DC Comics ace Porter “thrilled” to work with UFC

The UFC and DC Entertainment, home to DC Comics, have teamed up to create unique, special edition UFC 181 key art. The UFC and DC Comics, the cutting-edge leaders on their respective fields, collaborated on art which captures the larger than life doubl…

The UFC and DC Entertainment, home to DC Comics, have teamed up to create unique, special edition UFC 181 key art. The UFC and DC Comics, the cutting-edge leaders on their respective fields, collaborated on art which captures the larger than life double main event of the December 6 Pay-Per-View event. A collaboration between DC Entertainment pencil artist Howard Porter, colorist Alex Sinclair and the UFC creative team, the UFC 181 artwork depicts double main event stars Johny Hendricks. Robbie Lawler, Anthony Pettis and Gilbert Melendez, in iconic, one-of-a-kind artwork inspired by DC Comics. … Read the Full Article Here

T.J. Dillashaw Named Brand Ambassador for Topps

The Topps Company, Inc. and the UFC® announced today that UFC bantamweight Champion T.J. Dillashaw has been named its brand ambassador for Topps’ UFC products. During his title defense at UFC 177 last month, Dillashaw earned his third straigh…

The Topps Company, Inc. and the UFC® announced today that UFC bantamweight Champion T.J. Dillashaw has been named its brand ambassador for Topps’ UFC products. During his title defense at UFC 177 last month, Dillashaw earned his third straight win of 2014 and received a “Performance of the Night” bonus that etched his name in the UFC record books as the first fighter in UFC history to earn two fifth-round stoppage victories. As the Topps ambassador, Dillashaw’s autographed trading cards will be featured in all upcoming Topps UFC releases including the new Topps UFC … Read the Full Article Here

UFC 178 Preview: The Return of Cruz & Zingano, Johnson’s Challenge Ahead & More

This Saturday at UFC 178, the fans will get a chance to see probably the biggest UFC card of 2014 so far.  Dominick Cruz will step foot in the Octagon after being out almost three years. Cat Zingano will also find herself back in action after…

This Saturday at UFC 178, the fans will get a chance to see probably the biggest UFC card of 2014 so far. 

 Dominick Cruz will step foot in the Octagon after being out almost three years. Cat Zingano will also find herself back in action after being out a year. 

Brash Irishman Conor McGregor takes on seasoned UFC featherweight Dustin Poirier in a match that has Fight of the Night written all over it.

Fans will also get to see the long-awaited debut of former Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez as he squares off against Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone.

In the main event, Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson looks to defend his flyweight title for a fifth straight time as he takes on former kickboxing champion Chris Cariaso. 

Check out the video above as Senior Writer of MMA Fighting Chuck Mindenhall breaks down each fight and gives us his thoughts and predictions. 

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The Pros and Cons of Fighting in a Smaller UFC Octagon

Chances are you probably did a double-take when you saw Ben Rothwell and Alistair Overeem take center of the Octagon at UFC Fight Night 50 earlier this month. The heavyweight fighters, already gargantuan in size, seemed bigger. A lot bigger.
No, Rothwe…

Chances are you probably did a double-take when you saw Ben Rothwell and Alistair Overeem take center of the Octagon at UFC Fight Night 50 earlier this month. The heavyweight fighters, already gargantuan in size, seemed bigger. A lot bigger.

No, Rothwell and Overeem didn’t balloon in size before this fight (Overeem actually came in smaller than he usually does). This Octagon was smaller—exactly five feet smaller. 

Towering in at 6’4” and hitting the scales just within heavyweight confines, you think they’d tell Rothwell that he was scheduled to fight in a smaller cage than usual. They didn’t. Apparently, he didn’t care. 

That doesn’t mean that other heavyweight fighters are OK with performing inside of the 25-foot cage. The Ultimate Fighter season 10 alum Matt Mitrione already has his hands full when taking on the 6’3”, 265-pound Derrick Lewis before he learned about the smaller cage. He wasn’t pleased, he told reporters at the post-fight press conference:

I don’t like fighting in that small cage. I’d rather fight in a field than a phone booth. We’re big bodies. You take two steps and you’re fighting in the middle of it. For me, mobility’s a big part of my game—that, and being athletic. For me, it feels like every time I make a movement I’m a foot-and-a-half from one side of the cage or the other, so it’s more difficult.

Some like it. Some don’t. Let’s way out the pros with the cons.

 

The Pros

Fighting inside of a smaller cage will doubtlessly increase the amount of the fan-friendly action that takes place inside of the Octagon. Fighters familiar with the typical 30-footer will no longer be afforded the luxury of circling their away from the type of bout most fans want to see. They’ll either have to engage in a fight or expend an extensive amount of energy in trying to avoid one. 

Save for a few wrestling faithful, watching one fighter lie on top of another for 15 minutes with minimal ground-and-pound isn’t something that falls into the fan-friendly realm. A smaller cage affords stand-up fighters a greater chance to use the cage as part of their takedown defense, ultimately shielding our eyes from any more snoozers than we’ve already had to witness.

 

The Cons

A smaller cage, while action-friendly, curbs strategy. Like Mitrione said, when a fighter relies a lot on his (or her) movement, fighting in a smaller cage suddenly becomes a hindrance upon the fighting style they’ve come to develop. Sure, you might mention that Dominick Cruz was able to hone his hit-me-if-you-can footwork inside of the 25-foot WEC Octagon before stepping foot in the 30-foot one, but he’s a bantamweight—what about the bigger dudes? 

While certain fighters will be able to use the cage as a crutch for their takedown defense deficiencies, they will only be able to benefit if they can capitalize by getting off of the cage. If not, you’ve essentially got another snooze-fest on your hands—except that this one is the vertical, clinch-against-the-fence kind (WARNING: these are no better than the horizontal kind). 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.

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What, If Anything, Can the UFC Do to Protect Its Champs from Injury?

The Ultimate Fighting Championship, just like any other major sports promotion, is susceptible to injury-plagued moments. Just like a team in the NFL or NBA can have its season hopes ruined by one misstep, an entire MMA event can be blown up due to one…

The Ultimate Fighting Championship, just like any other major sports promotion, is susceptible to injury-plagued moments. Just like a team in the NFL or NBA can have its season hopes ruined by one misstep, an entire MMA event can be blown up due to one painful moment.

Mixed martial arts is a violent sport—a sport in which the athletes must train hard in order to be ready for high-level competition. Unfortunately, the UFC cannot do more than it is to protect its champions from sudden injury. Yet, it can do more to protect its cards from falling apart when it occurs.

Injuries within mixed martial arts are going to happen. When they do, the results are going to be catastrophic at times and “minor” in others. The moments that have struck UFC 177 and UFC 178 will ring out as two examples etched in the fight community’s mind.

If the UFC expects these fighters to come in and compete as world-class athletes, then hard training is a must. This hard training will lead to accidental injuries that will keep big-name athletes from upcoming events. The UFC can respond by having a match-making system in place that would help prevent cards from being drastically weakened if major players are forced to back out.

As the UFC moves forward with having all pay-per-view events headlined by title fights, the undercard should also feature title contenders from the same weight class. What this strategy would do is allow the UFC to shift its cards around in the moment of an injury or other change. UFC 158 can be pointed to as an example of how this card structure would work.

Georges St-Pierre was set to defend his title against Nick Diaz, who had been pulled from a previous title shot at UFC 137 due to missing media requirements (via MMA Fighting). If the UFC was forced to do so again, it could have filled his spot with either Johny Hendricks or Carlos Condit, who were in the co-main event. The UFC also booked Jake Ellenberger against Nate Marquardt, both of whom could have stepped in to face other men if needed and would have kept the welterweight division moving forward that night.

Keeping key fighters active within the same time span or on the same cards would help stop injuries from ruining event expectations. This would ensure that specific fighters are training in preparation for the moment in which their number is called.

UFC 146 is another example of a card that was shaken up due to a fighter being taken off the card. When Alistair Overeem was removed because he failed his pre-fight drug test, all of the heavyweight bouts were moved around (via MMAjunkie). Frank Mir was originally supposed to face Cain Velasquez, but instead he was bumped into the main event spot against Junior dos Santos.

Ben Fowlkes of MMA Fighting reported that Mir volunteered his services once it was official that Overeem was pulled from the card. He volunteered to do so at the right moment, and the fact that he was preparing to compete already could have helped the UFC select him to take the spot. Had the company not had any other heavyweight bouts in place, the promotion would have had a much harder time finding a replacement.

Injuries are going to happen in mixed martial arts no matter what the UFC or any other promotion tries to do. However, creating a card development system that books multiple contenders on the same event will help ease the pain of replacements when needed. The UFC will never be able to prevent injuries, but being prepared to face them is its next best option.

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3 Fights That Make Sense for Anderson Silva If Nick Diaz Falls Through

There were few other fights that the UFC could pull together that would excite fans more than Anderson Silva vs. Nick Diaz did when the bout was first announced earlier this year. 
In the blue corner you have the former Strikeforce welterweight ch…

There were few other fights that the UFC could pull together that would excite fans more than Anderson Silva vs. Nick Diaz did when the bout was first announced earlier this year. 

In the blue corner you have the former Strikeforce welterweight champion making his return to the Octagon after what would have been a 22-month hiatus. In the red corner you have the former UFC middleweight champion making his return from a yearlong absence that came as a result of one of the most gruesome injuries most of us have ever seen. 

Both men were poised to take the center of the Octagon and piece together what could have been one of the most fan-friendly striking matches anybody could ask for. 

So when most of us heard that Diaz was arrested under suspicion of DUI, the concerns started to grow—who would Silva fight if the highly anticipated bout with Diaz fell through?

Like it or not, this was a fight that Silva was supposed to win. Diaz was supposed to do what he always does: move forward, throw strikes aplenty and collect his paycheck. Silva, being the counterstriker that he is, was supposed to bob, weave and pounce his way back into relevancy. 

None of the following fighters would make for quite as an exciting fight, especially when you consider the amount of attention Diaz garners when he steps inside of a cage. That doesn’t mean this pay-per-view is already destined to fail, though. 

Here are some alternative options: 

 

Gegard Mousasi

No, he may not have the same rhetorical abilities that Diaz has developed over the years, but he certainly has a similar striking game that could make for an equally exciting fight. Akin to Diaz, Gegard Mousasi doesn’t always throw heavy, but he surely throws often. 

Coming off of a one-sided loss to Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza earlier this month, Mousasi fell to the bottom of the already-crowded middleweight pool of title contenders. A victory against Silva—which could happen—would likely toss him ahead of a lot of the current crop of contenders. 

A win for Silva here would likely provide a little more validation than he would receive in defeating Diaz, further convincing the public that he’s still worthy of the No. 1 spot in the UFC’s middleweight division.

 

Dan Henderson 

Sure, Dan Henderson hasn’t necessarily looked impressive since he took part in a five-round war with Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in 2011. He also hasn’t fought at 185 pounds since he challenged for Jake Shields’ Strikeforce middleweight title back in 2010. 

But after getting rag-dolled by Daniel Cormier, knocked out by Vitor Belfort and split-decisioned by faster fighters in Lyoto Machida and Rashad Evans, it’s obvious that Hendo needs to make some changes before he’ll start seeing any sort of success inside of the Octagon again. 

Squaring off against Silva—in what would be the sequel to their 2008 title unification bout—could be the sort of motivation that Henderson needs to make the difficult weight cut at 44 years old. 

 

Rashad Evans

With back-to-back victories against Henderson and Chael Sonnen, it’s not as if Rashad Evans needs to make the move down to middleweight. He sits firmly as the light heavyweight division’s No. 3 contender, likely only needing one or two more victories before he’ll find himself in a rematch against Jon Jones. 

But that’s just it—it’ll be a rematch against the man who beat him in every feasible way for five whole rounds. And it’s not as if Jones suddenly plateaued upon defeating Evans—he’s gotten much, much better. 

He’ll be looking to make his return to the Octagon in early 2015 after tearing his ACL in the weeks leading up to his bout against Cormier back in March. He did say he’d be willing to come back as early as February, per The MMA Hour, via Dana Becker of Fightline.com, but who’s to say he’d be opposed to the idea of pushing his ETA a month early to step up and fight the former pound-for-pound king? 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA. 

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