UFC on Fox 5 Results: Will Fans Turn Against Benson Henderson for Beliefs?

UFC on Fox 5 resulted in Benson Henderson exercising three freedoms to the fullest.One was the freedom to inflict pain on his opponent, Nate Diaz. The second was his freedom of speech, and with it, he exercised his freedom of religion. Henderson is a C…

UFC on Fox 5 resulted in Benson Henderson exercising three freedoms to the fullest.

One was the freedom to inflict pain on his opponent, Nate Diaz. The second was his freedom of speech, and with it, he exercised his freedom of religion.

Henderson is a Christian.

In a nation that was founded on don’t-tell-me-who-to-worship principles, that isn’t a problem with most. The thing is, though, Henderson is a Christian who’s extremely passionate about his beliefs. And as the sports world has witnessed during the Tim Tebow era, if an athlete’s passion is perceived as too in-your-face, then haters begin to hate.

Smooth entered the octagon on Saturday night to a genre, Christian hip-hop, that’s a stranger to UFC walkout music. And after it began to play, Henderson’s go-to pump-up song began to trend on Twitter.

Reid Forgrave of Fox Sports reacted to and identified the track.

It doesn’t get much more in your face than blasting “Awesome God” through the KeyArena speakers. But for crying out loud, it’s a remake of a children’s song. Even the most anti-religious can’t scour at that—and the vast majority of reactions to Henderson’s walkout music couldn’t have been more positive.

After he defeated Diaz by unanimous decision, though, Henderson wasn’t finished exercising of his freedom.

Forgrave reported that the fighter’s victory cry proclaimed, “Seattle! Key Arena! I can do all things through Christ!”

In the post-fight press conference, he addressed his faith and said (via Fox Sports): “For me it’s more a daily walk. It’s what I do every day, not putting on a show. It’s more about your daily walk with the Lord. I’m not afraid to wear it on my sleeve.”

And when athletes aren’t afraid to wear their faith on their sleeve, critics pour in like Niagara Falls.

Even Kurt Warner, a self-professing Christian, advised Tebow to tone down his I love Jesus declarations. Dan Bickley of the Arizona Republic reported that Warner said:

There’s almost a faith cliche, where (athletes) come out and say, “I want to thank my Lord and savior.” As soon as you say that, the guard goes up, the walls go up, and I came to realize you have to be more strategic.

That was pretty much a response to Jake Plummer’s comments on Tebow earlier that week who, according to Nate Davis of the USA Today, said:

I think that when he accepts the fact that we know that he loves Jesus Christ, then I think I’ll like him even better. I don’t hate him because of that. I just would rather not have to hear that every single time he takes a good snap or makes a good handoff.

Henderson is loved now. But in today’s easily-offended society, will his non-Christian audience eventually become turned off by his faith like Tebow’s? It all depends how often and to what extent he wears it on his sleeve.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.

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Henderson vs. Diaz: Bendo Should Fight Gilbert Melendez after UFC on Fox 5 UD

Nate Diaz couldn’t even give Benson Henderson a challenge.After abusing Diaz and defeating Frankie Edgar twice, the number of lightweight UFC fighters who are talented enough to compete with Henderson is thinning. That’s why Dana White shou…

Nate Diaz couldn’t even give Benson Henderson a challenge.

After abusing Diaz and defeating Frankie Edgar twice, the number of lightweight UFC fighters who are talented enough to compete with Henderson is thinning. That’s why Dana White should reach out to Strikeforce fighter Gilbert Melendez to be Henderson’s next opponent.

Nate Diaz’s trainer Cesar Gracie approved a Henderson vs. Melendez showdown and said after Saturday night’s fight when asked about the potential matchup (via MMA Fighting):

I think that’s the fight they should make. Obviously it’s not up to me … Gilbert’s the champ over there, he’s been in Strikeforce forever, and that would be a great fight. He’s beaten the guys: he’s beaten the Clay Guidas and all these other guys and he’s a tough guy. I’ll tell you: that would be a scrap. He’s kind of like a Ben Henderson with that scrappy, fighter style … I think it would be a really good fight.

Melendez definitely has the resume to warrant a title shot.

He’s won seven straight fights, his last loss coming in 2008 against Josh Thompson, who he’s beaten twice since then—one by unanimous decision.

ESPN’s latest MMA lightweight power rankings had Melendez slotted at No. 3, only behind Henderson and Edgar.

Josh Gross of ESPN said that Melendez would give Henderson a much more competitive fight than Diaz, writing “Melendez is physical. He wrestles hard. Punches hard. Clinches hard. Everything about Melendez is intense.”

When discussing the potential of a Henderson vs. Melendez bout, it isn’t a matter of if the two mixed martial artists should fight, but when. They are the two best lightweight fighters alive and it’d be a shame if they didn’t go toe-to-toe next year.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.

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UFC 150 Live Stream: When and Where to Watch Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar

“Epic” doesn’t do justice to how much Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar Round 2 is a must-watch bout. With a UFC 150 live stream available, you have no excuse to miss Saturday night’s fight. If you’re on your death bed, i…

“Epic” doesn’t do justice to how much Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar Round 2 is a must-watch bout.

With a UFC 150 live stream available, you have no excuse to miss Saturday night’s fight. If you’re on your death bed, it’s called a laptop.

Watch the preliminary round free on UFC’s Facebook page at 7:30 p.m. EDT and the rest of UFC 150 on UFC.tv starting at 10:00 p.m. EDT.

After Benson and Edgar put on the Fight of the Night in UFC 144, both competitors believed they had just won a memorable match. They couldn’t share the W, though. 

Judges dealt Benson the win by unanimous decision. He took the Lightweight Championship belt that Edgar had worn since April 2010.

Edgar didn’t agree with the ruling and he recently confirmed his discontent in an interview with Matt Tuthill of Men’s Fitness. He said:

“I thought I won. I watched the fight again. I did.”

Either way, he’s getting another shot at Benson. And it’s sure to be just as much, if not more brilliant than the first.

In its pound-for-pound MMA power rankings, ESPN  rated Edgar and Benson as the sixth- and seventh-best fighters in the world.

Benson has won 14 of his last 15. Edgar has lost just one match in his entire career besides his previous to Benson.

And “Smooth” Henderson knows that earning another unanimous decision will be difficult. According to Neil Springer of the Toronto Sun, Benson said of Edgar:

Frankie’s a tough fighter and we all know he’s a lot better in rematches. It’s one of his biggest things. His coaches are great and they always put together a great game plan for rematches and finding weaknesses and holes in their previous opponent.

In his three career rematches, Edgar has never suffered a loss.

Expect nothing less than a Fight of the Year-like match.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.


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UFC on Fox 4: Mauricio Rua Will Bounce Back and Defeat Brandon Vera

UFC on Fox 4’s main event is Mauricio Rua’s to lose.The 30-year-old Brazilian MMA fighter will face off against Brandon Vera on Saturday at 8 p.m. ET on Fox. If he isn’t the last man standing, it’d be a shocker. Rua is the more …

UFC on Fox 4’s main event is Mauricio Rua’s to lose.

The 30-year-old Brazilian MMA fighter will face off against Brandon Vera on Saturday at 8 p.m. ET on Fox. If he isn’t the last man standing, it’d be a shocker. Rua is the more talented fighter, and with a title shot on the line, he has more to fight for.

John Morgan of MMAjunkie.com reported that Rua talked about how the importance of a victory vs. Vera is amplified by the fact that a belt could be within his reach. He said:

I prefer to look at it from a different perspective. I don’t look at it as any kind of pressure but as a way to have more motivation for the fight next Saturday. It doesn’t matter. The belt is a result of a good job, good work. I’m now focused on the fight of next Saturday. Then I’m going to start to think about the future. Right now, all that matters is Saturday’s fight.

Since losing his light heavyweight championship to Jon Jones, Rua has knocked out Forrest Griffin in the first round and lost in the Fight of the Year to Dan Henderson.

According to Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports, UFC president Dana White said of his match against Henderson: “[Rua‘s] last fight with Dan Henderson was one of the sickest fights I’ve ever seen in my life.”

That sounds like a fan to me.

With only one more win likely standing in between Rua and a shot at a title, he isn’t losing—especially to Vera.

In the American’s last four fights, he was defeated by unanimous decision against Randy Couture, knocked out in the first round by Jones, dealt a loss by unanimous decision again vs. Thiago Silva (until Silva attempted to cheat on his urine test) and beat Eliot Marshall.

Marshall, Vera’s only victory since three summers ago, isn’t anything special with a 10-4 career record against other mediocre fighters.

The 34-year-old Vera’s downslide will continue on Saturday.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.


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Hector Lombard: Crash of Hype Train at UFC 149 Proves UFC’s Superiority

UFC is on another level. Hector Lombard fell to Tim Boetsch at UFC 149 by split decision on Saturday night. The Cuban fighter’s failure to make noise in his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut is proof that UFC is the superior MMA league. Accord…

UFC is on another level.

Hector Lombard fell to Tim Boetsch at UFC 149 by split decision on Saturday night. The Cuban fighter’s failure to make noise in his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut is proof that UFC is the superior MMA league.

According to John Morgan of MMAjunkie.com, UFC president Dana White talked about how disappointing Lombard’s match was. He said:

It’s the unfortunate thing about hype: When there’s a lot of hype behind you and you don’t live up to the hype, it goes away real quick. This is one of those things—the guy was on a 25-fight win streak, a lot of people were high on him, people have been talking about him forever. Guys that fight in other organizations end up in top-10 rankings, and it’s a whole other world over here.

In their MMA power rankings going into the week, ESPN ranked Lombard as the seventh-best Middleweight fighter in the world. Boetsch was unranked, by the way. Their analysis of Lombard’s ranking read: “All the talk of Lombard being overrated for annihilating the Bellator field can now stop: The Cuban is headed for the UFC.”

Well, isn’t that ironic?

When Lombard finally fought in the UFC, it only proved that he was overrated—not the other way around, like ESPN tried to play it.

A fighter that absolutely dominated Bellator and CFC couldn’t come up with a victory against Boetsch—a solid but far-from-elite competitor.

Lombard was supposed to be elite. He hadn’t lost a fight since 2006. Not only does his Saturday-night loss hurt his reputation, but it destroys Bellator’s and CFC’s as well.

There’s a lesson to be learned from the crash of the Cuban hype train: If they aren’t fighting the UFC’s best, don’t rank them among the UFC’s best.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.

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Ronda Rousey Body Issue: Rowdy Can’t Allow Attention to Become a Distraction

Many sports fans were introduced to Ronda Rousey this week.That isn’t an insult. It’s just that, outside of MMA fans, the ESPN Body issue is likely the first time a solid chunk of the sports world has heard her name. Rousey must ignore her …

Many sports fans were introduced to Ronda Rousey this week.

That isn’t an insult. It’s just that, outside of MMA fans, the ESPN Body issue is likely the first time a solid chunk of the sports world has heard her name. Rousey must ignore her new-found fame, though, and not let the bright lights blind her from her Strikeforce domination.

According to Marc Raimondi of the New York Post, Rowdy had about 76,000 Twitter followers before the issue was released. Today, she’s approaching 86,000. While that isn’t a Charlie Sheen-like rise, Rousey is tapping into a new fan base.

As an admitted Twitter addict, Rousey must resist the temptation to fall in love with her ever-growing popularity. Just recently, she called out Kim Kardashian. With her diss, Rousey garnered praise from every Kardashian hater on the planet (and there are many).

At this moment, Rousey is one of the hottest names in the world of sports. Sarah Kaufman is one person hoping that the notoriety gets to her head.

Rousey and Kaufman are scheduled to fight on August 18th. While Rowdy has been a force to be reckoned with over the course of her career, Kaufman isn’t a pushover. Rousey boasts just five professional wins compared to Kaufman’s career record of 15-1.

The average sports fan may never heard of Kaufman—she doesn’t have 16,000 followers on Twitter, but that means nothing in the Octagon. While the fight will highlight Rousey, it’ll be a match between the two best pound-for-pound fighters in the MMA.

Kaufman talked to MMAjunkie in late June about the matchup. She said:

“Ronda hasn’t fought someone like me yet. It’s going to be a shock for her. I definitely want to test [Ronda’s] chin, for sure.”

If Rousey’s focus wavers next month, her undefeated record will be no more.

 

David Daniels is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and a syndicated writer.

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