Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bisping’s quick return backfires

Second defeat in only three weeks

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

Former UFC middleweig­ht champion Michael Bisping’s rapid return to the cage after losing the title didn’t work out the way he had hoped.

Bisping was knocked out by Kelvin Gastelum at the midway point of the opening round Saturday in the main event of UFC Fight Night 122 in Shanghai just three weeks after he was submitted by Georges St. Pierre at UFC 217 in New York.

That loss had fueled speculatio­n he might retire. The 38-year-old Bisping quickly put that notion to rest when he agreed to step in for Anderson Silva, who was removed from the matchup with Gastelum because of a potential violation of the anti-doping policy.

If he was looking to quickly bounce back from the disappoint­ment of losing the belt and hoping for a quick path back into title contention, things didn’t go according to plan.

Bisping, however, still has no plans to walk away from competitio­n.

“I was enjoying myself,” Bisping said after the fight. “He caught me with a good shot. God bless Kelvin. He’s young. I’ve done this for a long time. I’m getting old.

“You know Kelvin is a great guy, but unfortunat­ely it’s going to take a bigger pile of (expletive) than him to get rid of me.”

Gastelum has now won three of four fights since moving up to middleweig­ht, though one win was vacated because of a positive marijuana test. His lone loss came against former champ Chris Weidman.

The 26-year-old hopes his run of success is enough to warrant a shot against interim middleweig­ht champ Robert Whittaker.

“I heard he needs a main event opponent over in Australia for February, and I’m up for the challenge,” said Gastelum, whose past three wins have come against fighters more than a decade older than he is. “You guys say I beat up all the elderly, and Robert Whittaker definitely isn’t an elderly. He’s probably my age. So I’m up for that challenge.”

Former UFC lightweigh­t sentenced

South Korean fighter Tae Hyun Bang, a lightweigh­t who had five bouts in the UFC between 2014 and 2016, was sentenced to 10 months in prison for accepting bribes to fix a 2015 UFC bout against Leo Kuntz in 2015.

Bang allegedly accepted money to lose the UFC Fight Night 79 bout intentiona­lly but eventually won the fight by split decision.

The Korea Herald reported on the sentencing, which was handed down by Seoul’s Central District Court.

“The crime of match fixing damages the credibilit­y of sport, and in internatio­nal matches, it has a bad effect on the country’s credibilit­y as well,” the court said, according to The Korea Herald.

UFC officials were notified of a drastic move in the betting market and warned both fighters before the fight.

Askren retires undefeated

ONE Championsh­ip star Ben Askren closed his career with a

Busy week ahead

The UFC will host events in two cities this week as UFC 218 takes place Saturday in Detroit following Friday night’s “The Ultimate Fighter 26” Finale card at Park Theater inside the Monte Carlo.

Nicco Montano will fight for the inaugural women’s flyweight title against an opponent to be determined on Wednesday’s episode of the reality show in the main event Friday night.

Saturday’s pay-per-view card is headlined by a featherwei­ght title rematch between champion Max Holloway and former champ Jose Aldo.

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

 ?? Heidi Fang ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Heidifang Former UFC middleweig­ht champion Michael Bisping at the UFC 217 post-fight news conference Nov. 4 at the Madison Square Garden theater in New York.
Heidi Fang Las Vegas Review-journal @Heidifang Former UFC middleweig­ht champion Michael Bisping at the UFC 217 post-fight news conference Nov. 4 at the Madison Square Garden theater in New York.

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