Melvin Manhoef vs. Cyborg Santos 2 set for April in Brazil

Daniel Herbertson, MMA Fighting

MMA fans went crazy on Feb. 4, 2006, with an epic brawl between Melvin Manhoef and Evangelista Santos at Cage Rage 15 in London, England. Eight years later, they are set to meet again.

Gringo Super Fight announced Tuesday that "Cyborg" and Manhoef are set to collide one more time on April 13 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the vacant welterweight championship. In the first fight, Manhoef stopped the Brazilian with punches in the second round.

Manhoef (27-11-1, 1 no-contest), who is set to make his 170-pound debut, went 15-9 (and one no-contest) since that battle with "Cyborg" in London, scoring wins over Kazushi Sakuraba, Mark Hunt, Kazuo Misaki, and Denis Kang.

Santos (19-15) competed at Pride, Sengoku and Strikeforce since losing to Manhoef. "Cyborg" has fought top competition in Gegard Mousasi, Nick Diaz and Siyar Bahadurzada in those promotions, defeating the likes of Francis Carmont and Marius Zaromskis in his 7-7 run since 2006.

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Melvin Manhoef vs. Cyborg Santos 2 set for April in Brazil

'Cyborg' has Rousey in her sights

Ronda Rousey secured a TKO victory against Sara McMann in 66 seconds Getty Images

Invicta FC featherweight champion Cristiane Justino has a plan for 2014, which she hopes will lead to UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey by December.

Justino (12-1) recently hired medical consultants to help her start shedding weight in an attempt to make the 135-pound bantamweight limit by midsummer.

The plan calls for Justino, aka 'Cyborg', to defend her 145-pound Invicta title in late April or early May, most likely against Ediane Gomes. Justino would then fight for Invicta's 135-pound title in a quick turnaround, perhaps as early as July.

In previous interviews, the Brazilian fighter hinted she was entering the final fight on the Invicta contract she signed last year. Invicta president Shannon Knapp wouldn't offer details, but said the proposed two title fights wouldn't necessarily require Justino to sign a contract extension.

"I won't confirm or deny where she is on her contract, but I can tell you she would still be contractually under Invicta on her current deal [in that situation]," Knapp told ESPN.

A former Strikeforce champion, Justino publicly stated her intent to drop to 135 pounds last Saturday, hours before Rousey (9-0) was scheduled to defend her title against Sara McMann at UFC 170 in Las Vegas. Rousey won the fight via first-round TKO.

Justino is scheduled to compete in a 145-pound muay Thai bout at Lion Fight 14 on March 28 in Las Vegas. According to her attorney George Prajin, Justino typically weighs approximately 170 pounds between fights and has a hard time even cutting to her current weight class.

The goal is for Justino to gradually drop, under a physician's supervision, over the next few months, which would make her next two cuts to 145 pounds easier. She would then make a practice cut to 135 before fighting for the Invicta bantamweight title this summer.

Earlier this month, Justino's manager, former UFC champion Tito Ortiz, stepped down from his involvement with her. UFC president Dana White has criticised Ortiz's handling of Justino's career in the past.

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'Cyborg' has Rousey in her sights

Ronda Rousey Rumored to Fight Gina Carano or Cris Cyborg in July

Isaac Brekken/Associated Press

The first ever womens MMA superfight could be on the horizon, pitting UFC champ Ronda Rousey against either Cristiane Cyborg Justino or Gina Carano.

During an appearance on KROQs Kevin & Bean Show on Friday (h/t MMAFighting.com), UFC commentator Joe Rogan teased at a huge announcement coming from the UFC, possibly within the next week, regarding Rouseys next opponent.

Within the next probably week or so a huge announcement will come about women's fighting and I'll be back in [the studio] and we'll talk some more, Rogan said. It's going to be crazy. Madness. I wish I could [talk about it now], but I would betray the confidence of my friend and employer.

UFC President Dana White recently told Yahoo! Sports Kevin Iole that Rousey was the biggest star in UFC history.

Unfortunately, pay-per-view numbers arent generated by compliments. Rouseys headliner against fellow Olympian Sara McMann a little more than a week ago at UFC 170 didnt live up to Whites forecast in buys at the pre-fight media scrum. This was especially disappointing considering McMann was penned as Rouseys biggest fight left in the womens bantamweight division.

It also didnt help that it took Rousey only 66 seconds to dispatch of McMann and record her third straight UFC title defense.

An appetite for marquee fights seems insatiable at this point, considering the glaring gap in skill between Rousey and the rest of the bantamweight division. Fortunately for fans, hope could lie in Rogans teaser of a major announcement forthcoming from the UFC.

MMA journalist Dave Meltzer echoed Rogans comments in the Wrestling Observer (h/t BloodyElbow.com), and he named Carano and Cyborg, two of MMAs biggest stars, as the two potential opponents:

Rousey has two potential opponents, both of which would draw huge for different reasons. The first is Gina Carano. Carano hasn't fought in four-and-a-half years. There would be hell to pay in criticism for UFC if they were to make that fight, if Carano would even have interest in it.

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Ronda Rousey Rumored to Fight Gina Carano or Cris Cyborg in July

Fightweets: Vitor Belfort becomes the face of The TRT Era

There were basically three stories that mattered in MMA this week: Whether Ronda Rousey vs. Cyborg Justino will ever happen; Gilbert Melendez's new deal; and the big one, the Nevada Athletic Commission banning theraputic use exemptions for testosterone replacement therapy in combat sports, followed by Vitor Belfort pulling out of his UFC 173 middleweight title shot against Chris Weidman and being replaced by Lyoto Machida.

So without further ado, onto this week's Fightweets, which is all about the Big Three and issues left in their aftermath.

TRT, Vitor, etc.

@1MeanLobo: When do you think Vitor is gonna announce an "injury" so he doesn't have to fight in Nevada?

For the record, this tweet came in, oh, about 15 seconds after the TRT ban was announced Thursday. Let's face it: By pulling out of the fight (and this comes with the qualifier that there are legitimate medical concerns about withdrawing from TRT mid-course), Belfort just sealed his legacy as the face of the TRT Era. Before this week, Belfort's fans could point around at other users and claim with some validity that Belfort was being picked on. But Belfort pulled out of his title shot (attempts at semantic posturing Friday notwithstanding) , amid rumors regarding an out-of-competition drug test (the results of which won't go public unless Belfort chooses to do so). This comes Belfort knocked people's heads off left and right on TRT, and of course, he has his 2006 steroid suspension on his record. This all has a feel similar to watching all those juiced-up baseball players in front of Congress trying to blame everyone but themselves.

@reverendruckus: Dan Henderson should send Vitor a thank you card. Hendo is just as filthy & no one talks about it.

Nope. That line of reasoning is out the window. Henderson actually went ahead and fought Rashad Evans at UFC 161 without TRT when he couldn't get an exemption. And Hendo's never been busted in a career that spans back as far as Belfort's does.

@RuckerYeah: Whoa! Nevada bans TRT. Did anyone see this coming?

It was pretty well known that the door was open to changes in the first major NAC (And it is NAC, not NSAC) meeting since Keith Kizer stepped down as executive director. But most informed speculation held that we wouldn't see any major change until after a new director came in.

Boy, was that wrong. In one fell swoop, the country's most influential athletic commission eliminated the most egregious thing wrong with the sport: That some fighters were given a green light to cheat. Think of Nevada in this case the way you normally do California. If the state of California makes a law that affects an industry, it affects the entire country, because a business can't lose a market with 35 million people, so they have to adjust their products to conform to California's regulations. Likewise, a fighter is going to have to fight in Las Vegas eventually if they're going to make it. You saw the instantaneous chain reaction, from the UFC following suit (and if nothing else, credit Dana White's consistency when he says his company follows commissions' leads), to other commissions making statements, to Belfort pulling out.

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Fightweets: Vitor Belfort becomes the face of The TRT Era