Fight Night Fairfax: Return of the Ultimate Fighter – Julianna Pena


After a long and difficult road back to the Octagon, rehabbing from a torn ACL, MCL, LCL, and meniscus, Julianna Pena has made a full recovery and is back.

She is set to face Milana Dudieva on the main card of Fight Night 63 Fairfax.in Virginia on Saturday April 4th.

Fight Night Fairfax: Why I Fight – Chad Mendes


UFC featherweight contender Chad “Money” Mendes explains why he became a fighter after college, how he has gained another family, and what knowledge he hopes to pass on to younger athletes at Team Alpha Male.

Fight Night Fairfax: Heavy Hitters – Ricardo Lamas


How would Ricardo Lamas describe his striking style? Well, you’ll have to watch and find out as the No. 4-ranked featherweight talks about his punching and kicking game in this edition of “Heavy Hitters.”

Fight Night Fairfax: Gym Escape – Chad Mendes


When not in the gym training, Chad “Money” Mendes enjoys relaxing in the outdoors and going fishing or deer hunting.

Watch Mendes battle Ricardo Lamas in the main event at UFC Fight Night in Fairfax, Virginia on Saturday April 4th,

Fight Night Fairfax: On The Brink – Chad Mendes


Follow along on Chad Mendes’ journey to his shot at the featherweight title against Jose Aldo at UFC 179 in Brazil.

Go behind the scenes during the lead up and during the fight to hear Mendes talk about the experience.

Fight Night Fairfax Free Fight: Ricardo Lamas vs. Dennis Bermudez


Mexican featherweight contender Ricardo “The Bully” Lamas battles Dennis Bermudez in his home country of Mexico.

Lamas looks to make his climb back into title contention as he takes on Chad “Money” Mendes in the main event at UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax, this Saturday April 4th.

UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax Weigh-In Results


UFC Fight Night 63, comes from Fairfax in Virginia. Headlined by featherweights Chad Mendes and Ricardo Lamas, with up-and-coming lightweight Al Iaquinta taking on Jorge Masvidal in the co-main event.

Chad Mendes vs. Ricardo Lamas UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Chad Mendes vs. Ricardo Lamas UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

As always before any of the fights can take place it is the all important weigh-ins.

Here are the weigh-in results:

Main Card 

Chad Mendes (145.5 lbs) vs. Ricardo Lamas (145.5 lbs)

Chad Mendes Weigh-In UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Chad Mendes Weigh-In UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Jorge Masvidal (156.5 lbs)* vs. Al Iaquinta (155.5 lbs)

Jorge Masvidal vs. Al laquinta UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Jorge Masvidal vs. Al laquinta UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Michael Chiesa (155.5 lbs) vs. Mitch Clarke (155 lbs)

Michael Chiesa vs. Mitch Clarke UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Michael Chiesa vs. Mitch Clarke UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Julianna Pena (136 lbs) vs. Milana Dudieva (135.5 lbs)

Juilanna Pena vs. Milana Dudieva  UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Juilanna Pena vs. Milana Dudieva UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Clay Guida (146 lbs) vs. Robbie Peralta (145 lbs)

Clay Guida Weigh-In UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Clay Guida Weigh-In UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Dustin Poirier (155.5 lbs) vs. Carlos Diego Ferreira (155.5 lbs)

Dustin Poirier vs. Carl Diego Ferreira UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Dustin Poirier vs. Carlos Diego Ferreira UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Preliminary Card 

Liz Carmouche (134.5 lbs) vs. Lauren Murphy (135 lbs)

Liz Carmouche vs Lauren Murphy UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax
Liz Carmouche vs Lauren Murphy UFC Fight Night 63 Fairfax

Gray Maynard(155 lbs) vs. Alexander Yakovlev (155.75 lbs)

Shamil Abdurahimov (255 lbs) vs. Timothy Johnson (263.5 lbs)

Ronald Stallings (185 lbs) vs. Justin Jones (185.5 lbs)

* Has 2 hours to make-weight

‘I know I will never have an opponent as tough as my teammates’ Lauren Murphy


Lauren Murphy [8-1] will this weekend be facing Liz Carmouche [9-5] in her second outing for the UFC at Fight Night 63 in Fairfax, Virginia.

Not only is Lauren one tough athlete in the octagon, she also says exactly how she feels without holding back.

In this interview, I asked Lauren not only about her upcoming fight with Liz Carmouche, her thoughts on the Ronda Rousey and Bethe Correia fight but the current scoring system in place, amongst a few other gems and let’s just say Lauren has not minced her words. Have a read.

Lauren Murphy UFC
Lauren Murphy UFC

First of I’d like to take you back to your fight with Sara McMann and I’d like to ask, as Joe Rogan puts it “UFC jitters really exist”.  Did you feel this in your UFC debut fight, and did that did happen for you or as you stated in our last interview “It is just another cage. There maybe a few more cameras, a few more lights, a few more people in the audience, but there is only one opponent and she is human, just like me”.

I got a little jittery. I was under the bright lights, fighting a woman I’d only ever seen on TV in the world-famous Octagon. It was a little nerve-wracking. I got excited and didn’t think as well as I wanted to.

Talking of your debut fight against Sara McMann, having being scored in the way that it was and although you were the more active fighter, even from bottom position landing shots (and I’m not taking anything away from Sara McMann in that fight), do you feel the judging system as a whole needs to be looked at in the way judges are scoring these kind of fights?

I think the thing that we could really revise would be, I’d like to see judges explain why they think one fighter won a particular round. Just a quick sentence on the scorecard would be sufficient: “Maintained top position”, “was more active fighter”, “landed more effective punches/kicks”; something like that. Sometimes after fights we’re all left wondering what fight the judges were looking at, and I think if they had to provide an explanation we wouldn’t be so confused.

It was announced 10 weeks ago that you would be facing Liz Carmouche at UFC Fight Night 63 in Fairfax on April 4th for your second UFC outing. True Lauren Murphy fans will know that you never shy away from a tough fight, infact you welcome them. What was your initial reaction when Sean Shelby offered you this fight, as I know you had been vocal on social media about other possible match-ups? 

I said yes right away. My manager called me with the matchup and I knew it was perfect immediately. I’d still like to fight Bethe Correia.

Okay so I’m just going to throw this one in here! When I saw on your Twitter feed a fair few weeks back, that you were asking to fight Bethe Correia, my own eyes lit up.  Lauren Murphy fans that know you, know that you bring it in every fight that you have, so in saying that, you and Bethe in my own opinion would have made perfect sense in adding value and integrity, let alone a perfect match up stylistically, but it was not meant to be! How do you feel that the champion Ronda Rousey has a crack at putting Bethe Correia in her place, as Ronda Rousey has clearly stated it was her choice because of it being personal?

I think it’s ridiculous. Bethe is not a great fighter. She has zero punching power, is a mediocre grappler and can’t wrestle. She’s always talking about the “power of her hands” and “the weight of her fists”….no one believes that shit. She beat Jessamyn Duke in a decision and then beat Shayna Baszler. No one is impressed by that. They are the two worst fighters in any division in the UFC, who cares if she beat them. Her opponents have a combined record of 1-6 in the UFC, and the “1” is a win over Peggy Morgan who is no longer in the UFC after having one fight. I guess the UFC gave Bethe to Ronda to fight as a favor…that’s a pretty big favor. 

Lauren Murphy first official UFC weigh-In
Lauren Murphy first official UFC weigh-In

You’ve been at The MMA Lab for quite a while now. How do you find that you have settled in, and how are you finding that you have been evolving, whilst being under the tutelage of John Crouch and training with arguably some of the best athletes around at the moment such as Benson Henderson, Jocelyn Lybarger, Joe Riggs and Mitch Clarke? 

 I’ve been at The MMA Lab for a year! I love it there. The team is a family, everyone is very kind. When I got there I felt like the worst fighter in the room, and maybe I was, but because of that, I’ve come a loooong way. The training is difficult but the reason I love it so much is because I know I will never have an opponent as tough as my teammates, and no fight will be as hard as any fight camp I go through.

Once again according to MMA Odds for your upcoming fight against Liz Carmouche, it appears you are ‘The underdog’ – I know you have previously stated you ‘like being the underdog’ but just for once, wouldn’t it be nice to have the betting odds on your side? (although self belief beats betting odds any day in my opinion). 

 It doesn’t matter to me. The odds makers don’t know shit. They don’t know how hard I’ve worked, they don’t see the progress I’ve made. It doesn’t matter to me what they think. It’s just like the media controlled rankings. The rankings are a joke. The media decides who they like by who gives the best interviews, creates the most traffic for their site, and who they are buddies with, not by who fights the best. I decided a while ago that none of that matters.

Looking at Liz Carmouche’s record, she has 6 TKO wins, 2 Submission wins, 1 decision win and 5 losses, subsequently you also have 6 TKO wins, 2 decisions and the split decision loss to Sara McMann.  On paper this looks set to be pretty much a great striking battle with knockout potential, although, this is MMA we are talking about, therefore anything can happen.  Without giving your own game plan away, what do you hope Liz Carmouche brings to the cage On April 4th? 

I don’t know what Liz will do. Neither of us have ever been known as great strikers, all our TKO’s come on the ground from ground and pound. If it comes to a striking battle, it’ll be because we’re evenly matched as grapplers. It doesn’t matter, I’m ready for anything!

What challenges do you think Liz Carmouche may pose on the night and where do you feel that you will be stronger in this fight?

Liz is strong, and tough, and she works hard…But no one works harder than I do, no one is harder on themselves than I am, so no one makes the progress between fights that I make. I am not underestimating how physical she is, or how tough she is. Those are her biggest strengths. I’ve just been working on being a better MMA fighter. I think that’s where I’ll be strongest.

Liz Carmouche broke WMMA history in being one of the first women to compete in the new UFC bantamweight division, with obviously the title holder and current champion Ronda Rousey, for which she gladly asked for the fight. When news came through that the UFC were now having 1) a female bantamweight division, 2) Ronda Rousey was given the title, 3) Liz Carmouche offered to fight Ronda Rousey and in turn made WMMA history. Did this motivate you even harder in striving to becoming a better athlete yourself, for when you finally accepted the UFC’s offer this time around?

Yes.

In the eight months you have been ‘off’, as there have been no scheduled fights for you (not, that you have not been asking of course), have you been competing in any BJJ/Grappling competition’s at all just so you can sharpen up your arsenal of weapons in your ever-growing box of tools?  If so can you talk me through your achievements you have gained during this time competing.

I competed at no-gi worlds this year and won my division and placed in the open. That was pretty cool, but next year I’d like to do it again at a higher belt level. I also did a couple gi tournaments and stuff, just working on my grappling in general.

Lauren Murphy at the Atlanta Open
Lauren Murphy at the Atlanta Open

UFC Media Days! How do you think you managed your first one back in August 2014, for your debut fight against Sara McMann and how are you feeling about this one coming up for your fight against Liz Carmouche, is it a case of knowing what is to be expected from you now?

I haven’t been a part of any media days. I just give a couple of interviews to different outlets through the week, but it’s been like that for every fight for the last several years.

Let’s talk about ‘The Lauren Murphy Documentary’ – I heard it is now complete and you had your own private viewing so you could sit back and enjoy the moment. What was it like to finally see it on-screen completed and did it exceed your expectations?

A guy named Jay Clark edited the documentary and put all the footage together, and he did an amazing job. It was really well done. It just shows a small part of my story, who I am, what I’ve done. Maybe someone somewhere will be inspired by it.

I’m still not sure where it’s going to be released, probably at small theaters locally around Houston and Alaska, and then we’ll go from there. It might end up on YouTube.

Lastly are there any sponsors or Thank You’s you would like to give to anyone?

Always I want to thank my team, which not only includes my coaches and team mates, but also my husband, who is my rock, and my best friends, who are the peanut butter and jelly of the bread slices of my life. I’d like to thank everyone who sponsored me for this fight, particularly MMA Signatures. AJ Hiller (the owner of the company) is a great dude and has a really cool business idea, so make sure you check him out.

Many thanks for your time Lauren it is always appreciated.

You can keep up to date with Lauren on her Twitter account here.

You can keep up to date with Lauren of her Facebook page here.

You can keep up to date on The Lauren Murphy documentary here.

UFC Fight Night 63, happens this Saturday, April 4th from the Patriot Center in Fairfax, Virgina. Headlined by Chad Mendes vs. Ricardo Lamas and free to air on FOX Sports 1, BT Sports in the UK.

If you have missed any of the previous articles on Lauren you can view them here:

https://fiveroundswithemma.com/2013/12/07/introducing-the-inspiring-lauren-murphy-a-true-fighter-in-every-sense-of-the-word/

https://fiveroundswithemma.com/2013/12/12/part-2-introducing-the-inspiring-lauren-murphy/

https://fiveroundswithemma.com/2014/08/07/i-like-being-the-underdog-lauren-murphy-on-ufc-debut/

Photo Credits: Lauren Murphy Facebook

Photo Credits: Altanta Open/Kill Cliff/Moskova

UFC 189 World Championship Tour Embedded: Ep 9 ‘As a Champion, you have to promote the fight well’ Jose Aldo


 

On Episode 9 of UFC 189 World Championship Tour Embedded, featherweight champion Jose Aldo and challenger Conor McGregor cross the pond to London, England.

Jose Aldo UFC 189 World Championship Tour

 

 

Aldo cheers on his countrymen to victory in a soccer game at Emirates Stadium, both men visit the London Eye and the two face off once more at a tension-filled press conference.

 

Tickets for UFC 189 are now on sale at UFCFIGHTWEEK.com.

 

Video Credit: UFC

UFC 189 World Championship Tour Embedded: Ep 8 ‘I want to smell his Pu**y, I can smell that pu**y from here’ Conor McGregor


 

On Episode 8 of UFC 189 World Championship Tour Embedded, featherweight champion Jose Aldo and challenger Conor McGregor take over chilly Toronto.

The moment Conor McGregor put his hand on Jose Aldo UFC 189 World Championship Tour
The moment Conor McGregor put his hand on Jose Aldo UFC 189 World Championship Tour

Aldo’s patience for McGregor’s trash talk wears thin, UFC President Dana White is forced to play peacemaker on set, on stage and behind the scenes.

'King' Conor McGregor UFC 189 World Championship Tour
‘King’ Conor McGregor UFC 189 World Championship Tour

 

Tickets for UFC 189 are now on sale at UFCFIGHTWEEK.com.

 

Video Credit: UFC