
Teddy Atlas: Ilia Topuria has 'supreme confidence' like Sugar Ray Robinson, Muhammad Ali
Topuria (17-0 MMA, 9-0 UFC), a former UFC featherweight champion and current lightweight champion, has looked unstoppable as of late, scoring three-straight knockouts of Alexander Volkanovski, Max Holloway, and most recently Charles Oliveira at UFC 317.
Prior to challenging Volkanovski for the featherweight title, Topuria placed "UFC champion" on his social media bio. Prior to beating Oliveira to claim the vacant 155-pound title, "El Matador" held a victory party. Atlas compared his self belief to two boxing legends.
"Ilia Topuria, he'd be great to have on that White House lawn," Atlas said in an interview with BetVictor Online Casinos. "But for me, what makes him so special, Cus (D'Amato) once said to me that if somebody ever gets supreme confidence, it makes them very rare. It makes them very hard to beat and supreme confidence the way that he identified it and explained it to me was very rare in a way, that he only knew two people that ever had it: Sugar Ray Robinson and Muhammad Ali.
"And what it means is, it's an ability, not just confidence, but it's a belief that you just can't get beat. You go into the ring completely believing that there is nothing on earth that will keep you from winning that match. And even though they didn't win all their fights, they had that belief."
Atlas wants to see Topuria take part in a mega fight on next year's White House event.
"Topuria and (Paddy) Pimblett would be a good combination on the White House lawn because even though Pimblett doesn't have the skills that he has, Pimblett is more known because he's very creative, and he's very good at promoting himself," Atlas said.
"One thing about Pimblett: I had him on my podcast, when he was just coming up, and they were looking to make him a star. I said, 'Let me give you one piece of advice,' and he's a good kid, he said. 'Sure, Teddy, what is that?' I said, 'Keep your chin down. You've got it up.' The old timer would say, 'It's like a lantern in the storm.'"

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


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
UFC 320: Another Major Fight Added To Stacked Vegas Card
UFC 320 is looking stronger every day. On Monday, a top-notch middleweight fight was added to the card making the already stacked Las Vegas card look even better–at least on paper. Joe Pyfer will take on Abus Magomedov in a battle that could prove which veteran 185er has what it takes to take a step up in the rankings. Pyfer could be seen as the Jacob Fatu of the UFC's middleweight division. He's all gas and no brakes, but that approach has gotten him into trouble against Jack Hermansson where he appeared to gas out as he was forced to grapple for extended periods. That aspect of Pyfer's game will almost certainly be put to the test against Magomedov. The Dagestani Russian brings a heavy grappling style as evidenced by his gutsy submission victory over Brunno Ferreira in October 2024. Magomedov had some tense moments, but he wound up winning by third-round submission using an arm-triangle as he overtook the gassed-out Ferreira. Is the same thing going to happen to Pyfer? A win would solidify Magomedov's status at No. 14 in the division. A loss would probably see him swap spots with Pyfer who comes into the fight unranked. Because of the stylistic battle between Pyfer and Magomedov, it should fit nicely on the UFC 320 card that already has its share of potential bangers. The main event will see Alex Pereira looking to avenge his loss to Magomed Ankalaev in hopes of regaining his UFC light heavyweight title. No matter what happens, this could be Pereira's last fight at light heavyweight. In the co-main event, my favorite for UFC Fighter of the Year, Merab Dvalishvili will look to defend his title for the third time in 2025 when he faces long-time contender Cory Sandhagen. I know Ilia Topuria is on a crazy run, but if Dvalishvili beats Sandhagen, he's the fighter of the year. Also, former light heavyweight champion Jiri Prochazka will battle Khalil Rountree Jr. in a fight that could steal the show. While the card isn't complete, here are the fights we know about: Last Saturday's UFC Fight Night: Taira vs. Park and the next one featuring Roman Dolidze vs. Anthony Hernandez on August 9 aren't going to get fans out of their chairs–at least not on name recognition. However, business picks up with UFC 319 on August 16. The August 23 card in China has a nice feel to it because of location and local star power while Noche UFC should highlight September's slate. October is where the real fire will be on the upcoming UFC calendar and UFC 320 is a big reason for the buzz.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Tapology's new system ranks every single UFC fighter — which may be welcome news for some, but not others
Tapology has removed vibes from the UFC rankings. Those little numbers next to a fighter's name? At least on Tapology, long a trusted online record-keeper in the sport of MMA, human beings and their fickle feelings will no longer have a say in the hierarchy. Instead, Tapology's new system uses a proprietary algorithm to rank every active UFC fighter — which in some weight classes means tracking more than 70 fighters through the ups and downs of in-cage competition. 'We want the system to be consistent and unemotional,' Tapology founder Gregory Saks told Uncrowned. 'That sounds a little bit boring and robotic, but it is, we think, the best thing when you're talking about rankings. You wouldn't want vibes to control which NFL teams make the playoffs and which one has home-team advantage. It has to be a robotic system that says, 'These are the rules and we don't care how excited the Eagles fans are by how they looked last weekend.'' These new algorithm-based rankings have been roughly five years in the making, according to Saks. The goal was to create an automated system that would focus only on the important data to create a ranking for every single fighter in the UFC. But that's more challenging that it might initially seem, especially in a sport like MMA. Other such systems used to rank chess players, for instance, had the benefit of large sample sizes to draw from. A typical UFC career might span only a few fights, or it might include 20 bouts spread out over the course of a decade. And then there's the question of what weight to give to each outing. Does a quick knockout win over a lower-ranked fighter count for more than a close decision victory over an established opponent? What about wins that come against once-great fighters now on the decline? And what's it worth to beat an opponent who took the fight on short notice? The many intangibles of the fight game have long proved to be an impediment to any automatic or computer-based rankings systems. At the same time, if the MMA world agrees on nothing else, it's a disdain for the current 'media rankings' system employed by the UFC. Even UFC CEO Dana White seems to hate the rankings produced by a small body of little-known media members that includes local radio stations and obscure websites. White has even discussed coming up with AI rankings system with the help of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Anything to replace the current system. But according to Saks, artificial intelligence won't solve the problem, in part because it doesn't know what matters and what doesn't in this sport. Tapology's system looks at each UFC fighter's last six fights in the promotion. It also measures strength of schedule, the quality of each win or loss, as well as various other factors such as short-notice opponent changes. The exact way it balances these variables is Tapology's own 'secret sauce,' Saks said, making it a proprietary company secret that he declined to reveal. But after much tinkering over the course of several years, including some experiments with the kind of rating system developed by chess master and physics professor Arpad Elo, Saks believes the system is now capable of producing rankings that are accurate and fair. 'The early versions were unsuccessful and not very good,' Saks said. 'Like many people out there, both sort of hobbyists who like stats and playing around with data, as well as more serious people who are running websites about this kind of thing, we started with an Elo rating system because this is kind of the go-to mathematical approach for how you might rank competitors in competitions. These are used in chess and tennis. These used to be used for college football. The Elo ratings are kind of the default place to start. We tried that and we were not getting results that were acceptable. I mean, lots of it would look good, but then you'd have way too many things that were just ludicrous, where a fighter that nobody would think was a top-15 fighter, not even close, would appear as number three for some strange reason.' Ultimately, Saks said, his team decided that they needed to build their own system that was specific to MMA and its many quirks. The result is interesting for a couple different reasons. For one thing, unlike the UFC's media-generated rankings system that only concerns itself with the top 16 fighters in each weight class (one champion, followed by a numbered list of 15 ranked contenders), the Tapology rankings track every single UFC fighter. This means that each fighter on the roster can now see exactly how far he or she has to go, at least according to Tapology. Someone like Michael Chiesa might previously have only known that he was lurking somewhere outside the top 15. Now he can look and see that Tapology currently has him as the promotion's No. 17 welterweight, which isn't too shabby. Conversely, a fighter like Jeremy Stephens can look at Tapology's lightweight rankings and see himself at No. 83 (out of 94 total lightweights on the list), which is bound to sting a bit more for someone who might otherwise have only known that they were hovering somewhere in the vague outer darkness of the division. Now they (and everyone else) can see just how far from the top they are, which might be unwelcome news for many fighters. The flip side, Saks pointed out, is that it also gives fighters a way of determining which matchups make sense for them. If you're the 36th featherweight on the list and you were thinking of calling out a fellow 145-pounder you dislike or just think you could beat, you might change your mind if you knew he was ranked somewhere north of the No. 50 spot. 'We believe that the new Tapology system, with rankings for the entire division, can give new exposure and ammunition to athletes who are not in the top 15 of the media rankings,' Saks said. 'Now they can say, 'Hey, I'm No. 17 or No. 22 in Tapology, so I'm right on the cusp.' And maybe they can use that as far as their PR campaign to justify why they think they need a bigger fight or a more compelling fight. We also think it can play hopefully a useful role for fans who are trying to just put meaning behind what they're watching. Now they'll understand why each fight means something, because the winner might move up in these rankings. But then also the fighters and their teams [can use it] in justifying why perhaps they should be lined up for a bigger fight next.' But there's another side to that coin. Once they can look at exact numbers, it might occur to some fighters that their scheduled bouts do very little for them in terms of rankings. Take Saturday night's win for UFC flyweight contender Tatsuro Taira, for example. Headed into that main-event bout, Taira was ranked sixth in the 125-pound division by the Tapology rankings — the same spot he held in the UFC's own internal rankings. Hyun Sung Park, his opponent, was unranked by the UFC, but ranked at No. 23 by Tapology. The dominant submission win for Taira didn't move him up at all in Tapology's rankings, Saks said, mostly because he was facing a much lower-ranked opponent who was serving as a late-notice replacement. According to the Tapology rankings algorithm, there was basically nothing Taira could have done in this fight in order to change his ranking and move closer to the top of the list. 'It is kind of like treading water, essentially, is how the Tapology system saw that [fight],' Saks said. 'To move ahead of elite contender top-10 fighters, you need to demonstrate that you are performing better than them. And our system did not think that Saturday night's performance, as awesome as it was, proved that he deserves a higher position in the ranking.' It's not hard to imagine how this, too, could rankle some fighters. Obviously, fighting for money is about more than the number next to your name, and the UFC has never been all that constrained even by its own rankings once it sees a fight it would like to put together, so maybe Taira is unconcerned with where the Tapology algorithm puts him. Then again, some fighters may not love knowing that they're headed into matchups that offer no possibility of positional advancement. Some might even conceivably decline certain fights on that basis. But then don't rankings always exist, at least in part, to give us something to argue about? It's why sports websites love them so much. They foster engagement by giving readers something to get angry and bicker about in the comments section. They are a springboard to discussion and debate. Tapology's system provides more date to argue about, but also substitutes a faceless computer algorithm for the human rankings panels, which might make spewing online vitriol a little less fun for users. For his part, Saks isn't terribly concerned that the rankings will mean either too much or too little to those who view them. Receiving angry emails over all aspects of its record-keeping has been part of the job at Tapology, Saks said, and he doesn't expect that to change any time soon. But now, at least, there's more information for readers to sort through. 'What's good about it for fans is having a reliable ranking system that now not only talks about the top 15, but allows you to understand the context of every fight that's happening on the card,' Saks said. 'Hopefully they'll get more enjoyment out of watching the fights and knowing that there's more at stake than just whether or not these fighters will maybe appear in the top 15 soon. So for fans, I think the best-case scenario is that this adds some enjoyment and fun and debate. For Tapology as a business, if it's driving more eyeballs and users to the site, then that helps our business grow and allows us to put money into doing other stuff, whether it's a new ranking system or something totally different. These features that we add take time and effort, so we have to fund them somehow.' As for how UFC fighters and officials might react? That's a trickier question. It's possible both will choose to ignore this new system, at least at first. But, Saks pointed out, with enough time and chatter from the fans, that could change. After all, if you were a fighter swirling somewhere among the unranked masses of the UFC roster, wouldn't you at least pull those rankings up to see where you stand? Wouldn't you be just a little bit curious?


Forbes
2 hours ago
- Forbes
UFC Vegas 109 Full Fight Card Set With Dolidze Vs Hernandez Main Event
The UFC is in Las Vegas for the second week in a row for Saturday's UFC Vegas 109 fight card. The event, which is headlined by a middleweight matchup between top-10 ranked contenders Roman Dolidze and Anthony Hernandez, headlines the UFC Apex fight card. The UFC Vegas 109 main card airs on ESPN and streams on ESPN+. UFC Vegas 109 Main Card Roman Dolidze vs. Anthony Hernandez - Middleweight Steve Erceg vs. Ode Osbourne - Bantamweight Iasmin Lucindo vs. Angela Hill - Strawweight Andre Fili vs. Christian Rodriguez - Featherweight Miles Johns vs. Jean Matsumoto - Bantamweight Eryk Anders vs. Christian Leroy Duncan - Middleweight UFC Vegas 109 Preliminary card Julius Walker vs. Raffael Cerqueira - Light heavyweight Elijah Smith vs. Toshiomi Kazama - Bantamweight Joselyne Edwards vs. Priscila Cachoeira - Women's bantamweight Uros Medic vs. Gilbert Urbina - Welterweight Gabriella Fernandes vs. Julija Stoliarenko - Women's flyweight Roman Dolidze (15-3) enters UFC Vegas 109 as the No. 9 ranked UFC middleweight. Dolidze joined the fight promotion in July 2020 going 2-1 in his first three outings with the UFC. Dolidze followed a March 2021 decision loss to Trevin Giles with a four-fight winning streak. That run ended with his loss to Vettori. A majority decision setback to Nassourdine Imavov followed. Dolidze followed that lackluster performance with a decision win over Anthony Smith at UFC 303. In October 2024, Dolidze scored a TKO win over Kevin Holland in a bout where Holland could not continue because of broken ribs. In his most recent outing, a five-round UFC Fight night main event, Dolidze bested former UFC 185-pound title challenger Marvin Vettori by decision. Anthony Hernandez (14-2-0-1) is riding a seven-fight winning streak ahead of the UFC Vegas 109 fight card. Hernandez joined the promotion in 2019, opening his UFC run with a 1-2 record. He has not lost since Kevin Holland stopped him via TKO in 2020. Hernandez had back-to-back 'Performance of the Night' bonus-winning victories in 2024. In those contests he stopped Roman Kopylov via submission and earned a TKO win over Michel Pereira in a UFC Fight Night main event scrap in October 2024. In his most recent trip to the Octagon, Hernandez defeated Brendan Allen via decision in February of this year. Hernandez is the No. 10 ranked UFC middleweight. We will have more on the UFC Vegas 109 fight card as fight night nears, including betting odds, picks, predictions and more. As well as full fight card results, reactions and highlights on fight night.