Dan Ige puts up valiant effort with just hours notice at UFC 303


Dan Ige, left, punches Diego Lopes during a 165-pound catchweight mixed martial arts bout at UFC 303, Saturday, June 29, 2024, in Las Vegas. Ige replaced Brian Ortega, who withdrew from the bout due to illness. (Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP)

LAS VEGAS — An illness forced Brian Ortega to withdraw Saturday hours before his scheduled fight with Diego Lopes in the co-main event at UFC 303, and Dan Ige was called in as a replacement and narrowly lost by decision.

All three judges scored the fight 29-28 in favor Lopes (25-6).

“I’ve said before whoever, wherever, I’ll fight anybody,” Lopes, a Brazilian, said through an interpreter.

READ: Alex Pereira keeps title with TKO win over Jiri Prochazka at UFC 303

Ige (18-8) received a loud ovation from the crowd after his loss for his willingness to step in on short notice.

“I was like, ‘Man, this an opportunity to become a legend,’” Ige said. “This is a story I will tell my grandkids. I’d love to (have won), but man I couldn’t be happier.”

UFC President Dana White said before the bout that it likely would have been called off if Ige hadn’t been available.

“There would have been no other options,” White said.

The match is the warm-up bout to the main event between light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira and top-ranked challenger Jiri Prochazka.

White said Ortega was running a fever and wasn’t ready to go on. Ige, who is from Honolulu but trains in Las Vegas, already was in town preparing for another fight.

READ: Conor McGregor forced to withdraw from UFC 303 due to broken toe

“It’s all about opportunity,” White said. “He jumped at it. Who’s hotter than Lopes right now?”

White joked that Ige likely was sitting on his couch about to order the pay-per-view when he got the call.

Jeff Mullen, executive director of the Nevada Athletic Commission, told ESPN that because Ige fought Feb. 10 in Las Vegas, that made the process smoother to get him approved.



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“We already had his medicals and all his requirements completed,” Mullen said. “It was a perfectly approved matchup. I checked with the attorneys to make sure everything was in order.”

The Ortega-Lopes fight itself was a replacement for a previously scheduled bout. Jamahal Hill had to ask out of his match against Carlos Ulberg because a knee injury in training.

Tag-team effort of Vucinic, Trillo leads to Meralco’s first PBA title


MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Coach Luigi Trillo and active consultant Nenad Vucinic shared the podium for the first time on Sunday night, and appropriately so after Meralco overcame hardships to win a first-ever PBA championship.

For both, the Bolts’ road to Philippine Cup glory at the expense of the favored San Miguel Beermen is something that would have not been a possibility without their team buying in.

“Credit to the players because they responded. It took a lot of them to get out of that hole,” Trillo said after a nail-biting 80-78 title-clinching win at Smart Araneta Coliseum made possible by Chris Newsome’s last-second shot from the baseline.

Trillo and Vucinic, both designated by management to call the shots after long-time mentor Norman Black took a lesser role as consultant, and the Bolts were on the brink of elimination when a stunning loss to winless Converge left them at 3-5 and outside of the playoff picture.

At that time, a championship, let alone a spot in the quarterfinals, seemed like a distant possibility. But Meralco somehow persevered, and both witnessed their players lift the Jun Bernardino Perpetual Trophy.

“The players, they bought in and worked hard though it was very hard for them to understand,” said Vucinic, the Serbian-born former New Zealand national team coach.

Forgotten second placers

The triumph, which was also Meralco’s first major basketball title since the 1971 MICAA Open, was also a redemption of sorts for the coaching duo.

Trillo has been with the Bolts since 2014 as an assistant under Black, and shared the bitter feeling of losing four times in the Finals with Newsome, Cliff Hodge, Anjo Caram and Reynel Hugnatan, now a member of the coaching staff.

Before Game 5, Trillo spoke about how no one remembers being second place. Now, everyone will remember Meralco’s first.

“It wasn’t easy getting there,” he said. “They’ve been through four Finals appearances, a lot of pain. To gut it out this way, to really earn it—I’m saying about getting respect—it’s very fulfilling for us.”

Vucinic, meanwhile, had a previous short run as Meralco consultant in the 2022 Philippine Cup with Black still calling the shots before deciding to leave at the end of a seven-game semis loss to San Miguel.

But for some reason, the Bolts came calling again in 2023.

“The thing is when a new face comes in, especially a new face across the world—and this team has been under huge pressure to get the championship—we struggled I have to say because you have to implement a new system with new coaches and it’s difficult,” he said.

Now that the breakthrough title has been fulfilled, the talk now is whether Meralco can run it back for a shot at another one or multiple titles on the horizon. For the meantime, that thought will have to take a backseat.



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“The future of Meralco is a party. A huge party,” said Vucinic. “After the party, we will talk about it.” INQ