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Robertson Excited For Home Crowd Treatment

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“Every other pro fight I’m pretty sure has been in my opponent’s hometown. It will be nice to have the home crowd behind me for the first time.”

She giggles as she says this, shrugging off the fact that although she arrived here safely for fight week, her luggage was not so lucky. It’s the kind of detail that could spoil a trip for even the most patient among us, never mind a mixed martial artist preparing for a high-profile contest on the world stage. Still, Robertson laughs it off with an ease that puzzlingly belies her nickname, “Savage.”

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In fact, if you’ve only ever seen Robertson fight or seen her promotional materials, you’d be forgiven for thinking of her as a steely-eyed assassin. But spend a few minutes talking to the lighthearted 24-year-old Canadian and a paradox begins to form.

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“I’ve never been in a street fight. I’m probably the least aggressive person I know,” she explains. “It’s just a sport to me. It’s like playing soccer or playing football; that’s how I look at it. I’m more in love with the mental side of jiu-jitsu than anything else. It’s not like I want to hurt people.”

Her opponents might beg to differ, particularly when they find themselves on the wrong end of her rear naked choke, a move that has become her calling card.

“When I was growing up, I was like 115 pounds, wrestling guys that were like 200 pounds…me manhandling them, and I’m like ‘This is awesome that I can do this!’ It’s all just the mechanics of your body. It’s amazing and I love it.”

Her love for jiu-jitsu aside, she firmly believes the sport of MMA affords her even more opportunity to deploy her signature move; almost as if her opponents leave her no choice.

“People always try to stand up, so it’s like they’re giving up their neck. They forget about it for that one second when they try to get to their feet and they give up their throat.”

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It’s a move she’s honed to near-perfection at American Top Team as she emerges as yet another of the gym’s deftly-crafted fighters. In fact, she won’t excuse her lone UFC loss to Mayra Bueno Silva in September 2018 to the short notice nature of the fight, but rather a lack of time with coach Din Thomas.

“Din was gone with Tyron Woodley up in Milwaukee for that whole camp. So I really just worked with him one day,” she explains. “I really like to get time with him in my camps and I didn’t get that at all. I feel like that really impacted me that I didn’t get that one-on-one drilling, fight-prep kind of training. The flight after that, I only had four weeks’ notice, I flew up to Milwaukee so I could be with Din, and made sure we put in the work.”

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The work paid off with a second-round submission of Veronica Macedo on last February’s UFC Prague card. And, just like that, Robertson finds herself on the precipice of getting traction in the women’s flyweight division if she comes out on the right side of Saturday’s contest with highly-touted Brazilian prospect Sarah Frota.

“I had a little more notice for this camp, about 10 weeks. Almost too much,” she laughs. But whether it’s four weeks or ten matters little to Robertson.

“My game plan is always the same,” she says with a sly confidence. “I’m trying to take it to the ground. I’m trying to get to the throat. I have a million ways to get there, and I’m going to find it.”

Whittaker vs Adesanya Set For UFC 243 In Melbourne

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Tickets for UFC 243, which airs live on pay-per-view, go on sale on August 16. More information: UFC.com/Melbourne

Australia’s Whittaker has been sidelined since the second of two epic battles with Yoel Romero, but this fall he gets his chance to cement his place as the best middleweight in the world when he takes on New Zealand’s Adesanya, who is coming off wins over Anderson Silva and Kelvin Gastelum.

Also made official for the card are the following bouts:

Tai Tuivasa vs Serghei Spivak
Nadia Kassem vs Ji Yeon Kim
Justin Tafa vs Yorgan DeCastro

DWCS: SEASON 3, WEEK 5 RESULTS

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Ramazan Kuramagomedov def. Jordan Williams (27-30, 29-28, 29-28)

This one is the clubhouse leader as the best fight of the season thus far.
 
Over the opening five minutes, the middleweight hopefuls went shot-for-shot, opting to engage in a straight kickboxing match where each man was tagged with a couple quality punches and neither was able to really build or sustain any momentum. Each time one would get the better of things for a piece, the other would hustle back, drawing level while showing toughness and tenacity.
 
Early in the second, it looked like Kuramagomedov was poised to seize control, knocking Williams off balance with a heavy low kick and following it up with a jumping knee that appeared to land flush. To his credit, Williams took it without issue, quickly working back to his feet after getting taken down and once again offering his own offense to keep things close heading into the third round.
 
It was more of the same in the third, as Kuramagomedov attacked with cleaner technique and more fluid striking, only to be countered by the power and resiliency of Williams, who ate several clean shots while refusing to wilt. Down the stretch, they continued to bang it out, both men showing the impact of their 15-minute battle and throwing to the horn.
 
When the contest ended, Dana White rose to his feet and applauded, giving these two the ovation their efforts deserved. After the nines and tens were tallied, it was Kuramagomedov who came away with the split decision victory, while Williams’ stock certainly rose despite the setback.

Aubin-Mercier Shares Bond With GSP

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In the presence of a bona fide global superstar and one of the athletes who inspired his mixed martial arts fandom and eventual transition into the sport, the naturally awkward judo player fumbled his way through the exchange. While the actual details of how the handshake went awry usually gets lost in the laughter whenever Aubin-Mercier is forced to retell the story, the core piece to take away from the encounter is that it was really awkward and really embarrassing for the former TUF Nations competitor.

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These days, however, Aubin-Mercier and St-Pierre have their handshake game on point, as exhibited by their recreation of the iconic scene from Predator when ‘80s action luminaries Arnold Schwarzenegger and Carl Weathers share a powerful clasping of hands that has evolved into one of the more popular memes of the moment earlier this summer.

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“It’s an evolution,” the sarcastic Aubin-Mercier said. “I’ve always got to train to get better at what I do and it’s getting dangerous now.”

But cutting fun videos for social media is far from the only thing the French-Canadian competitors have been working on since the last time Aubin-Mercier stepped into the Octagon.

Over the last several months, the duo has spent a tremendous amount of time working together at Montreal’s Tristar Gym. What started as one or two sessions a week morphed into three or four days of working together and eventually reached the point where the only thing St-Pierre wasn’t doing was stepping into the cage to spar with the 30-year-old lightweight.

“I was training with him in the beginning twice a week and at the end, it was three or four times a week,” said Aubin-Mercier, who returns to action looking to snap a two-fight skid this weekend in Edmonton against Arman Tsarukyan. “He was coming out to every sparring session I was doing; he was there a lot for this training camp.

“We kind of have the same tactics when we fight, so it was natural that he showed me some techniques and I had some time to work them out and it has been working really well.”

Getting advice and insights from one of the most accomplished fighters in UFC history — and a technical master at that — is certainly a major plus for anyone, but perhaps the biggest impact St-Pierre has had on Aubin-Mercier is on the mental side of things.

Throughout his career, the former welterweight and middleweight champion stood in stark contrast to the MMA fighter archetype.

He was polished, professional and wore suits to all his public appearances. When his contemporaries were puffing out their chests and declaring they feared no man and were willing to face anyone, anywhere, anytime, St-Pierre was strategic and calculating about the fights he took and open about the emotions he wrestled with in advance of every fight.

As much as the technical insights were beneficial to Aubin-Mercier, building a deeper connection with a championship-level fighter who experienced the same feelings he does prior to each fight was the biggest take away from his extensive work with St-Pierre ahead of Saturday night’s event in Edmonton.

“He’s a candid guy and I think in the MMA world, it’s mostly the opposite,” he said of St-Pierre. “We try to put a shell around us and not show our weaknesses, but Georges was really transparent that he was scared when he was going to fight and that it was normal, so it was good to not be alone.

“I knew it was normal, I know that everybody was full of s***, but it’s always nice to be able to talk to somebody about it anyway,” added Aubin-Mercier, who carries an 12-4 record into his main card showdown with Tsarukyan at UFC 240. “Every time (I spoke before fights), I was really candid too — really open about being scared when I fight — and talking about it, people were (always dissuading me from talking about it).

“Everybody has these feelings and they try to run away from it, but me, I take another approach; I try to embrace it and control it.”

And it seems to be working.

Fight Week is normally a stressful time for Aubin-Mercier, who admitted he can get in his own head and used to reach a point where he questioned his motivations for stepping into the cage. This week, however, the “Canadian Gangster” is loose and looking forward to making the walk on Saturday.

“I’m really excited,” he said with a surprised laugh. “Normally, I’m really stressed out before a fight and I’m asking myself why I’m doing this and this is probably the first time where I know why I’m doing this.

“I think you can win without knowing it,” he said when asked about the importance of being dialed in and understanding why he’s competing, “but when you know it, you have a goal and that’s something great — coming into the fight with a goal.”

Though he laughed while saying it, the last piece of that comment is the perfect summation of where Aubin-Mercier is at in his progression as a fighter.

Because he’s been in the UFC for five years and was pushed heavily right out of the chute, it’s easy to forget that Aubin-Mercier made his promotional debut with a 4-0 record and less than six minutes of combined cage time to his name.

He ran through inexperienced regional competition and played to his strengths while advancing to the welterweight finals on TUF Nations, where he faced off with fellow Canadian and future teammate Chad Laprise, dropping a split decision to “The Disciple” in Quebec City.

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Although he won seven of his next eight appearances, including an impressive four-fight run that culminated with a first-round technical knockout of Evan Dunham at UFC 223, many people failed to recognize that Aubin-Mercier was still very much a work in progress and trying to figure out how to best deploy the obvious skills and talents he carries with him into the cage.

And that showed in his last two outings, decision losses to Alexander Hernandez and Gilbert Burns where he was largely controlled throughout.

“I have to use my strengths,” he said plainly, reflecting on the two-fight slide that carries him into his 2019 debut this weekend. “I think I wasn’t fighting my fight during those fights — I was fighting their fights and that was the biggest mistake. I wasn’t myself.

“I think I’m the best version of myself right now,” he added. “I’m better mentally than I was six months ago. I’m better physically than I was six months ago. I’m better technically than I was six months ago and I’m pretty sure if I played ping pong with myself from six months ago, I would win too.”

As he readies to cross the threshold into the Octagon for the 12th time in his career, Aubin-Mercier finally seems ready to put all the pieces together and take the next step forward in his career.

“At some point, I have to decide if I’m an athlete or a showman,” said the fun-loving French-Canadian. “I know I’m both before the fight, but when I get into the cage, I won’t be — I’m going to be an athlete.

“On Saturday night, I’m going to fight my fight and that’s going to be it,” he added.
 “I have to be ready because Arman came for one thing and that’s to win and I have to be the same. If I think about anything else, it’s not good.”

And for the first time, there is nothing else on his mind other than entering the Octagon, playing to his strengths, and doing whatever it takes to secure the victory.

UFC 240: Fight by Fight

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MAX HOLLOWAY VS. FRANKIE EDGAR

Holloway and Edgar have been booked to fight for the featherweight title twice before, first at UFC 218 and then again at UFC 222. The first time around, it was Edgar who suffered an injury, leading to Holloway’s rematch with Jose Aldo, and the second time, it was “Blessed” who was sidelined, resulting in Edgar squaring off with Brian Ortega.

Now they’re finally going to share the Octagon together in the main event of this weekend’s return to Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

The champion enters off his first loss in more than five years, having landed on the wrong side of the cards in his bid to claim the interim lightweight title in an entertaining rematch with Dustin Poirier at UFC 236. But when fighting at featherweight, Holloway has been unmatched, rattling off 13 consecutive victories, including twin stoppages of Aldo and a masterful performance against Ortega to close out 2018.

A fixture in the title picture across two divisions for nearly a decade, Edgar rebounded from his loss to Ortega with a polished, professional effort against Cub Swanson last April in Atlantic City. The 37-year-old former lightweight titleholder has gone 8-2 over his last 10 fights dating back to his featherweight debut and looks to become just the seventh fighter in UFC history to hold championship gold in two divisions.

Viviane Araujo Seized Her Opportunity

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“Actually, we are not thinking about a title fight right now,” she said. “My plans are to consolidate myself in the organization and fight great fights, one step at a time.”

It’s a smart move, even if the impatient among us want to see how “Vivi” matches up with some of the flyweight division’s best. And considering that she won’t have to go through the cut to 115 pounds or be at a size disadvantage at 135, she may be even better in her new weight class.

“My physical structure is perfect for the flyweight category,” Araujo said. “In order for me to stay on bantamweight, I would need to increase my weight a lot so it would be difficult to maintain one of my best features, which is my speed. So our plan is to stay in the flyweight division now. It’s a weight division in which I feel very good and strong. I don’t suffer from a drastic weight cut and this is a plus for an athlete’s best performance during the fight. My plans are to stay healthy and fight as often as possible during the year.”

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That attitude, coupled with her performance against Bernardo, made her an instant favorite among fight fans, and she is happy to keep those action-packed performances coming.

“I have a great respect and affection for the fans,” she said. “UFC is a big event, and being part of this show has always been my big dream. Now it’s time to seize the opportunity and bring joy to the fans.”

Yeah, it’s impossible not to like Viviane Araujo, who epitomizes the old adage that who dares wins. Araujo dared to take a fight on less than a week’s notice and she won more than a fight earlier this year by taking that shot. So what does this all say about her?

“That we must persist and always be prepared for any challenge,” she said.

On the Rise: UFC 240 Edition

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All Araujo did in her promotional debut was show up at UFC 237 on a couple days’ notice, fighting up two divisions, and delivering a blistering striking performance that culminated with her clocking Talita Bernardo and collecting a third-round stoppage win. This weekend, the Cerrado MMA representative returns to action and 125 pounds in a flyweight showdown with Davis.

Araujo looked outstanding in her debut ¬— her fluid striking, quick movements and vast speed advantage were on display from the outset as she bounced around the cage putting together combinations and taking the fight to Bernardo. That effort set the bar pretty high for the promising 32-year-old, who pushed her winning streak to four with the victory, but now she gets the opportunity to move to the 125-pound weight class after putting in a full camp and make an immediate impression there if she can hand the Canadian a third straight loss.

Born and raised in the Niagara Region, Davis has been a fixture in the UFC since the bantamweight ranks were added to the fold and remains a tough out in the middle of the flyweight division. Though she’s dropped her last two outings by decision, she also kicked off her run at 125 pounds with a close win over Liz Carmouche, who is set to challenge for the title later this summer.

Needless to say, if Araujo can go into the cage and replicate her debut performance against a durable, battle-tested veteran like Davis who has gone the distance with a trio of Top 15 fighters since the division’s inception, it will vault the Brazilian into the thick of the title chase and position her for an even bigger assignment next time out.

UFC San Antonio: The Scorecard

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When it comes to the standup game in MMA, I always refer back to something Gokhan Saki told me about his striking. “The difference (between him and other MMA strikers) is that they try to strike, and me, I am a striker. Whatever I touch, it falls like leaves on a tree in autumn.” Walt Harris is one of those striker guys. Remember, this is someone who has been called to spar with heavyweight boxing stars Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury. So if he gets to throw his hands with four-ounce gloves on, odds are that it’s going to be a rough night for any opponent. Aleksei Oleinik found that out Saturday, even though he didn’t even get a chance to decide on a strategy before the fight ended. After some bumps in the road, “The Big Ticket” is here and fans can’t wait to see where he goes next.

UFC San Antonio: Bonus Coverage

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These two bantamweights absolutely brought it. Both Mario Bautista and Jinsoo Son showcased their diverse arsenal of attacks and their iron chins in a Fight of the Night worthy performance. It was a fast-paced affair that would result in a unanimous decision victory for Bautista.

Bautista’s volume of strikes, angles and ability to handle the forward pressure from Son was impressive. He found consistent success with his straight punches, piecing up Son every time he tried to close the distance.

But Son was more than happy to absorb a punch or two or to get his licks in. In his last two fights, Son has proved to be an absolute gamer and is seriously fun to watch. His approach is simple: let’s throw down. It may not have won him this fight, due to Bautista’s effectiveness and ability to handle Son’s attacks, but it will win him fights in the UFC.

Dana White’s Contender Series: Week 5 Preview

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TERRANCE MCKINNEY VS. SEAN WOODSON

A member of the Sikjitsu fight team that has produced UFC contenders Michael Chiesa and Julianna Pena, amongst others, McKinney arrives in Las Vegas on a three-fight winning streak, looking to become the latest member of the Spokane, Washington squad to ink a UFC deal.

The 24-year-old featherweight scored a sub-one-minute win over Strikeforce veteran Charon Spain back in May, and half of his professional bouts have come against two opponents, including his lone career loss, which came when McKinney suffered a leg injury, so it’s difficult to get an accurate read on his talents. That said, Sikjitsu head coach Rick Little isn’t one to send his charges into battle unprepared, and given the collection of quick stoppage victories that line his record, it’s safe to say that McKinney will be looking to end this one early.

Woodson jumped at the opportunity to replace the injured Adli Edwards here and makes his first appearance since last November with the chance to potentially graduate to the UFC hanging in the balance. The 27-year-old from Missouri came out of the gates quickly, winning four fights in his first year as a pro, but has been limited to just a single appearance since then, as fight cancellations have kept him out of action.

Woodson has shown an ability to go the distance against solid regional competition in the past, so it will be interesting to see if the short notice nature of this matchup impacts that at all. It’s a stark contrast to McKinney’s quick-finishing style, so this one could come down to which man is able to best control the tempo on Tuesday night in Las Vegas.

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