rankings

Dana White: AI Could Fix UFC’s Ranking Woes

UFC President Dana White has announced plans to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into the UFC’s ranking system. The move comes in response to criticism from fighters like Renato Moicano, who argue that the current system is flawed and biased. White believes that AI can provide a more accurate and objective assessment of fighter performance, leading to fairer matchups and more exciting fights.

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Updated Official Bellator MMA Fighter Rankings

BELLATOR MMA’s incredible start to 2022 continues, as inside the Mohegan Sun Arena on Saturday, February 19, top welterweights collide. No. 4-ranked Neiman Gracie will take on No. 5-ranked Logan Storley at BELLATOR MMA 274: Gracie vs. Storley, in a matchup that could determine the next title challenger at 170-pounds. Also, the co-main event sees the return of hard-hitting former champion and No. 9-ranked welterweight Andrey Koreshkov looking to knock off the surging, undefeated Mukhamed Berkhamov.   Click here for additional information detailing fighter eligibility, as well as additional voting criteria. MEN’S POUND-FOR-POUND 1. AJ McKee (18-0) 2. Vadim Nemkov (15-2) ∆1   3. Patricio Pitbull (32-5)   4. Gegard Mousasi (48-7-2) 5. Yaroslav Amosov (26-0) 6. Ryan Bader (29-7) ∆2   7. Sergio Pettis (22-5) ∇1 8. Corey Anderson (16-5) ∇1 9. Michael Page (20-1) 10. Valentin Moldavsky (11-1) WOMEN’S POUND-FOR-POUND 1. Cris Cyborg (25-2, 1 NC) 2. Juliana Velasquez (12-0) 3. Ilima-Lei Macfarlane (11-1) 4. Liz Carmouche (16-7) 5. Denise Kielholtz (6-3) 6. Arlene Blencowe (15-8) 7. Cat Zingano (12-4) 8. Kana Watanabe (10-1-1) 9. Leah McCourt (6-1) 10. Leslie Smith (12-9-1) MEN’S HEAVYWEIGHT C. Ryan Bader (28-7) 1. Valentin Moldavsky (11-2)  2. Cheick Kongo (31-11-2) 3. Fedor Emelianenko (40-6)    4. Linton Vassell (22-8)  5. Tim Johnson (15-8)  6. Tyrell Fortune (11-2) 7. Steve Mowry (10-0) ∇1   8. Davion Franklin (4-0 9. Said Sowma (8-2) ∇1    10. Gokhan Saricam (6-1) MEN’S LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT C. Vadim Nemkov (15-2) 1. Corey Anderson (16-5) 2. Phil Davis (23-6)  3. Ryan Bader (29-7) 4. Julius Anglickas (10-2) 4. Anthony Johnson (23-6)∇1        6. Lyoto Machida (26-11) 7. Karl Albrektsson (13-3) 8. Alex Polizzi (9-1) 9. Grant Neal (6-1) 10. Melvin Manhoef (32-15-1) MEN’S MIDDLEWEIGHT C. Gegard Mousasi (48-7-2) 1. Austin Vanderford (11-0)  2. John Salter (18-5)  3. Johnny Eblen (10-0) ∆1       4. Fabian Edwards (9-2) ∆1      5. Anatoly Tokov (30-2) ∆1         6. Romero Cotton (5-0) ∆3       7. Dalton Rosta (6-0) NR 7. Lorenz Larkin (23-7) NR 9. Rafael Carvalho (16-6) NR 10. Joshua Jones (11-5) NR MEN’S WELTERWEIGHT C. Yaroslav Amosov (26-0) 1. Michael Page (20-1) 2. Douglas Lima (32-10) 3. Jason Jackson (15-4) 4. Neiman Gracie (11-2) 5. Logan Storley (12-1) 6. Derek Anderson (17-4)  7. Paul Daley (43-18-2)  8. Joey Davis (8-0) ∆1            9. Andrey Koreshkov (24-4) ∇1        10. Kyle Crutchmer (8-1)   MEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT C. Patricky Pitbull (24-10) 1. Sidney Outlaw (16-4)  2. Brent Primus (11-2)   3. Benson Henderson (28-11) ∆3   4. Goiti Yamauchi (26-5)    5. Usman Nurmagomedov (14-0) ∇2 6. Peter Queally (13-6-1) ∇1     7. Islam Mamedov (20-1-1)      8. Myles Jury (19-6) 9. Aviv Gozali (6-0)       10. Alexander Shabily (20-3)     MEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT C. AJ McKee (18-0) 1. Patricio Pitbull (32-5) 2. Mads Burnell (16-3) ∆1        2. Adam Borics (17-1) 4. Aaron Pico (9-3)       5. Pedro Carvalho (12-5)       6. Emmanuel Sanchez (20-7) 7. Jeremy Kennedy (17-3)         8. Daniel Weichel (41-13)    9. Justin Gonzales (12-1) 10. Darrion Caldwell (15-6) MEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT C. Sergio Pettis (22-5) 1. Juan Archuleta (25-3) 2. Patchy Mix (15-1) ∆1        3. Raufeon Stots (17-1) ∇1          4. Magomed Magomedov (18-2) 5. Leandro Higo (21-5) 6. James Gallagher (11-2) 7. Josh Hill (21-4) ∆1        8. Kyoji Horiguchi (29-4) ∇1   9. Jornel Lugo (7-0) 10. Cass Bell (5-2) WOMEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT C. Cris Cyborg (25-2, 1 NC) 1. Arlene Blencowe (15-8) 2. Cat Zingano (12-4) 3. Leslie Smith (12-9-1) 4. Leah McCourt (6-1)  5. Sinead Kavanagh (7-5)       6. Janay Harding (6-5) 7. Pam Sorenson (9-4)  7. Talita Nogueira (8-2) ∆1     9. Olivia Parker (4-2) 10. Jessica Borga (3-4) WOMEN’S FLYWEIGHT C. Juliana Velasquez (12-0) 1. Ilima-Lei Macfarlane (11-1) 2. Liz Carmouche (16-7) 3. Denise Kielholtz (6-3)  4. Kana Watanabe (10-1-1)  5. Alejandra Lara (9-5) ∆2     6. Veta Arteaga (6-4) 7. DeAnna Bennett (11-7-1) ∆1          8. Vanessa Porto (23-9) ∆1     9. Diana Avsaragova (4-0) ∆1     10. Valerie Loureda (4-1) NR         Please visit Bellator.com for additional information.

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Updated Bellator MMA rankings

BELLATOR MMA returns to action on Friday, May 21 with BELLATOR MMA 259: Cyborg vs. Smith 2 featuring the return of women’s featherweight queen Cris Cyborg (23-2-1 NC) putting her title on the line in a rematch against #4 ranked featherweight Leslie Smith (12-8-1). Also, former bantamweight champion Darrion Caldwell (15-4) returns to the division he once ruled over when he squares off with the No. 6 ranked bantamweight Leandro Higo (20-5) in the co-main event. Bellator 259 airs live on SHOWTIME at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT. Click here for additional information detailing fighter eligibility, as well as additional voting criteria. MEN’S POUND-FOR-POUND 1. Patricio Pitbull (32-4) 2. Vadim Nemkov (14-2) 3. Gegard Mousasi (47-7-2) 4. Ryan Bader (28-6, 1 NC) 5. Douglas Lima (32-8) ∆1 5. AJ McKee (17-0) ∆2 7. Sergio Pettis (21-5) NR 8. Juan Archuleta (25-3) ∇3 9. Corey Anderson (15-5) ∇1 10. Yaroslav Amosov (25-0)   WOMEN’S POUND-FOR-POUND 1. Cris Cyborg (23-2, 1 NC) 2. Juliana Velasquez (11-0) 3. Ilima-Lei Macfarlane (11-1) 4. Julia Budd (15-3) 5. Liz Carmouche (15-7) ∆1 6. Arlene Blencowe (13-8) ∇1 7. Denise Kielholtz (6-2) 8. Cat Zingano (12-4) 9. Kana Watanabe (10-0-1) 10. Leslie Smith (12-8-1) MEN’S HEAVYWEIGHT C. Ryan Bader (28-6) 1. Timothy Johnson (15-6) 2. Cheick Kongo (30-11-2) 3. Valentin Moldavsky (10-1) 4. Linton Vassell (20-8) 5. Tyrell Fortune (10-1) 6. Steven Mowry (9-0) 7. Matt Mitrione (13-8) 8. Javy Ayala (11-8) 9. Davion Franklin (2-0) 10. Jake Hager (3-0) MEN’S LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT C. Vadim Nemkov (14-2) 1. Ryan Bader (28-6) 2. Corey Anderson (15-5) 3. Phil Davis (22-6)  4. Anthony Johnson (23-6) NR 5. Julius Anglickas (10-1) ∇1 6. Lyoto Machida (26-11) ∇1 7. Grant Neal (5-0) ∇1 8. Tyree Fortune (5-0) ∇1 9. Melvin Manhoef (32-15-1) 9. Christian Edwards (4-0) ∇1 MEN’S MIDDLEWEIGHT C. Gegard Mousasi (47-7-2) 1. John Salter (18-4) 2. Anatoly Tokov (29-2) 3. Austin Vanderford (10-0) 4. Fabian Edwards (9-1) 5. Costello van Steenis (13-2) 6. Johnny Eblen (8-0) 7. Charlie Ward (9-4) 8. Mike Shipman (14-3) 9. Ed Ruth (8-3) ∆1 10. Romero Cotton (5-0) ∇1 MEN’S WELTERWEIGHT C. Douglas Lima (32-8) 1. Yaroslav Amosov (25-0) 2. Michael Page (19-1) 3. Jason Jackson (14-4) 4. Neiman Gracie (10-2) 5. Logan Storley (11-1) 6. Derek Anderson (17-4) 7. Joey Davis (8-0) 8. Paul Daley (43-17-2) 9. Sabah Homasi (15-9) 10. Oliver Enkamp (10-2) MEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT C. Patricio Pitbull (32-4) 1. Brent Primus (10-1) 2. Patricky Pitbull (23-10) 3. Goiti Yamauchi (25-5) 3. Benson Henderson (28-10) ∆1 5. Myles Jury (19-5) 6. Peter Queally (13-5-1) NR 7. Sidney Outlaw (15-4) ∇1 8. Adam Piccolotti (12-4) ∇1 9. Alfie Davis (14-3) 10. Dan Moret (5-0) ∇2 MEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT C. Patricio Pitbull (32-4) 1. AJ McKee (17-0) 2. Emmanuel Sanchez (20-5) 3. Adam Borics (17-1) 4. Jay-Jay Wilson (8-0) 5. Daniel Weichel (40-12) 6. Aaron Pico (7-3) 7. Pedro Carvalho (11-5) 8. Mads Burnell (15-3) 9. Tywan Claxton (6-2) 10. Jeremy Kennedy (16-3, 1 NC) MEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT C. Sergio Pettis (21-5) 1. Juan Archuleta (25-3) ∇1 2. Patchy Mix (14-1) 3. Magomed Magomedov (18-1) 4. Raufeon Stots (16-1) 5. James Gallagher (11-1) 6. Leandro Higo (20-5) 7. Josh Hill (20-4) 8. Jornel Lugo (6-0) 9. Cass Bell (5-2) 10. Brian Moore (13-7) WOMEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT C. Cris Cyborg (23-2, 1 NC) 1. Julia Budd (15-3) 2. Arlene Blencowe (13-8) 3. Cat Zingano (12-4) 4. Leslie Smith (12-8-1) 5. Sinead Kavanagh (7-4) 6. Janay Harding (6-4) 7. Leah McCourt (4-1) 8. Amanda Bell (7-7) 9. Jessy Miele (9-5) 10.Talita Nogueira (8-2) WOMEN’S FLYWEIGHT C. Juliana Velasquez (11-0) 1. Ilima-Lei Macfarlane (11-1) 2. Liz Carmouche (15-7) 3. Kana Watanabe (10-0-1) 4. Denise Kielholtz (6-2) 5. Alejandra Lara (9-4) 6. Veta Arteaga (6-4) 7. Kate Jackson (11-5-1) 8. Valerie Loureda (3-0) ∆1 9. Vanessa Porto (22-9) ∆1 10. Diana Avsaragova (3-0) NR    

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Bellator MMA Launches Official Fighter Rankings

Bellator MMA™ is pleased to announce the organization will implement an official fighter rankings system for each of its weight classes, in addition to a pound-for-pound list for both the men’s and women’s divisions, in the coming weeks. The official Bellator MMA Fighter Rankingswill be determined by a 15-person voting panel, comprised exclusively of members of the MMA media.   “This is the greatest roster in the history of Bellator,” said Bellator MMA President Scott Coker. “As we continue to sign the top free agents in the sport and see the success of young prospects inside the Bellator cage, we felt that the time was right to introduce official fighter rankings. We are always looking at ways to improve our product and this adds a new and exciting aspect to the organization that will have a significant impact on how fans watch Bellator. Every division is competitive, every matchup is important, and we are set for several potential blockbusters as we begin a new year on Showtime.”   Votes will be cast for eligible fighters following each Bellator live event and final results will be made public. To ensure transparency, the tabulation of votes will be overseen solely by a third-party company, Combat Registry.   The initial rankings will be released in the days leading up to Bellator’s return to action and debut on SHOWTIME® Friday, April 2 with Bellator 255: Pitbull vs. Sanchez 2 at 9 p.m. ET.   Information detailing fighter eligibility, as well as additional voting criteria, is listed below:   Divisional Rankings: Top 10 fighter rankings will be voted on in nine Bellator MMA weight classes, in addition to two pound-for-pound lists. Champions of each division will be automatically assigned to the Champions slot atop the rankings. Fighters in seven men’s divisions will be ranked, including: Heavyweight Light Heavyweight Middleweight Welterweight Lightweight Featherweight Bantamweight Fighters in two women’s divisions will be ranked, including: Featherweight Flyweight Two pound-for-pound lists will be voted on, including: Men’s Women’s    New Fighter Eligibility: A fighter must have competed once inside the Bellator cage on a current term with the company to be eligible.   Inactivity: A fighter is eligible to be ranked for up to 15-months without competing.   Retirement A fighter remains eligible for 60 days after an indication of retirement, with the organization ultimately determining if the fighter remains active and eligible.   Multiple Weight Classes: A fighter is allowed to be actively ranked in two different weight classes and is eligible to be ranked in an additional weight class once they have competed at least once in that division. A fighter must actively compete in each weight class – a period of inactivity longer than 15 months in a given weight class will result in the removal from that specific weight class, but not necessarily from another division or the overall rankings pool. With the exception being that a fighter is actively participating in a World Grand Prix tournament in a different weight class.   Removal/Ineligibility: A fighter serving a non-medical suspension from an overseeing regulatory body and/or the organization for longer than six months will be removed from rankings eligibility. A fighter will remain eligible with a suspension of six months or fewer.   Fighter Rankings Pool: The final list of eligible fighters, and the weight classes in which they are eligible to be ranked, will ultimately be determined by the organization.   Voting Frequency: New Bellator rankings will only be voted on after every event, regardless of frequency. Votes will be due the Monday following a Bellator live event.   First-Place Votes: Each rankings period will reveal how many number one contender votes each fighter received.   Voting Tabulation: Tabulation of votes will be handled exclusively by Combat Registry, a third-party independent of Bellator MMA.   Voting Panel: Bellator fighter rankings will be voted on exclusively by media members within the MMA industry. In no capacity, will Bellator staff, athletes, talent or other organization personnel participate in voting.   The inaugural voting panel will include the following members of the media:   Jeff Cain – MMA Weekly Brian Campbell – CBS Sports Rodrigo Del Campo – Claro Sports Rob DeMello – KHON Hawaii Jason Floyd – The MMA Report George Garcia – MMA Junkie Amy Kaplan – FanSided Nolan King – MMA Junkie John Hyon Ko – South China Morning Post Mark LaMonica – Newsday Igor Lazarin – TASS Russia Shakiel Mahjouri – Fightful MMA Joe McDonagh – Cageside Press John Morgan – MMA Junkie Ken Pishna – MMA Weekly

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Tom Aspinall: “I used to go training and not put 100% in”.

The start to Wigan’s Tom Aspinall UFC career couldn’t have gone much better and he thanks his children for providing the motivation he needed to take the next step in his career. Having finished both Jake Collier and Alan Baudot by first-round knockout, Tom has quickly captured the imagination and this weekend will take on a step up in competition, in the form of former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski. A father of three at age 27, Tom travels for an hour from Atherton, Wigan to Team Kaobon in Liverpool and realises that this is time he would otherwise be spending at home with his children, “I’m out of the house for a long time when I train and it’s changed my whole intensity on training, to be honest”. Aspinall has one-year-old twins, as well as, a five-year-old son. “When I leave, I don’t want that time I am away from home to be wasted”. “I used to go training and not put 100% in for years and I didn’t really realise that until I had twins. When I leave the house, it’s got to be worth leaving for, otherwise what’s the point? I will just be wasting everybody’s time”. As for Arlovski, you would think the 42-year-old Belarussian would be winding down his illustrious career but with wins in three of his last four fights, he appears to still be able to justify his place amongst the elite. He originally won the championship all the way back in 2005 and despite now having a large number of losses on his record ‘The Pitbull’ will have plenty to throw at Tom Aspinall. A win for Tom will hopefully see him crack the top 15, as the former Wigan doorman continues to step out of teammate Darren Till’s shadow. The fight is set to be a co-main event at UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs Lewis in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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Georges St-Pierre Removed From Middleweight Rankings

The latest UFC rankings confirm what many people expected as Georges St-Pierre was removed from the middleweight rankings. The Canadian won the UFC middleweight championship on his return to the company after four years against Michael Bisping at UFC 217 but later relinquished the belt after suffering from colitis; casting doubt over his long-term future at 185lbs. GSP remains on the pound-for-pound list which could suggest he is not finished fighting just yet and could move back down to welterweight where he was once a dominant champion. He did fall three places to sixth with Daniel Cormier and Stipe Miocic both on the rise. Current UFC welterweight champion, Tyron Woodley, has been vocal in calling for a fight with St-Pierre to prove who is truly the best welterweight to ever compete in the UFC and a move back to 170 is believed to be the next move for GSP to fight Woodley or even Conor McGregor. St-Pierre’s removal from the rankings sees a number of fighters rise in his absence including Derek Brunson, Chris Weidman, Kelvin Gastelum, Michael Bisping, David Branch, Uriah Hall and Vitor Belfort. Mirsad Bektic’s huge victory at UFC Charlotte sees him rise three places in the featherweight rankings while UFC 220 main card winner, Calvin Kattar, also enters the top 15 for the first time. Do you think GSP will fight in the UFC again? Let us know in the comments!

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GSP Drops and McGregor Rises in UFC Pound For Pound Rankings

I don’t normally take much notice of the pound for pound rankings, they are as subjective as they are pointless. But the latest round of rankings have got my interest. Conor McGregor rises to number two, despite not having fought since November 2015, at the expense of GSP, who has fought in the recent past, and of course, won. The only difference that I can see is that GSP has vacated his UFC middleweight title, so is he being punished for that? You can look further down and Joanna Jędrzejczyk is at 15, and Rose Namajunas who beat her inside one round isn’t ranked. So my question is, why? Personally, Amanda Nunes is at number 13 and that ranking is too low. If you are going to have these kind of rankings, at least make them credible. UFC Pound For Pound Rankings Demetrious Johnson 27-2-1 Conor McGregor 21-3-0 Georges St-Pierre 26-2-0 Max Holloway 19-3-0 Daniel Cormier 19-1-0 TJ Dillashaw 16-3-0 Stipe Miocic 17-2-0 Tyron Woodley 18-3-1 Cris Cyborg 19-1-0 Tony Ferguson 24-3-0 Cody Garbrandt 11-1-0 Robert Whittaker 20-4-0 Amanda Nunes 15-4-0 Khabib Nurmagomedov 25-0-0 Joanna Jedrzejczyk 14-1-0

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