Matt Hamill offers to rematch Jon Jones to settle debate over 15-year-old DQ
Sometimes, people say absurd things, and itās part of our job to let you, the reader, know about it.
In MMA, thatās just called ātoday.ā So for your Friday lunacy, weāre obliged to tell you Matt Hamill, the 47-year-old former UFC fighter best known for being the only loss on heavyweight champion Jon Jonesā record, has offered to end his 6-year retirement to rematch Jones for the belt.
āLetās cut this chaseā¦ @danawhite ā I know youāre desperate to get @jonnybones an undefeated record. I see how you want to profit from that! Is also why you bail him out of all the other thingsā¦ā Hamill posted on Instagram. āHow about a rematch?! Iāll be happy to fight him for a heavyweight title. If I beat him, I want a UFC belt. Let me know if Stipe Miocic backs out. Iāll take short notice, just remember he already lost to me!ā
It all stems from Tuesdayās unanimous decision from the Association of Boxing Commissions and Combative Sports committee to lift the longstanding ban on 12-6 elbows, so named for their straight up and down motion, like the hands on a clock at 12 and 6.
On Dec. 5, 2009, at the UFCās Season 10 finale of āThe Ultimate Fighterā in Las Vegas, Jones was disqualified against Hamill for the illegal elbows. In the first round of the fight, after Jones had delivered plenty of ground-and-pound on Hamill, he landed a pair of 12-6 elbows. After the first, referee Steve Mazzagatti started to warn Jones. On the second, he stopped the fight immediately and told Jones he was taking a point away.
When Hamill couldnāt continue, the ruling was changed to a disqualification loss, much to Jonesā dismay. Nearly 15 years later, it remains the only blemish on his record, and those sympathetic to that blemish have campaigned with Jones that the loss should be overturned.
When Jones heard of the rule change, which will take place in November, he lobbied UFC CEO Dana White to help remove the loss from his record. That, of course, might be something the Nevada Athletic Commission would take issue with. There is no question the 12-6 elbows were illegal at the time of the fight. If Jones knew the rule, and Jones broke the rule, and it led to a loss, the argument is he shouldnāt have broken the rule.
Reversing his DQ loss would be akin to a driver getting a speeding ticket for doing 50 in a 35mph speed zone in 2009, but in 2024 the speed limit there was changed to 50 and the ticketed driver wants a refund and a cleared record. It was the law at the time. Good luck with that.
And just as absurd to most is Hamillās claim heād hop right into a UFC cage and give Jones a fight and walk away as heavyweight champion. Jones virtually destroyed Hamill 15 years ago on his way up and unquestionably only got better after that.
Jonesā 2009 loss, in a just world, will remain a loss. Break the rules, suffer the consequences. But a just world also might ask for Hamill to get another Jones beatdown just for the suggestion thatās a fight that needs to be settled.
Two things can be true at the same time: Jones demolished Hamill. And Jones deserved to be disqualified under the letter of the law.
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