logo
Raoni Barcelos vs. Cody Garbrandt added to increasingly stacked UFC Atlanta lineup

Raoni Barcelos vs. Cody Garbrandt added to increasingly stacked UFC Atlanta lineup

USA Today08-05-2025

MMA Junkie
The UFC's return to Atlanta next month continues to add firepower to the lineup with the addition of another former champion to the card.
Ex-bantamweight titleholder Cody Garbrandt has been booked for a fight against Raoni Barcelos at UFC on ESPN 69 (ESPN, ESPN+), which is set for June 14 at State Farm Arena. MMA Junkie confirmed the matchup with a person close to the booking. The person asked to remain anonymous because the promotion has not yet made an official announcement. Barcelos initially mentioned the matchup on social media.
Garbrandt (14-6 MMA, 9-6 UFC) will be looking for his first win since late 2023, when he knocked out Brian Kelleher for his second straight win after a stretch that saw him drop five of six fights after a perfect 11-0 start to his career, including a bantamweight title win over Dominick Cruz.
In April 2024, Garbrandt was submitted by former flyweight champ Deiveson Figueiredo at the historic UFC 300 in Las Vegas. He was set to return this past fall against Miles Johns, but pulled out with an injury.
Barcelos (19-5 MMA, 8-4 UFC) has two straight wins after a rough stretch of his own with four losses in five fights. In February 2024, he submitted Christian Quinonez, and in January he pulled off an all-time upset when he outworked Payton Talbott, a previously unbeaten prospect who was a favorite of more than 11-1.
With the addition, the UFC Atlanta lineup now includes:

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tyrese Haliburton, Reggie Miller share emotional moments with Pacers after NBA Finals loss
Tyrese Haliburton, Reggie Miller share emotional moments with Pacers after NBA Finals loss

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Tyrese Haliburton, Reggie Miller share emotional moments with Pacers after NBA Finals loss

Despite suffering a serious injury, Tyrese Haliburton waited for his Pacers teammates and greeted them as the dejected team walked off the court following its Game 7 loss to the Thunder in the NBA Finals. Haliburton played in seven minutes of the game before he suffered an Achilles injury, but was there for his team, high-fiving them as they entered the locker room while he stood with the help of crutches on Sunday night. Former Pacers great Reggie Miller shared an emotional moment with T.J. McConnell after the game as well, trying to comfort the heartbroken player. McConnell looked to be near tears as he entered the back of the arena and Miller embraced him in a hug to console McConnell after the 103-91 loss. Miller also stopped Bennedict Mathurin as he was walking by to hug him. Tyrese Haliburton greets his Pacers teammates after Game 7 of the NBA Finals on June 22, 2025. X / @ESPN T.J. McConnell (R.) and Reggie Miller embrace after Game 7 of the NBA Finals on June 22, 2025. X / @NBA McConnell was also captured by ESPN cameras being consoled by his mother as he was entering the tunnel toward the locker rooms. The Pacers came up just short of the franchise's first NBA title, but finished their 2024-25 season with a number of accomplishments under its belt. This year's team became the first 50-win Pacers' squad since 2014 and it was the organization's first trip to the NBA Finals since 2000. 'No moral victories, obviously. Deflated, but proud of everything we've accomplished. There's no award for second place so everyone is upset but hats off to OKC — they were the better team today,' McConnell told reporters after the game. While the heartbreak was palpable for the Pacers, it didn't stop head coach Rick Carlisle from going over to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to congratulate him. Video captured showed the moment that Gilgeous-Alexander was walking through the back of the arena with the Larry O'Brien Trophy when Carlisle stopped him to dap him up and congratulate the Thunder star on his championship. The championship is the first for the Thunder since they relocated to Oklahoma City in 2008.

ESPN's Mike Breen Breaks Silence on Doris Burke Reports
ESPN's Mike Breen Breaks Silence on Doris Burke Reports

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

ESPN's Mike Breen Breaks Silence on Doris Burke Reports

ESPN's Mike Breen Breaks Silence on Doris Burke Reports originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Mike Breen, Doris Burke and Richard Jefferson will be on the call for ESPN when the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder take the court for Game 7 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night. Advertisement This Game 7 could mark the final time Breen and Burke share the broadcast booth. Prior to the start of this year's NBA championship series, sports media insider Andrew Marchand of The Athletic reported that ESPN is considering a major change to its lead NBA broadcast team. ESPN reportedly plans to re-sign Jefferson, but Burke's future is in question. This is Breen's second season working alongside Burke in the NBA Finals broadcast booth. Last year, Breen and Burke called the championship series alongside now-former ESPN analyst JJ Redick. In a recent interview with Richard Deitsch of The Athletic, Breen was asked to address the reports of Burke's possible replacement. 'Right now, what I'm focused on and what I am thrilled at is with the growth we've had as a team,' Breen said. 'These Finals, I really feel like we've come so far. I don't know the exact amount or number of games we've done together, but it's not many. 'I don't think people understand how difficult it is to find that chemistry. It's hard in a two-person booth; it's harder in a three-person booth. I'm blown away by Doris and Richard and their work ethic and their care factor to get it right. I've had so much fun with them. Some of these Finals broadcasts have been far and away our best together, and we keep getting better. That's my thought going into Game 7.' Advertisement Game 7 of the NBA Finals will tipoff at 8 p.m. ET. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.

T.J. McConnell's mom told ESPN to stop recording him after NBA Finals loss
T.J. McConnell's mom told ESPN to stop recording him after NBA Finals loss

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

T.J. McConnell's mom told ESPN to stop recording him after NBA Finals loss

In terms of sports heartbreak, it doesn't get any worse than losing Game 7 of a championship series. Unfortunately for the Indiana Pacers, who already had to deal with Tyrese Haliburton's devastating Achilles injury, that's exactly what they experienced after falling short at the hands of the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals on Sunday night. Advertisement One player who seemed to take the Pacers' defeat extra hard was backup point guard T.J. McConnell. The veteran floor general laid his heart out on the line all postseason. He made every hustle play. He stole so many inbounds passes. He seemingly made every shot he took every time he was on the floor. And McConnell was especially effective against the Thunder in one of the best Finals series we've ever seen. Ultimately, McConnell's and the Pacers' efforts weren't enough to get that fateful 16th playoff win, and they fell short. That's sports. Heck, that's life, sometimes. As a clearly dejected McConnell walked off the court, though, an ESPN camera followed him all the way into the tunnel, where his mother, Shelly, quickly ran over to embrace him. While McConnell's mother comforted her child after the toughest loss of his entire basketball career, the ESPN camera lingered on the scene. This is where she drew a line for her son by asking the cameraperson to stop recording and go away. What a powerful scene: In terms of ESPN's general all-around bungling of its NBA coverage this postseason, this sequence with McConnell and his mother probably lands lower on the list of screw-ups. McConnell's mother was more being a loving mother than the person handling the ESPN camera being outright tasteless. Nonetheless, they did linger a little too long while a player was trying to be comforted by their parents in a raw moment, and Shelly McConnell responded accordingly. Advertisement Sometimes, above all else, you gotta read the room a little bit. This article originally appeared on For The Win: T.J. McConnell's mom asked ESPN camera to stop recording after NBA Finals loss

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store