Get ready to throw another name into the conversation of top contenders in the UFC lightweight division.
Those who fight for a living in Ultimate Fighting Championship’s octagon are helping raise millions of dollars for those who fight for the Canadian and American militaries.
She is a self-described former "fat kid." He was a kindergarten teacher.
The next time Tito Ortiz enters Ultimate Fighting Championship’s octagon, he’ll be fighting for his career with the company he helped build.
Despite the one loss attached to his professional record, almost everyone involved with the UFC considers 29-year old lightweight Evan Dunham (11-1) an undefeated fighter.
Holding a pair of Ultimate Fighting Championship events in the state of New York — including one in famed Madison Square Garden — would generate $16 million in new spending in a single year, UFC president Dana White claimed Thursday as the company began another push to gain sanctioning in mixed-martial-arts’ last major North American holdout.
Anthony Pettis emerged as the biggest victim after Frankie Edgar and Gray Maynard fought to a draw in the lightweight championship fight at UFC 125.
After weeks in seclusion following the loss of his Ultimate Fighting Championship heavyweight title, Brock Lesnar will soon be spending week after week in the spotlight of national television.
When Ultimate Fighting Championship makes its long-awaited debut in Toronto this April, fans are sure to get the hard-hitting action to which they’ve become accustomed. The company wants to make sure those same fans don’t, however, get hit hard by ticket scammers leading up to the event.
Mauricio “Shogun” Rua will defend the UFC light heavyweight belt he won last May for the first time March 19 in Newark, N.J., against former champion Rashad Evans.
When Ultimate Fighting Championship makes its long-awaited debut in Toronto later this year, Canadian superstar Georges St-Pierre will be on top of the card.
The Vancouver Giants' bench boss makes no apologies for the fact that he has found a home on the major-junior stage. It's simply a matter of choice for Hay, who has been there and done that in terms of NHL jobs and has no interest in blindly jumping at the next offer that comes along.