Jon Jones heard two different alarms in two different title-fight upsets.
For Ilia Topuria, the danger is the glare that follows a belt: the dinners, attention, money and new faces that crowd around a champion before the work starts to slip. For Khamzat Chimaev, Jones saw something colder and more technical, the moment a great bully of grappling suddenly had to fight from underneath.
That is the useful part of Jones speaking on both men after their first professional defeats. He is not selling sympathy. He is diagnosing the uncomfortable bit every dominant fighter eventually meets, even if Jones himself only carries the Matt Hamill disqualification on an otherwise unbeaten résumé.

Jon Jones advice to Khamzat Chimaev and Ilia Topuria after UFC title losses
Jones addressed the subject in an interview with Red Corner MMA after Topuria was beaten by Justin Gaethje for the undisputed lightweight championship at UFC Freedom 250 and Chimaev came up short on the cards against Sean Strickland at UFC 328, losing the middleweight belt. The timing made it hard to ignore: two unbeaten, high-status UFC names, two titles gone, two reputations suddenly forced into repair mode.
His read on Topuria was not built around tactics first. Jones pointed to the championship hangover, the immediate jump in fame and the clutter that follows it. He also said Topuria has important stabilizers around him, including faith, a serious team, work ethic and enough self-awareness to admit the Gaethje fight was below his standard. The phrase Jones kept circling was accountability, because an excuse-making former champion rarely walks cleanly into a rematch.
Why Jones sees honesty as Topuria’s first real weapon
Topuria’s appeal has always included certainty. He talked like a champion before he wore UFC gold, and for a long stretch the results backed up every hard word. A loss to Gaethje does not erase that, but it changes the room. Jones’ point is that the comeback begins before the gym session, with the fighter deciding whether he wants truth or comfort. In his words, “Honesty with yourself is the key.” That is not poetry from Jones; it is the blunt requirement for a fighter who may be offered a quick path back to the same man who just beat him.
- Gaethje left UFC Freedom 250 as the undisputed lightweight champion after defeating Topuria.
- Strickland edged Chimaev at UFC 328 and took the middleweight title from him.
- Topuria and Chimaev each entered those fights without a previous pro defeat.
- Jones gave his assessment while speaking with Red Corner MMA.

Khamzat Chimaev rematch path hinges on ground-game comfort
Jones was more specific with Chimaev because the Strickland fight presented a cleaner technical question. Chimaev is usually the man applying the body lock, forcing scrambles and making opponents live at his preferred tempo. Jones believed the major psychological turn came when Chimaev was put on his back, a position the former champion has not often had to solve under UFC lights.
The advice was simple and a little bruising: rebuild the weak room. Jones said Chimaev should alter the endurance work, spend more training time underneath and become calm enough there to threaten submissions rather than merely survive. That matters because a Strickland rematch, if the UFC grants one, would not be fought in a vacuum; every middleweight contender has now been handed a visible line of attack. If Chimaev returns at 185 pounds instead of pursuing the light heavyweight move he initially mentioned, his next camp cannot be only about sharpening what already scares people.
| Fighter | Key issue after loss |
|---|---|
| Ilia Topuria | Managing fame, pressure and honesty after dropping UFC lightweight gold |
| Khamzat Chimaev | Becoming functional and dangerous when forced onto his back |
| Justin Gaethje | Exited UFC Freedom 250 with the undisputed lightweight belt |
| Sean Strickland | Shifted the middleweight picture by beating Chimaev |
| Jon Jones | Framed both comebacks around self-assessment and targeted training |
| UFC matchmakers | Still control whether either former champion receives an immediate rematch |
There is no mystery about the stakes. Topuria and Chimaev are still elite talents, still marketable, and still close enough to the throne that the UFC can justify fast rematches if the divisions break that way. But Jones’ message cuts against the easy promotional reset: Topuria has to resist the champion’s lifestyle without the champion’s belt, and Chimaev has to fix the position opponents will now chase. Chimaev has called for another fight with Strickland after initially signaling a move to light heavyweight.
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