Are MMA referees (gasp!) actually doing a better job lately? And what are the realistic options for Aljamain Sterling as he heads into a UFC main event at the Apex this Saturday? Also, what does the future hold for Mike Malott?All that and more in this week’s mailbag.

To ask a question of your own, hit up @BenFowlkesMMA on X or @Ben_Fowlkes on Threads.Refs are letting hurt fighters fight and actually calling and penalizing fouls now. Why?!? It makes the sport better, so I am confused...at least we still have weight-cutting for no good reason, at all...— 🍁🍁Screenplaya🍁🍁 (@Screenplaya) April 22, 2026@Screenplaya: Refs are letting hurt fighters fight and actually calling and penalizing fouls now.

Why?!? It makes the sport better, so I am confused...at least we still have weight-cutting for no good reason, at all…OK look, I was as fatalistic as anybody when it comes to the work of refs and judges in MMA. It seemed like we saw the same problems and screw-ups over and over again, with zero signs of improvement or accountability.Then I went to the Combat Sports Officials Summit in January and what I came away with was a sense that, regardless of how it might look from the outside at times, these people are really, really trying.

They’re talking about the same issues we are. They’re debating the same potential solutions. They’re reviewing the failures — their own and other people’s — and trying to learn from them.

They’re doing the best they can.They’re never going to be perfect, but I do think there’s been steady improvement, even if it doesn’t always look like it. The thing we have to realize, though, is that this is an incredibly difficult sport to officiate. There are so many weird things that can happen.

No matter how many weird things you think you’ve already seen during your MMA fandom, there’s still more out there waiting to be discovered. These people have to make snap judgments on wild, tricky situations.And just by the nature of this sport, any call they make is likely to change the entire fight, if not end it completely. It’s basically a close play at home plate in the bottom of the ninth every single time.

Not saying we shouldn’t expect them to be good at their jobs. People’s careers and health are on the line, after all. But they know all that, and they really are trying to get it right.Through all the turmoil and hate, Aljamain Sterling finds himself headlining another card.

Where does his legacy stand? Does he have one more ride to the top at 145 in him?— matthewpizana (@justlikelasagna) April 22, 2026@justlikelasagna: Through all the turmoil and hate, Aljamain Sterling finds himself headlining another card. Where does his legacy stand?

Does he have one more ride to the top at 145 in him?I’ll answer the second part first, since it’s the easiest: No, I’m afraid he does not. He’s 36, with a body that’s been through the meat grinder. He’s also in a division that’s historically unkind to middle-aged fighters.

Even if he could overcome those factors and string some quality wins together (he’s been doing the old win-one-lose-one routine since 2023), there’s the added obstacle of the UFC itself.I don’t think I’m telling anyone anything they don’t already know when I say the UFC bosses don’t love this man. They didn’t love it when he was champ. They pressured him into defending the belt before he was healthy and ready.

They’ve shunted him to the side ever since and are now trying to use him as a catapult for younger fighters. He’d have to really earn it in order to get a title shot at featherweight right now. And sadly, I just don’t think he has that much time left on the clock.Prime vs prime fight, Randy vs Crocop.

Who wins? Felt like they should have done that immediately when Crocop joined the UFC— Tony Moran (@TonyMoran67) April 23, 2026@TonyMoran67: Prime vs prime fight, Randy vs Crocop. Who wins?

Felt like they should have done that immediately when Crocop joined the UFCYou’re absolutely right about that. And I think in a way, the UFC learned a lesson from that whole situation. The lesson was that you shouldn’t make fights just so you can make other fights down the road.

This sport is too unpredictable for that.For those unfamiliar, the UFC brass picked up Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic after the purchase of PRIDE FC and wanted him to fight Randy Couture for the heavyweight title. But they seemed worried that perhaps “Cro Cop” wasn’t well-known enough to North American fans. So they threw him in there with Gabriel Gonzaga first, thinking he’d head kick his way to glory and set up a big pay-per-view showdown with Couture.

Instead it went the exact opposite direction.The moral of the story? When you have a big fight in the crosshairs, go ahead and make it now. Don’t wait for later, because sometimes later never comes.How high can Mallot climb in the rankings.— Bodkins (@bodkins_nick) April 22, 2026@bodkins_nick: How high can Mallot climb in the rankings.Skill-wise, I think Mike Malott has the potential t