Rousey had a "minor" knee surgery on Wednesday, so she's probably unavailable for the remainder of the year. Dana still says shes she gets a title shot on her return fight, whoever holds the belt. Funny that just days before the surgery, the press were reporting she was back in the gym 'hitting the bag,' apparently with some ferocity.
Now Dana says Diaz-McGregor II might never happen. The fight originally scheduled for UFC 200 would have been Diaz's first appearance under his new contract with the UFC, and I'm sure his appearance fee would have been quite handsome. But now that that's ronnied, and through no fault on his part, Diaz apparently feels the UFC still owe him for him making himself available for that fight, and for the investment he made in preparing for it (which probably amounted to cutting back on how much weed he was smoking). White didn't say specifically but I think Diaz is attempting to hold up the UFC for still more money for Diaz-McGregor II Part Deux because The Notorious One is now even more notorious, and he because Diaz is passing on other pursuits, such as other opportunities to fight. And it's got Dana over the proverbial barrel because McGregor, who is the hottest property in the UFC at the moment, has a bee in his bonnet over the rematch with Diaz at 170, will not consider any other offers.
McGregor, BTW, now says the first fight with Diaz was going "okay" for the first eight minutes. BJJ legend Rigan Machado stirred the pot a bit, offering that one of his students, Hollywood actor Ashton Kutcher (who in real life is a BJJ purple belt, two ranks below the first black belt), could submit McGregor. I've not seen Kutcher's ground game but I have seen McGregor's (or rather its lack), and I don't find the claim the least bit implausible.
And it's somewhat old news but in case you haven't been keeping up, it appears B.J. Penn is un-unretired. The UFC postponed his first unretirement contest at UFC 197 as a precautionary measure when it was announced Penn was being investigated on charges of sexual violence. Once that was cleared up, the UFC scheduled him for still another fight at this coming weekend's UFC 199, but now USADA have suspended him for violating the WADA IV policy. Penn admits he received an OOC IV, not for rehydration but for treatment for concussion symptoms with a known non-banned medication (doctors telling him it was the most effective means of administration), without realising that IVs are banned even out of competition.
Which begs the question, how many other WADA rules has he ignored for failing to familiarise himself with the code.