Jones vs. Cormier Results: Twitter Reacts to UFC 182 Main Event

One of the biggest criticisms surrounding UFC of late is that the company has added so many events to the schedule that it’s watered down the product. However, UFC 182 proved the company can still put on a great show every now and then.
In the main eve…

One of the biggest criticisms surrounding UFC of late is that the company has added so many events to the schedule that it’s watered down the product. However, UFC 182 proved the company can still put on a great show every now and then.

In the main event, Jon Jones retained his light heavyweight title, beating Daniel Cormier by unanimous decision.

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey felt that Jones was a deserving winner:

The animosity between the two fighters often spilled over when they made public appearances leading up to UFC 182. They made it clear that they didn’t like one another. After his victory, Jones couldn’t help rubbing some salt in Cormier’s wounds, per MMAFighting.com:

The champ also paused to take some selfies with fans, per Bleacher Report MMA:

The bout started off really well, with Jones and Cormier arguably exchanging the advantage in the first two rounds. Most had the score even going into the third.

That’s when Jones asserted himself as the superior fighter on the night. From the third round on, he built more and more distance between himself and Cormier.

Bryan Alvarez of Figure Four Weekly didn’t think Cormier managed to match his effort level from his impressive second-round showing:

MMA Supremacy felt there was a long stretch in the middle rounds when the challenger failed to mount any sort of attack:

Yahoo Sports’ Kevin Iole correctly posited that anything short of a knockout, submission or referee stoppage in the final round would mean a win for the champion:

ESPN’s Todd Grisham thought Cormier simply didn’t have enough left in the tank to finish off the fight and that the talent gap only exacerbated the problem:

With Jones having conquered another challenger, the focus will now shift to his next potential opponent. Some might clamor for a rematch with Cormier. ESPN’s Max Bretos argued against it, feeling that there isn’t any doubt about who is the superior fighter:

The next logical choice would be Alexander Gustafsson. After all, Gustafsson was set to fight Jones at UFC 178 before having to back out after suffering an injury in training.

The 27-year-old Swede pushed Jones to the limit back at UFC 165, and a rematch would almost certainly be among the most anticipated fights of the year.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com