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Bad news for complacent UFC lightweights: Pissed Tony Ferguson is not retiring

Bad news for complacent UFC lightweights: ‘Pissed’ Tony Ferguson is not retiring Share this story Photo by Rey Del Rio/Getty Images UFC President Dana White believes former interim lightweight champion Tony Ferguson is no longer the bloodthirsty killer who once terrorized the 155-pound weight class, winning 12 straight fights with nine violent finishes. That assessment may lead some of the Top 10 competitors to feel like they’ve somehow managed to escaped the wrath of “El Cucuy,” but according to the “pissed” Ferguson, who turned 37 back in February, the best is yet to come. Related “It Ain’t Over Yet McGavin . The Way I See It . We’ve Only Just Begun,” Ferguson wrote on Instagram, quoting the “Happy Gilmore” movie. “Retire And Give These [Mother Fuckers] A Break? No, I Don’t Think So. Not On My Watch. Now I’m Pissed. Thank You Hardcore For Picking Me Up When I Was Down Crew.”

Tony Ferguson Will Fight On After His Third Consecutive Loss

Tony Ferguson Will Fight On After His Third Consecutive Loss
lowkickmma.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lowkickmma.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

4 Wildlife Restoration Programs That Have Actually Worked

4 Wildlife Restoration Programs That Have Actually Worked Biologist Andrea Morton on her 30 year campaign to save wild salmon. Plus: More proof that wildlife restoration projects can be successful. Flannery Dean Updated (Illustration: Vivian Rosas) Biologist Andrea Morton ended up in B.C.’s remote Echo Bay in the early 1980s with her son and (now late) husband, Robin, to study orcas. When factory fish farms moved in, some whales fled, but Morton stayed behind to fight for the integrity of the ecosystem. For the next 34 years, she documented the farms’ increasingly catastrophic impact on wild salmon, going toe to toe with the industry and the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Here, the scientist-turned-reluctant-activist shares what she learned (for more, read her new book,

Tyee Poll: Do You Think Fish Farms Should Be Banned on the Pacific Coast?

SHARES Please note that Tyee Barometer polls are only intended as a quick and engaging non-scientific snapshot of our readers opinions on various topics that fit with The Tyee s very broad editorial mandate. They are not intended to be seen as a representative sampling of BC opinion. Salmon activist Alexandra Morton has just released her telling book Not On My Watch, chronicling, and challenging with resonant detail salmon farming on the Pacific coast. Comparing salmon farms to feedlots, she argues how the acceleration and mere continuation of fish farming on the Pacific coast will lead to species extinction. Disease among local salmon populations is rife, yet governing bodies are only now starting to come to terms with the impacts of fostering development with foreign investors.

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