
Fighting in UFC is biggest weight I've ever felt
Former Bellator featherweight and lightweight champion Patricio Pitbull has looked unconvincing, recording one win and one defeat. Ex-Bellator bantamweight title holder Patchy Mix, meanwhile, was outclassed by Mario Bautista on his UFC debut in June.In the co-main event at UFC 319 in Chicago, Illinois on Saturday, Britain's Lerone Murphy faces Aaron Pico - another former Bellator fighter - in a featherweight contest.Page, who faces American middleweight Jared Cannonier on the undercard, says he empathises with the former Bellator athletes who have struggled."I'm starting to see it more and more that the Bellator fighters are not performing the way I know they can," said Page."Pitbull has had a couple of fights and he hasn't looked like the Pitbull I've seen in Bellator - he was unbelievable. "I feel like the magnitude and weight they're carrying isn't allowing them to perform the way they could perform."
'This is my last lap in MMA'
The fight with 41-year-old Cannonier represents Page's second successive bout at middleweight after he ended Magomedov's undefeated reign in February.After spending the majority of his 13-year career at welterweight, Page says he has chosen to move up because he was struggling to secure fights in the lower weight class."Nobody at welterweight seems to like action - it's a slow division," said Page."I think there's a lot of people in the latter stage of their careers, so for them every fight means something a bit more."They don't want to take a risky fight, and I feel I represent a lot of risk because of the style I bring."Page's only title fight during his career was against American Logan Storley for the interim welterweight belt in 2022, where he suffered a split decision defeat.Page says competing in fights that "turn heads" is his main goal during the twilight of his career, but he has not given up on becoming a world champion.The middleweight belt will be on the line in the main event at Chicago's United Centre as South African champion Dricus du Plessis faces Russia's Khamzat Chimaev."With someone so experienced and dangerous, I can't look past Jared," said Cannonier."But my goal is to get a title fight in my last run. For me I feel like this is my last lap in MMA, and I want to retire from MMA before MMA retires me," said Page. "I'm doing a lot of work in the background to set up the next stage of my life, so for now it's about getting big fights and pushing towards the title."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The four One-Day Cup breakout stars pushing for an England call: A flame-haired record-breaker, Mushtaq Ahmed's young protege, a Harry Brook-Ben Stokes hybrid and the Bazball archetype
With England set to rest captain Harry Brook and other senior figures like Joe Root ahead of the Ashes, next month's three-match one-day series in Ireland offers opportunities for younger players to be blooded. It was a similar scenario against the Irish two Septembers ago when England's director of cricket Rob Key and his fellow selectors delved beneath the surface and into a talent pool that included debutants Jamie Smith and Tom Hartley.


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Aston Villa transfer briefing: New club in for Morgan Rogers revealed, the five stars being lined up for new contracts, who's leaving and which signings they want
The news went down like a lead balloon with Aston Villa supporters looking ahead to their team's first game of the season. Daily Mail Sport reported on Thursday morning that even if Jacob Ramsey moves to Newcastle – Villa's opponents on Saturday – the initial £39million fee is unlikely to be used to strengthen the squad in the remaining two weeks of the window.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
The Premier League circus is back, but after a summer of splurges who'll be laughing when the curtain comes down in May?
IT'S opening night at football's multi-billion dollar circus and spending has gone through the big-top roof. So despite an almighty spree of his own, Arne Slot believes his Liverpool side will face tougher competition than ever if they are to retain their Premier League title. 7 7 7 7 England's biggest five clubs have already shelled out more than £1billion between them this summer, in a whopping total spend of £2.1billion — or £2.5bn including deal add-ons. And as the defending champions roll up to Anfield to face Bournemouth, kicking off another season for the greatest show on Earth, the Dutchman expects the title battle to be fiercer than ever. Liverpool's imminent signing of Giovanni Leoni would take their summer outlay to around £300m — with deals for Alexander Isak and Marc Guehi still possible. But world champs Chelsea have spent another quarter of a billion, followed by Manchester United (£200.5m), Arsenal (£181.8m) and Manchester City (£150.1m for a total of £324m in the calendar year). And Slot said: 'The reason why it's so difficult lies mainly with the fact there are so many that can win the league over here. 'To win it once is very special, if you can win it twice in five years like us — and City did even better — then that is unbelievable. 'And probably this year's going to be harder than any year before because every team brings in new players. Our main competitors definitely did as well. 'The challenge in the Premier League is always the teams. We start with Bournemouth — the most intense in the league in terms of running and also playing style — and after that it's Newcastle and Arsenal. 'That sums up this league and the challenges we have.' If winning the title is a serious achievement, retaining it is far tougher — only Pep Guardiola's City, Sir Alex Ferguson's United and Jose Mourinho's Chelsea have won back-to-back Premier League crowns. 7 Slot would be walking among giants if he wins a second title in two seasons. And while the signings of Florian Wirtz, Hugo Ekitike, Jeremie Frimpong and Milos Kerkez provide a major platform, he still wants Newcastle striker Isak as well as Guehi, the England defender who skippered Crystal Palace to beat the Reds in Sunday's Community Shield. Perennial runners-up Arsenal are in a major recruitment drive too — adding Viktor Gyokeres, Noni Madueke, Martin Zubimendi, Christian Norgaard, Kepa Arrizabalaga and Cristhian Mosquera ahead of a critical campaign for Mikel Arteta. As ever, Chelsea have bought in bulk — with strikers Joao Pedro and Liam Delap joining wingers Jamie Gittens and Estevao Willian, left-back Jorrel Hato and midfielder Dario Essugo at a club powered by its own brand of chaos. Guardiola's City — four-in-a-row champions before last term — have made four big signings in Tijjani Reijnders, Rayan Cherki, Rayan Ait-Nouri and James Trafford, to add to their January quartet. With United's attacking overhaul bringing Benjamin Sesko, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo in, never before have all of England's major clubs seen such change. Europa League winners Spurs have spent £100m-plus, with more to come — with even promoted Sunderland well over nine figures. The league is increasingly competitive. The Liverpool-City duopoly — when two near-perfect teams needed close to 100 points to take the crown — is over. No longer does one defeat spell disaster, yet fewer fixtures are a formality for any title-chasers. With Liverpool making so many changes, Slot faces a different pressure to when he inherited Jurgen Klopp's squad last summer. He said: 'I took over a team with only two weeks to prepare due to the Euros and Copa America. 'This year we've brought in very good, intelligent players who need to integrate. Bournemouth will bring a big challenge but everyone is looking forward to it.' Roll up, roll up — tonight's the night we begin to find out if they all have more money than sense. 7 7