Can Dustin Poirier, Chan Sung Jung Give Jose Aldo a Challenge?

When Dustin “The Diamond” Poirier and Chan Sung “The Korean Zombie” Jung meet in the main event of UFC on Fuel TV 3, the two 145-pound warriors will fight for the right to be the next No. 1 contender to current champion Jose Aldo.Since coming to the UF…

When Dustin “The Diamond” Poirier and Chan Sung “The Korean Zombie” Jung meet in the main event of UFC on Fuel TV 3, the two 145-pound warriors will fight for the right to be the next No. 1 contender to current champion Jose Aldo.

Since coming to the UFC, Jung has put on two brilliant performances, submitting Leonard Garcia with a twister in May 2011, a move that eventually earned him Submission of the Year honors. He followed that up by knocking out former No. 1 contender Mark Hominick in seven seconds at UFC 140 in December 2011.

Poirier is also undefeated since coming over from the WEC. He knocked off Josh Grispi and Jason Young each by decision in January and June of 2011, respectively. He followed those two performances by choking out Pablo Garza in November 2011 and tapping out Max Holloway in February 2012 to run his UFC record to 4-0.

Do either of these men, though, have a chance of knocking Aldo off the top of the 145-pound pedestal?

Let’s look at Jung. He lost a razor-thin split decision to Leonard Garcia, then was knocked out by George Roop, who’s lost three of four, then beat Garcia, who’s also lost three out of four, then bested Hominick. Bottom line? Jung is too much of a wild card to get a great read on. He took 15 minutes of punishment from a hard-hitting guy like Garcia, then gets knocked out cold by an off-balance kick from a guy who had knocked out one person in his previous 17 fights. He then submits Garcia, a guy who had only been submitted once in 22 previous fights, then follows that up by knocking out Hominick, who had only lost by KO twice in his previous 29 fights.

For all the hype over Jung, he’s still 2-2 his last four fights and a plus-270 betting line favorite.

Next, there’s Poirier. Since losing to lightweight Danny Castillo by decision back in August 2010, Poirier has won five straight. He knocked out Zach Micklewright in 53 seconds before beginning his four-fight UFC win streak, looking better each fight. His fight with Holloway at UFC 143 was supposed to be with Erik Koch, before Koch pulled out with an injury. He’s now fighting for the featherweight championship in July against Aldo.

In just three years as a professional, Poirier has positioned himself one win away for fighting for the biggest prize in mixed martial arts and enters the fight as a current minus-350 betting line favorite.

Bottom line: Poirier should beat Jung and earn the title shot, but Aldo seems to be too much of a challenge for anybody at 145 right now. Between the WEC and UFC, he’s been in six title fights, and three of them have ended in less than two rounds. He survived exhaustion against Mark Hominick at UFC 129 in April 201, and overwhelmed Urijah Faber while still in the WEC—and did the same to Kenny Florian in the UFC last October.

Champions have never been more dominant, and like Georges St.-Pierre, Anderson Silva and Jon Jones, Aldo may very soon be called upon to move up in weight class and take on the best at 155 pounds.

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UFC Fighters and Their Celebrity Doppelgangers

Everybody out there supposedly has someone who looks exactly like them—a doppelganger.In the UFC, the story is no different. Some UFC fighters, including one who appears on this list, have earned nicknames based off of the people they look like.T…

Everybody out there supposedly has someone who looks exactly like them—a doppelganger.

In the UFC, the story is no different. Some UFC fighters, including one who appears on this list, have earned nicknames based off of the people they look like.

This list will focus on nine current UFC fighters, personalities, champions and UFC executives.

Here we go:

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UFC: Why Jon Jones Should Face Rashad Evans Next, Not Hendo

People often talk about the most undeserving title challengers of all-time, such as the Brian Lopez-Benchimol article seen here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/982539-vitor-belfort-and-the-25-most-undeserving-title-challengers-ever.”Sugar” Ras…

People often talk about the most undeserving title challengers of all-time, such as the Brian Lopez-Benchimol article seen here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/982539-vitor-belfort-and-the-25-most-undeserving-title-challengers-ever.

“Sugar” Rashad Evans is one man who will never appear on that list. He belongs at the top of “the biggest title shot snubs ever” list.

Why? Let’s take a closer look.

Since the beginning of 2010, Evans is 3-0, including two wins over former UFC Light Heavyweight Champions Tito Ortiz and Rampage Jackson. All three of those wins were at Light Heavyweight as well.

Henderson is 4-1 with wins over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Fedor Emelianenko, Rafael Cavalcante, and Renato “Babalu” Sobral. He lost to Jake Shields back in April of 2010. During that five fight span, Henderson has fought at Middleweight, Light Heavyweight, and Heavyweight. 

In that time, Evans has faced the best in the world inside the Octagon. Henderson has one UFC fight, a “win” that many people who don’t professionally score the fights had as a draw.

How about looking at their UFC records overall? 

Evans is 11-1-1, with victories over four UFC Light Heavyweight champions. Henderson is 4-2, and in the two biggest fights of his life, UFC title fights, he got beat by “Rampage” Jackson and choked out by Anderson Silva.

Rashad Evans has lost four title shots due to injury (two to him, one to “Shogun” Rua, one to Jon Jones) since he became the number one contender back in May of 2010. Dan Henderson has spent that time defeating lesser competition. 

Rashad Evans is the rightful number one contender for the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship, and hopefully matchmaker Joe Silva will see it that way before he makes another “Sugar-less” title fight.

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UFC 143: Why Fabricio Werdum Will Have No Problems Against Roy Nelson

At UFC 143, former UFC contender Fabricio Werdum will make his return to the octagon more than three years after his previous fight, a knockout loss to now Heavyweight Champion Junior Dos Santos, to fight “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 10 alum Roy “Big …

At UFC 143, former UFC contender Fabricio Werdum will make his return to the octagon more than three years after his previous fight, a knockout loss to now Heavyweight Champion Junior Dos Santos, to fight “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 10 alum Roy “Big Country” Nelson.

Werdum enters the bout looking to avenge a disappointing decision loss at the hands of current number one contender Alistair Overeem back in June, where Werdum spent time begging Overeem to come into his guard, hoping to utilize his world class jiu-jitsu. Before that, he had pulled off the upset of the year in 2010 when he submitted Fedor Emelianenko in 69 seconds.

Nelson is looking to pick up his 2nd straight win after a 3rd round TKO victory over Mirko Cro Cop back at UFC 137 in late October. Before that, Nelson lost two straight decisions to Junior Dos Santos and Frank Mir.

Werdum should enter this fight as a solid betting favorite, and for solid reasons.

“Vai Cavalo” has won five of his last seven fights, four of those coming by way of TKO or submission, and for his career, he’s beaten Emelianenko, Gabriel Gonzaga (twice), and Overeem (back in 2006).

Nelson is 3-4 in his last seven fights, his toughest win coming at either the hands of Stefan Struve or Brendan Schaub. You decide who’s a tougher test. Those two might be the toughest wins of his career, as his other victories include Brad Imes and a well-past-his-prime Cro Cop.

Nelson has shown great ability to take a punch, as shown in his fights with Mir and Dos Santos, but Werdum will, like Mir, possess a great balance of power and submissions, and Nelson

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UFC 141: How Nam Phan Can Become a Contender in the Featherweight Division

Nam Phan burst onto the UFC scene in the fall of 2010 as a member of Josh Koscheck’s team on the 12th season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” during which time he became the first person to ever beat the master of the “McKenzietine,” Cody McKenzie, and almos…

Nam Phan burst onto the UFC scene in the fall of 2010 as a member of Josh Koscheck’s team on the 12th season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” during which time he became the first person to ever beat the master of the “McKenzietine,” Cody McKenzie, and almost knocked off Georges St-Pierre’s top pick Michael Johnson in the semifinals.

Since the show, Phan is 1-2 with a loss to Mike Brown and a win and a loss to Leonard Garcia, though many people believe he won both of those fights.

In his second fight with Garcia on the main card of UFC 136, Phan and Garcia got into a slugfest that saw about as much defense being shown as there’d be in a New York Knicks game. The brawl earned both men fight-of-the-night honors as Phan won by unanimous decision.

If Phan wants to have any chance of beating Jim Hettes on December 30, the black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and karate will need a completely new gameplan.

Hettes comes into the fight with a perfect 9-0 record, with all of his victories coming by way of submission. Six of his wins have come within one round, and back in August he submitted fellow “TUF” Season 12 alum Alex Caceres with a rear naked choke.

Hettes will be one of Phan’s biggest tests to date, and a game plan like the one he showed at UFC 136 may very well earn him his third official loss in his last four fights.

To beat someone like Hettes, Phan will need to work on his ground game. Avoiding the ground for 15 minutes against someone like Hettes will be near impossible, and Hettes will look for the submission finish the second the fight goes to the ground, as he’s used five different submission variations to finish fights.

Nam Phan has the tools to be a contender at 145 pounds. Now he just has to use them right.

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UFC: Why Now Is the Time for the Strikeforce Heavyweights to Enter the Octagon

Shane Carwin, Minotauro Nogueira, Brock Lesnar, Cain Velasquez and Junior Dos Santos.Other than all being UFC Heavyweight Champions of some sort at one point or another, they have all missed time this year due to injury.The current heavyweight picture …

Shane Carwin, Minotauro Nogueira, Brock Lesnar, Cain Velasquez and Junior Dos Santos.

Other than all being UFC Heavyweight Champions of some sort at one point or another, they have all missed time this year due to injury.

The current heavyweight picture includes several names at the top of the contender’s list, then a big gap, then a bunch of fighters several fights away from a title shot.

Lesnar, Velasquez, Frank Mir and Alistair Overeem are the only fighters with a real claim as to being one fight from a title shot at the least. 

Other fighters like Travis Browne, Cheick Kongo, Dave Herman, etc, are all several fights away from even reaching the levels of the first four, let alone current heavyweight champion Dos Santos.

This is why now is the perfect time for the heavyweights from Strikeforce to enter the UFC.

Strikeforce heavyweights such as Fabricio Werdum, Antonio Silva, Andrei Arlovski, Brett Rogers, among others would all make for great fights among the current middle-tier fighters to try and create a more crowded top-tier in the division, which right now may be the weakest of the seven that have officially recognized champions.

The heavyweight division is supposed to be the glamour division of MMA, but right now, there is little that’s glamorous about the UFC heavyweights. It’s time for Strikeforce to save the day.

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