logo
Robert Whittaker baffled by Belal Muhammad's 'ridiculous' game plan for UFC 315

Robert Whittaker baffled by Belal Muhammad's 'ridiculous' game plan for UFC 315

USA Today12-05-2025

Robert Whittaker baffled by Belal Muhammad's 'ridiculous' game plan for UFC 315
Robert Whittaker thinks Belal Muhammad trying to prove a point against Jack Della Maddalena cost him at UFC 315.
Muhammad (24-4 MMA, 15-4 UFC) lost his welterweight title to Della Maddalena (18-2 MMA, 8-0 UFC) by unanimous decision in Saturday's main event at Bell Centre in Montreal. Muhammad opted to stand and trade with Della Maddalena for the majority of the fight, which led to a broken nose, orbital bone, and a split lip.
Muhammad promised not to shoot one takedown, which he did for a significant amount of time before trying to mix things up. Whittaker was confused by Muhammad's game plan.
"I expected more takedowns," Whittaker said on his MMArcade Podcast. "When he mixed in the striking to bring Jack onto him, to mix into his shots, they were clean every time. I think his only two takedowns more or less were from the open mat, drawing Jack into him. Now why didn't we see more of that? I can't help but feel like Belal was trying to make a point striking with Jack for the first three rounds. If that's the case, that is ridiculous. Jack is amazing at that mid-range boxing. One of my paths to victory for Jack was to embrace the dogfight and make Belal pay for every step he went forward and every time he walked away, which Jack did unbelievably."
Muhammad has been known for his high-IQ fight style where he neutralizes his opponents' strengths, and mixes in his grappling to stifle them.
"What brought Belal to the title and made him champion was the fact that he could punch, punch, shoot, punch, punch, punch," Whittaker said. "He's not Gilbert Burns on the ground. He's not a guy that when he gets you on your back, he's going to start working those tricky submissions, and you're in a very dangerous spot. He is just that game. He's that punch, punch, shoot, punch, punch, shoot, and we didn't see that."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UFC 317 video: Ilia Topuria and Charles Oliveira hug at friendly first faceoff
UFC 317 video: Ilia Topuria and Charles Oliveira hug at friendly first faceoff

USA Today

time24 minutes ago

  • USA Today

UFC 317 video: Ilia Topuria and Charles Oliveira hug at friendly first faceoff

LAS VEGAS – Ilia Topuria and Charles Oliveira came face-to-face for the first time in a formal setting ahead of Saturday's UFC 317 title fight, and it was a friendly scene. Topuria (16-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) and Oliveira (35-10 MMA, 23-10 UFC) will clash to determine to claimed the vacant lightweight belt left behind by Islam Makhachev when they meet in the main event at T-Mobile Arena (ESPN+ pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+). Thursday's pre-fight press conference went down at the host venue, and after taking questions from the media, Topuria and Oliveira got a chance to square up. The height disparity on the side of former 155-pound titleholder Oliveira was noticeable against former 145-pound champ Topuria, who vacated his belt to move up and attempt to become the 11th in history to claim belts in two divisions. Overall, though, it was a highly respectful first faceoff, with hugs and smiles exchanged on both ends. Check out the video above to see the UFC 317 press conference staredown between Topuria and Oliveira.

Israel Adesanya doesn't believe Jon Jones is really retired: 'I think he'll come back' and fight Tom Aspinall
Israel Adesanya doesn't believe Jon Jones is really retired: 'I think he'll come back' and fight Tom Aspinall

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Israel Adesanya doesn't believe Jon Jones is really retired: 'I think he'll come back' and fight Tom Aspinall

Israel Adesanya isn't sold on Jon Jones' recent MMA retirement. Jones' legendary career came to an unceremonious end at a post-fight press conference in Baku, Azerbaijan, last Saturday night. The surprise announcement from UFC CEO Dana White ended a lengthy saga that left the MMA world waiting for a potential fight between now-former heavyweight champion Jones and UFC interim heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall. Advertisement Although Jones has since confirmed the announcement on social media, Adesanya isn't expecting it to last. "I think he'll come back," Adesanya said on Thursday's special edition of "The Ariel Helwani Show" from Las Vegas. "What do they call it now? The kids call it rage-baiting. It's working. I don't agree with the fact of holding up the division. Tom defended the belt, that's a defense on his book. Let the division keep moving, and now it moves forward. Now this whole thing comes out because [criminal charges stemming from an incident] in February or whatever. F***ing that's why he retired. I think he'll go through this and then, again, he'll come back. "I think he'll fight Tom. It's too much money. They offered him what, $20-$30 million? Yeah, I think he'll come back. It'll even be bigger by the time he comes back because Tom would have had like two fights or three fights and then built up his own legacy as well." Since England's Aspinall emerged as the interim titlist in November 2023, Jones has made it clear that he has little to no interest in that matchup. "Bones" instead went on to defend his title against the former two-time champion Stipe Miocic, whom he was initially booked against before an injury delayed the bout. Advertisement Over time, a hypothetical Jones vs. Aspinall fight gained significant hype, to the point where White claimed it would be the biggest heavyweight fight in the company's history. Having been virtually unstoppable throughout his last 12 fights, Aspinall has primarily been viewed as someone with the potential to defeat Jones. Adesanya said he tends to agree with that assessment. "I think Tom is definitely the guy [who can beat Jones]," Adesanya said. "I've sat next to Tom and his father, and people say this about me on TV, 'Oh, you're so much bigger in person.' Tom is a huge dude, and the speed. It's the speed for me. For a heavyweight, I don't understand. I asked him about it, and he's like, 'I think fast.' I understand what he means neurologically. I do that as well. When you're working, no matter how tired you are, you're still trying to give 100% in that moment on the airdyne [bike] or whatever, just so your neurons are firing or wiring with that thing in mind." Moving forward, Aspinall awaits his first title defense as the official undisputed heavyweight champion. But recently, rumors have surfaced about another former UFC champion being open to a return. Advertisement A fight between Jones and former champion Francis Ngannou appeared to be the biggest fight imaginable for Jones before Aspinall rose to prominence. However, Ngannou's relationship with the UFC dissolved through negotiations, and led to him leaving the promotion to pursue boxing while also signing an MMA deal with the PFL. "The Predator" was recently seen at UFC Atlanta alongside friend and former champion Kamaru Usman. Lacking notable contenders at heavyweight, Adesanya pointed out, an Ngannou return is exactly what the UFC should pursue. "I texted him right after [UFC Atlanta] and said, 'I love seeing you there,'" Adesanya said of Ngannou. "It made me feel like, 'This is where my boy belongs, man.' The best in the world. If you put him back in the mix. Him vs. Tom, crazy. That's the biggest fight. Dana said women will never fight in the UFC. Things happen. I've seen a lot of things happen in this game." Unfortunately, White has been unenthusiastic about welcoming Ngannou back. Advertisement As for the former two-time middleweight champion Adesanya, "The Last Stylebender" has fought once this year, losing via second-round TKO to Nassourdine Imavov in the main event of UFC Saudi Arabia in February. Whoever Adesanya fights next, he'll be trying to snap a three-fight skid against. Ideally, he'd like to return in September or October, he said. In terms of opponents, Adesanya is most interested in getting redemption against the man who started his current slide, Sean Strickland. "The division's kind of stagnant," Adesanya said. "That [Sean Strickland] rematch is the only one I want, but then he hasn't responded. Probably because he got fat. People sent me a video of that as well. I was like, 'Oh, s***.' So, maybe he's going through something. "No question [he'd be ideal]. Look, he lost his last fight. I lost my last fight. All right, cool. Want a rematch? If he doesn't want to, that's fine. It's easy money, bro. You beat me already. Handedly. Five-nil. Come on, that's easy money. "I just feel like I could do better. If he beats me on my best, I could be like, 'F*** yeah. Good game.' And I'll leave it at that. But I know I can do better. Everything happens the way it's supposed to happen. I don't regret it."

Tracy Cortez 'grew a ton' from Rose Namajunas loss, excited to show evolution at UFC 317
Tracy Cortez 'grew a ton' from Rose Namajunas loss, excited to show evolution at UFC 317

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Tracy Cortez 'grew a ton' from Rose Namajunas loss, excited to show evolution at UFC 317

Defeat can be painful, but often times, it's a necessary hardship for growth. Tracy Cortez, a contender in the UFC women's flyweight division, feels she's a testament of that and is thankful for her loss to former UFC champion Rose Namajunas in July 2024. Nearly one year later, Cortez (11-2 MMA, 5-1 UFC) makes a return this Saturday against veteran Viviane Araujo (13-6 MMA, 7-5 UFC) at UFC 317 from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas (ESPN+ pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+). Advertisement Cortez, 31, didn't enjoy losing a decision to Namajunas, but did enjoy the evolution that came with it, and she can't wait to show it in her return. "I was obviously bothered that I lost, but I did feel like I learned a lot from that fight," Cortez told MMA Junkie in Spanish. "I learned a lot. I knew that I had good cardio, I'm well-conditioned, but I had never been in a five rounder. I remember telling my coaches, 'Hey, I can fight another round.' I had a lot more inside of me to give. So I learned a lot from that fight, and above all else, I feel like I grew. I grew a ton as a person and fighter. "I can be very harsh on myself. I try to be positive, but it's hard because as an athlete who's competing, you never want to lose. I applied everything I learned from my last fight to this camp and I feel 100 percent right now." Cortez was undefeated in the octagon prior to Namajunas. She was also on an 11-fight winning streak dating back to a lone stumble in her 2017 professional debut. Given her popularity, top 10 ranking in the UFC and record, Cortez doesn't view the short-notice defeat to Namajunas as a significant setback. She said two more wins after Araujo on Saturday, and she's in title contention. Advertisement "I honestly think that after winning this one, maybe one or two fights, I'm ready to fight for the title," Cortez said. "There's obviously a lot of people in front of me who already deserve the title fight, and have been competing for a long time, but all in due time. I know it's close, it's not that far." This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC 317 Tracy Cortez 'grew a ton' from Rose Namajunas loss

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