Sergei Bobrovsky! Connor McDavid finds Evan Bouchard, who delivers a blast that the Panthers goalie needs to dive across the crease to save. Bouchard has three shots on six attempts tonight, including a goal. What a scoring chance. Getty Images P2 19:10 - Oilers 3, Panthers 2 The Oilers are able to kill the Florida power play to start the period. As Evan Bouchard comes out of the box, he gets the puck for an odd-man rush. The Edmonton defenseman fires a shot on target but Sergei Bobrovsky makes the save before a scrum ensues following the whistle. The intensity continues in this second period. P2 20:00 - Oilers 3, Panthers 2 The second period is underway from Edmonton. Florida starts on the power play for 41 seconds. Getty Images Evan Bouchard added another secondary helper on the McDavid-to-Draisaitl jaw-dropping tally, his third point of the game. He's now up to 79 points in his playoff career, tying him with teammate Ryan Nugent-Hopkins for ninth on the franchise's all-time list. With that first-period goal in his 71st playoff game, Evan Bouchard has matched Colorado Avalanche star Cale Makar as the fastest active defenseman to 20 career playoff goals. Only six other defensemen have reached 20 goals that quickly in NHL history: Paul Coffey (48 games played) Brian Leetch (49) Bobby Orr (50) Denis Potvin (52) Al MacInnis (70) Paul Reinhart (70) Reinhart, of course, is the father of Panthers forward Sam Reinhart. Rob H.: Another great game, but Panthers need to keep it from turning into a track meet. Another great game, but Panthers need to keep it from turning into a track meet. Brennan L.: This is awesome. The intensity and skill is insane. This is awesome. The intensity and skill is insane. Brandon W.: Imagine cheering for this Panthers team. Imagine cheering for this Panthers team. Brian F.: Edmonton just absolutely on fire. Can't even pretend. Edmonton just absolutely on fire. Can't even pretend. Victor E.: Keep up the parade to the penalty box Florida. Remember, you can send us your thoughts, questions and predictions by emailing us at live@ and if you're a subscriber you can also join the Game 2 discussion page. Imagn Images Evan Bouchard got another playoff goal in the first period tonight. Per Sportsnet stats, Bouchard is the class of the NHL for playoff goals by a defenseman since 2022. Below are his playoff goals by type and where that ranks among the league (you'll notice a pattern). Total: 20 (1st) 20 (1st) Power play: 8 (1st) 8 (1st) Even strength: 12 (1st) 12 (1st) Game winning: 6 (1st) 6 (1st) Game-tying or go-ahead: 10 (1st) Imagn Images With his 10th goal in the 2025 NHL playoffs (and third in this Stanley Cup Final already), Leon Draisaitl has become the third player in NHL history to score 10-plus goals in three consecutive postseasons. He joins Mike Bossy (in four straight playoffs from 1980-1983) and fellow Oiler Wayne Gretzky (three straight from 1983-1985). Imagn Images Shots: Shot attempts: Hits: Faceoffs won: Power play: Penalty minutes: Blocked shots: Imagn Images Connor McDavid has recorded his 33rd career multi-assist playoff game, and did so in dramatic fashion with a beautiful pass through traffic to Leon Draisaitl for the Oilers' third goal of the first period. McDavid is now alone in third place all-time in terms of multi-assist playoff games, behind Wayne Gretzky (72) and Mark Messier (40). His performance tonight broke a tie with Sidney Crosby, Doug Gilmour and Ray Bourque (all with 32). Imagn Images For a second straight game to begin the Final, Sam Bennett has set a new record. His 12th road goal of these playoffs is a new NHL record, surpassing Mark Scheifele's total of 11 in 2018. Getty Images That's as wild an opening period in the Stanley Cup final that I can remember in all the years covering this. Everything was happening. Imagn Images P1 0:00 - Oilers 3, Panthers 2 What a first period to Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final! Five goals and seven power plays later and the Oilers lead by one over the Panthers. Stuart Skinner makes a critical save on Aleksander Barkov to end the frame. Florida will have some power play left to start the second.