Evans Expects Machida at UFC 98
Despite every assurance made during Saturday nightâs UFC 96
pay-per-view broadcast, UFC light heavyweight champ Rashad
Evans doesnât believe Quinton
âRampageâ Jackson will be standing across the Octagon to face
him at UFC 98 on May 23.
âAs I learned, âRampageâ might need time off,â Evans told the Sherdog Radio Networkâs âBeatdownâ show on Monday. âItâll probably be Lyoto Machida, but I havenât gotten a confirmation on that.â
Jackson, who earned a hard-fought decision over Evansâ teammate Keith Jardine in the main event on Saturday, told reporters afterward that he needed time to evaluate the May title bout offered to him that night before heâd give his answer.
The 30-year old Memphis, Tenn., native lost the belt to Forrest Griffin at UFC 86 last July. Evans then took it from Griffin at UFC 92 in December.
Tensions rose on Saturday night when Evans (13-0-1) entered the cage to trade barbs with Jackson seconds after his victory. Evans said he knew then that Jackson (30-7) might not be up to snuff for a May encounter.
âI donât know. Iâve just got that feeling,â said Evans. âJust listening to him when we were in the ring talking he was kind of like, âYeah man youâre lucky I wasnât 100 percentâ and he started making excuses and I was thinking like it sounds like an excuse-fest is about to happen, so I know he ainât going to take no fight with me. Heâs making excuses now.â
Evans was actually surprised the standoff became as heated as fast as it did.
âI didnât expect any of that, man,â said Evans. âI was just going to do the face-off and what not but then he started talking trash. I wasnât even in the mood to play or joke around, I just saw one of my best friends lose a fight which I had him winning until the last 10 seconds. I see the hurt in [Jardineâs] eyes and heâs so upset and heâs disappointed and I feel, like, bad for him. Then this dude is bumpinâ his gums at me, and honestly, I really wanted to punch him in his face, but I knew that wasnât the right time to do that so I just tried to stay as composed as possible because I donât like to talk trash. Whenever I got into a street fight I never talked -- I just hit. I never liked to be in someoneâs face that close just talking.â
There is a certain double standard in the war of words leading up to the Evans-Jackson showdown that hasnât escaped the 29-year-old champion. Evans consistently catches heat for his antics in and out of the cage, while Jackson seems to be applauded for it.
âYou know what, I canât understand it either,â said Evans. âI canât understand it either man. I try not to. There was a time where it really bothered me and ate at me and I was like, âI donât understand.â Iâm in the arena and everyone is booing me. And thatâs so funny because everyone is in here booing at me, but I just spent about two hours signing autographs. So who the hell is booing at me, you know what Iâm saying? Whoâs booing at me? Itâs just so contradictory to everyone that comes to speak to me. I always treat everyone with respect. Yet everyone still boos. They donât like me. But thatâs OK. Everybody has a cross to bear in life and maybe thatâs my cross to bear. I donât have to be popular in life, as long as I know who I am then thatâs OK.â
Evans will probably have other things to ponder in short turn, most likely the conundrum that is Machida (14-0), a fighter whose style perplexes opponents more often than not.
âThe kidâs been phenomenal,â said Evans. âHeâs been better than phenomenal. Heâs been looking better every fight. But thatâs the fight business. Thatâs the fun part about a fight is the fact that you go in there with an opponent that sometimes seems insurmountable. But then you figure it out and that makes the victory that much sweeter. With that said, there may be some kinks in his armor that I have yet to see that I can exploit when I look at the tapes more closely. Nobodyâs unbeatable. Machidaâs been looking slicker than I donât know what, but everybody has a weakness even if you do look slick as oil. Everyone has a weakness.â
Evans said heâs a lock to expose weaknesses on May 23, though if it will be Jackson or Machidaâs shortcomings remains to be seen.
âAs I learned, âRampageâ might need time off,â Evans told the Sherdog Radio Networkâs âBeatdownâ show on Monday. âItâll probably be Lyoto Machida, but I havenât gotten a confirmation on that.â
Jackson, who earned a hard-fought decision over Evansâ teammate Keith Jardine in the main event on Saturday, told reporters afterward that he needed time to evaluate the May title bout offered to him that night before heâd give his answer.
The 30-year old Memphis, Tenn., native lost the belt to Forrest Griffin at UFC 86 last July. Evans then took it from Griffin at UFC 92 in December.
Tensions rose on Saturday night when Evans (13-0-1) entered the cage to trade barbs with Jackson seconds after his victory. Evans said he knew then that Jackson (30-7) might not be up to snuff for a May encounter.
âI donât know. Iâve just got that feeling,â said Evans. âJust listening to him when we were in the ring talking he was kind of like, âYeah man youâre lucky I wasnât 100 percentâ and he started making excuses and I was thinking like it sounds like an excuse-fest is about to happen, so I know he ainât going to take no fight with me. Heâs making excuses now.â
Evans was actually surprised the standoff became as heated as fast as it did.
âI didnât expect any of that, man,â said Evans. âI was just going to do the face-off and what not but then he started talking trash. I wasnât even in the mood to play or joke around, I just saw one of my best friends lose a fight which I had him winning until the last 10 seconds. I see the hurt in [Jardineâs] eyes and heâs so upset and heâs disappointed and I feel, like, bad for him. Then this dude is bumpinâ his gums at me, and honestly, I really wanted to punch him in his face, but I knew that wasnât the right time to do that so I just tried to stay as composed as possible because I donât like to talk trash. Whenever I got into a street fight I never talked -- I just hit. I never liked to be in someoneâs face that close just talking.â
There is a certain double standard in the war of words leading up to the Evans-Jackson showdown that hasnât escaped the 29-year-old champion. Evans consistently catches heat for his antics in and out of the cage, while Jackson seems to be applauded for it.
âYou know what, I canât understand it either,â said Evans. âI canât understand it either man. I try not to. There was a time where it really bothered me and ate at me and I was like, âI donât understand.â Iâm in the arena and everyone is booing me. And thatâs so funny because everyone is in here booing at me, but I just spent about two hours signing autographs. So who the hell is booing at me, you know what Iâm saying? Whoâs booing at me? Itâs just so contradictory to everyone that comes to speak to me. I always treat everyone with respect. Yet everyone still boos. They donât like me. But thatâs OK. Everybody has a cross to bear in life and maybe thatâs my cross to bear. I donât have to be popular in life, as long as I know who I am then thatâs OK.â
Evans will probably have other things to ponder in short turn, most likely the conundrum that is Machida (14-0), a fighter whose style perplexes opponents more often than not.
âThe kidâs been phenomenal,â said Evans. âHeâs been better than phenomenal. Heâs been looking better every fight. But thatâs the fight business. Thatâs the fun part about a fight is the fact that you go in there with an opponent that sometimes seems insurmountable. But then you figure it out and that makes the victory that much sweeter. With that said, there may be some kinks in his armor that I have yet to see that I can exploit when I look at the tapes more closely. Nobodyâs unbeatable. Machidaâs been looking slicker than I donât know what, but everybody has a weakness even if you do look slick as oil. Everyone has a weakness.â
Evans said heâs a lock to expose weaknesses on May 23, though if it will be Jackson or Machidaâs shortcomings remains to be seen.

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