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Sadio Mane scores four in Al Nassr's 9-0 thrashing

Sadio Mane scores four in Al Nassr's 9-0 thrashing

Yahoo13-05-2025

Alex Volkanovski: 'I'm most proud of coming back from 2 knockout losses'
Alexander Volkanovski returns as two-time UFC featherweight champion after his win over Diego Lopes to break down what it meant to regain the belt, getting back on track after back-to-back knockout losses, a potential fight with Movsar Evloev, the state of his division, his relationship with Cristiano Ronaldo, wanting the Ilia rematch, Belal Muhammad vs. fellow Aussie Jack Della Maddalena, and more.
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Ariane da Silva's team says big UFC 316 weight miss related to pituitary tumor treatment
Ariane da Silva's team says big UFC 316 weight miss related to pituitary tumor treatment

USA Today

time42 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Ariane da Silva's team says big UFC 316 weight miss related to pituitary tumor treatment

Ariane da Silva's team says big UFC 316 weight miss related to pituitary tumor treatment UFC women's flyweight Ariane da Silva stepped on the scale Friday morning closer to the bantamweight division, and her team has since provided a shocking explanation. Da Silva (17-10 MMA, 6-7 UFC) is scheduled to face Wang Cong at UFC 316 (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) in a preliminary bout at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., but the fight was in jeopardy of not going forward after the official weigh-in session. Weighing in at 132 pounds, da Silva came in six pounds over the flyweight limit. Cong (7-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC), who made 125 pounds on the nose, would have been justified in refusing the fight, but decided to keep the bout alive. Renato da Silva, Ariane's husband, told MMA Fighting that a poor treatment plan for a benign pituitary tumor led to complications with the weight cut. According to Ariane's coach, the tumor was discovered during further examination after a blood test during fight camp showed abnormal levels of prolactin and cortisol. The team brought in a new nutritionist to deal with the weight cut for UFC 316, but the plan did not work. "We wanted to get the cortisol levels down so it wouldn't affect her health," Renato told MMA Fighting in Portuguese (translated by MMA Fighting). "By controlling the cortisol levels, we wanted to cause as little stress as possible to her body. And the nutritionist opted for a strategy that would have her hold as much as weight as possible until the end, and it was too much for the final days. He doesn't know her as much as I do, and he thought she would be able to do that. "There was a moment this morning she wasn't feeling good. I know her body. There was still something left there to cut, but at the same time, her reactions weren't normal. She wasn't walking right, she was blinking too slow, she had double vision, and couldn't focus, her voice sounded weak. She was giving us dangerous signs as she dropped weight." After contacting the UFC's medical staff, it was determined that attempting to cut the remaining six pounds would be too dangerous, so the weight cut was stopped. The team places some blame on the nutritionist's plan to get Ariane to the flyweight limit. "It was too much (weight) for such a short amount of time," Renato said. "I think that was the mistake by the nutritionist. We trusted the process, and unfortunately, it didn't work. It's a mistake we made. I also made that mistake as a coach, to have believed and tried something different, but my goal is always to take care of the health of Ariane, an athlete and also my wife. I'll always put her health first." Cong accepted the new terms of the fight after weigh-ins, which included 30 percent of da Silva's purse, and the fight changed to a catchweight at 132 pounds.

Mitchell Starc goes public with sad news after difficult decision with wife
Mitchell Starc goes public with sad news after difficult decision with wife

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Mitchell Starc goes public with sad news after difficult decision with wife

Mitchell Starc has admitted he's realistic that his career in the prestigious IPL might be over after flying home early from the tournament with wife Alyssa Healy last month. Starc and Healy were among dozens of Aussies who flew home from India when the IPL was suspended in May due to tensions with neighbouring Pakistan. The T20 tournament eventually resumed, but Starc and fellow Aussie Jake Fraser-McGurk chose not to return for the Delhi Capitals. Healy, who was in India supporting her husband, later revealed harrowing details of the situation, which saw a game in Dharamshala abandoned mid-match because of air strikes nearby. Speaking for the first time since deciding not to return to India, Starc said on Friday he's at peace with the fact he might never play in the IPL again. IPL franchises aren't known to react well when players leave the tournament early or withdraw. 'I'm comfortable with my decision and how I felt about the whole situation and how it was handled,' Starc told , revealing he'd expressed concerns about going ahead with the game in Dharamshala before it had to be abandoned. 'That's why I made my decision post-that, and my focus changed to red-ball cricket for about a week prior to coming over here (to Lord's for the World Test Championship final). Time will tell with repercussions or how it looks with guys that didn't return. But I've had my questions and concerns leading into that game, and obviously we saw what happened, which played a part in my decision." Starc also confirmed that he pulled out of the recent Champions Trophy ODI tournament due to concerns he held about playing in Pakistan. Whether IPL franchises will be willing to offer him contracts in the future remains to be seen, but the 35-year-old has shown in the past he doesn't really care for the riches on offer in T20 leagues. Starc has famously missed out on around $10 million throughout his career by prioritising family time with wife Alyssa and keeping his body fresh to play for Australia, rather than playing in the IPL. But he was quick to point out on Friday that he's always given 100 per cent to IPL franchises he's played for. 'These are different circumstances," he said. 'It was more a question of not having enough information leading into making a decision [about] things of that degree. I had a discussion back home then came to a decision, and whatever comes from that I'm comfortable with that and we move forward.' RELATED: Cricket world stunned as rival joins Glenn Maxwell in immediate exit Marnus Labuschagne cops brutal new blow amid calls for Test axing Healy had previously opened up the scary situation that unfolded in Dharamshala, in northern India near the Pakistan border. 'It was a surreal experience," she said on the 'Willow Talk' podcast. "All of a sudden a couple of the light towers went out and we were just sitting there up the top waiting … we're a large group of family and extra support staff. And the next minute the guy who wrangles the group of us and gets us on the bus came up and his face was white. He was like, 'we need to go right now'. 'Then (another) guy came out and his face was white and he grabbed one of the children and said, 'we need to leave right now.' We were like, 'what's going on?' We weren't told anything. We had no idea. 'I said to Mitch, 'what's going on?' He said the town 60km away had just been smacked by some of the missiles so there was a complete blackout in the area. That's why the lights were off because the Dharamshala stadium was like a beacon at that point in time. All of a sudden we're crammed into vans and off we go back to the hotel. There was madness.' Healy said they took a five-and-a-half-hour bus ride and six-hour train trip the following day back to Delhi, which took them uncomfortably close to the Pakistan border. 'There was a lot of anxiety around the Australian group because we didn't have a whole heap of information as to what was going on," she added. "That's probably been the really interesting and probably the scariest part of this whole situation is the misinformation."

Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry'
Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry'

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry'

Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry' Aljamain Sterling is confused by UFC 316 headliner Sean O'Malley's star power. O'Malley (18-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC) runs things back with Merab Dvalishvili (19-4 MMA, 12-2 UFC) in Saturday's main event (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Sterling lost his bantamweight title to O'Malley at UFC 292, before his teammate Dvalishvili dethroned O'Malley to become champion at UFC 306. "The Funkmaster" previously said his fight with O'Malley didn't deliver the pay-per-view buys he expected, and that the idea of him being a big star may be a myth. "I don't really know his personality outside of when he's asking me constantly about my weight, or asking other fighters how much they weigh in person," Sterling told Home of Fight. "That's always been my interaction with him: 'How much do you weigh right now?' So I don't really have much to go of off. "I've always said his personality was a little dry, in my opinion, and I didn't really understand the stardom other than his fight skills. He's a very good fighter. He had a lot of good knockouts and highlights. That's usually good when you're fighting not-so-good people." O'Malley revealed that he went into his first fight with Dvalishvili with a torn labrum in his hip, which he underwent surgery for after the fight. When Sterling fought O'Malley, it was just three months after he had retained his belt against Henry Cejudo in a five-round battle at UFC 288. "Isn't that funny? Isn't that funny that he's all of a sudden healthy, but for some reason I was making excuses when we fought, had to turn around (fast) after just going 25 minutes with a former two-division champion?" Sterling said. "You could say whatever you want. I had to take a whole month off just to let my legs heal, and somehow that had no bearing on the fight in his fanbase's mind. "But anyone, as a combat sports athlete, understands the game. You have to be mentally ready and physically prepared in order to step in there, so I think it's perfect timing with the irony. Karma has a way of playing funny games, and now he sees how it feels. Even if he had two good hips, I really don't think on that day he was beating Merab."

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