Jon Jones isn’t backing down from the narrative around his body breaking down. If anything, he’s pushing against it with video evidence. The former heavyweight champion has spent the past few weeks in a public back-and-forth with UFC boss Dana White, and the center of it is simple: Can he still fight at the highest level?

White pointed to Jones’ hip arthritis as a major concern, even suggesting it played a role in keeping him off the UFC’s White House card, which is the main point in their ongoing feud. For a 38-year-old with years of damage, it’s not a small claim. But Jones has now responded with training footage.

“Right now I’m exactly where I need to be,” Jones wrote alongside the video shared on social media. “I’m excited to see myself in a few months when things actually start to ramp up. Feeling sharp across the board. #mma”

Jones initially stepped away from the sport following stalled negotiations for a fight with Tom Aspinall, then reversed course when the UFC’s White House event was announced. When he didn’t get that slot, frustration built. He even went as far as asking for his release, something the promotion is highly unlikely to grant.

So now, every move he makes publicly carries weight. The footage itself is straightforward. Pad work with bare-knuckles and clean combinations. But that’s the point. There’s no hesitation in his hands, no visible limitation in movement. For a fighter dealing with arthritis concerns, that’s the message he’s trying to send: that this isn’t slowing me down.

But none of it happens without resolution with the UFC. And right now, that’s the biggest hurdle. Jon Jones is showing he’s active. He’s hinting at a return. He’s even using “#mma” as a signal that this isn’t just about training clips, it’s about fighting again. But until the promotion moves, or he finds a way out, it stays in limbo. And as for Dana White, he’s apparently getting tired of being asked about Jon Jones!

Dana White goes off on Jon Jones situation at the UFC Seattle press conference

Dana White’s frustration with the Jon Jones situation is starting to emerge in public. At the UFC Seattle press conference, the UFC head honcho didn’t entertain the topic for long.

“Who gives a s—?” White said, “I’ve already talked about this a million times. Jon knows what happened. So first of all, leading up to this whatever this is, [all I say is] Jon Jones is the GOAT, he’s the greatest ever and everybody’s talking about how I’m blowing Jon Jones all the time, now this falls out, what I f— hate Jon Jones, and I’m trying to destroy Jon Jones now or whatever?”

From White’s perspective, the decision around the White House card was already settled. No matter what negotiations happened, no matter what number was discussed, the former champion wasn’t being booked. Even when talk surfaced about a potential fight with Alex Pereira, White insists the final call came down to reliability.

That’s the keyword here. Jon Jones’ history is part of the equation. Pullouts, legal issues, a failed drug test that removed him from UFC 200, all of it builds a pattern. And for a one-off, high-profile event like the White House card, White made it clear he wasn’t willing to take that risk. In his view, this is just business, the same negotiations that happen every week behind the scenes.

There’s also a practical layer. The UFC CEO pointed out that if Jones truly wants to fight, the promotion is obligated to offer him bouts. Otherwise, the promotion pays.

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