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UFC 277 went down on Saturday night in Dallas, Texas, and the card opened the door to a host of exciting matchup options in some of the promotion's most...

UFC's Dana White Thinks Jake Paul Cancelled Hasim Rahman Jr. Fight over Ticket Sales

Jul 31, 2022
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 12: Jake Paul answers questions from the media during a press conference at Madison Square Garden on July 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 12: Jake Paul answers questions from the media during a press conference at Madison Square Garden on July 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

The official reason given for Jake Paul canceling his pay-per-view bout against Hasim Rahman Jr. was a disagreement over the bout's weight limit.

Dana White isn't buying it.

The UFC president said he believes poor ticket sales is the real reason behind the cancellation.

“I think they sold under $1 million in tickets and it costs $500,000 to turn the f--king lights on at MSG,” White told reporters. “That’s what I think. Not to mention hotel rooms in New York and transportation is very expensive.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tlivx44-lk

Paul announced the fight's cancellation Saturday, saying Rahman had not made any progress in getting his weight down to the contracted 200 pounds. The New York State Athletic Commission bumped up the weight limit to 205 pounds in response to Rahman's inability to reach the original contracted weight.

However, according to the statement released by Paul's promotional team, Rahman revealed he was planning to come into the weigh-in at 215 pounds and would not agree to the fight unless the YouTuber-turned-boxer agreed to that limit.

Paul burst onto the boxing scene with celebrity-fueled matchups against former NBA guard Nate Robinson and MMA stars Ben Askren and Tyron Woodley. The spectacle surrounding Paul fights—most often brought on by the hype of fans wanting to see the natural heel lose—led to significant pay-per-view buys and him becoming one of the biggest faces in boxing.

However, it appears much of the novelty has worn off. Paul's last fight, a rematch against Woodley, drew less than 65,000 pay-per-view buys, per DAZN's Steven Muehlhausen. Paul has disputed those numbers, calling them "bulls--t."

The bout against Rahman, who was a last-minute replacement for Tommy Fury, seemed to have even less hype than the Woodley rematch.

Rahman is not a nationally known name, and Paul's promotions team seemed to be banking on the social media star's name alone selling the fight. That was always unlikely to happen—especially given Paul's move to Showtime has taken away much of the spectacle that used to surround the bouts when they were broadcast on Triller.

It's likely the truth lies somewhere in the middle, with Rahman's weight issues giving Paul and Co. a good excuse to cancel a fight that was likely to do disappointing numbers.

UFC 277: Julianna Pena is Tough, But Not as Tough as The GOAT, Amanda Nunes

Jul 31, 2022
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: (L-R) Amanda Nunes of Brazil faces Julianna Pena in their UFC bantamweight championship fight during the UFC 277 event at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: (L-R) Amanda Nunes of Brazil faces Julianna Pena in their UFC bantamweight championship fight during the UFC 277 event at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

By the end of the night, it almost looked like a real lion might have been involved.

Following the main event at Saturday’s UFC 277, the Octagon at American Airlines Center in Dallas Texas, it was evident from the canvas that someone had taken a serious cut. The unlucky soul was Julianna Pena, the bravest challenger yet to step into the Lioness’ den. But unlike their first encounter back in December, Pena wasn’t primed to pull out the shocker this time.

That’s right. “The Lioness” Amanda Nunes has attained her revenge, and she is UFC women’s bantamweight champion once again. Over 25 grueling minutes, Nunes sought out, isolated and thoroughly destroyed every weak spot Pena exposed—or thought she exposed—the first time around, leaving the cage looking like a crime scene in the process.

“If the Lioness doesn’t get her prey the first time, I set the trap better, and I know I’ll get it the second time,” Nunes told broadcaster and podcaster Joe Rogan in the cage after the fight. “Now we are here to make history again.”

Nunes took the unanimous decision, with the three ringside judges scoring it 50-45, 50-44, 50-43. That means: one, no judge saw Pena winning a round, two, one judge gave Nunes a 10-8 round in a nod to her dominance, and three, another judge gave her two such 10-8 rounds.

The only thing that made this respectable was the outlandish toughness displayed by Pena. And we’ll get to that.

The bout started slowly. Pena looked to push the issue with volume but didn’t land anything to write home about. Nunes, who started southpaw before switching to orthodox, used a counter-right hook to rock Pena with about 1:30 left. Pena sent a right of her own down the pipe in the round’s final seconds and narrowly won the volume battle 51-47 per UFC stats, but Nunes still managed to find more damage and took the round on that basis.

With about 40 seconds gone in the second, Nunes scored another knockdown on a short counter shot. I think it was fair to say the Brazilian had Pena’s range and timing down, even as she herself switched stances throughout to keep Pena guessing.


Nunes scored another knockdown about 40 seconds later, but there was nothing short about this one, a sweeping bolt of energy that seemed to knock the champ into the air. Somehow, as her back hit the floor, Pena kept her wits about her enough to flash her guard and keep the Lioness from pouncing.

DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Julianna Pena reacts as she grapples with Amanda Nunes of Brazil in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Julianna Pena reacts as she grapples with Amanda Nunes of Brazil in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

In the third, Pena tried to take things to the clinch, but Nunes wrenched free easily. Nunes looked to be in far better shape than for their first bout—which she has famously said she was underprepared for because of a bout with COVID, a knee injury, complacence, and the distractions of fame including building a new gym.

But here there was no lingering of the stamina issue that spelled her undoing in their original bout. She hit a trip takedown at the three-minute mark of the third, followed by an extended ground sequence that saw Pena go fishing for a triangle choke and an armbar to no avail. Nunes didn’t do much from inside Pena’s guard—that is, until about the 1:10 mark, when an elbow sliced open Pena along the hairline. And that’s when things started to get messy.

Pat yourself on the back if your bingo card had Nunes, and not Pena, forcing the action to the ground. In the opening seconds of the championship rounds, Nunes landed a double-leg takedown and kept the action on the mat for another extended stretch. It wasn’t like we didn’t know Nunes could do this—she did it in 2019 to avoid trading with world-class kickboxer Germaine de Randamie—but it was the rare pundit who saw it coming Saturday.

If you’re familiar with Pena’s public persona, it’s one that stands out for its competitiveness. And that’s saying something in the UFC. It’s like pointing out a shark for being toothy. There were UFC Embedded episodes this week where a slew of coaches told tales of her work ethic, like her insistence on running a few seconds past the end of every drill whistle.

So it wasn’t a surprise to see her continue to fight through what was an absolutely grueling fourth round. An armbar came close, but Nunes gutted her way out of it. Once they found their way back to their feet, Pena’s face was a bloody mess. But she stayed game.

The fifth was noticeably and understandably slower, with both fighters near exhaustion. And yet, here was the Lioness, grinning manically and still shooting for takedowns. At one point, the pressure from a semi-serious anaconda choke attempt from Nunes seemed to wring blood from Pena’s cut like a wet sponge. Perhaps the big signature of the final seconds was Pena gutting her way out of a gnarly, injury-to-insult Nunes neck crank.

Make no mistake: This was a dominant victory by Nunes. Pena won the first two rounds on volume, but Nunes won all five in pure damage. She also hit on 6-of-8 takedowns to Pena’s 0-of-0, racking up a combined 11:49 of control time. That is not a misprint. Pena had not one second of control time, not even in the clinch.

The damage to Pena’s noggin was serious enough that it required not only a trip to the hospital but an emergency consultation with a plastic surgeon, according to UFC President Dana White (h/t Marc Raimondi of ESPN).

DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Amanda Nunes (L) of Brazil kicks Julianna Pena in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Amanda Nunes (L) of Brazil kicks Julianna Pena in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

So, yes, while Pena is clearly Nunes’ most effective opponent to date, there’s still only one GOAT here. GSP-Matt Serra didn’t need a rubber match. Am I saying Pena-Nunes 3 should never happen? Of course not. But perhaps Pena could beat someone else before jumping back in. This is a particularly enticing proposition when recalling that one Valentina Shevchenko may be waiting in the wings.

As for Nunes, she’s taking her time.

“Let me sit down, let me go back to Brazil,” she told Rogan. “I haven’t seen my family there for three years. Because of the epidemic. So I stayed here, I focused on getting the belt back. Now I have a chance to go back and see my family. Let the Lioness rest a little bit, and I’ll come back as soon as possible.”

With her loss avenged and the main jewel of her crown restored, the Lioness can just enjoying being a GOAT for a while again.

Amanda Nunes Beats Julianna Pena via Decision to Retain Title in Rematch at UFC 277

Jul 31, 2022
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Amanda Nunes (top) of Brazil grapples with Julianna Pena in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Amanda Nunes (top) of Brazil grapples with Julianna Pena in their bantamweight title bout during UFC 277 at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Amanda Nunes reclaimed her bantamweight throne with a unanimous decision win over Julianna Peña in their main event rematch at UFC 277 in Dallas, Texas, on Saturday.

From the jump it was clear that Pena was seeing a different Nunes than the one she beat at UFC 269.

The Brazilian surprised her opponent by coming out in a southpaw stance which set her up to easily counter the jab that gave her so much trouble in the first fight.

Things really started to turn for Nunes in the second round where she was able to knock down Pena three times, primarily with her lead right hook out of the left-handed stance.

The latter rounds featured a bit more grappling. It also offered the only glimmer of hope for Pena. She nearly locked in an armbar that would have stunned the crowd again.

However, it wasn't in the cards as Nunes clearly earned the right to be the champion of the 135-pound division again.

The win is another bullet point on one of the best resumes in the history of the sport. The Lioness has defeated some of the best women of her generation, but lost her belt after more than five years in an upset loss to Pena at UFC 269.

The Lioness didn't look great on that night, and she has since opened up on a difficult training camp preceding the loss.

"I had a bad knee injury leading up to that fight," Nunes said, per E. Spencer Kyte of UFC.com. "I tried to push, push, push, and I was trying to do it. In my head, I thought I was going to be able to beat Julianna with how my training was going, and obviously, I should have prepared better."

Lesson learned.

Nunes looked much more focused this time around. The end result was something similar to what we've seen when she faces the titans of her weight class.

Her resume includes wins over Valentina Shevchenko (twice), Cris Cyborg, Holly Holm, Ronda Rousey and several other top names.

With one of her few career losses avenged, the division is once again ruled by Nunes. As long as she maintains her focus, she's going to be tough to dethrone.

Brandon Moreno Beats Kai Kara-France via 3rd-Round TKO in UFC 277 Co-Main Event

Jul 31, 2022
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Brandon Moreno of Mexico enters the Octagon prior to facing Kai Kara-France of New Zealand in their interim UFC flyweight championship fight during the UFC 277 event at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC)
DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 30: Brandon Moreno of Mexico enters the Octagon prior to facing Kai Kara-France of New Zealand in their interim UFC flyweight championship fight during the UFC 277 event at American Airlines Center on July 30, 2022 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC)

Brandon Moreno added an interim flyweight championship belt to his resume with a third-round TKO win over Kai Kara-France in the co-main event of UFC 277.

The fight got off to a slow start as both fighters took nearly the whole first round to get a read on one another. However, business started to pick up in Round 2 as Moreno's boxing allowed him to score with a few hooks.

Kara-France answered with some leg kicks which parlayed nicely into him opening things up in the third round.

The New Zealanders started to score more regularly with boxing of his own but his willingness to stand and exchange cost him in the long run. Moreno landed a nasty body kick that sent Kara-France to the floor and ended the fight.

The win over Kara-France is the second time he has beaten the New Zealander. The two met at UFC 245 on the Fight Pass Prelims, where Moreno took a unanimous decision before working his way up to UFC champion.

The 28-year-old effectively proved that he's still among the top flyweights in the world. It's a point that could have been lost in the fact that he fought current champion Deiveson Figueiredo three times in a row.

With their series tied at one apiece with one draw, it would appear a fourth fight is what's coming down the pike for the division.

This bout was created as an interim championship while Figueiredo recovers from injuries. Now he has a timetable for his return.

"I couldn't accept this fight right now. I understand they were going to fight for this anyway, and it's important for them to fight. The belt is mine," the champion told Mike Bohn of MMA Junkie. "They're going to come for my belt. Surely by the end of the year, the start of next year, I will be ready to go and ready to face whoever wins this."

Now that we have a winner, Figueiredo knows he will see a familiar face.

It isn't often that a fourth fight is necessary between two competitors, but this is the exception. With the series all tied up and the two proven to put on a great fight, the fourth fight should provide a fitting conclusion to their rivalry.

B/R Exclusive: Amanda Nunes on Admitting Mistakes and Gaining Revenge at UFC 277

Jul 29, 2022
LAS VEGAS, NV - DECEMBER 11: Amanda Nunes prepares to fight Julianna Peña in their womans bantamweight title fight during the UFC 269 on December 11, 2021, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, NV. (Photo by Louis Grasse/PxImages/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
LAS VEGAS, NV - DECEMBER 11: Amanda Nunes prepares to fight Julianna Peña in their womans bantamweight title fight during the UFC 269 on December 11, 2021, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, NV. (Photo by Louis Grasse/PxImages/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

In contrast to her ferocity in the cage, Amanda Nunes is about as nice and gregarious a person as the current UFC roster has to offer.

That's all well and good for interviewers like me, but this Saturday at UFC 277, Nunes will have to make sure she recaptures her edge. The women's MMA GOAT will need nothing less if she is to gain her revenge against Julianna Pena, who now holds the UFC women's bantamweight strap that belonged to Nunes for five years.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - DECEMBER 11: (R-L) Julianna Pena punches Amanda Nunes of Brazil in their women's bantamweight championship bout during UFC 269 at T-Mobile Arena on December 11, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - DECEMBER 11: (R-L) Julianna Pena punches Amanda Nunes of Brazil in their women's bantamweight championship bout during UFC 269 at T-Mobile Arena on December 11, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Nunes, who is still the UFC women's featherweight champ, admitted after the shocking loss to Pena back in December that she was distracted and indulging in the spoils of success. Honestly, who can blame her? As one of only four fighters to simultaneously hold two UFC belts, she's earned it.

Still, onlookers noted her lack of stamina in the fight, which saw Pena overcome an early battering to outbox and eventually choke out the Brazilian in the second round. Nunes would later attribute it to an incomplete camp and struggles brought on by a bout with COVID-19 and a knee injury. However, a simple lack of commitment in the gym before the camp remained a part of the narrative in the run-up to the rematch. The rivalry with Pena was further enhanced by the two coaching opposite each other on the 30th season of The Ultimate Fighter.

In advance of Saturday's main event at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, Bleacher Report spoke to Nunes about her preparation for the rematch with Pena—and what she's doing to correct past mistakes.

Had you done any coaching before The Ultimate Fighter?

Nunes: Back in the day, I used to coach little kids in judo and jiu-jitsu, but nothing at the professional level. It was mainly just to help out, help my partners. But I enjoyed it a lot, doing that.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 10:  (L-R) Julianna Pena and Amanda Nunes face off during the filming of The Ultimate Fighter at UFC APEX on March 10, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 10: (L-R) Julianna Pena and Amanda Nunes face off during the filming of The Ultimate Fighter at UFC APEX on March 10, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Did you enjoy coaching on the show?

Nunes: It was a very good experience for me. At first I was a little bit nervous to coach them, I'm not gonna lie to you. I wanted to be sure I was able to help. I was especially nervous to coach the guys. They were heavyweight guys. (laughs) I didn't have much experience; [partner] Nina [Ansaroff] had more experience with coaching than me. She has been in a lot of corners before. She was there to help me on the show. But once we started, I started to make friendship with all of them and talk to them. The heavyweight guys had such open minds. The girls, too. Maybe coaching is something I could do in the future. I don't know.

What did you learn about Julianna Pena during TUF?

Nunes: (pauses) I just think that Julianna Pena is a very weird person.

How so?

Nunes: I don't know. She's just weird for me. She always has these different vibes. Nothing against her. Nothing personal. She's just weird.

Let's talk about your camp for the rematch. For the first bout, you had COVID-19 and a knee injury. Have you had better luck the second time around?

Nunes: Yes, definitely. I had a full camp this time. The first camp was hard. Because of COVID, I was struggling a little bit with my lungs. But the big thing was my knees. I wasn't able to move how I like to move in training because everything was hurting. So I was training one day, then taking two days off. It wasn't how I wanted to do things. But that's how it is.

Your original camp didn't seem to go so well for several reasons.

Nunes: Yes, we all make mistakes. Sometimes I have a hard head; I don't want to listen. And [the Pena loss] was what I got for it. But we all have to move forward. I'm not going to stop doing what I love to do. So I had to learn. I feel like now I know how to lose. You lose, but you move forward. I know what I have to do to come back to the top again.

You and others had suggested that coming into the fight you were a little too comfortable with success, that maybe you weren't as motivated as you had been in the past.

Nunes: That is true, too! Man, I did this for seven years. You don't think I can enjoy a little bit? I always say that the UFC changed my life. They really believe in me. Everything I've ever asked of them, they've done for me.

But I still have a long way to go. I want to fight until I'm 40. But I wanted to enjoy for a while. I didn't lose the belt just because of that. I still want to win. I still trained. I did everything that I could in that camp, you know what I mean? Being in pain, and with my lungs being bad, I still stepped in the cage.

But yes. I do want to enjoy my life. A lot of people want to be in my position. A lot of fighters want to be able to enjoy life, and I'm happy to be able to.