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This Past Weekend: Strikeforce Challengers Series 15

Posted on April 5, 2011 by Jonathan

Strikeforce – Challengers 15

April 1, 2011
Stockton, California, United States

 

Lightweight (155 lbs)

Justin Wilcox (11 – 3 – 0)  continued his march towards a Strikeforce lightweight title shot as he disposed of Rodrigo Damm (9 – 5 – 0) by stopping the bout due to doctors stoppage at the end of round 1.  Rodrigo Damm looked like he had little to offer Wilcox, who dominated the Brazilian with powerful head kicks and ground and pound including precision elbows (thanks to Strikeforce adopting the unified rules and allowing elbows).  In the post fight interview, Wilcox stated that he has his eye on the gold.  It is hard to argue against him after the performance he showed on Friday night.  Other than a title fight with the winner of [#4] Gil Melendez and [#9] Tatsuya Kawajiri (taking place on April 9th), a bout with [#13] Jorge Masvidal would prove telling for Justin “The Silverback” Wilcox.  Wilcox jumps 12 spots forward, from [#40] to [#28] with this victory, and now on a 6 fight win streak.  Rodrigo Damm is in a tough spot , losing 4 of his last 5.  Perhaps scraps between he and [#78] Billy Evangelista, who is coming off the first loss of his career to Jorge Masvidal, or [#89] Carlo Prater would be worthwhile.  Damm drops 29 spots from [#92] to {#121].

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The Ultimate Fighter 13 – Episode 1 Results

Posted on March 31, 2011 by Oleg

In Episode 1, Miles Jury was forced out of the competition when he tore his ACL in training. Jury was replaced on Team Lesnar by [#289 WW] Chuck O’Neil.

In the first fight, Team Dos Santos’ first pick Shamar Bailey defeated Team Lesnar’s last pick Nordin Asrih by a unanimous decision (20-18 on all scorecards).

The current fight tally is 1 Team Dos Santos, 0 Team Lesnar.

Here’s who remains:

[#113] Anthony Ferguson

[#179] Myles Jury
injured in training

[#200] Ryan McGillivray

[#247 LW] Ramsey Nijem

[#289] Chuck O’Neil
alternate taking place of Miles Jury

[#321] Charlie Rader

[#364] Shamar Bailey
moves on to quarter-finals with a win over Asrih

[#387] Clay Harvison

[#441] Chris Cope

[#475] Len Bentley

[NR] Nordin Asrih
lost a unanimous decision to Shamar Bailey

[NR] Michael Bowman

[NR] Keon Caldwell

[NR] Zachary Davis

[NR] Javier Torres

This Past Weekend: Bellator 38

Posted on March 30, 2011 by Jonathan

Bellator Fighting Championships 38
March 26, 2011
Tunica, Mississippi, United States

Bellator Light Heavyweight Tournament Quarterfinals

Light Heavyweight (205 lbs)
Tim Carpenter (7 – 0 – 0) won a split decision over Daniel Gracie (5 – 3 – 0).  Carpenter drops 2 spots from #114 to #116, since he only won a split decision over a much lower ranked fighter.  Carpenter will face Christian M’Pumbu in the semi finals of the tournament.  Daniel Gracie drops 7 spots from #192 to #199.  Who knows what the next move for the relatively inactive Gracie will be.

Light Heavyweight (205 lbs)
Christian M’Pumbu (16 – 3 – 1) defeated Chris Davis (10 – 3 – 0) by TKO due to punches at 3:34 into round 3.  M’Pumbu jumps 7 spots forward from #56 to #49.  M’Pumbu, who has now won 5 of his last 6 fights, will face Tim Carpenter in the semi finals.  Chris Davis plummets 44 spots from #89 to #133.  Davis was winning the fight early, but faded late and paid for it.  This breaks a 3 fight win streak for Davis.

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Titan FC 17 results

Posted on March 29, 2011 by Jonathan

Titan Fighting Championships 17

March 25th, 2011

Heavyweight (265 lbs)
Former WWE Heavyweight champion Bobby Lashley (6 – 1 – 0) defeated John Ott (8 – 8 – 0) by unanimous decision. Lashley jumps 35 points from #161 to #126. Lashley faded late and his performance was underwhelming. John Ott falls 38 spots from #269MW to #307 MW.

Heavyweight (265 lbs)
Aaron Rosa (17 – 3 – 0) stopped Abe Wagner (8 – 4 – 0) by rear naked choke :35 into the 2nd round. Rosa jumps 24 points from #51 to #27. Rosa is on a 4 fight win streak, and has effectively usurped the momentum Wagner had coming out of his Sylvia win. Abe Wagner falls 20 spots from #29 to #49.

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UFC – Fight Night 24 Results and Ranking changes

Posted on March 29, 2011 by Jonathan

UFC Fight Night 24

March 26, 2011
Seattle, Washington, United States

Main Card

Light Heavyweight (205 lbs)
“Mr. Wonderful” Phil Davis (9 – 0 – 0) continued his undefeated streak by winning a unanimous decision over Antonio Rogerio Nogueira (19 – 5 – 0). Davis moves up 7 spots from #20 to #13. Phil Davis continues to pass the tests put in front of him, but still has some room for improvement before he steps up to the top tier of the division. A fight against #12 ranked Rich Franklin, #11 Ryan Bader, or a step up against #7 Forrest Griffin could be good tests for “Mr. Wonderful.”
“Lil Nog” drops down 4 spots, from #15 to #19. Nog has lost 2 fights in a row, so the next could be a must win for him to stay employed by the UFC. The original match between Nog and #23 ranked Tito Ortiz could still be done at this point, or a match against a fellow loser to Phil Davis, #21 ranked Alexander Gustafsson.

Welterweight (170 lbs)
Anthony Johnson (9 – 3 – 0) came back after a 16 month layoff and won a unanimous decision over Dan Hardy (23 – 9 – 0). Johnson, who was previously unranked, moves into #19. Anthony Johnson surprised some fans by not standing and trading on the feet with Hardy. Although not popular with the people in attendance, Johnson showed previously unused tools in his arsenal to ensure victory against the poor takedown defense of Hardy. Johnson has a myriad of possibilities for next opponent. Match ups against #22 Chris Lytle, #20 Mike Pierce, #18 Brian Ebersole or #17 Jake Ellenberger could all be interesting.
Dan Hardy moves down 8 spots from #19 to #27. Hardy has now lost 3 in a row, and is in danger of being cut by the UFC. If he is to stay, matches against #29 Nate Diaz, #26 Ricardo Almeida, #25 Paulo Thiago or #24 Matt Serra would all prove to be do or die contests for the competitors involved.

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This Past Weekend: Saturday and Sunday

Posted on March 28, 2011 by Jonathan

These are the results from this past Saturday and Sunday and how they effected the fighters rankings.

Ultimate Challenge MMA – Lights Out
March 26, 2011
London, England

Heavyweight (265 lbs)
Former Worlds Strongest Man competitor Oli Thompson (8 – 2 – 0) defeated Ben Smith (8 – 4 – 0) by rear naked choke in round 2. Thompson goes from #230 to #147, jumping 83 points.  Oli Thompson is now on a 4 fight winning streak.  Ben Smith falls off the top #250.

Fighters Arena Lodz 2
March 26, 2011
Lodz, Lodzkie Voivodeship, Poland

Catchweight (198 lbs)
UFC veteran Tomasz Drwal (18 – 4 – 1) broke a 2 fight losing streak and defeated Argentinian Leonardo Lucio Nascimento (8 – 8 – 2) by KO due to punches 3:37 into round 2. Drwal goes from #61 to #58, jumping 3 points. Leonardo Lucio Nascimento drops 8 points from #223LHW to #231LHW.

Heavyweight (265 lbs)
Latvian kick boxer Konstantin Gluhov (15 – 6 – 0) defeated Polish Bellator vet Michal Kita (8 – 4 – 0) by TKO due to retirement 5:00 into round 2. Gluhov breaks into the top 100, jumping from #116 to #67, moving up 49 points.  Kita drops 11 points from #72 to #83.  Kita is now on a 3 fight losing streak.

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This Past Weekend: Late Thursday into Friday

Posted on March 28, 2011 by Jonathan

These are the results from this past Thursday and Friday and how they effected the fighters rankings.

Heroes Gate 3
March 24, 2011
Tesla Arena,
Prague, Czech Republic

Light Heavyweight (205 lbs)
Francis Carmont (14 – 7 – 0) defeated Simon Carlsen (4 – 2 – 0) by TKO due to punches in the 2nd round.  Carmont moves up 23 spots from #82 to #59.  Carmont is on a 3 fight win streak, and has won 4 of his last 5.  Carlsen drops 50 spots from #101 to #151.  Prior to this loss, Carlsen was on a 4 fight win streak.

Light Heavyweight (205 lbs)

Attila Vegh (21 – 4 – 2) defeated Baga Agaev (20 – 11 – 0) by TKO due to corner stoppage in the 3rd round.  Vegh moves up 63 spots from #115 to #52.  Vegh is 3-1-1 in his last 5 fights.  Agaev drops weight classes and moves from #50HW to #74LHW.  Prior to this loss, Agaev was on a 5 fight win streak.

Lightweight (155 lbs)

Ivan Buchinger (16 – 2 – 0) defeated Maratbek Kalabekov (12 – 4 – 0) by unanimous decision.  Buchinger moves up 9 spots from #132 to #123.  Buchinger is on a 4 fight win streak.  Kalabekov drops off the top 500 list for 155lbs,  being previously ranked at #457.  Prior to this loss, Kalabekov was on a 3 fight win streak.

Middleweight (185 lbs)
Artur Kadlubek (10 – 8 – 0) defeated Milan Tomes (4 – 5 – 0) by TKO due to punches in the 1st round.  Kadlubek goes from being unranked to #273.  Tomes remains unranked.

Welterweight (170 lbs)
Matus Laincz (6 – 2 – 0) defeated Jaroslav Poborsky (15 – 25 – 0) by TKO due to punches in the 1st round.  Laincz goes from being unranked to #308. Laincz is on a 3 fight win streak.   Poborsky remains unranked.

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UFC 121 Review

Posted on October 25, 2010 by Oleg

Taking place in Anaheim, UFC 121 shaped up to be one of the better cards of the year, in terms of significant matchups.  The headline bout of Brock Lesnar defending his heavyweight title against Cain Velasquez was  backed up by a very strong undercard, with the much anticipated UFC debut of Jake Shields taking second billing against Martin Kampmann.  Here’s how it all went down:

Preliminary Card (Spike TV)

Patrick Cote vs Tom Lawlor (185 lbs)

Round 1: Lawlor is aggressive early, backing Cote up with punches and tying him up against the cage.  Lawlor works knees to Cote’s legs from clinch.  Eventually Lawlor pulls Cote down to the ground.  Cote closes guard and waits for a standup.  Lawlor with small punches from the top; very little action until Lawlor passes guard and locks in an arm triangle.  Cote frees himself after a struggle but Lawlor takes his back as the round ends.  Round 10-9 Lawlor

Round 2: Some mild standup exchanges then Lawlor goes for another takedown.  Cote defends with a guillotine attempt.  Lawlor breaks out of it and completes the takedown.  Cote gets up then taken down again.  Not much happening on the ground and referee Jon McCarthy stands them up, they trade punches to complete the second stanza.  Round 10-9 Lawlor

Round 3: Cote looking to strike but gets taken down quickly again.  Lawlor passes into side control and goes for another arm triangle.  Cote escapes but now finds himself mounted.  They struggle and eventually he regains guard.  Lawlor methodical from the top, not doing any damage and eventually referee stands them up.  Lawler with another takedown, clinching the fight.  Round 10-9 Lawlor

Tom Lawlor wins a unanimous decision, 30-27 on all scorecards

Aftermath: This was a must-win fight for both opponents, and Tom Lawlor did exactly what he had to.  His next opponent should be Kyle Noke or Court McGee.  Patrick Cote failed to deliver, losing his third consecutive bout and falling to 4-7 in the UFC.   He will likely have to take a fight or two in another promotion, though I expect to see him back in UFC eventually.

Ranking Impact: Tom Lawlor moves up 50 spots to #51 MW.  Patrick Cote falls 22 spots to #74 MW.

Fight Grade: 2/5

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UFC 120 Review

Posted on October 18, 2010 by Oleg

Returning to the O2 Arena in London, UFC 120 was broadcast with taped delay on Spike TV in the US, and featured Michael Bisping taking on Yoshihiro Akiyama in a middleweight bout for the main event.  The fight card lacked title matches or star power, and featured mainly the British and European competitors in most bouts.

Cyrille Diabate vs. Alexander Gustafsson (205 lbs)

Round 1: The fighters exchange leg kicks and circle.  Eventually Gustafsson comes forward with a flurry and drops Diabate.  Gustafsson follows to the ground, landing in side control.  Gustafsson keeps Diabate down and lands punches.  Diabate eventually gets back to the feet.  They clinch and trade, and Gustafsson drops Diabate again with an uppercut.  Gustafsson looking to follow up on the ground but Diabate is up quickly and returns fire.  Diabate landing solid body and leg kicks.  Gustafsson closes the distance and puts Diabate on his back with a trip.  Gustafsson punches away from side control as the round ends.   Round 10-9 Gustaffson

Round 2: Diabate opens up with his hands; Gustafsson clinches and slams Diabate to the ground.  Gustafsson in side control again, passing into north-south then mount.  Diabate gives up his back and Gustafsson is looking for a choke.  It’s not there and so he opens up with punches from the back.  Another choke attempt then more punches, another adjustment and this time the choke is locked in and Diabate taps quickly.

Aftermath: After being stifled and submitted by Phil Davis in his previous fight, the Swedish striker Gustafsson rebounds with an impressive win, dominating Diabate in every aspect.  Brandon Vera would be the perfect test for Gustafsson’s next bout.

The veteran kickboxer Diabate looked every bit of his 37 years against Gustafsson.  The loss ends a six-win streak for the Frenchman, who knocked out Luis Arthur Cane in his Octagon debut.  After being matched up with other strikers in his first two UFC bouts, he should face a wrestler such as Jason Brilz or Vladimir Matyushenko to measure his viability in the division.

Ranking Impact: Gustafsson rises 36 spots to #27 LHW.  Diabate falls 13 spots to #36 LHW.

Fight Grade: 4/5

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WEC 51 Review

Posted on October 1, 2010 by Oleg

Taking place in Broomfield, Colorado, WEC 51 featured a very strong line-up.  The event was headlined by the featherweight champion Jose Aldo defending his title against a former UFC lightweight and ‘Ultimate Fighter’ finalist Manvel Gamburyan.  On the undercard, former WEC champions Miguel Torres (bantamweight) and Jamie Varner (lightweight) were taking on Charlie Valencia and Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone respectively.  The preliminary bouts featured another former champion, featherweight Mike Thomas Brown (whose bout with Cole Province didn’t make the televised broadcast), along with a highly hyped debut of WEC’s first Chinese fighter Tie Quan Zhang.

Leonard Garcia vs. Mark Hominick (145 lbs)

Round 1: As expected, Garcia is swinging big from the opening bell.  Hominick is more patient, stalking Garcia, countering Leonard’s wild strikes with clean jabs.  The fighters are mainly even in exchanges, neither doing significant damage.  A big leg kick by Garcia makes both fighters stumble from the impact. Garcia eats punches but only smiles and continues attacking.  Tough round to score.  Round 10-10 draw

Round 2: Similar to the first round, Garcia is looking for the knockout punch while Hominick evades and uses his jab to set up combinations.  Garcia is having some success in early striking, but as the time wears on he slows down, and his wild punches miss by a wide margin, leaving him wide open to Mark’s counters.  Both fighters are bleeding by the end of the round, but Hominick is now in firm control of most exchanges.   Round 10-9 Hominick

Round 3: Garcia starts out as the aggressor once again but Hominick evades or blocks most of Leonard’s attacks, and counters successfully.  Garcia is very tired, and his strikes don’t have much pop to them any more.  Hominick is picking Garcia apart, momentarily drops him with a hook but Garcia is game and continues fighting till the end.    Round 10-9 Hominick

Mark Hominick wins a split decision with the scores of 29-28, 29-28, 28-29

Ranking Impact: Mark Hominick rises 1 spot to #16 FW.  Leonard Garcia remains #26 FW.

Hominick asks for a title shot in the post-fight interview.  He is one of WEC’s top featherweight contenders, along with Josh Grispi and Chad Mendes.

Fight Grade: 3/5

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UFC 119 Review

Posted on September 27, 2010 by Oleg

Taking place in Indianapolis, UFC 119 presented a rather pedestrian card, with Frank Mir taking on Mirko ‘Cro-Cop’ Filipovic in the main event after Antonio Rodrigo ‘Minotauro’ Nogueira withdrew from a scheduled rematch with Mir due to an injury.  In the co-main, Minotauro’s brother Antonio Rogerio Noguiera took on undefeated lightheavyweight prospect Ryan ‘Darth’ Bader.  The card was rounded out by a number of random matchups of little divisional significance.

 

 

Preliminary Card (Spike TV)

Joey Beltran vs. Matt Mitrione (HW)

Round 1: Mitrione is the aggressor, going after Beltran with combinations of punches.  Mitrione mixes in a high kick and leg kicks.  Beltran looking to counter and finally finds an opening, rocking Matt with a punch, pushing him against the fence and punching while holding his head.  Beltran changes levels and scores a takedown.  Beltran works from the top.  Mitrione looking for a triangle, but Beltran evades and passes into half-guard, north-south, then side control all while landing punches from the top.  Beltran got cut somewhere along the way, bleeding on Mitrione from his brow.  Round 10-9 Beltran

Round 2: Mitrione is again leading with punch and kick combinations.  Beltran charges with a flurry, backing up Mitrione against the cage and looking for a takedown.  Mitrione manages to remain on his feet.  They trade wildly, Mitrione rocks Beltran and looks for the finish but Joey hangs in there and lands a big shot of his own.  Beltran slows the pace down by clinching and attempting a takedown but can’t complete.  The action is stopped to cut off some tape that’s hanging off Beltran’s glove.  Fight resumes and they go back to trading windmill punches, and Mitrione finishes the round with a big flurry of punches and kicks.  Round 10-9 Mitrione

Round 3: Mitrione begins the final round in the same manner as the first two.  Beltran is tired, covering up and absorbing a lot of punishment.  The pace slows down and Mitrione is landing on Beltran at will; Joey’s face is bloodied but he keeps coming forward and forcing Mitrione into sloppy exchanges.  Clear victory for Mitrione but Beltran is making a fight of it until the final second.  Round 10-9 Mitrione

Aftermath: An unlikely 3-0 in UFC (and his professional MMA career), Mitrione climbs the ranks with a hard fought victory.  He should next take on Stefan Struve, Roy Nelson, or the winner of an upcoming matchup between Brendan Schaub and Gabriel Gonzaga.   Joey Beltran should fight Patrick Barry or Sean McCorkle.  Better yet, get in shape and cut down to 205 lbs.

Both fighters earned a ‘Fight of the Night’ bonus for the sloppy but enterntaining bout.

Ranking Impact: Matt Mitrione rises 49 spots to #39 HW.  Joey Beltran falls 9 spots to #43 HW.

Fight Grade: 4/5

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UFN 22 Review

Posted on September 16, 2010 by Oleg

To kick off Season 12 of ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ reality series, Ultimate Fighting Championship returned to Texas with another installment of UFC Fight Night.  The four-fight televised card was headlined by middleweight contenders Nate Marquardt and Rousimar Palhares trying to climb the rankings to a title shot, and backed up by a trio of lightweight bouts.

Cole Miller vs. Ross Pearson (155 lbs)

Round 1: The fighters circle and exchange.  Big reach advantage for Miller and he is finding Pearson’s face with the jab.  They trade leg kicks.  Pearson connecting with punches but Miller ducks under for a takedown.  Pearson defends, he eventually gets dragged to the ground but pops back up.  Miller attempts to jump guard but Pearson holds him up against the cage, refusing to go the the ground.  Miller lets go and it’s back to trading; Pearson starting to find his range and out-land Miller on strikes.  Round 10-9 Miller

Round 2: Pearson resumes his striking attack, landing solid body shots.  Miller shoots; Pearson sprawls and Miller ends up on the bottom.  Pearson stands up and motions Cole to do the same.  Miller jabs, then hurts Pearson with a right cross.  Pearson stumbles backwards and Miller runs at him with a flying knee, then floors his stumbling opponent with a hook.  Miller quickly takes Pearson’s back and locks in a rear naked choke, forcing a tapout from Ross.

Aftermath: Former ‘Ultimate Fighter: US vs UK’ winner Ross Pearson is handed his first loss inside the Octagon, while Cole Miller improves his UFC record to 6-2 (with hist last four wins coming by submission).  Miller next bout should be against Charles Oliveira, and Ross Pearson’s against Efrain Escudero.

Fight Grade: 4/5

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UFC 117 Review

Posted on August 9, 2010 by Oleg

On the heels of two highly successfull Pay-Per-View events in UFC 115 and 116, UFC delivered another stacked card for 117. A middleweight title bout between the champion Anderson Silva and challenger Chael Sonnen was backed up by two potential contender matchups: Junior dos Santos taking on Roy Nelson for a crack at the heavyweight title, and a rematch between top welterweights Jon Fitch and Thiago Alves.

Junior dos Santos vs. Roy Nelson (HW)

Round 1: Nelson takes the center of the Octagon, holding his hands high.  Nelson’s advances while covering up; Dos Santos lands a body shot and Nelson shoots in for a takedown.  Dos Santos sprawls and they clinch agains the cage.  Dos Santos breaks up the clinch, landing a knee as they separate.  Dos Santos rocks Nelson with an uppercut.  Nelson goes down to his knees and looks for a single-leg takedown.  Junior backs off then blasts Nelson with another uppercut.  Nelson falls down but survives and keeps trying for takedowns.  Dos Santos patiently landing punches.  Nelson recovers and starts throwing back, landing several hooks and overhand rights towards the end of the round.  Round 10-9 dos Santos

Round 2: Dos Santos leads with a jumping knee to the body.  Nelson responds with an overhand punch that lands, then rushes in for a takedown but dos Santos blocks it.  Dos Santos keeps firing off shots; Nelson covering up and swinging back.  Nelson lands several punches that open up a cut underneath Junior’s eye.  Both fighters slowing down.  Dos Santos tries a half-hearted takedown attempt of his own but does not succeed.  Nelson keeps alternating strikes with double-leg and single-leg shots but Junior’s takedown defence is flawless.  Much closer than first round but dos Santos still outstriking Nelson by a large margin.  Round 10-9 dos Santos

Round 3: The fighters go right back to trading, though neither has much snap to their punches in the final round. Nelson’s defense blocks most of Junior’s punches but an occasional uppercut and body shots come through.  Dos Santos lands a slapping front kick to the head.  Nelson finds his target with a few big punches but Santos appears unfazed.  Dos Santos shoots for a takedown and scores; Nelson right back up.  Nelson is hanging in there, he looks very tired but is still looking for a knockout punch.  The time runs out and the fighters embrace.  Good fight and a clear-cut victory for dos Santos.  Round 10-9 dos Santos

Junior dos Santos wins a unanimous decision with the scores of 30-27, 30-27, 30-26

Aftermath: Both fighters looked good in an enterntaining fight.  Dos Santos showed great takedown defense and solid as usual striking, improving his UFC record to 6-0 and earning a title shot in process.  He will now face the winner of the upcoming title bout between Brock Lesnar and Cain Velasquez.

Roy Nelson’s striking and takedowns both fell short of the mark, but he demonstrated that his chin – and his heart – match the size of his belly.  He may never be in the title picture but at the very least will make a great gatekeeper. His next fight should be against Mike Russow, or a rematch with his former IFL rival Ben Rothwell.

Ranking Impact: Junior dos Santos remains #5 HW.  Roy Nelson remains #26 HW.

Fight Grade: 4/5

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UFC on Versus 2 Review

Posted on August 2, 2010 by Oleg

There’s been a famine of UFC events in the month of July.  After nearly a month-long hiatus, UFC returned with a fight card headlined by a light-heavyweight bout between Jon Jones and Vladimir Matyushenko, and broadcast on Versus network live from San Diego, California.  With a mediocre fight line-up, the most notable thing about this card was the UFC return of iconic MMA referee ‘Big’ John McCarthy, taking his place as the third man in the Octagon for this first time since 2007.

Takanori Gomi vs. Tyson Griffin (155 lbs)

Round 1: Both fighters circle, feint and jab.  Not much landing early.  They continue trading punches and Gomi catches Griffin with a left, then follows up with a right hook that drops Tyson face-first onto the canvas.  Gomi jumps on his fallen opponent and the referee quickly steps in to stop the bout.  Griffin not happy with the stoppage but it was justified.

Aftermath: After being submitted by Ken Florian in his UFC debut, former Pride FC champion Gomi showed a return to the old form, stopping Tyson Griffin for the first time in his career.  Gomi earned the Knockout of the Night bonus for his performance, and claimed in the post-fight interview that he “learned to fight like an American”.  The victory earns Gomi a return to the Top 10; however it is too soon for any talk of title contention.  For now Gomi can either fight another contender such as George Sotiropoulos, or Joe Stevenson, who was supposed to be Gomi’s original opponent for this event but was forced to withdraw with an injury.

Tyson Griffin was eager to get back into the Octagon after losing a decision to Evan Dunham at UFC 115.  Unfortunately stepping up as a short-notice replacement did not work out for him this time, and Griffin finds himself on a losing streak for the first time in his MMA career.  His next fight will be a must-win to remain in the UFC.  Sam Stout or Denis Siver would make for good ‘rebound’ opponents.

Ranking Impact: Takanori Gomi rises 7 spots to #10 LW.  Tyson Griffin falls 12 spots to #32 LW.

Fight Grade: 3/5

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UFC 116 Review

Posted on July 5, 2010 by Oleg

I’ve been slacking on reviewing the slew of MMA events in the past month, but we’re back with a vengeance for what was one of the most anticipated shows of the year this far.  A huge (in every sense of the word) heavyweight title unification bout between champion Brock Lesnar and interim champ Shane Carwin was backed by a superstar of Japanese MMA Yoshihiro Akiyama taking on Chris Leben (a last-minute substitution for the legendary Wanderlei Silva who was hurt while training for the fight).  A lightweight matchup between two streaking prospects Kurt Pellegrino and George Sotiropoulos capped off the undercard of UFC 116.  And here’s how it all went down:

Preliminary card (Spike TV)

Seth Petruzelli vs. Ricardo Romero (205 lbs)

Round 1: They quickly engage and exchange kicks.  Romero looks for a takedown.  Petruzelli defends and hurts Romero with punches.  Romero clinches to recover.  Petruzelli backs up then lands another combination but slips while throwing a kick.  Romero gets Petruzelli’s back in a scramble.  Petruzelli sweeps and pounds away from guard.  Romero with a reversal of his own and mounts Petruzelli.  Romero looking for a submission; Seth rolls out of it and stands, dropping Romero with an uppercut.  Romero holds on to Petruzelli’s leg as Seth lands some odd and sloppy ‘double axe-handle’ strikes.  Round 10-9 Petruzelli

Round 2: Romero looks for a takedown early and eats a knee on the way in.  He staggers but keeps trying for the takedown.  Petruzelli takes his back in a scramble and transitions to an armbar; Romero reverses and ends up in top guard.  Romero’s nose is leaking blood.  Petruzelli attempts a triangle and Romero uses the submission attempt to pass into side control.  Romero secures the crucifix position and looks for a kimura then turns it into a straight armbar.  Petruzelli taps out, in obvious pain.

Aftermath: Romero’s UFC debut was unspectacular but a win is a win, and he will have a chance to do better in his next Octagon outing – maybe against Krzysztof Soszynski or Jared Hamman.  Seth Petruzelli should take on Steve Cantwell or Kyle Kingsbury next.

Ranking Impact: Ricardo Romero, previously ranked at #77 HW, makes his LHW debut at #49.  Seth Petruzelli falls 38 spots to #111 LHW.

Fight Grade: 3/5

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