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Javier Mendez: Islam Makhachev is ‘undefeated’ at welterweight, says Daniel Cormier should have left like Tom AspinallJavier Mendez: Islam Makhachev is ‘undefeated’ at welterweight, says Daniel Cormier should have left like Tom Aspinall

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(Photo: Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Makhachev’s slam trainer Javier Mendez previews welterweight bout with Jack Della Maddalena, reveals Daniel Cormier should have quit like Tom Aspinall and says he would be open to training Jake Paul ahead of his MMA debut.

I’m talking to CanadaCasinoMéndez said:

  • Daniel Cormier should have left after Stipe took a look at the team, just like Tom Aspinall did
  • Both Cyril Gane and Aspinall should be given a chance to redeem themselves
  • Khabib and I would like to train Jake Paul and make him successful in MMA
  • Tom Aspinall isn’t a UFC headliner – he should consider boxing
  • Tom Aspinall should build his boxing career to 12-0 and then face Anthony JoshuAND
  • Islam Makhachev is unbeatable in the welterweight division
  • JDM is a formidable opponent, but Makhachev is bigger, stronger and more confident
  • JDM is a much better striker than Ilia Topuria – a potential p4p fight in the White House is not a springboard for Makachev

Javier Mendez from Team Khabib: Daniel Cormier should have left like a ‘warrior’ Tom Aspinall, Jack Della Maddalena a ‘better striker’ than Ilia Topuria, Islam Makhachev looks ‘unbeatable’

Daniel Cormier should have left after Stipe took a look at the team, just like Tom Aspinall did

What Ciryl Gane did was accidental. People miss everything. Why would he try to fight half-blindly to please the fans? What will this do for his family? What will this do for his legacy? No, he absolutely, 100% made the right decision by telling the truth: “I can’t see.” And when he can’t see, you can’t, as a referee or a doctor, continue to skip the fight. The guy told him he couldn’t see. From what I hear, and I’m not saying I know, from what I hear, he still has vision problems.

When Daniel Cormier was poked in his third fight against Stipe Miocic, Daniel couldn’t see. When the doctor approached Daniel and asked, “Can you see?” He said yes. He couldn’t see, and then he couldn’t see for several days because the stinging was so powerful. So I know first hand. It’s DC, it’s got a dog in it. When he gets into a fight, he’s that dog, that guy. He won’t give up for anything. But that’s not the smartest thing. But look what happened to Daniel. Yes, he kept fighting, but as far as I could see, he was half a fighter. That’s why it wasn’t good for him to do that. I would prefer Daniel to do what Tom did to ensure a level playing field. Who wants to fight with such an injury? How is this fair? How is this fair to people who have their eyes accidentally or intentionally poked and then are no longer the same and are now cowards because they backed down? I’m talking nonsense. Tom Aspinall is a true warrior. I don’t see anything decreasing. It was the blink of an eye. It’s only one round. This wasn’t the end. There is no way I would say he will be defeated. He worked. Tom could end the fight at any time. The next round could totally go Tom’s way.

Both Cyril Gane and Aspinall should be given a chance to redeem themselves

To say that Gane should be disqualified or disqualified is extreme. He should be able to fight next week if he’s physically ready. It’s bad enough that he was given an opportunity that could have gone his way and been taken away from him. That’s punishment enough. Let the boy get another chance, let him fulfill his dream of winning this title. And let Tom get redemption for the people who think he’s giving up, because he’s not.

Khabib and I would like to train Jake Paul and make him successful in MMA

If the team votes for him, he will be able to train with them. However, it hasn’t happened yet, so I can’t say definitively yes or no. He is a solemn boxer and athlete who should be taken seriously. I believe that if he decides to take it seriously, he can succeed. I’ve told everyone from the beginning that he’s not like his brother Logan Paul who focuses on the WWE style. Jake Paul takes boxing very seriously and gets the most out of it.

Jake Paul is good at MMA because he creates more eyeballs. He would take it seriously; he wouldn’t do any of the “nonsense” that other fighters do. He would be solemn and committed. However, I seriously doubt he’ll want to fight in MMA because, realistically, boxing makes more money for him. So I don’t think he would do it. To get attention he would need to find a fighter who will fight in MMA, maybe Dillon Danis would be a good market for him. On the ground, of course, Dillon will tear it up. But on the stand, Jake tears him apart.

Tom Aspinall isn’t a UFC headliner – he should consider boxing

I don’t think Tom isn’t their man. I simply believe that boxing allows its stars to earn much more than UFC stars. So if they talk about boxing next, it will just be money. There is simply more money in boxing, and if you are a massive name, you can make a lot of money in boxing. Tom has a massive name and would make a lot of money from boxing. I think that’s what his father is implying; he knows how good his son is at boxing. I asked, “What do you want, Tom?” If he says, “I want to box,” I advise him to keep doing it. If he says, “I just want to be in the UFC,” I’ll tell him to go for it. It’s about what the warrior wants. If you ask me what we would make more money from, of course I will answer boxing.

Tom Aspinall should build his boxing career to 12-0 and then face Anthony Joshua

NO. I enjoy watching boxers climb the ranks and develop their careers. If he has built his career to 12-0, this is the fight [with Anthony Joshua] it would be fascinating, but without knowing what he could do in boxing, as a fan I wouldn’t be that interested.

Islam Makhachev is unbeatable in the welterweight division

Based on what I see in the gym, I believe Islam is unbeatable these days. I don’t see a hole in his game yesterday [during sparring] I was so amazed by it that yes, it is insurmountable, it covers every corner.

It is definitely stronger and more compact. Hits harder. Yesterday he went through three sparring partners. I was shocked. It was impossible to go more than two rounds, he said: “I’ve had enough, I’ve had enough!” so at the very end we had to hire someone else. Islam is a beast now and it must be a beast to defeat this very, very tough opponent.

Islam needs very little guidance. He’s the complete package when it comes to the mental aspect, game planning and taking care of his body, he’s perfect. He listens to all his coaches and is the prototype of the best player. He’s almost like Cain Velasquez, with one exception: Islam knows when his body is falling apart, and he’ll tell you. Cain refused to say anything until he broke down.

JDM is a formidable opponent, but Makhachev is bigger, stronger and more confident

This guy is very powerful in all areas and hasn’t lost in a long time. It’s a great run and he’s getting stronger. And then he gained the mental advantage of knowing he felt like the bigger guy. But here’s the question I want to answer myself. Let’s wait until he weighs himself and then we’ll see who’s bigger. Maybe we’re not too far from it. But I know that Islam is not the Islam of senior, it is bigger now, stronger, more confident and now it hits much harder.

JDM is a much better striker than Ilia Topuria – a potential p4p fight in the White House is not a springboard for Makachev

I never called Topuria the best striker, only the best boxer, and I stand by that. The guy has amazing boxing for MMA. I’m not saying he could go out there right now and win a world boxing title; it’s a completely different animal. But his boxing is really good.

If you look at someone like Jack Maddalena, who we’re fighting, he’s not a boxer like Topuria, but he’s a better striker because he can do everything, which means he can kick; he can kneel, he can do everything really well. He’s not as polished as a boxer. Technique, technical aspect, he has really powerful boxing skills.

The White House conversations are not distracting at all. Islam focuses on the task at hand. If he wants to be on the White House card, and I’d love for him to be, he’ll have to bypass Jack. If he can’t beat Jack, I seriously doubt there will be a White House card [for us]. He will have to defeat Jack.

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UFC 329 roundtable: Has the MMA world passed Conor McGregor by?

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UFC 329 roundtable: Has the MMA world passed Conor McGregor by?

UFC 329 is upon us, and Conor McGregor (MMA Gods willing) is back.

Assuming all goes as planned this week, McGregor will step into the octagon for the first time since 2001 to face longtime rival Max Holloway. Much has changed since McGregor beat Holloway 13 years ago. Championships. Age. Weight class. Somehow, their roads led to this, and it feels oddly fitting that another dance with Holloway will mark what should be the final chapter of McGregor's fighting career.

Is it enough for McGregor to just show up, or does he need to recapture the magic that vaulted him into unprecedented levels of fame and fortune? MMA Fighting's Jed Meshew, Damon Martin, and Alexander K. Lee debate the stakes of Saturday's main event for both stars, and what else to look for as the UFC rolls on to the second half of 2026.

1. What does success look like for Conor McGregor in 2026?

Meshew: Honestly, if he even looks competitive and not like a shell of his former self, that would be a huge win for McGregor. And that's not an indictment of him personally, but just an honest assessment of the situation.

McGregor has not fought in five years, and he hasn't won a fight in over six years. And the last time he did fight, he was already showing signs of decline, and then he suffered a catastrophic injury. None of that historically adds up to a sterling performance, especially when you add in that he's about to be 38 years old.

And then there's everything else. At the peak of his powers, McGregor was an offensive dynamo with a unique approach and skillset. That was a decade ago. His offense never looked the same up at 155 pounds, and now he's up at 170. Is that going to look remotely good? Probably not. Even if he'd been taking perfect care of himself (a big if), the man has put some mileage on.

For McGregor, this fight is all about reaching the end of his UFC contract so he can move on and make $500 million by doing superfights outside the promotion. It's a means to an end. And so for him, this is about looking viable enough to sell those fights in the future, and hopefully not taking too much damage in the process. We'll see if he can pull that off.

Martin: Not getting dominated and finished inside five rounds.

That's remarkably low expectations, but the reality is McGregor hasn't fought in five years, he's coming off a devastating injury similar to the same suffered by Anderson Silva and Chris Weidman—neither of whom looked the same afterwards—and turns 38 years old three days after his upcoming fight. When it comes to star power and attraction, McGregor still draws a massive crowd, but fighting is built around success, and “Notorious†hasn't tasted victory since 2020.

Sure, McGregor could lose, make all the excuses about the long layoff, and vow to come back better the next time, and maybe his sizable fanbase believes it. But it gets harder and harder to buy that he's still even a shadow of the pound-for-pound great that conquered two divisions a decade ago. So success for McGregor is hanging tough with a top 5-ranked fighter like Holloway and making it look good until it's over.

Given his past conditioning issues, it's tough to imagine McGregor looking down at the floor and slugging it out with Holloway to close the fight, but even hanging around that long would be considered a win at this stage of the game.

Lee: Not snapping his leg in two in the first 30 seconds of the fight? Too soon?

I'm probably the wrong person to ask here because my expectations for McGregor could not be lower. Putting aside the fact that McGregor is an absolute trash human being (though it can't be emphasized enough), he hasn't won a fight since 2020. I can admit he had his moments in both Dustin Poirier runbacks, but he lost. Twice. And let's not act like he's been dedicated to rest and recovery and reinvention these past five years. He's essentially cramming for a test, except the test is an MMA fight and Holloway is determining whether he makes the grade.

You want to know what success is for McGregor right now? Actually making the walk to the damn cage and moving one step closer to fighting out his contract.

2. Where does Max Holloway go with a loss?

As grim as my outlook is for McGregor, there's no denying that, at his very best, he's one of the most thrilling knockout artists in MMA history. Holloway will stand with him, he'll trade punches, and he'll trust his reflexes and chin to carry him through. But what if they can't anymore?

I'd never seen Holloway knocked out before. It happened. I've rarely seen him completely neutralized by grappling. It just happened. Is it so unreasonable to think his defense has degraded to the point that McGregor could cold him?

If that happens, Holloway's stock shouldn't drop too much, given how much the UFC and fans will always love him. It does close some doors, though, and puts an actual timetable on a potential retirement. We've watched Holloway grow up in the cage, and it felt like he would fight forever. Hard not to see the end of the road if he loses to McGregor.

Meshew: A loss would be pretty catastrophic for Max, because if it happens, it's not because McGregor wins a decision. When they were both babes in the woods, McGregor had enough of a skill gap over Holloway to take a fight to decision and win, but those days are long since gone. Max is a much more skilled fighter than Conor, and so for Notorious to win, he's got to rely on a KO.

But Max has one of the greatest chins in MMA history, and his style, in part, relies on it. So if Max gets got, after getting got by Ilia Topuria, it might spell the beginning of the end for “Blessed.â€

Martin: It would be devastating on a whole other level compares to falling to Charles Oliveira in a fight where he basically got taken down and outgrappled for 25 minutes.

All the reasons why the expectations are so low for McGregor would act in reverse for Holloway, who, at 34 years old, is no longer a young champion with a huge amount of experience. Holloway opened as a massive favorite for this fight, and while the gap in the odds has narrowed, that's likely built around McGregor fandom and the love of an underdog pick rather than sudden belief in the Irish superstar to pull off the upset.

The fight against McGregor is a temporary stop at welterweight for Holloway, who would have to return to a snakepit at lightweight where even a single loss can doom your forward progression for months if not years. A win for Holloway is huge because he already has one of the greatest knockouts in UFC history over current champion Justin Gaethje. But a loss to McGregor after already being dominated by Oliveira would put Holloway into dangerous territory where he's suddenly the guy younger contenders are hoping to build their names against.

3. What is your must-see fight outside of the main event?

Martin: The heavyweight division is dreadful right now. It might be the worst its ever been.

So here comes Olympic gold medalist and multi-time NCAA champion Gable Steveson as the last bastion of hope after Alex Pereira's triumphant move to a new division ended with him complaining about a referee rather than lighting even the briefest spark of excitement about the future of the weight class.

Make no mistake, Steveson is set up to win here. He's facing Elisha Ellison, a 5-2 heavyweight who got battered by Brando Pericic in his lone octagon appearance, and Steveson should roll to victory. The only real question is how long it takes him to deliver an emphatic finish.

But if Steveson can come out like a ball of fire with UFC GOAT Jon Jones in his corner and lay waste to Ellison on one of the biggest cards of the year, perhaps he can inject a little bit of enthusiasm for the future. With Tom Aspinall apparently healthy and ready to compete again and a rematch against Ciryl Gane expected later this year, along with Josh Hokit commanding a lot of attention right now (for better or worse) Steveson provides a prospect unlike any other in UFC history, and that's something the heavyweight division desperately needs right now.

Lee: I'm locked in to King Green vs. Terrance McKinney because even though the match makes a weird sort of sense, I have no clue how it's going to play out.

Will Green's veteran savvy prevail? Or will he be run over by McKinney's unmatched aggression? Is McKinney capable of winning a fight that goes past the first round? Or maybe Green is the one who finds the quick finish?

Honestly, flawless matchmaking, and the best possible way to kick off the first main card of the second half of the year.

Meshew: The thing I'm more impressed about with UFC 329 is that the card is not just good, it's great! Usually, when Conor McGregor is fighting, the UFC knows people will tune in, so they don't have to stack the rest of the card. But every main card fight this weekend is awesome, and many of the undercard bouts are, too.

Lone'er Kavanagh vs. Brandon Royval should be electric, and Cory Sandhagen vs. Mario Bautista is probably the best fight of the whole event, but for me, I'm taking the low-hanging fruit and going for the co-main event: Benoit Saint Denis vs. Paddy Pimblett.

Look, we've all been hard on Pimblett, and not without reason. The man is a good fighter, but he also has huge, glaring flaws and hasn't fought much top opposition. But the Justin Gaethje fight, and what Gaethje went on to do afterward, means it's time for us to reconsider our hate for “The Baddy.â€

While Pimblett still looked weird and vulnerable in the fight, he also showed how tough he is, and also showed a pretty savvy understanding of fight tactics, tactics that the great Ilia Topuria forewent against Gaethje. Now, he faces a guy who is significantly more physically gifted than he is, but has shown his own distinct weaknesses. Can Pimblett's toughness and smarts get him the biggest win of his career? Or is Saint Denis going to continue his current run of form, which has him looking like one of the best lightweights on Earth?

It's a fascinating bout, and I'm pumped for it.

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Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month

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Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month

Wrestling legend Jordan Burroughs finally has an opponent for his RAF debut, and it's someone MMA fans know well.

On Friday, Real American Freestyle announced that Burroughs, who signed with the promotion last month, will face UFC welterweight Sean Brady in the main event of RAF 12 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Aug. 22.

Widely considered one of the greatest American wrestlers of all time, Burroughs was a two-time national champion in college for Nebraska before transitioning to the senior circuit, where he dominated the 74-kg weight class, winning the World Championships in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017. The highlight of Burroughs' wrestling career is his gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games. After setbacks in 2016 and 2020, Burroughs moved up to 79 kgs, where he won the World Championship in 2021 and 2022.

Burroughs, 37, last competed at the 2024 World Championships, losing to multiple-time world medalist Mohammad Nokhodi.

Brady is one of the top welterweights competing in MMA right now. Though he doesn't hail from a traditional wrestling background, Brady has proven himself to be a strong wrestler in his MMA and grappling career. Most recently, he defeated Joaquin Buckley at UFC 328 in May. This is his RAF debut.

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MMA

Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month

Published

on

Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month

Wrestling legend Jordan Burroughs finally has an opponent for his RAF debut, and it's someone MMA fans know well.

On Friday, Real American Freestyle announced that Burroughs, who signed with the promotion last month, will face UFC welterweight Sean Brady in the main event of RAF 12 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Aug. 22.

Widely considered one of the greatest American wrestlers of all time, Burroughs was a two-time national champion in college for Nebraska before transitioning to the senior circuit, where he dominated the 74-kg weight class, winning the World Championships in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017. The highlight of Burroughs' wrestling career is his gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games. After setbacks in 2016 and 2020, Burroughs moved up to 79 kgs, where he won the World Championship in 2021 and 2022.

Burroughs, 37, last competed at the 2024 World Championships, losing to multiple-time world medalist Mohammad Nokhodi.

Brady is one of the top welterweights competing in MMA right now. Though he doesn't hail from a traditional wrestling background, Brady has proven himself to be a strong wrestler in his MMA and grappling career. Most recently, he defeated Joaquin Buckley at UFC 328 in May. This is his RAF debut.

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