Morning Report: Alexander Gustafsson waiting for UFC’s call on rematch with Jon Jones

Hyperbole and sports writing seem like eternal soul mates at times, but you’ll be hard-pressed to find someone snubbing UFC 165’s main event as anything but one of the greatest MMA fights in recent memory. After a razor thin decision went the way of light heavyweight champion Jon Jones over Alexander Gustafsson, everyone’s immediate question was when we’d all be treated to part two.

Unable to mount the post-fight presser’s dais to field questions from the media, Jones and Gustafsson were sent to the hospital to begin the healing process. Luckily, Ariel Helwani was able to catch a quick interview with the challenger before he’d join Jones.

When asked if he believed he did enough to win the fight, Gustafsson sounds to be a believer that to be the champ, you need to beat the champ. “It’s hard to say,’ said Gustafsson. “I don’t know. I learned a lot from this fight. He’s the champ for a reason. To take the belt from the champ you need to finish him. That’s how it is and I didn’t do it. I didn’t get the belt so I’m disappointed.”

On talk of a likely rematch with Jones, Gustafsson says he’s ready and willing for another shot at the champion. “Absolutely. I’m down whenever. I want a rematch right away, if I can. It’s up to the UFC. I’m just blessed to be fighting in the UFC. I believe it’s an honor to fight Jones and I’ll be ready whenever they call me.”

Jones was photographed being helped from the Octagon and back to the dressing room Saturday night, before reports surfaced he was carried to an ambulance on a stretcher, breathing heavily. Jones cornerman and trainer, Mike Winkeljohn, tweeted Sunday that Jones had ‘possibly shattered’ his foot early in the fight. With Jones sounding the worse for wear, the UFC might be working more on his timeframe as they look ahead for potential dates.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

UFC 165 Aftermath. In addition to making the case for Jones to be regarded as one of the sport’s all-time greats, Dave Doyle breaks down the calls of the night and who’s seeing their stock plummet.

Fortunes changed for five. With two championship bouts in the books, Dave Meltzer explains how Saturday’s results reverberate throughout the UFC’s light heavyweight and bantamweight divisions.

Wineland. Stopped early in the second round of his bantamweight title bout with Renan Barao, Eddie Wineland later called the TKO, ‘bulls**t.’ “[Barao] caught me with a great kick. I was by no means out, I was on my way back up.”

Wrap up show. Following the UFC 165 post-fight presser, Ariel Helwani and Chuck Mindenhall give their instant reactions to the night’s action in Toronto.

The Eagle. Even with No. 1 lightweight contender Josh Thomson in his corner, Khabib Nurmagomedov says he ‘wants a piece.’ “We’re a big family at American Kickboxing Academy and we train together. If he wins, I’m gonna ask him for a piece of that title.”

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MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 main card highlights.

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Rogan and Goldie recaps for UFC 165.

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Phil Davis‘ reaction to Jon Jones’ win.

(HT to Christian Wong)

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Chris Weidman Q&A session and scrum.

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UFC 165 post-fight press conference.

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Quick recap of Lion Fight 11, Cris Cyborg dominating.

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Rener Gracie demonstrates the D’Arce Choke on Ariel Helwani for a quick Gracie Breakdown.

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Jorge Luis Bezerra vs. Scott Askham for the middleweight title at BAMMA 13.

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GLORY 10 Los Angeles – Four Man Tournament.

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Walk off KO, Beau Tribolet vs. Liam McGeary at Bellator 100.

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TWEETS

As per usual, please make sure to check out Shaun’s ‘Pros react’ post to get instant reactions from UFC 165.

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Me too.

That fight was just what I needed

— Jon Bones Jones (@JonnyBones) September 22, 2013

ASAP.

Didnt go my way last nite but ill be back stronger thats a promise!!! Wanna thanks all my fans u r… http://t.co/xsurscP7k7

— Alexander Gustafsson (@AlexTheMauler) September 22, 2013

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Not great?

#MMA: there is a huge difference between good and great. Jones is good, Cain is great.

Dave Camarillo (@DaveCamarillo) September 22, 2013

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I can see it.

Also, I guess I have to get a picture w/@AlexTheMauler now since everyone says he looks like he could be my younger brother. #IFeelOld.

Josh Barnett (@JoshLBarnett) September 22, 2013

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PRIDE system?

I think it’s time for the @UFC to start experimenting with different scoring systems. See if something is more suitable for MMA.

Dan Hardy (@danhardymma) September 22, 2013

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Oh well.

Dustin cost me €11,000 🙁 pic.twitter.com/vQO1eZlfRh

Conor McGregor (@TheNotoriousMMA) September 22, 2013

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Medium scary.

If @PhilMrWonderful wasn’t scary before, how about now! pic.twitter.com/BUYOUPwL5X

Ben Askren (@Benaskren) September 22, 2013

Really scary, but think he’s joking.

I drove my first Harley today, i got up to 140mph in the rain. No big deal http://t.co/t8TOIXsjYk

— Phil Davis (@PhilMrWonderful) September 21, 2013

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Yeesh.

It’s official hands broken in 3 places. Getting surgery. I’ll be back stronger!

Herman Terrado (@HermanTerrado) September 22, 2013

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I forgot about the Rampage show.

I had a great time playing with my toys on my day off,loving the trails n Mexico. (Not sure the film… http://t.co/VZ9UiIlriG

Quinton Jackson (@Rampage4real) September 23, 2013

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High probability for leg locks.

I have a great new TELEVISION SERIES coming out soon about my Bailbonds & Bodyguard business here in Reno Nevada…) @arielhelwani

— KEN SHAMROCK (@ShamrockKen) September 22, 2013

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Another deleted Tito tweet.

Tito_on_dana_and_mom_medium

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Our condolences go out to Zak and his family.

Just over 24 hours ago, my father lost his battle w/ lung cancer and passed away. It was quiet, peaceful and his… http://t.co/klenBbiEHm

Zak Cummings (@ZakCummings) September 23, 2013

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced this weekend (Sept. 20-22 2013)

Joe Warren vs. Nick Kirk at Bellator 101

Cheick Kongo vs. Mark Godbeer moved from Bellator 101 to Bellator 102

Mike Bronzoulis vs. Joe Riggs at Bellator 106

Thiago Perpetuo vs. Omari Akhmedov at UFC Fight Night 32

Caio Magalhaes vs. Nick Ring at UFC Fight Night 33

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via MMA Fighting member OKGangster.

Reaction to UFC 165

Toronto, Ontario, Canada was the stage for the fight that is surely the front runner for fight of the year. Jon Jones squared off against Alexander Gustafsson in a fight that was promised to make our heads explode. That wasn’t the only fight on the card though, so let’s get into this.

The first fight on the card was a lightweight showdown between Pat Healy and Khabib Nurmagomedov, a fight that most likely had title implications. After a strong first round by Nurmy, he seemed to slowed down in what was a back and forth 2nd round only to come back strong in the 3rd, sealing a unanimous decision. Pat Healy is a great fighter, dare I say a lightweight elite, I would like to see a fight between him and Joe Lauzon. Nurmy looked great and deserves a fight that would lead to a title fight. I say the Ben Askren wannabe fights Rafael dos Anjos with the winner getting a title shot.

The next fight between Costa Philippou and Francis Carmont left much to be desired as Carmont put forth a GSP-like performance and took Philippou down and kept him down to earn a very lop-sided decision. Costa really did Philipoop on himself, he had absolutely nothing for Carmont; he has a lot of building back up to do. I say he fights Chris Camozzi or the nightmare match up that is Yushin Okami. I’m not sure where to put Carmont. He beat Philippou, who I was never really sold on, lost but was given the decision against Tom Lawlor, and won controversial decision against Larkin. Let’s see him fight Cezar Ferreira or Thales Leites, then I might have clearer opinion on him.

The Heavyweights were up with Brendan Schaub fighting everyone’s favorite meathead Matt Mitrione. Schaub used crisp powerful combinations to batter Meathead on his feet before taking the fight to ground and submitting him with the D’arce choke, a first for the UFC heavyweight division. Mitrione moves to 1-3 in his past 4 fights, not a good position to be in, fights against Brandon Vera(if he’s still with the UFC) or Nikita Krylov are fights that would get him back on track. Like him or not Schaub’s got talent and he’s getting better, a fight with Todd Duffee or Stipe Miocic would be nice scraps.

The co-main was the interim bantamweight title fight between Renan Barao and Eddie Wineland. Round 1 was very competitive, Wineland used his boxing to give as much as he took. Round two came around and was more of the same, until Barao threw his “spinning stuff”, and finished Wineland with a spinning back kick to the head. Wineland, who looked very impressive, should look to rebound against Iuri Alcantara, in what should be an interesting fight. As for Barao, the next fight absolutely should be against Dominick Cruz, we need to get rid of the “interim title” nonsense as soon as possible.

The final fight of the night was Jon Jones against Gustafusson for the title. The best way I can describe it is that my friend and I started off the fight sitting nonchalantly on the couch, and by the end of the fight we were standing about a foot from the TV, losing our freaking minds. Jones showed his championship heart while surviving some hellacious shots and coming back with his own, and Gustafusson showed that he is deserving of nickname “The Mauler”. For all you wondering, I had Gustafusson winning the fight, but I am perfectly fine with 48-47 for Jones, but the judge who scored 49-46 needs to taken behind the barn and “put down” CJ Ross style. I’m not going to let that put a damper on what was an incredible fight, what has to be the front runner for fight of the year. Be sure to comment and tell me how wrong I am.

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Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Hyperbole and sports writing seem like eternal soul mates at times, but you’ll be hard-pressed to find someone snubbing UFC 165’s main event as anything but one of the greatest MMA fights in recent memory. After a razor thin decision went the way of light heavyweight champion Jon Jones over Alexander Gustafsson, everyone’s immediate question was when we’d all be treated to part two.

Unable to mount the post-fight presser’s dais to field questions from the media, Jones and Gustafsson were sent to the hospital to begin the healing process. Luckily, Ariel Helwani was able to catch a quick interview with the challenger before he’d join Jones.

When asked if he believed he did enough to win the fight, Gustafsson sounds to be a believer that to be the champ, you need to beat the champ. “It’s hard to say,’ said Gustafsson. “I don’t know. I learned a lot from this fight. He’s the champ for a reason. To take the belt from the champ you need to finish him. That’s how it is and I didn’t do it. I didn’t get the belt so I’m disappointed.”

On talk of a likely rematch with Jones, Gustafsson says he’s ready and willing for another shot at the champion. “Absolutely. I’m down whenever. I want a rematch right away, if I can. It’s up to the UFC. I’m just blessed to be fighting in the UFC. I believe it’s an honor to fight Jones and I’ll be ready whenever they call me.”

Jones was photographed being helped from the Octagon and back to the dressing room Saturday night, before reports surfaced he was carried to an ambulance on a stretcher, breathing heavily. Jones cornerman and trainer, Mike Winkeljohn, tweeted Sunday that Jones had ‘possibly shattered’ his foot early in the fight. With Jones sounding the worse for wear, the UFC might be working more on his timeframe as they look ahead for potential dates.

Star-divide

5 MUST-READ STORIES

UFC 165 Aftermath. In addition to making the case for Jones to be regarded as one of the sport’s all-time greats, Dave Doyle breaks down the calls of the night and who’s seeing their stock plummet.

Fortunes changed for five. With two championship bouts in the books, Dave Meltzer explains how Saturday’s results reverberate throughout the UFC’s light heavyweight and bantamweight divisions.

Wineland. Stopped early in the second round of his bantamweight title bout with Renan Barao, Eddie Wineland later called the TKO, ‘bulls**t.’ “[Barao] caught me with a great kick. I was by no means out, I was on my way back up.”

Wrap up show. Following the UFC 165 post-fight presser, Ariel Helwani and Chuck Mindenhall give their instant reactions to the night’s action in Toronto.

The Eagle. Even with No. 1 lightweight contender Josh Thomson in his corner, Khabib Nurmagomedov says he ‘wants a piece.’ “We’re a big family at American Kickboxing Academy and we train together. If he wins, I’m gonna ask him for a piece of that title.”

Star-divide

MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 main card highlights.

Star-divide

Rogan and Goldie recaps for UFC 165.

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Phil Davis‘ reaction to Jon Jones’ win.

(HT to Christian Wong)

Star-divide

Chris Weidman Q&A session and scrum.

Star-divide

UFC 165 post-fight press conference.

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Quick recap of Lion Fight 11, Cris Cyborg dominating.

Star-divide

Rener Gracie demonstrates the D’Arce Choke on Ariel Helwani for a quick Gracie Breakdown.

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Jorge Luis Bezerra vs. Scott Askham for the middleweight title at BAMMA 13.

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GLORY 10 Los Angeles – Four Man Tournament.

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Walk off KO, Beau Tribolet vs. Liam McGeary at Bellator 100.

Star-divide

TWEETS

As per usual, please make sure to check out Shaun’s ‘Pros react’ post to get instant reactions from UFC 165.

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Me too.

ASAP.

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Not great?

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I can see it.

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PRIDE system?

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Oh well.

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Medium scary.

Really scary, but think he’s joking.

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Yeesh.

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I forgot about the Rampage show.

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High probability for leg locks.

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Another deleted Tito tweet.

Tito_on_dana_and_mom_medium

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Our condolences go out to Zak and his family.

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced this weekend (Sept. 20-22 2013)

Joe Warren vs. Nick Kirk at Bellator 101

Cheick Kongo vs. Mark Godbeer moved from Bellator 101 to Bellator 102

Mike Bronzoulis vs. Joe Riggs at Bellator 106

Thiago Perpetuo vs. Omari Akhmedov at UFC Fight Night 32

Caio Magalhaes vs. Nick Ring at UFC Fight Night 33

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via MMA Fighting member OKGangster.

Reaction to UFC 165

Toronto, Ontario, Canada was the stage for the fight that is surely the front runner for fight of the year. Jon Jones squared off against Alexander Gustafsson in a fight that was promised to make our heads explode. That wasn’t the only fight on the card though, so let’s get into this.

The first fight on the card was a lightweight showdown between Pat Healy and Khabib Nurmagomedov, a fight that most likely had title implications. After a strong first round by Nurmy, he seemed to slowed down in what was a back and forth 2nd round only to come back strong in the 3rd, sealing a unanimous decision. Pat Healy is a great fighter, dare I say a lightweight elite, I would like to see a fight between him and Joe Lauzon. Nurmy looked great and deserves a fight that would lead to a title fight. I say the Ben Askren wannabe fights Rafael dos Anjos with the winner getting a title shot.

The next fight between Costa Philippou and Francis Carmont left much to be desired as Carmont put forth a GSP-like performance and took Philippou down and kept him down to earn a very lop-sided decision. Costa really did Philipoop on himself, he had absolutely nothing for Carmont; he has a lot of building back up to do. I say he fights Chris Camozzi or the nightmare match up that is Yushin Okami. I’m not sure where to put Carmont. He beat Philippou, who I was never really sold on, lost but was given the decision against Tom Lawlor, and won controversial decision against Larkin. Let’s see him fight Cezar Ferreira or Thales Leites, then I might have clearer opinion on him.

The Heavyweights were up with Brendan Schaub fighting everyone’s favorite meathead Matt Mitrione. Schaub used crisp powerful combinations to batter Meathead on his feet before taking the fight to ground and submitting him with the D’arce choke, a first for the UFC heavyweight division. Mitrione moves to 1-3 in his past 4 fights, not a good position to be in, fights against Brandon Vera(if he’s still with the UFC) or Nikita Krylov are fights that would get him back on track. Like him or not Schaub’s got talent and he’s getting better, a fight with Todd Duffee or Stipe Miocic would be nice scraps.

The co-main was the interim bantamweight title fight between Renan Barao and Eddie Wineland. Round 1 was very competitive, Wineland used his boxing to give as much as he took. Round two came around and was more of the same, until Barao threw his “spinning stuff”, and finished Wineland with a spinning back kick to the head. Wineland, who looked very impressive, should look to rebound against Iuri Alcantara, in what should be an interesting fight. As for Barao, the next fight absolutely should be against Dominick Cruz, we need to get rid of the “interim title” nonsense as soon as possible.

The final fight of the night was Jon Jones against Gustafusson for the title. The best way I can describe it is that my friend and I started off the fight sitting nonchalantly on the couch, and by the end of the fight we were standing about a foot from the TV, losing our freaking minds. Jones showed his championship heart while surviving some hellacious shots and coming back with his own, and Gustafusson showed that he is deserving of nickname “The Mauler”. For all you wondering, I had Gustafusson winning the fight, but I am perfectly fine with 48-47 for Jones, but the judge who scored 49-46 needs to taken behind the barn and “put down” CJ Ross style. I’m not going to let that put a damper on what was an incredible fight, what has to be the front runner for fight of the year. Be sure to comment and tell me how wrong I am.

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Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Morning Report: Following Chael Sonnen’s Rihanna comments, Dana White says ‘he’s got to knock that s**t off’

Speaking with media members prior to this weekend’s UFC 165 in Toronto, UFC president Dana White gave his take on an incident involving Chael Sonnen earlier this week. On Monday night’s edition of FOX Sports Live, Sonnen made an ill attempt at humor, landing him in hot water with FOX executives. White, while towing the line for FOX, seemed a bit more forgiving.

“It’s at the point where I’m not upset, but Chael is a smart guy, he’s a funny guy. He’s a talented guy and has a huge future. He’s just got to stop, you know?”

“First of all, the joke wasn’t that funny. He’s not a comedian, and you can’t make fun of domestic violence or any other thing. He’s a sports commentator now and he’s got to knock that s**t off. He’s got to stop. He’s got to stop, or it’s not going to be good.”

Although White has repeatedly insisted Sonnen is a rockstar for FOX, he’s also been quick to discourage his fighters from cracking wise, just ask Miguel Torres. White has also participated in his fair share of infamous bits gone wrong. Appearing in a comedy sketch for FOX NFL Sunday last December, White was portrayed as a homeless gentleman bearing a sign reading: “Please Help!! Need Food AKA Booze.” I guess Dana’s really going to have to deliver the goods during his Sept. 25 appearance for FXX’s The League.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

UFC 165 Predictions. Luke Thomas breaks down this weekend’s card before making his picks.

Deadline. After being sidelined with injuries for nearly two years, Dana White says Dominick Cruz could be stripped of his title. “It’s getting to the point now where it’s just like, if he can’t fight at the beginning of the year, we’ve got to pull the trigger.”

Pena. Our Ultimate Fighter blogger Julianna Pena recaps a hectic episode 3 with Shaun Al-Shatti. Also, make sure to drop her a line in the comments if you’d like her to answer a question next week.

Do or die. With veteran heavyweights Frank Mir and Alistair Overeem both on losing skids, it could be a case of ‘loser leaves town’ at UFC 167.

Challenger. While overshadowed by the light heavyweight main event, Jack Slack expertly dissects the dynamic striking of bantamweight challenger Eddie Wineland.

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MEDIA STEW

Dana White UFC 165 media scrum.

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Free Fight: Wineland vs. Campuzano.

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Renan Barao pre-fight interview.

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Super Fight League 25.

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Tommy Toe Hold is back.

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Bellator 100 promo for tonight.

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New Fedor highlight? Sounds good.

(HT to r/MMA)

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TWEETS

A Vine within a Vine.

Jones vs Gustafsson https://t.co/czgiA5ZIlx

— Dana White (@danawhite) September 19, 2013

Pretty big deal.

It’s the training you do outside the Octagon that makes you who you are inside it. @JonnyBones #WinFromWithin pic.twitter.com/SRo6JTF0BE

— Gatorade (@Gatorade) September 20, 2013

Cyborg is ready. (Possibly NSFW)

Ready… 146lbs! #lionfight #checkweight #ready #muaythai #invictafc #happy #champion #inspiration #jesuschristhttp://t.co/OA7OnFp3Fp

Cris Cyborg (@criscyborg) September 19, 2013

Beard talk.

@dc_mma @roynelsonmma I’d pull some of his whiskers out!

Ben Askren (@Benaskren) September 19, 2013

Very intriguing.

Interesting news coming soon!

— Alpha Cat Zingano (@CatZingano) September 19, 2013

Nutrition.

Breakfast. Looks like someone threw up in a bowl. Tastes good though. pic.twitter.com/gkWyCcRbUI

— michael (@bisping) September 19, 2013

On the other hand…

You ever need to smile get done chocolate cover bacon 😉 pic.twitter.com/jsTO6rEXVx

Bart Palaszewski (@Bartimus7) September 19, 2013

The good old days.

Back in 07/08 I was the 1st MMA fighter 2 have his own shoe deal… (Those boys r a Lil beat up now… http://t.co/VUBb0PZIBm

Quinton Jackson (@Rampage4real) September 19, 2013

Swick looking huge.

So I am playing golf when I hear yelling coming from behind me. I turn around and see this barefoot… http://t.co/CUIVrGwCMP

— Mike Quick Swick (@officialswick) September 19, 2013

Leg day.

Just sayin… All natural baby! http://t.co/wSjDmOfNBx

Phil Davis (@PhilMrWonderful) September 19, 2013

That’s one upside.

So I’m filling out my national fighter license form and it asked for hair color…think @ufc wants brown or bald? #nohairproblems

Shawn Jordan (@savageshawn) September 19, 2013

At least for a walkout … or Halloween.

I think I found my new look pic.twitter.com/1rcoaZhuec

Mitch Clarke (@MitchClarkeMMA) September 19, 2013

Don’t even have to leave home.

Playing #GTA5 & I spent all my money in the strip club. I think I might have a problem.

Speaking with media members prior to this weekend’s UFC 165 in Toronto, UFC president Dana White gave his take on an incident involving Chael Sonnen earlier this week. On Monday night’s edition of FOX Sports Live, Sonnen made an ill attempt at humor, landing him in hot water with FOX executives. White, while towing the line for FOX, seemed a bit more forgiving.

“It’s at the point where I’m not upset, but Chael is a smart guy, he’s a funny guy. He’s a talented guy and has a huge future. He’s just got to stop, you know?”

“First of all, the joke wasn’t that funny. He’s not a comedian, and you can’t make fun of domestic violence or any other thing. He’s a sports commentator now and he’s got to knock that s**t off. He’s got to stop. He’s got to stop, or it’s not going to be good.”

Although White has repeatedly insisted Sonnen is a rockstar for FOX, he’s also been quick to discourage his fighters from cracking wise, just ask Miguel Torres. White has also participated in his fair share of infamous bits gone wrong. Appearing in a comedy sketch for FOX NFL Sunday last December, White was portrayed as a homeless gentleman bearing a sign reading: “Please Help!! Need Food AKA Booze.” I guess Dana’s really going to have to deliver the goods during his Sept. 25 appearance for FXX’s The League.

Star-divide

5 MUST-READ STORIES

UFC 165 Predictions. Luke Thomas breaks down this weekend’s card before making his picks.

Deadline. After being sidelined with injuries for nearly two years, Dana White says Dominick Cruz could be stripped of his title. “It’s getting to the point now where it’s just like, if he can’t fight at the beginning of the year, we’ve got to pull the trigger.”

Pena. Our Ultimate Fighter blogger Julianna Pena recaps a hectic episode 3 with Shaun Al-Shatti. Also, make sure to drop her a line in the comments if you’d like her to answer a question next week.

Do or die. With veteran heavyweights Frank Mir and Alistair Overeem both on losing skids, it could be a case of ‘loser leaves town’ at UFC 167.

Challenger. While overshadowed by the light heavyweight main event, Jack Slack expertly dissects the dynamic striking of bantamweight challenger Eddie Wineland.

Star-divide

MEDIA STEW

Dana White UFC 165 media scrum.

Star-divide

Free Fight: Wineland vs. Campuzano.

Star-divide

Renan Barao pre-fight interview.

Star-divide

Super Fight League 25.

Star-divide

Tommy Toe Hold is back.

Star-divide

Bellator 100 promo for tonight.

Star-divide

New Fedor highlight? Sounds good.

(HT to r/MMA)

Star-divide

Star-divide

TWEETS

A Vine within a Vine.

Pretty big deal.

Cyborg is ready. (Possibly NSFW)

Beard talk.

Very intriguing.

Nutrition.

On the other hand…

The good old days.

Swick looking huge.

Leg day.

That’s one upside.

At least for a walkout … or Halloween.

Don’t even have to leave home.

Morning Report: Anderson Silva says ‘superfights’ good for UFC’s business, bad for fighters

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion …

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion – the people always say ‘superfight, superfight’ but where are the chances for the new guys to come?

“I’m ready for fight for Jon Jones, Georges St Pierre but in my academy, Minatouro, Glover and the other fighters in this class for Jon Jones. George St Pierre is a different class. I have my problems in my class.

“Yeah it’s good for business but is no good for the other’s guy fight. I go to fight Georges St Pierre, he cuts up, I cut down. I finish the fight. I go to fight Jon Jones, I finish the fight. Who’s next? No have! My opinion, this is perfect bullshit.”

Prior to losing his title to Chris Weidman, Silva played the middle child in MMA fans’ various fantasy scenarios. While welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre and light heavyweight champion Jon Jones had no where to go but up in weight, Silva was the wildcard that could possibly go north or south.

Now with Weidman holding court over the 185lbs division, Silva says the pressure is off.

“Uhm… is normal fight, don’t have too much pressure. The pressure is for Weidman. Wiedmann is champion, I’m normal guy now.”

“I training hard, I go for fight because I love it. I no go for fight for belt. It’s a symbol, it’s normal.

“The belt is the symbol, is nothing more. My opinion is the belt is the symbol but my fans, the people in the country don’t understand this.

“My friends see but the people don’t. “Come on Anderson it’s the belt. We need you to pick up the belt.”

Silva, soon off to Thailand to begin his training, faces Weidman in a rematch for the UFC middleweight title Dec. 28 at UFC 168.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

MMA RoundtableLuke Thomas and Chuck Mindenhall try to settle the debate on everything from Jones vs. Gustafsson to what MMA could possibly do to try to match Mayweather vs. Canelo.

Part II. After an injury removed Demetrious Johnson from headlining the TUF 17 Finale, fate would have it that he’d make his next title defense to Joseph Benavidez at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

The Punk. A rejuvenated Josh Thomson talks his upcoming title fight with Anthony Pettis, spending much of his career injured and no longer having to face Gilbert Melendez. “I’ll be 35 this weekend, and it’s one of those things where I don’t know if the opportunity will come up again. Everything rides on this for me. It’s the moment I’ve been waiting for since 2004.”

Enhanced testingDave Meltzer explains why George St-Pierre’s push for extensive drug testing may be more about himself than Hendricks. “Just the fact St-Pierre is going through this testing at this point without Hendricks seems to indicate it’s more about clearing his own name than him worrying about whether his opponent is cheating.”

Kyra over Ronda? UFC Hall of Famer Royce Gracie believes multi-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Kyra Gracie has what it takesto beat Ronda Rousey. “(Ronda Rousey) is good, she knows what she’s doing. (But) Kyra’s jiu-jitsu is better, with a gi or in MMA.”

Star-divide

MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 Predictions with Gilbert Melendez and Demetrious Johnson.

Star-divide

Episode 2 of Alexander Gustafsson’s video blog.

Star-divide

Jon Jones sits down with Mens Fitness.

(HT to @ZProphet_MMA)

Star-divide

Mike Tyson is a witch.

Star-divide

Jordan Burroughs wins world title at 2013 FILA World Championships of Wrestling.

(HT to Bloody Elbow)

Star-divide

Playing as Urijah Faber, Jose Aldo knocks himself out, sorta.

Star-divide

Jones shows some elbow techniques.

Star-divide

Luke Thomas’ latest Chat Wrap.

Star-divide

An oldie, but a goodie.

(HT to Jake Heun)

Star-divide

TWEETS

Soon(?)

Hashtag Yankees.

Getting closer.

Not a glowing endorsement.

Mr. Fox

Three for Burroughs.

I cried during the last three Star Wars.

Get well soon.

Happy birthday, guys.

Women drivers, amiright.

TUF stuff.

Now we wait.

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced yesterday (Sept. 17 2013)

Carlos Condit vs. Matt Brown at UFC on FOX 9

Daron Cruickshank vs. Adriano Martins at UFC Fight Night 32

Omari Akhmetov vs. Thiago Perpetuo at UFC Fight Night 32

Jose Maria Tome vs. Dustin Ortiz at UFC Fight Night 32

Demetrious Johnson vs. Joseph Benavidez at TUF 18 Finale

Luke Rockhold out, C.B. Dollaway in vs. Tim Boetsch

Michael Johnson vs. Gleison Tibau at UFC 168

Danny Castillo meets Edson Barboza at UFC on FOX 9

Tim Elliott vs. Ali Bagautinov at UFC 167

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Connor Ruebusch.

An Invitation to Rewatch Mayweather-Alvarez

Okay. This is going to be a long one, so if you prefer to just skip to the bottom and read my scores, feel free. But if you really want to test your analytical skills, and become a better watcher of fights, then read through, and let me know what you think.

I just finished rewatching Mayweather vs. Alvarez, and I came up with a shocking conclusion. You ready?

CJ Ross’ draw score is absolutely justifiable.

The blowback from Ross’ shocking score was impressive, even forcing the much-maligned judge to take a leave of absence after the fight. But I aim to prove to you that her score was far from ridiculous.

If you want to rewatch with me, please feel free. Here is the link to the video that I watched (quality’s not great, but what can you do?). Go round by round with me when you have the time, and here’s the imporant bit: watch the fight with the sound off. The Showtime commentary is pretty horrendous at times when bias is concerned, and without their voices you’ll have a much easier time of focusing on the actual fight.

Round 1

The first thing that strikes me is Floyd’s obvious respect for Canelo’s boxing. He immediately looks completely unwilling to stand right in front of Canelo, constantly adjusting to keep the Mexican boxer from lining him up. I would happily score this round a draw, but considering that the judges don’t have the same luxury, I’ll give it to Mayweather. Neither guy landed anything solid, with Canelo establishing early that he’s not just going to just eat jabs all day by countering with double jabs and jabs to the body after every one of Floyd’s attempts.

Again, it’s way too close to be of much significance, but based on a few more connected jabs and one glancing counter right, I’ll give this one to Floyd.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 2

This one is just as close as the first, but with increased activity. Canelo once again looks to counter Floyd’s jabs with a double jab of his own, but can’t seem to find Floyd’s chin. He does manage to touch Mayweather on the shoulder and chin, however. Floyd lands a slick right hand, but it’s definitely a scoring punch. And while Alvarez doesn’t land much upstairs, he does find targets for some solid body punches. A reaching left hook from Alvarez is more or less equaled out by a pair of smothered punches from Mayweather.

We’re so used to seeing Floyd shoulder roll right hands that we tend to forget that he can still be struck while doing so. This is the first of many times that we will see Canelo land his right hand to the body as Floyd turns away, catching the older fighter behind the left elbow.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: How uncomfortable must all of these rich casino-goers in the front rows be sitting next to Li’l Wayne’s shirtless ass?)

Round 3

The first minute of the round is characterized by multiple clinches, in which Canelo tries to counter Floyd’s jab with his own left, and Floyd steps in under his arm, nearly lifting the bigger man off his feet a couple times. Both men are pot-shotting and trying to counter, but haven’t found their respective ranges yet.

The first decent shot of the round is a rising hook from Alvarez that catches Floyd partially on the glove. Nice combination to set it up, though. Alvarez reacts to sudden changes very well. Floyd answers half a minute later with a glancing but impressive looking right hand, the first meaningful combination he’s thrown so far. Canelo counters a nose-tickling jab with a hard one of his own moments later, and Floyd realizes that perhaps this isn’t the kind of fight in which to show off his back-against-the-ropes inside fighting skills, circling away immediately.

Canelo finishes the round with a scary uppercut to counter a swinging overhand right from Floyd. Close call, though I don’t think it landed. Another very close round. At this point I’m starting to see that Floyd will win rounds like these by looking more impressive without actually performing better than his opponent. Alvarez chooses to block Floyd’s early combination, while Floyd tends move around in defense. Neither a missed punch nor a blocked punch should be scored, but a missed punch looks worse than a blocked one, even if the opponent doesn’t capitalize on the whiff.

I also think that Canelo’s posture hurts him here. Even though he’s got solid defense and a good chin, punches that do land tend to make his head wobble around, while Floyd’s straight back and tucked chin make Alvarez’ harder punches look relatively soft. Still, one good punch isn’t enough to win against Canelo’s more effective pressure and cleaner shots.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 4

Cinnamon begins this round with a nice jab to the body and a series of left hooks. These are “soft” punches–thrown for speed rather than power, but they land. Floyd fails to shoulder roll a right hand to the body from Alvarez, but counters nonetheless with his own right. Neither shot is very clean. Floyd lands his first truly effective punch of the fight with a hard right hand after a stiff jab to the body. Another jab after that, and then a clinch in which Floyd catches a glove to the pills. Closer inspection reveals that this was a response to Floyd cranking on Canelo’s neck by twisting his head by the chin during the clinch.

Floyd goes to touch gloves (something Luis Monda recently pointed out he only does in closely contested fights), but Canelo isn’t interested. Really nice pair of body shots by Canelo after a few probing jabs from Mayweather, and then a thudding right hook to the body from Money. A good right hand to counter Floyd’s jab, and then a solid left hook to the gut to follow up. Good jabs, and another right hand from Alvarez, though it might have slid off Floyd’s shoulder. A left hook from Mayweather draws the excitement of the commentators, but Canelo blocked it with his elbow.

Floyd finishes the round with a good jab, a quick right hand, and a sneaky left hook, but his moment is spoiled a little by another hard jab from Canelo. Once again, Floyd landed the showier punches at the beginning and end of the round, but the bulk of the round was decided by Canelo’s ramrod jab and body punches, as well as the first decent shots to the head of Mayweather.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 5

Floyd looks to have found the timing for Canelo’s jab, and he throws a nice right hand from the hip that catches the younger fighter lunging in. A couple jabs and some nice body punches from Alvarez. Floyd lands another right as Alvarez jabs, this one a chopping blow over the top. Long left hook and a glancing right hook to the ribs from Alvarez. Floyd is much busier and more accurate with his jab this time around, having already stuck Canelo with a few solid left hands. Short left hook from Mayweather.

A slapping left hook from Canelo catches Floyd off balance. That’s a very sneaky punch from him–looks like a jab until it lands on the side of your head. I wish he’d throw it palm down though, and get a little damage out of it. Floyd lands a right hand and Canelo once again almost succeeds in countering him with the right uppercut. It sounds like it lands, but it’s hard to see–the replay reveals that at best it was a glancing blow. Canelo slaps floud with another left hook, but Floyd shoulder rolls the follow-up right hand beautifully and throws a counter right, which barely grazes Canelo’s head. A bit later Floyd connects with a slapping left hook of his own, and then another glancing right hand. Canelo lands a hard uppercut to his ribs before they clinch up. Floyd comes back with a couple of punches to Canelo’s belt line on either side, but eats a jab in the process.

Very close, but I’ll give this one to Floyd. He was a bit busier, and started to land some nice counters. Alvarez’ jab looking very sharp, though.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 6

Alvarez immediately follows his corner’s instructions to get busy, cornering Floyd and throwing a quick combination, ending with a left hook that is partially blocked. He continues to pressure, deftly avoiding Floyd’s jab. He lands a nice left hook mid-exchange. Once again he lands that long left hook, which Floyd is having difficulty avoiding–he keeps expecting a jab. Floyd throws a right hand that gets blocked, then blocks one right uppercut and avoids another. The two exchange partially blocked right hands, and another combination from Canelo ends in a pair of hard left hooks, one to the body and the second to the head. Right to the body and a short left hook from Floyd as Canelo pivots out.

Canelo shoulder bumps Floyd under the chin, and the impression I get from Floyd’s body language as the ref warns his opponent is that he’s enjoying this. He truly respects Alvarez’ grit, and he tries once again to touch gloves with the young man, who points at Floyd a couple times seeming to say that Floyd is initiating the gamesmanship, not he. A few more jabs, and Canelo lands a nice right hand over the top. Floyd lands some quick punches without much behind them, and Alvarez throws a much harder combination in response, landing a hard right hand to Floyd’s body as he tries to shoulder roll. Floyd finds a series of good right hands punctuated by another uppercut from Canelo and a combination that allows Floyd to show off his defensive finesse.

Despite the last thirty seconds, I think that Alvarez once again landed the better punches. Completely opposite to my initial impressions, he is actually finding far more success with his jab than Mayweather, landing lefts aplenty to Money’s chest, shoulder, chin, and stomach.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: Check out Mayweather’s body language after the shoulder shot in the replay. He’s like, “Alright, alright…” The fans might have thought that Alvarez looked frustrated, but for Money May this is clearly a case of “game recognize game.”

Round 7

Floyd looks to take over in this round. He lands a good 1-2 coming forward, and then pressures, using lots of feints, to get Canelo into the corner. He once again seems to be getting the timing of Alvarez’ jab, and he lands one of his own followed by a right hand over the top while deftly avoiding Canelo’s left hand. He starts bounding jabs off of Canelo’s guard and sticking him in the belly, using his eyes to misdirect his opponent. Mayweather’s distance control looks really slick in this round as he slides away from Canelo’s combinations and counters with his jab. He’s also starting to read those right hands, not exposing his left side to Canelo’s body shots, but catching the glove on his elbow.

Floyd walks Canelo down again, avoiding most of his punches and blocking others. He touches Canelo with his jab and lands a sweeping right around his guard, then another series of jabs followed by a nice looking right uppercut (Canelo’s posture betraying him again). For the next thirty seconds he alternates jabbing Alvarez’ guard and the pit of his stomach, throwing another pair of right hands that are blocked, followed by yet another sweeping right hand that lands clean. Finally Alvarez fights his way out of the corner, but that sequence looked really bad for him. Unless he lands something noteworthy this will be Floyd’s round.

He doesn’t. Clearest round of the fight so far.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 8

Alvarez opens the round with a combination, landing a body shot but failing to connect with anything else clean. Another nice looking combination a bit later, but again only the right to the body lands, his powerful left hook catching Floyd’s glove. Floyd seems to pick up the pace a bit, and tries to counter Canelo’s jab with the check hook he used to knock out Hatton, but it’s blocked. Canelo tries another combination against the ropes, but no cigar on this one.

Floyd throws two flashy looking 1-2s, but only the jabs are landing, and Alvarez lands a thunderous left hook to Floyd’s gut as he tries to pivot out with a left hook of his own. Good combination by Alvarez against the ropes. His left hook catches Floyd as he slips the jab, and then he uses a stiff arm to set up a right overhand. It’s very difficult to catch Floyd with a right hand, and this one glances off as he leans back, but it’s the cleanest one of the fight so far. Another pair of left hooks gets blocked as Floyd gets off the ropes. Now Alvarez puts Floyd back on the ropes, but he can’t land anything clean (except perhaps those rights to the body–it’s hard to tell from this angle). Floyd sticks him with a short counter right as he resets to try again.

Now Floyd is touching Canelo with the jab as he walks forward. He gets cornered again, but a three punch combination lands for him and makes Alvarez look bad. Good left hook after a feinted right hand after that. Another right hand to the ribs from Canelo, and another nice 1-2 from Floyd to finish up the round.

Tough round to score, but Floyd landed the cleaner shots to the head, while Canelo’s best punches were to the body.

10-9 Mayweather

Note: I could see this round going to Canelo, which already validates CJ Ross’ apparently abhorrent draw scorecard. Keep that in mind when lambasting her in the future.

Round 9

Alvarez goes back to his jab, but Mayweather blocks three in quick succession.

(Note: At this point the commentary team’s scores come up. They all have Floyd ahead, two with scores of 79-73, and Paulie Malignaggi with 78-74. Currently I have Floyd down 76-77)

Canelo tries for some hard right hooks. He seems to want to walk Floyd into his right hand with that long hook, but Floyd’s shoulder roll flummoxes him, and his right merely slaps the outside of Floyd’s shoulder. Floyd blocks some more punches. Both guys trade jabs to the head and body. Not much landing. Nice right uppercut from Mayweather and a left hook that’s blocked. Canelo with a short right over the top as they separate from a clinch. More punches from Canelo to the head and body, and Floyd seems to know what’s coming now. He’s blocking everything.

One right hand to the body gets partially through Mayweather’s defense, and he counters with a right hand that whiffs. A few jabs and Mayweather tries another right hand that gets blocked. Very quick right hand from Mayweather that looks like it catches Alvarez on the chin. I think he rolls his head with the punch, but that kind of makes it look even harder. Canelo looks a little sluggish now, but he lands a pair of glancing right hands. Mayweather dodges a left hook and then counters a jab with a quick right hand. He casually lands some jabs through the guard of Alvarez. Hard right hand to the body from Floyd and then a jab. Another one, right into the pit of Canelo’s stomach, and the Mexican fighter can’t seem to get past Floyd’s lead shoulder anymore.

Floyd finishes up the round by dodging another Alvarez combination, and taunting his opponent with his hands on his knees.

10-9 Mayweather

Round10

Alvarez tries the long hook and right hand again, but Mayweather avoids both shots, bouncing off the ropes to circle back to the center of the ring. He tries for a jab and Alvarez counters with a pair of hard jabs, one to the head and one to the body, and then a right to the body that Floyd blocks. Canelo tries the lead right and Floyd shoulder rolls it, countering with his own right. It doesn’t land well, but it looks good for him. The two exchange a few times, with nothing really getting through for either fighter. Canelo throws a big combination of power punches, but only a jab and an awkward right get through.

Floyd back on the offensive, and he lands another right hand. Floyd has Canelo against the ropes and he tries to pot shot him to pieces again, but he can’t replicate the success he had in round 7. Canelo’s blocking everything except a few jabs to the chest. The lack of initiative looks bad for him, though. Here we go: Canelo puts Floyd against the ropes (just as Malignaggi is saying how he doesn’t know how to trap him) and lands a good right hand, then a series of punches to the body and another right to the head, but none of these land very cleanly. Floyd with some light jabs and the two stare one another down after the bell.

This one goes to Floyd, but it’s unbelievably close. I desperately want to call it a draw. Floyd had Canelo on the ropes for longer and landed a bit more, but Canelo landed the much harder shots in his moments of control.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 11

The first blow is a vicious right hook to the kidney by Alvarez, which gets him a warning from the ref. Alvarez with a swinging right hand, trying to catch Floyd pivoting, but it’s no good. Another right hand to the body from Canelo after a few flickering jabs. That’s consistently been his best punch, and it seems like a good one to use against a guy like May, who turns his body away when he defends. Combinations from Alvarez, but Floyd’s defense looks very tight, and he steals the initiative right back with a clean 1-2 combination. Canelo might be a little frustrated now, as he shoves Mayweather away when the ref breaks their clinch.

A few jabs, a couple of glancing left hooks, and then another quick lead right that lands clean from Mayweather. Three left hooks in succession from Floyd, the last of which lands clean. Canelo responds with a nice left hook to the liver against the ropes, and a few more hard punches, but Floyd’s catching everything else on his arms.

Canelo actually landed the better punches, but not nearly enough of them. Floyd accumulated more points with his jab, and managed to make Alvarez look a little silly by avoiding almost all of his punches, including a right hand that rattled the ropes prompting Floyd to mock his opponent. Canelo’s inexperience started to show in this round, as he began hunting for the knockout blow but without the jabs and feints he was showing earlier in the fight.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 12

The ref asks the fighters to touch glove as the final round begins, and Floyd’s touch is a grandiose gesture, half bravado and half legitimate respect. Canelo’s own touch is a curt tap. This small exchange is a microcosm of the fight so far.

The first blows are once again from Alvarez, as he lands a jab and a right uppercut to the body, followed by a rabbit punch to Floyd’s ear when Floyd holds him. He uses his shoulder to shove Mayweather back as the ref breaks them up. Now Floyd is dancing around with his hands lowered, catching Canelo’s punches on his arms. Floyd connects with the second of two left hooks as he steps around to Alvarez’ right.

Now Mayweather clinches and Canelo punishes him with some nice bodyshots and a hard right hook upstairs. Floyd tries to smother Canelo’s power. Bayless tells them to break and then changes his mind. They continue to work, Canelo trying for a right uppercut and missing, Floyd trying to counter with a hook and missing as well. Floyd starts dancing around and Canelo is practically jogging after him, desperate to finish strong. He backs up into the center ring, expressing his frustration with Mayweather’s tactics, and Money obliges him by coming forward.

Good left hook to the body by Canelo followed by a right and another left up top that Floyd blocks. Floyd tries to shoulder roll a lead right from Canelo but gets caught and misses with his counter. The two exchange counters, but neither of them lands. Another body jab that forces Floyd to step in and Canelo cracks him behind the ear with a chopping right. 1-2 by Canelo, and the right hand isn’t clean but it touches Floyd on the temple. Floyd’s counter misses again.

And the final bell.

10-9 Alvarez

Final Score: 115-114 Floyd Mayweather, 7 rounds to 5

Conclusion: There is a big difference between watching a fight as a fan and watching as a judge. Though many of us like to keep a running tally of the score as we watch live, we also tend to get caught up in the flash and flair of the fight. Next time a score seems controversial to you, I urge you to rewatch the fight as soon as possible with the sound off, merely looking at which fighter caused more damage to the other round by round. That should be the prime criterion in mind when judging prizefighting.

What did I learn from this fight? I learned that Canelo Alvarez is a hell of a fighter, with a damn near unbreakable will. Though I was impressed by his dogged determination in the immediate aftermath of the fight, I am even more impressed now that I realize how truly close this fight was. This 23 year-old has nothing to be ashamed of: he showed a great jab, solid pressuring skills, and ferocious body punching. In time, he will be as great as Mayweather, if not better. This just wasn’t quite his time to take this fight.

I also learned that Floyd is better than any other boxer in the game at looking like he’s winning, even when he’s not. His in-ring antics, his unique style of defense, and his counters, which often look much more impressive than they really are, make him a difficult fighter to score. When Mayweather is in a close fight, which this was, his style allows him to land on the right side of that margin of error.

I didn’t mention it consistently, in part to avoid making this extensive breakdown even longer than it already is, and in part because not much damage was being caused, but Floyd was very busy with his jab throughout the entire fight. As Canelo walked him down, Floyd would constantly stick him with his left hand. And even though the majority of these punches were either quite soft or completely blocked/avoided, his activity allowed him to carry the fight in the judges’ (and the fans’) eyes even as he spent much of the fight moving backward. As such, Floyd was able to make Canelo’s good moments look less-than-good, and his own moments of success seemed to stand out. Simply watch the intervals between rounds and see for yourself–all but one or two replays are of Floyd’s punches, not Canelo’s.

Watch this one again, and see if you find it to be closer than when you watched it live. You might find that “The One” was everything we were promised after all.

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Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Morning Report: Anderson Silva says ‘superfights’ good for UFC’s business, bad for fighters

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion …

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion – the people always say ‘superfight, superfight’ but where are the chances for the new guys to come?

“I’m ready for fight for Jon Jones, Georges St Pierre but in my academy, Minatouro, Glover and the other fighters in this class for Jon Jones. George St Pierre is a different class. I have my problems in my class.

“Yeah it’s good for business but is no good for the other’s guy fight. I go to fight Georges St Pierre, he cuts up, I cut down. I finish the fight. I go to fight Jon Jones, I finish the fight. Who’s next? No have! My opinion, this is perfect bullshit.”

Prior to losing his title to Chris Weidman, Silva played the middle child in MMA fans’ various fantasy scenarios. While welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre and light heavyweight champion Jon Jones had no where to go but up in weight, Silva was the wildcard that could possibly go north or south.

Now with Weidman holding court over the 185lbs division, Silva says the pressure is off.

“Uhm… is normal fight, don’t have too much pressure. The pressure is for Weidman. Wiedmann is champion, I’m normal guy now.”

“I training hard, I go for fight because I love it. I no go for fight for belt. It’s a symbol, it’s normal.

“The belt is the symbol, is nothing more. My opinion is the belt is the symbol but my fans, the people in the country don’t understand this.

“My friends see but the people don’t. “Come on Anderson it’s the belt. We need you to pick up the belt.”

Silva, soon off to Thailand to begin his training, faces Weidman in a rematch for the UFC middleweight title Dec. 28 at UFC 168.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

MMA RoundtableLuke Thomas and Chuck Mindenhall try to settle the debate on everything from Jones vs. Gustafsson to what MMA could possibly do to try to match Mayweather vs. Canelo.

Part II. After an injury removed Demetrious Johnson from headlining the TUF 17 Finale, fate would have it that he’d make his next title defense to Joseph Benavidez at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

The Punk. A rejuvenated Josh Thomson talks his upcoming title fight with Anthony Pettis, spending much of his career injured and no longer having to face Gilbert Melendez. “I’ll be 35 this weekend, and it’s one of those things where I don’t know if the opportunity will come up again. Everything rides on this for me. It’s the moment I’ve been waiting for since 2004.”

Enhanced testingDave Meltzer explains why George St-Pierre’s push for extensive drug testing may be more about himself than Hendricks. “Just the fact St-Pierre is going through this testing at this point without Hendricks seems to indicate it’s more about clearing his own name than him worrying about whether his opponent is cheating.”

Kyra over Ronda? UFC Hall of Famer Royce Gracie believes multi-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Kyra Gracie has what it takesto beat Ronda Rousey. “(Ronda Rousey) is good, she knows what she’s doing. (But) Kyra’s jiu-jitsu is better, with a gi or in MMA.”

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MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 Predictions with Gilbert Melendez and Demetrious Johnson.

Star-divide

Episode 2 of Alexander Gustafsson’s video blog.

Star-divide

Jon Jones sits down with Mens Fitness.

(HT to @ZProphet_MMA)

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Mike Tyson is a witch.

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Jordan Burroughs wins world title at 2013 FILA World Championships of Wrestling.

(HT to Bloody Elbow)

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Playing as Urijah Faber, Jose Aldo knocks himself out, sorta.

Star-divide

Jones shows some elbow techniques.

Star-divide

Luke Thomas’ latest Chat Wrap.

Star-divide

An oldie, but a goodie.

(HT to Jake Heun)

Star-divide

TWEETS

Soon(?)

Hashtag Yankees.

Getting closer.

Not a glowing endorsement.

Mr. Fox

Three for Burroughs.

I cried during the last three Star Wars.

Get well soon.

Happy birthday, guys.

Women drivers, amiright.

TUF stuff.

Now we wait.

Star-divide

FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced yesterday (Sept. 17 2013)

Carlos Condit vs. Matt Brown at UFC on FOX 9

Daron Cruickshank vs. Adriano Martins at UFC Fight Night 32

Omari Akhmetov vs. Thiago Perpetuo at UFC Fight Night 32

Jose Maria Tome vs. Dustin Ortiz at UFC Fight Night 32

Demetrious Johnson vs. Joseph Benavidez at TUF 18 Finale

Luke Rockhold out, C.B. Dollaway in vs. Tim Boetsch

Michael Johnson vs. Gleison Tibau at UFC 168

Danny Castillo meets Edson Barboza at UFC on FOX 9

Tim Elliott vs. Ali Bagautinov at UFC 167

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Connor Ruebusch.

An Invitation to Rewatch Mayweather-Alvarez

Okay. This is going to be a long one, so if you prefer to just skip to the bottom and read my scores, feel free. But if you really want to test your analytical skills, and become a better watcher of fights, then read through, and let me know what you think.

I just finished rewatching Mayweather vs. Alvarez, and I came up with a shocking conclusion. You ready?

CJ Ross’ draw score is absolutely justifiable.

The blowback from Ross’ shocking score was impressive, even forcing the much-maligned judge to take a leave of absence after the fight. But I aim to prove to you that her score was far from ridiculous.

If you want to rewatch with me, please feel free. Here is the link to the video that I watched (quality’s not great, but what can you do?). Go round by round with me when you have the time, and here’s the imporant bit: watch the fight with the sound off. The Showtime commentary is pretty horrendous at times when bias is concerned, and without their voices you’ll have a much easier time of focusing on the actual fight.

Round 1

The first thing that strikes me is Floyd’s obvious respect for Canelo’s boxing. He immediately looks completely unwilling to stand right in front of Canelo, constantly adjusting to keep the Mexican boxer from lining him up. I would happily score this round a draw, but considering that the judges don’t have the same luxury, I’ll give it to Mayweather. Neither guy landed anything solid, with Canelo establishing early that he’s not just going to just eat jabs all day by countering with double jabs and jabs to the body after every one of Floyd’s attempts.

Again, it’s way too close to be of much significance, but based on a few more connected jabs and one glancing counter right, I’ll give this one to Floyd.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 2

This one is just as close as the first, but with increased activity. Canelo once again looks to counter Floyd’s jabs with a double jab of his own, but can’t seem to find Floyd’s chin. He does manage to touch Mayweather on the shoulder and chin, however. Floyd lands a slick right hand, but it’s definitely a scoring punch. And while Alvarez doesn’t land much upstairs, he does find targets for some solid body punches. A reaching left hook from Alvarez is more or less equaled out by a pair of smothered punches from Mayweather.

We’re so used to seeing Floyd shoulder roll right hands that we tend to forget that he can still be struck while doing so. This is the first of many times that we will see Canelo land his right hand to the body as Floyd turns away, catching the older fighter behind the left elbow.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: How uncomfortable must all of these rich casino-goers in the front rows be sitting next to Li’l Wayne’s shirtless ass?)

Round 3

The first minute of the round is characterized by multiple clinches, in which Canelo tries to counter Floyd’s jab with his own left, and Floyd steps in under his arm, nearly lifting the bigger man off his feet a couple times. Both men are pot-shotting and trying to counter, but haven’t found their respective ranges yet.

The first decent shot of the round is a rising hook from Alvarez that catches Floyd partially on the glove. Nice combination to set it up, though. Alvarez reacts to sudden changes very well. Floyd answers half a minute later with a glancing but impressive looking right hand, the first meaningful combination he’s thrown so far. Canelo counters a nose-tickling jab with a hard one of his own moments later, and Floyd realizes that perhaps this isn’t the kind of fight in which to show off his back-against-the-ropes inside fighting skills, circling away immediately.

Canelo finishes the round with a scary uppercut to counter a swinging overhand right from Floyd. Close call, though I don’t think it landed. Another very close round. At this point I’m starting to see that Floyd will win rounds like these by looking more impressive without actually performing better than his opponent. Alvarez chooses to block Floyd’s early combination, while Floyd tends move around in defense. Neither a missed punch nor a blocked punch should be scored, but a missed punch looks worse than a blocked one, even if the opponent doesn’t capitalize on the whiff.

I also think that Canelo’s posture hurts him here. Even though he’s got solid defense and a good chin, punches that do land tend to make his head wobble around, while Floyd’s straight back and tucked chin make Alvarez’ harder punches look relatively soft. Still, one good punch isn’t enough to win against Canelo’s more effective pressure and cleaner shots.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 4

Cinnamon begins this round with a nice jab to the body and a series of left hooks. These are “soft” punches–thrown for speed rather than power, but they land. Floyd fails to shoulder roll a right hand to the body from Alvarez, but counters nonetheless with his own right. Neither shot is very clean. Floyd lands his first truly effective punch of the fight with a hard right hand after a stiff jab to the body. Another jab after that, and then a clinch in which Floyd catches a glove to the pills. Closer inspection reveals that this was a response to Floyd cranking on Canelo’s neck by twisting his head by the chin during the clinch.

Floyd goes to touch gloves (something Luis Monda recently pointed out he only does in closely contested fights), but Canelo isn’t interested. Really nice pair of body shots by Canelo after a few probing jabs from Mayweather, and then a thudding right hook to the body from Money. A good right hand to counter Floyd’s jab, and then a solid left hook to the gut to follow up. Good jabs, and another right hand from Alvarez, though it might have slid off Floyd’s shoulder. A left hook from Mayweather draws the excitement of the commentators, but Canelo blocked it with his elbow.

Floyd finishes the round with a good jab, a quick right hand, and a sneaky left hook, but his moment is spoiled a little by another hard jab from Canelo. Once again, Floyd landed the showier punches at the beginning and end of the round, but the bulk of the round was decided by Canelo’s ramrod jab and body punches, as well as the first decent shots to the head of Mayweather.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 5

Floyd looks to have found the timing for Canelo’s jab, and he throws a nice right hand from the hip that catches the younger fighter lunging in. A couple jabs and some nice body punches from Alvarez. Floyd lands another right as Alvarez jabs, this one a chopping blow over the top. Long left hook and a glancing right hook to the ribs from Alvarez. Floyd is much busier and more accurate with his jab this time around, having already stuck Canelo with a few solid left hands. Short left hook from Mayweather.

A slapping left hook from Canelo catches Floyd off balance. That’s a very sneaky punch from him–looks like a jab until it lands on the side of your head. I wish he’d throw it palm down though, and get a little damage out of it. Floyd lands a right hand and Canelo once again almost succeeds in countering him with the right uppercut. It sounds like it lands, but it’s hard to see–the replay reveals that at best it was a glancing blow. Canelo slaps floud with another left hook, but Floyd shoulder rolls the follow-up right hand beautifully and throws a counter right, which barely grazes Canelo’s head. A bit later Floyd connects with a slapping left hook of his own, and then another glancing right hand. Canelo lands a hard uppercut to his ribs before they clinch up. Floyd comes back with a couple of punches to Canelo’s belt line on either side, but eats a jab in the process.

Very close, but I’ll give this one to Floyd. He was a bit busier, and started to land some nice counters. Alvarez’ jab looking very sharp, though.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 6

Alvarez immediately follows his corner’s instructions to get busy, cornering Floyd and throwing a quick combination, ending with a left hook that is partially blocked. He continues to pressure, deftly avoiding Floyd’s jab. He lands a nice left hook mid-exchange. Once again he lands that long left hook, which Floyd is having difficulty avoiding–he keeps expecting a jab. Floyd throws a right hand that gets blocked, then blocks one right uppercut and avoids another. The two exchange partially blocked right hands, and another combination from Canelo ends in a pair of hard left hooks, one to the body and the second to the head. Right to the body and a short left hook from Floyd as Canelo pivots out.

Canelo shoulder bumps Floyd under the chin, and the impression I get from Floyd’s body language as the ref warns his opponent is that he’s enjoying this. He truly respects Alvarez’ grit, and he tries once again to touch gloves with the young man, who points at Floyd a couple times seeming to say that Floyd is initiating the gamesmanship, not he. A few more jabs, and Canelo lands a nice right hand over the top. Floyd lands some quick punches without much behind them, and Alvarez throws a much harder combination in response, landing a hard right hand to Floyd’s body as he tries to shoulder roll. Floyd finds a series of good right hands punctuated by another uppercut from Canelo and a combination that allows Floyd to show off his defensive finesse.

Despite the last thirty seconds, I think that Alvarez once again landed the better punches. Completely opposite to my initial impressions, he is actually finding far more success with his jab than Mayweather, landing lefts aplenty to Money’s chest, shoulder, chin, and stomach.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: Check out Mayweather’s body language after the shoulder shot in the replay. He’s like, “Alright, alright…” The fans might have thought that Alvarez looked frustrated, but for Money May this is clearly a case of “game recognize game.”

Round 7

Floyd looks to take over in this round. He lands a good 1-2 coming forward, and then pressures, using lots of feints, to get Canelo into the corner. He once again seems to be getting the timing of Alvarez’ jab, and he lands one of his own followed by a right hand over the top while deftly avoiding Canelo’s left hand. He starts bounding jabs off of Canelo’s guard and sticking him in the belly, using his eyes to misdirect his opponent. Mayweather’s distance control looks really slick in this round as he slides away from Canelo’s combinations and counters with his jab. He’s also starting to read those right hands, not exposing his left side to Canelo’s body shots, but catching the glove on his elbow.

Floyd walks Canelo down again, avoiding most of his punches and blocking others. He touches Canelo with his jab and lands a sweeping right around his guard, then another series of jabs followed by a nice looking right uppercut (Canelo’s posture betraying him again). For the next thirty seconds he alternates jabbing Alvarez’ guard and the pit of his stomach, throwing another pair of right hands that are blocked, followed by yet another sweeping right hand that lands clean. Finally Alvarez fights his way out of the corner, but that sequence looked really bad for him. Unless he lands something noteworthy this will be Floyd’s round.

He doesn’t. Clearest round of the fight so far.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 8

Alvarez opens the round with a combination, landing a body shot but failing to connect with anything else clean. Another nice looking combination a bit later, but again only the right to the body lands, his powerful left hook catching Floyd’s glove. Floyd seems to pick up the pace a bit, and tries to counter Canelo’s jab with the check hook he used to knock out Hatton, but it’s blocked. Canelo tries another combination against the ropes, but no cigar on this one.

Floyd throws two flashy looking 1-2s, but only the jabs are landing, and Alvarez lands a thunderous left hook to Floyd’s gut as he tries to pivot out with a left hook of his own. Good combination by Alvarez against the ropes. His left hook catches Floyd as he slips the jab, and then he uses a stiff arm to set up a right overhand. It’s very difficult to catch Floyd with a right hand, and this one glances off as he leans back, but it’s the cleanest one of the fight so far. Another pair of left hooks gets blocked as Floyd gets off the ropes. Now Alvarez puts Floyd back on the ropes, but he can’t land anything clean (except perhaps those rights to the body–it’s hard to tell from this angle). Floyd sticks him with a short counter right as he resets to try again.

Now Floyd is touching Canelo with the jab as he walks forward. He gets cornered again, but a three punch combination lands for him and makes Alvarez look bad. Good left hook after a feinted right hand after that. Another right hand to the ribs from Canelo, and another nice 1-2 from Floyd to finish up the round.

Tough round to score, but Floyd landed the cleaner shots to the head, while Canelo’s best punches were to the body.

10-9 Mayweather

Note: I could see this round going to Canelo, which already validates CJ Ross’ apparently abhorrent draw scorecard. Keep that in mind when lambasting her in the future.

Round 9

Alvarez goes back to his jab, but Mayweather blocks three in quick succession.

(Note: At this point the commentary team’s scores come up. They all have Floyd ahead, two with scores of 79-73, and Paulie Malignaggi with 78-74. Currently I have Floyd down 76-77)

Canelo tries for some hard right hooks. He seems to want to walk Floyd into his right hand with that long hook, but Floyd’s shoulder roll flummoxes him, and his right merely slaps the outside of Floyd’s shoulder. Floyd blocks some more punches. Both guys trade jabs to the head and body. Not much landing. Nice right uppercut from Mayweather and a left hook that’s blocked. Canelo with a short right over the top as they separate from a clinch. More punches from Canelo to the head and body, and Floyd seems to know what’s coming now. He’s blocking everything.

One right hand to the body gets partially through Mayweather’s defense, and he counters with a right hand that whiffs. A few jabs and Mayweather tries another right hand that gets blocked. Very quick right hand from Mayweather that looks like it catches Alvarez on the chin. I think he rolls his head with the punch, but that kind of makes it look even harder. Canelo looks a little sluggish now, but he lands a pair of glancing right hands. Mayweather dodges a left hook and then counters a jab with a quick right hand. He casually lands some jabs through the guard of Alvarez. Hard right hand to the body from Floyd and then a jab. Another one, right into the pit of Canelo’s stomach, and the Mexican fighter can’t seem to get past Floyd’s lead shoulder anymore.

Floyd finishes up the round by dodging another Alvarez combination, and taunting his opponent with his hands on his knees.

10-9 Mayweather

Round10

Alvarez tries the long hook and right hand again, but Mayweather avoids both shots, bouncing off the ropes to circle back to the center of the ring. He tries for a jab and Alvarez counters with a pair of hard jabs, one to the head and one to the body, and then a right to the body that Floyd blocks. Canelo tries the lead right and Floyd shoulder rolls it, countering with his own right. It doesn’t land well, but it looks good for him. The two exchange a few times, with nothing really getting through for either fighter. Canelo throws a big combination of power punches, but only a jab and an awkward right get through.

Floyd back on the offensive, and he lands another right hand. Floyd has Canelo against the ropes and he tries to pot shot him to pieces again, but he can’t replicate the success he had in round 7. Canelo’s blocking everything except a few jabs to the chest. The lack of initiative looks bad for him, though. Here we go: Canelo puts Floyd against the ropes (just as Malignaggi is saying how he doesn’t know how to trap him) and lands a good right hand, then a series of punches to the body and another right to the head, but none of these land very cleanly. Floyd with some light jabs and the two stare one another down after the bell.

This one goes to Floyd, but it’s unbelievably close. I desperately want to call it a draw. Floyd had Canelo on the ropes for longer and landed a bit more, but Canelo landed the much harder shots in his moments of control.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 11

The first blow is a vicious right hook to the kidney by Alvarez, which gets him a warning from the ref. Alvarez with a swinging right hand, trying to catch Floyd pivoting, but it’s no good. Another right hand to the body from Canelo after a few flickering jabs. That’s consistently been his best punch, and it seems like a good one to use against a guy like May, who turns his body away when he defends. Combinations from Alvarez, but Floyd’s defense looks very tight, and he steals the initiative right back with a clean 1-2 combination. Canelo might be a little frustrated now, as he shoves Mayweather away when the ref breaks their clinch.

A few jabs, a couple of glancing left hooks, and then another quick lead right that lands clean from Mayweather. Three left hooks in succession from Floyd, the last of which lands clean. Canelo responds with a nice left hook to the liver against the ropes, and a few more hard punches, but Floyd’s catching everything else on his arms.

Canelo actually landed the better punches, but not nearly enough of them. Floyd accumulated more points with his jab, and managed to make Alvarez look a little silly by avoiding almost all of his punches, including a right hand that rattled the ropes prompting Floyd to mock his opponent. Canelo’s inexperience started to show in this round, as he began hunting for the knockout blow but without the jabs and feints he was showing earlier in the fight.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 12

The ref asks the fighters to touch glove as the final round begins, and Floyd’s touch is a grandiose gesture, half bravado and half legitimate respect. Canelo’s own touch is a curt tap. This small exchange is a microcosm of the fight so far.

The first blows are once again from Alvarez, as he lands a jab and a right uppercut to the body, followed by a rabbit punch to Floyd’s ear when Floyd holds him. He uses his shoulder to shove Mayweather back as the ref breaks them up. Now Floyd is dancing around with his hands lowered, catching Canelo’s punches on his arms. Floyd connects with the second of two left hooks as he steps around to Alvarez’ right.

Now Mayweather clinches and Canelo punishes him with some nice bodyshots and a hard right hook upstairs. Floyd tries to smother Canelo’s power. Bayless tells them to break and then changes his mind. They continue to work, Canelo trying for a right uppercut and missing, Floyd trying to counter with a hook and missing as well. Floyd starts dancing around and Canelo is practically jogging after him, desperate to finish strong. He backs up into the center ring, expressing his frustration with Mayweather’s tactics, and Money obliges him by coming forward.

Good left hook to the body by Canelo followed by a right and another left up top that Floyd blocks. Floyd tries to shoulder roll a lead right from Canelo but gets caught and misses with his counter. The two exchange counters, but neither of them lands. Another body jab that forces Floyd to step in and Canelo cracks him behind the ear with a chopping right. 1-2 by Canelo, and the right hand isn’t clean but it touches Floyd on the temple. Floyd’s counter misses again.

And the final bell.

10-9 Alvarez

Final Score: 115-114 Floyd Mayweather, 7 rounds to 5

Conclusion: There is a big difference between watching a fight as a fan and watching as a judge. Though many of us like to keep a running tally of the score as we watch live, we also tend to get caught up in the flash and flair of the fight. Next time a score seems controversial to you, I urge you to rewatch the fight as soon as possible with the sound off, merely looking at which fighter caused more damage to the other round by round. That should be the prime criterion in mind when judging prizefighting.

What did I learn from this fight? I learned that Canelo Alvarez is a hell of a fighter, with a damn near unbreakable will. Though I was impressed by his dogged determination in the immediate aftermath of the fight, I am even more impressed now that I realize how truly close this fight was. This 23 year-old has nothing to be ashamed of: he showed a great jab, solid pressuring skills, and ferocious body punching. In time, he will be as great as Mayweather, if not better. This just wasn’t quite his time to take this fight.

I also learned that Floyd is better than any other boxer in the game at looking like he’s winning, even when he’s not. His in-ring antics, his unique style of defense, and his counters, which often look much more impressive than they really are, make him a difficult fighter to score. When Mayweather is in a close fight, which this was, his style allows him to land on the right side of that margin of error.

I didn’t mention it consistently, in part to avoid making this extensive breakdown even longer than it already is, and in part because not much damage was being caused, but Floyd was very busy with his jab throughout the entire fight. As Canelo walked him down, Floyd would constantly stick him with his left hand. And even though the majority of these punches were either quite soft or completely blocked/avoided, his activity allowed him to carry the fight in the judges’ (and the fans’) eyes even as he spent much of the fight moving backward. As such, Floyd was able to make Canelo’s good moments look less-than-good, and his own moments of success seemed to stand out. Simply watch the intervals between rounds and see for yourself–all but one or two replays are of Floyd’s punches, not Canelo’s.

Watch this one again, and see if you find it to be closer than when you watched it live. You might find that “The One” was everything we were promised after all.

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Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Morning Report: Anderson Silva says ‘superfights’ good for UFC’s business, bad for fighters

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion …

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion – the people always say ‘superfight, superfight’ but where are the chances for the new guys to come?

“I’m ready for fight for Jon Jones, Georges St Pierre but in my academy, Minatouro, Glover and the other fighters in this class for Jon Jones. George St Pierre is a different class. I have my problems in my class.

“Yeah it’s good for business but is no good for the other’s guy fight. I go to fight Georges St Pierre, he cuts up, I cut down. I finish the fight. I go to fight Jon Jones, I finish the fight. Who’s next? No have! My opinion, this is perfect bullshit.”

Prior to losing his title to Chris Weidman, Silva played the middle child in MMA fans’ various fantasy scenarios. While welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre and light heavyweight champion Jon Jones had no where to go but up in weight, Silva was the wildcard that could possibly go north or south.

Now with Weidman holding court over the 185lbs division, Silva says the pressure is off.

“Uhm… is normal fight, don’t have too much pressure. The pressure is for Weidman. Wiedmann is champion, I’m normal guy now.”

“I training hard, I go for fight because I love it. I no go for fight for belt. It’s a symbol, it’s normal.

“The belt is the symbol, is nothing more. My opinion is the belt is the symbol but my fans, the people in the country don’t understand this.

“My friends see but the people don’t. “Come on Anderson it’s the belt. We need you to pick up the belt.”

Silva, soon off to Thailand to begin his training, faces Weidman in a rematch for the UFC middleweight title Dec. 28 at UFC 168.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

MMA RoundtableLuke Thomas and Chuck Mindenhall try to settle the debate on everything from Jones vs. Gustafsson to what MMA could possibly do to try to match Mayweather vs. Canelo.

Part II. After an injury removed Demetrious Johnson from headlining the TUF 17 Finale, fate would have it that he’d make his next title defense to Joseph Benavidez at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

The Punk. A rejuvenated Josh Thomson talks his upcoming title fight with Anthony Pettis, spending much of his career injured and no longer having to face Gilbert Melendez. “I’ll be 35 this weekend, and it’s one of those things where I don’t know if the opportunity will come up again. Everything rides on this for me. It’s the moment I’ve been waiting for since 2004.”

Enhanced testingDave Meltzer explains why George St-Pierre’s push for extensive drug testing may be more about himself than Hendricks. “Just the fact St-Pierre is going through this testing at this point without Hendricks seems to indicate it’s more about clearing his own name than him worrying about whether his opponent is cheating.”

Kyra over Ronda? UFC Hall of Famer Royce Gracie believes multi-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Kyra Gracie has what it takesto beat Ronda Rousey. “(Ronda Rousey) is good, she knows what she’s doing. (But) Kyra’s jiu-jitsu is better, with a gi or in MMA.”

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MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 Predictions with Gilbert Melendez and Demetrious Johnson.

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Episode 2 of Alexander Gustafsson’s video blog.

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Jon Jones sits down with Mens Fitness.

(HT to @ZProphet_MMA)

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Mike Tyson is a witch.

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Jordan Burroughs wins world title at 2013 FILA World Championships of Wrestling.

(HT to Bloody Elbow)

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Playing as Urijah Faber, Jose Aldo knocks himself out, sorta.

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Jones shows some elbow techniques.

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Luke Thomas’ latest Chat Wrap.

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An oldie, but a goodie.

(HT to Jake Heun)

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TWEETS

Soon(?)

Hashtag Yankees.

Getting closer.

Not a glowing endorsement.

Mr. Fox

Three for Burroughs.

I cried during the last three Star Wars.

Get well soon.

Happy birthday, guys.

Women drivers, amiright.

TUF stuff.

Now we wait.

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced yesterday (Sept. 17 2013)

Carlos Condit vs. Matt Brown at UFC on FOX 9

Daron Cruickshank vs. Adriano Martins at UFC Fight Night 32

Omari Akhmetov vs. Thiago Perpetuo at UFC Fight Night 32

Jose Maria Tome vs. Dustin Ortiz at UFC Fight Night 32

Demetrious Johnson vs. Joseph Benavidez at TUF 18 Finale

Luke Rockhold out, C.B. Dollaway in vs. Tim Boetsch

Michael Johnson vs. Gleison Tibau at UFC 168

Danny Castillo meets Edson Barboza at UFC on FOX 9

Tim Elliott vs. Ali Bagautinov at UFC 167

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Connor Ruebusch.

An Invitation to Rewatch Mayweather-Alvarez

Okay. This is going to be a long one, so if you prefer to just skip to the bottom and read my scores, feel free. But if you really want to test your analytical skills, and become a better watcher of fights, then read through, and let me know what you think.

I just finished rewatching Mayweather vs. Alvarez, and I came up with a shocking conclusion. You ready?

CJ Ross’ draw score is absolutely justifiable.

The blowback from Ross’ shocking score was impressive, even forcing the much-maligned judge to take a leave of absence after the fight. But I aim to prove to you that her score was far from ridiculous.

If you want to rewatch with me, please feel free. Here is the link to the video that I watched (quality’s not great, but what can you do?). Go round by round with me when you have the time, and here’s the imporant bit: watch the fight with the sound off. The Showtime commentary is pretty horrendous at times when bias is concerned, and without their voices you’ll have a much easier time of focusing on the actual fight.

Round 1

The first thing that strikes me is Floyd’s obvious respect for Canelo’s boxing. He immediately looks completely unwilling to stand right in front of Canelo, constantly adjusting to keep the Mexican boxer from lining him up. I would happily score this round a draw, but considering that the judges don’t have the same luxury, I’ll give it to Mayweather. Neither guy landed anything solid, with Canelo establishing early that he’s not just going to just eat jabs all day by countering with double jabs and jabs to the body after every one of Floyd’s attempts.

Again, it’s way too close to be of much significance, but based on a few more connected jabs and one glancing counter right, I’ll give this one to Floyd.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 2

This one is just as close as the first, but with increased activity. Canelo once again looks to counter Floyd’s jabs with a double jab of his own, but can’t seem to find Floyd’s chin. He does manage to touch Mayweather on the shoulder and chin, however. Floyd lands a slick right hand, but it’s definitely a scoring punch. And while Alvarez doesn’t land much upstairs, he does find targets for some solid body punches. A reaching left hook from Alvarez is more or less equaled out by a pair of smothered punches from Mayweather.

We’re so used to seeing Floyd shoulder roll right hands that we tend to forget that he can still be struck while doing so. This is the first of many times that we will see Canelo land his right hand to the body as Floyd turns away, catching the older fighter behind the left elbow.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: How uncomfortable must all of these rich casino-goers in the front rows be sitting next to Li’l Wayne’s shirtless ass?)

Round 3

The first minute of the round is characterized by multiple clinches, in which Canelo tries to counter Floyd’s jab with his own left, and Floyd steps in under his arm, nearly lifting the bigger man off his feet a couple times. Both men are pot-shotting and trying to counter, but haven’t found their respective ranges yet.

The first decent shot of the round is a rising hook from Alvarez that catches Floyd partially on the glove. Nice combination to set it up, though. Alvarez reacts to sudden changes very well. Floyd answers half a minute later with a glancing but impressive looking right hand, the first meaningful combination he’s thrown so far. Canelo counters a nose-tickling jab with a hard one of his own moments later, and Floyd realizes that perhaps this isn’t the kind of fight in which to show off his back-against-the-ropes inside fighting skills, circling away immediately.

Canelo finishes the round with a scary uppercut to counter a swinging overhand right from Floyd. Close call, though I don’t think it landed. Another very close round. At this point I’m starting to see that Floyd will win rounds like these by looking more impressive without actually performing better than his opponent. Alvarez chooses to block Floyd’s early combination, while Floyd tends move around in defense. Neither a missed punch nor a blocked punch should be scored, but a missed punch looks worse than a blocked one, even if the opponent doesn’t capitalize on the whiff.

I also think that Canelo’s posture hurts him here. Even though he’s got solid defense and a good chin, punches that do land tend to make his head wobble around, while Floyd’s straight back and tucked chin make Alvarez’ harder punches look relatively soft. Still, one good punch isn’t enough to win against Canelo’s more effective pressure and cleaner shots.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 4

Cinnamon begins this round with a nice jab to the body and a series of left hooks. These are “soft” punches–thrown for speed rather than power, but they land. Floyd fails to shoulder roll a right hand to the body from Alvarez, but counters nonetheless with his own right. Neither shot is very clean. Floyd lands his first truly effective punch of the fight with a hard right hand after a stiff jab to the body. Another jab after that, and then a clinch in which Floyd catches a glove to the pills. Closer inspection reveals that this was a response to Floyd cranking on Canelo’s neck by twisting his head by the chin during the clinch.

Floyd goes to touch gloves (something Luis Monda recently pointed out he only does in closely contested fights), but Canelo isn’t interested. Really nice pair of body shots by Canelo after a few probing jabs from Mayweather, and then a thudding right hook to the body from Money. A good right hand to counter Floyd’s jab, and then a solid left hook to the gut to follow up. Good jabs, and another right hand from Alvarez, though it might have slid off Floyd’s shoulder. A left hook from Mayweather draws the excitement of the commentators, but Canelo blocked it with his elbow.

Floyd finishes the round with a good jab, a quick right hand, and a sneaky left hook, but his moment is spoiled a little by another hard jab from Canelo. Once again, Floyd landed the showier punches at the beginning and end of the round, but the bulk of the round was decided by Canelo’s ramrod jab and body punches, as well as the first decent shots to the head of Mayweather.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 5

Floyd looks to have found the timing for Canelo’s jab, and he throws a nice right hand from the hip that catches the younger fighter lunging in. A couple jabs and some nice body punches from Alvarez. Floyd lands another right as Alvarez jabs, this one a chopping blow over the top. Long left hook and a glancing right hook to the ribs from Alvarez. Floyd is much busier and more accurate with his jab this time around, having already stuck Canelo with a few solid left hands. Short left hook from Mayweather.

A slapping left hook from Canelo catches Floyd off balance. That’s a very sneaky punch from him–looks like a jab until it lands on the side of your head. I wish he’d throw it palm down though, and get a little damage out of it. Floyd lands a right hand and Canelo once again almost succeeds in countering him with the right uppercut. It sounds like it lands, but it’s hard to see–the replay reveals that at best it was a glancing blow. Canelo slaps floud with another left hook, but Floyd shoulder rolls the follow-up right hand beautifully and throws a counter right, which barely grazes Canelo’s head. A bit later Floyd connects with a slapping left hook of his own, and then another glancing right hand. Canelo lands a hard uppercut to his ribs before they clinch up. Floyd comes back with a couple of punches to Canelo’s belt line on either side, but eats a jab in the process.

Very close, but I’ll give this one to Floyd. He was a bit busier, and started to land some nice counters. Alvarez’ jab looking very sharp, though.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 6

Alvarez immediately follows his corner’s instructions to get busy, cornering Floyd and throwing a quick combination, ending with a left hook that is partially blocked. He continues to pressure, deftly avoiding Floyd’s jab. He lands a nice left hook mid-exchange. Once again he lands that long left hook, which Floyd is having difficulty avoiding–he keeps expecting a jab. Floyd throws a right hand that gets blocked, then blocks one right uppercut and avoids another. The two exchange partially blocked right hands, and another combination from Canelo ends in a pair of hard left hooks, one to the body and the second to the head. Right to the body and a short left hook from Floyd as Canelo pivots out.

Canelo shoulder bumps Floyd under the chin, and the impression I get from Floyd’s body language as the ref warns his opponent is that he’s enjoying this. He truly respects Alvarez’ grit, and he tries once again to touch gloves with the young man, who points at Floyd a couple times seeming to say that Floyd is initiating the gamesmanship, not he. A few more jabs, and Canelo lands a nice right hand over the top. Floyd lands some quick punches without much behind them, and Alvarez throws a much harder combination in response, landing a hard right hand to Floyd’s body as he tries to shoulder roll. Floyd finds a series of good right hands punctuated by another uppercut from Canelo and a combination that allows Floyd to show off his defensive finesse.

Despite the last thirty seconds, I think that Alvarez once again landed the better punches. Completely opposite to my initial impressions, he is actually finding far more success with his jab than Mayweather, landing lefts aplenty to Money’s chest, shoulder, chin, and stomach.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: Check out Mayweather’s body language after the shoulder shot in the replay. He’s like, “Alright, alright…” The fans might have thought that Alvarez looked frustrated, but for Money May this is clearly a case of “game recognize game.”

Round 7

Floyd looks to take over in this round. He lands a good 1-2 coming forward, and then pressures, using lots of feints, to get Canelo into the corner. He once again seems to be getting the timing of Alvarez’ jab, and he lands one of his own followed by a right hand over the top while deftly avoiding Canelo’s left hand. He starts bounding jabs off of Canelo’s guard and sticking him in the belly, using his eyes to misdirect his opponent. Mayweather’s distance control looks really slick in this round as he slides away from Canelo’s combinations and counters with his jab. He’s also starting to read those right hands, not exposing his left side to Canelo’s body shots, but catching the glove on his elbow.

Floyd walks Canelo down again, avoiding most of his punches and blocking others. He touches Canelo with his jab and lands a sweeping right around his guard, then another series of jabs followed by a nice looking right uppercut (Canelo’s posture betraying him again). For the next thirty seconds he alternates jabbing Alvarez’ guard and the pit of his stomach, throwing another pair of right hands that are blocked, followed by yet another sweeping right hand that lands clean. Finally Alvarez fights his way out of the corner, but that sequence looked really bad for him. Unless he lands something noteworthy this will be Floyd’s round.

He doesn’t. Clearest round of the fight so far.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 8

Alvarez opens the round with a combination, landing a body shot but failing to connect with anything else clean. Another nice looking combination a bit later, but again only the right to the body lands, his powerful left hook catching Floyd’s glove. Floyd seems to pick up the pace a bit, and tries to counter Canelo’s jab with the check hook he used to knock out Hatton, but it’s blocked. Canelo tries another combination against the ropes, but no cigar on this one.

Floyd throws two flashy looking 1-2s, but only the jabs are landing, and Alvarez lands a thunderous left hook to Floyd’s gut as he tries to pivot out with a left hook of his own. Good combination by Alvarez against the ropes. His left hook catches Floyd as he slips the jab, and then he uses a stiff arm to set up a right overhand. It’s very difficult to catch Floyd with a right hand, and this one glances off as he leans back, but it’s the cleanest one of the fight so far. Another pair of left hooks gets blocked as Floyd gets off the ropes. Now Alvarez puts Floyd back on the ropes, but he can’t land anything clean (except perhaps those rights to the body–it’s hard to tell from this angle). Floyd sticks him with a short counter right as he resets to try again.

Now Floyd is touching Canelo with the jab as he walks forward. He gets cornered again, but a three punch combination lands for him and makes Alvarez look bad. Good left hook after a feinted right hand after that. Another right hand to the ribs from Canelo, and another nice 1-2 from Floyd to finish up the round.

Tough round to score, but Floyd landed the cleaner shots to the head, while Canelo’s best punches were to the body.

10-9 Mayweather

Note: I could see this round going to Canelo, which already validates CJ Ross’ apparently abhorrent draw scorecard. Keep that in mind when lambasting her in the future.

Round 9

Alvarez goes back to his jab, but Mayweather blocks three in quick succession.

(Note: At this point the commentary team’s scores come up. They all have Floyd ahead, two with scores of 79-73, and Paulie Malignaggi with 78-74. Currently I have Floyd down 76-77)

Canelo tries for some hard right hooks. He seems to want to walk Floyd into his right hand with that long hook, but Floyd’s shoulder roll flummoxes him, and his right merely slaps the outside of Floyd’s shoulder. Floyd blocks some more punches. Both guys trade jabs to the head and body. Not much landing. Nice right uppercut from Mayweather and a left hook that’s blocked. Canelo with a short right over the top as they separate from a clinch. More punches from Canelo to the head and body, and Floyd seems to know what’s coming now. He’s blocking everything.

One right hand to the body gets partially through Mayweather’s defense, and he counters with a right hand that whiffs. A few jabs and Mayweather tries another right hand that gets blocked. Very quick right hand from Mayweather that looks like it catches Alvarez on the chin. I think he rolls his head with the punch, but that kind of makes it look even harder. Canelo looks a little sluggish now, but he lands a pair of glancing right hands. Mayweather dodges a left hook and then counters a jab with a quick right hand. He casually lands some jabs through the guard of Alvarez. Hard right hand to the body from Floyd and then a jab. Another one, right into the pit of Canelo’s stomach, and the Mexican fighter can’t seem to get past Floyd’s lead shoulder anymore.

Floyd finishes up the round by dodging another Alvarez combination, and taunting his opponent with his hands on his knees.

10-9 Mayweather

Round10

Alvarez tries the long hook and right hand again, but Mayweather avoids both shots, bouncing off the ropes to circle back to the center of the ring. He tries for a jab and Alvarez counters with a pair of hard jabs, one to the head and one to the body, and then a right to the body that Floyd blocks. Canelo tries the lead right and Floyd shoulder rolls it, countering with his own right. It doesn’t land well, but it looks good for him. The two exchange a few times, with nothing really getting through for either fighter. Canelo throws a big combination of power punches, but only a jab and an awkward right get through.

Floyd back on the offensive, and he lands another right hand. Floyd has Canelo against the ropes and he tries to pot shot him to pieces again, but he can’t replicate the success he had in round 7. Canelo’s blocking everything except a few jabs to the chest. The lack of initiative looks bad for him, though. Here we go: Canelo puts Floyd against the ropes (just as Malignaggi is saying how he doesn’t know how to trap him) and lands a good right hand, then a series of punches to the body and another right to the head, but none of these land very cleanly. Floyd with some light jabs and the two stare one another down after the bell.

This one goes to Floyd, but it’s unbelievably close. I desperately want to call it a draw. Floyd had Canelo on the ropes for longer and landed a bit more, but Canelo landed the much harder shots in his moments of control.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 11

The first blow is a vicious right hook to the kidney by Alvarez, which gets him a warning from the ref. Alvarez with a swinging right hand, trying to catch Floyd pivoting, but it’s no good. Another right hand to the body from Canelo after a few flickering jabs. That’s consistently been his best punch, and it seems like a good one to use against a guy like May, who turns his body away when he defends. Combinations from Alvarez, but Floyd’s defense looks very tight, and he steals the initiative right back with a clean 1-2 combination. Canelo might be a little frustrated now, as he shoves Mayweather away when the ref breaks their clinch.

A few jabs, a couple of glancing left hooks, and then another quick lead right that lands clean from Mayweather. Three left hooks in succession from Floyd, the last of which lands clean. Canelo responds with a nice left hook to the liver against the ropes, and a few more hard punches, but Floyd’s catching everything else on his arms.

Canelo actually landed the better punches, but not nearly enough of them. Floyd accumulated more points with his jab, and managed to make Alvarez look a little silly by avoiding almost all of his punches, including a right hand that rattled the ropes prompting Floyd to mock his opponent. Canelo’s inexperience started to show in this round, as he began hunting for the knockout blow but without the jabs and feints he was showing earlier in the fight.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 12

The ref asks the fighters to touch glove as the final round begins, and Floyd’s touch is a grandiose gesture, half bravado and half legitimate respect. Canelo’s own touch is a curt tap. This small exchange is a microcosm of the fight so far.

The first blows are once again from Alvarez, as he lands a jab and a right uppercut to the body, followed by a rabbit punch to Floyd’s ear when Floyd holds him. He uses his shoulder to shove Mayweather back as the ref breaks them up. Now Floyd is dancing around with his hands lowered, catching Canelo’s punches on his arms. Floyd connects with the second of two left hooks as he steps around to Alvarez’ right.

Now Mayweather clinches and Canelo punishes him with some nice bodyshots and a hard right hook upstairs. Floyd tries to smother Canelo’s power. Bayless tells them to break and then changes his mind. They continue to work, Canelo trying for a right uppercut and missing, Floyd trying to counter with a hook and missing as well. Floyd starts dancing around and Canelo is practically jogging after him, desperate to finish strong. He backs up into the center ring, expressing his frustration with Mayweather’s tactics, and Money obliges him by coming forward.

Good left hook to the body by Canelo followed by a right and another left up top that Floyd blocks. Floyd tries to shoulder roll a lead right from Canelo but gets caught and misses with his counter. The two exchange counters, but neither of them lands. Another body jab that forces Floyd to step in and Canelo cracks him behind the ear with a chopping right. 1-2 by Canelo, and the right hand isn’t clean but it touches Floyd on the temple. Floyd’s counter misses again.

And the final bell.

10-9 Alvarez

Final Score: 115-114 Floyd Mayweather, 7 rounds to 5

Conclusion: There is a big difference between watching a fight as a fan and watching as a judge. Though many of us like to keep a running tally of the score as we watch live, we also tend to get caught up in the flash and flair of the fight. Next time a score seems controversial to you, I urge you to rewatch the fight as soon as possible with the sound off, merely looking at which fighter caused more damage to the other round by round. That should be the prime criterion in mind when judging prizefighting.

What did I learn from this fight? I learned that Canelo Alvarez is a hell of a fighter, with a damn near unbreakable will. Though I was impressed by his dogged determination in the immediate aftermath of the fight, I am even more impressed now that I realize how truly close this fight was. This 23 year-old has nothing to be ashamed of: he showed a great jab, solid pressuring skills, and ferocious body punching. In time, he will be as great as Mayweather, if not better. This just wasn’t quite his time to take this fight.

I also learned that Floyd is better than any other boxer in the game at looking like he’s winning, even when he’s not. His in-ring antics, his unique style of defense, and his counters, which often look much more impressive than they really are, make him a difficult fighter to score. When Mayweather is in a close fight, which this was, his style allows him to land on the right side of that margin of error.

I didn’t mention it consistently, in part to avoid making this extensive breakdown even longer than it already is, and in part because not much damage was being caused, but Floyd was very busy with his jab throughout the entire fight. As Canelo walked him down, Floyd would constantly stick him with his left hand. And even though the majority of these punches were either quite soft or completely blocked/avoided, his activity allowed him to carry the fight in the judges’ (and the fans’) eyes even as he spent much of the fight moving backward. As such, Floyd was able to make Canelo’s good moments look less-than-good, and his own moments of success seemed to stand out. Simply watch the intervals between rounds and see for yourself–all but one or two replays are of Floyd’s punches, not Canelo’s.

Watch this one again, and see if you find it to be closer than when you watched it live. You might find that “The One” was everything we were promised after all.

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Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Morning Report: Anderson Silva says ‘superfights’ good for UFC’s business, bad for fighters

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion …

While visiting martial arts academies and teaching seminars in London this week, former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva voiced his disinterest in the UFC’s seemingly endless pursuit of the fabled ‘superfight.’

“My opinion – the people always say ‘superfight, superfight’ but where are the chances for the new guys to come?

“I’m ready for fight for Jon Jones, Georges St Pierre but in my academy, Minatouro, Glover and the other fighters in this class for Jon Jones. George St Pierre is a different class. I have my problems in my class.

“Yeah it’s good for business but is no good for the other’s guy fight. I go to fight Georges St Pierre, he cuts up, I cut down. I finish the fight. I go to fight Jon Jones, I finish the fight. Who’s next? No have! My opinion, this is perfect bullshit.”

Prior to losing his title to Chris Weidman, Silva played the middle child in MMA fans’ various fantasy scenarios. While welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre and light heavyweight champion Jon Jones had no where to go but up in weight, Silva was the wildcard that could possibly go north or south.

Now with Weidman holding court over the 185lbs division, Silva says the pressure is off.

“Uhm… is normal fight, don’t have too much pressure. The pressure is for Weidman. Wiedmann is champion, I’m normal guy now.”

“I training hard, I go for fight because I love it. I no go for fight for belt. It’s a symbol, it’s normal.

“The belt is the symbol, is nothing more. My opinion is the belt is the symbol but my fans, the people in the country don’t understand this.

“My friends see but the people don’t. “Come on Anderson it’s the belt. We need you to pick up the belt.”

Silva, soon off to Thailand to begin his training, faces Weidman in a rematch for the UFC middleweight title Dec. 28 at UFC 168.

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5 MUST-READ STORIES

MMA RoundtableLuke Thomas and Chuck Mindenhall try to settle the debate on everything from Jones vs. Gustafsson to what MMA could possibly do to try to match Mayweather vs. Canelo.

Part II. After an injury removed Demetrious Johnson from headlining the TUF 17 Finale, fate would have it that he’d make his next title defense to Joseph Benavidez at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

The Punk. A rejuvenated Josh Thomson talks his upcoming title fight with Anthony Pettis, spending much of his career injured and no longer having to face Gilbert Melendez. “I’ll be 35 this weekend, and it’s one of those things where I don’t know if the opportunity will come up again. Everything rides on this for me. It’s the moment I’ve been waiting for since 2004.”

Enhanced testingDave Meltzer explains why George St-Pierre’s push for extensive drug testing may be more about himself than Hendricks. “Just the fact St-Pierre is going through this testing at this point without Hendricks seems to indicate it’s more about clearing his own name than him worrying about whether his opponent is cheating.”

Kyra over Ronda? UFC Hall of Famer Royce Gracie believes multi-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Kyra Gracie has what it takesto beat Ronda Rousey. “(Ronda Rousey) is good, she knows what she’s doing. (But) Kyra’s jiu-jitsu is better, with a gi or in MMA.”

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MEDIA STEW

UFC 165 Predictions with Gilbert Melendez and Demetrious Johnson.

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Episode 2 of Alexander Gustafsson’s video blog.

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Jon Jones sits down with Mens Fitness.

(HT to @ZProphet_MMA)

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Mike Tyson is a witch.

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Jordan Burroughs wins world title at 2013 FILA World Championships of Wrestling.

(HT to Bloody Elbow)

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Playing as Urijah Faber, Jose Aldo knocks himself out, sorta.

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Jones shows some elbow techniques.

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Luke Thomas’ latest Chat Wrap.

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An oldie, but a goodie.

(HT to Jake Heun)

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TWEETS

Soon(?)

Hashtag Yankees.

Getting closer.

Not a glowing endorsement.

Mr. Fox

Three for Burroughs.

I cried during the last three Star Wars.

Get well soon.

Happy birthday, guys.

Women drivers, amiright.

TUF stuff.

Now we wait.

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced yesterday (Sept. 17 2013)

Carlos Condit vs. Matt Brown at UFC on FOX 9

Daron Cruickshank vs. Adriano Martins at UFC Fight Night 32

Omari Akhmetov vs. Thiago Perpetuo at UFC Fight Night 32

Jose Maria Tome vs. Dustin Ortiz at UFC Fight Night 32

Demetrious Johnson vs. Joseph Benavidez at TUF 18 Finale

Luke Rockhold out, C.B. Dollaway in vs. Tim Boetsch

Michael Johnson vs. Gleison Tibau at UFC 168

Danny Castillo meets Edson Barboza at UFC on FOX 9

Tim Elliott vs. Ali Bagautinov at UFC 167

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Connor Ruebusch.

An Invitation to Rewatch Mayweather-Alvarez

Okay. This is going to be a long one, so if you prefer to just skip to the bottom and read my scores, feel free. But if you really want to test your analytical skills, and become a better watcher of fights, then read through, and let me know what you think.

I just finished rewatching Mayweather vs. Alvarez, and I came up with a shocking conclusion. You ready?

CJ Ross’ draw score is absolutely justifiable.

The blowback from Ross’ shocking score was impressive, even forcing the much-maligned judge to take a leave of absence after the fight. But I aim to prove to you that her score was far from ridiculous.

If you want to rewatch with me, please feel free. Here is the link to the video that I watched (quality’s not great, but what can you do?). Go round by round with me when you have the time, and here’s the imporant bit: watch the fight with the sound off. The Showtime commentary is pretty horrendous at times when bias is concerned, and without their voices you’ll have a much easier time of focusing on the actual fight.

Round 1

The first thing that strikes me is Floyd’s obvious respect for Canelo’s boxing. He immediately looks completely unwilling to stand right in front of Canelo, constantly adjusting to keep the Mexican boxer from lining him up. I would happily score this round a draw, but considering that the judges don’t have the same luxury, I’ll give it to Mayweather. Neither guy landed anything solid, with Canelo establishing early that he’s not just going to just eat jabs all day by countering with double jabs and jabs to the body after every one of Floyd’s attempts.

Again, it’s way too close to be of much significance, but based on a few more connected jabs and one glancing counter right, I’ll give this one to Floyd.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 2

This one is just as close as the first, but with increased activity. Canelo once again looks to counter Floyd’s jabs with a double jab of his own, but can’t seem to find Floyd’s chin. He does manage to touch Mayweather on the shoulder and chin, however. Floyd lands a slick right hand, but it’s definitely a scoring punch. And while Alvarez doesn’t land much upstairs, he does find targets for some solid body punches. A reaching left hook from Alvarez is more or less equaled out by a pair of smothered punches from Mayweather.

We’re so used to seeing Floyd shoulder roll right hands that we tend to forget that he can still be struck while doing so. This is the first of many times that we will see Canelo land his right hand to the body as Floyd turns away, catching the older fighter behind the left elbow.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: How uncomfortable must all of these rich casino-goers in the front rows be sitting next to Li’l Wayne’s shirtless ass?)

Round 3

The first minute of the round is characterized by multiple clinches, in which Canelo tries to counter Floyd’s jab with his own left, and Floyd steps in under his arm, nearly lifting the bigger man off his feet a couple times. Both men are pot-shotting and trying to counter, but haven’t found their respective ranges yet.

The first decent shot of the round is a rising hook from Alvarez that catches Floyd partially on the glove. Nice combination to set it up, though. Alvarez reacts to sudden changes very well. Floyd answers half a minute later with a glancing but impressive looking right hand, the first meaningful combination he’s thrown so far. Canelo counters a nose-tickling jab with a hard one of his own moments later, and Floyd realizes that perhaps this isn’t the kind of fight in which to show off his back-against-the-ropes inside fighting skills, circling away immediately.

Canelo finishes the round with a scary uppercut to counter a swinging overhand right from Floyd. Close call, though I don’t think it landed. Another very close round. At this point I’m starting to see that Floyd will win rounds like these by looking more impressive without actually performing better than his opponent. Alvarez chooses to block Floyd’s early combination, while Floyd tends move around in defense. Neither a missed punch nor a blocked punch should be scored, but a missed punch looks worse than a blocked one, even if the opponent doesn’t capitalize on the whiff.

I also think that Canelo’s posture hurts him here. Even though he’s got solid defense and a good chin, punches that do land tend to make his head wobble around, while Floyd’s straight back and tucked chin make Alvarez’ harder punches look relatively soft. Still, one good punch isn’t enough to win against Canelo’s more effective pressure and cleaner shots.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 4

Cinnamon begins this round with a nice jab to the body and a series of left hooks. These are “soft” punches–thrown for speed rather than power, but they land. Floyd fails to shoulder roll a right hand to the body from Alvarez, but counters nonetheless with his own right. Neither shot is very clean. Floyd lands his first truly effective punch of the fight with a hard right hand after a stiff jab to the body. Another jab after that, and then a clinch in which Floyd catches a glove to the pills. Closer inspection reveals that this was a response to Floyd cranking on Canelo’s neck by twisting his head by the chin during the clinch.

Floyd goes to touch gloves (something Luis Monda recently pointed out he only does in closely contested fights), but Canelo isn’t interested. Really nice pair of body shots by Canelo after a few probing jabs from Mayweather, and then a thudding right hook to the body from Money. A good right hand to counter Floyd’s jab, and then a solid left hook to the gut to follow up. Good jabs, and another right hand from Alvarez, though it might have slid off Floyd’s shoulder. A left hook from Mayweather draws the excitement of the commentators, but Canelo blocked it with his elbow.

Floyd finishes the round with a good jab, a quick right hand, and a sneaky left hook, but his moment is spoiled a little by another hard jab from Canelo. Once again, Floyd landed the showier punches at the beginning and end of the round, but the bulk of the round was decided by Canelo’s ramrod jab and body punches, as well as the first decent shots to the head of Mayweather.

10-9 Alvarez

Round 5

Floyd looks to have found the timing for Canelo’s jab, and he throws a nice right hand from the hip that catches the younger fighter lunging in. A couple jabs and some nice body punches from Alvarez. Floyd lands another right as Alvarez jabs, this one a chopping blow over the top. Long left hook and a glancing right hook to the ribs from Alvarez. Floyd is much busier and more accurate with his jab this time around, having already stuck Canelo with a few solid left hands. Short left hook from Mayweather.

A slapping left hook from Canelo catches Floyd off balance. That’s a very sneaky punch from him–looks like a jab until it lands on the side of your head. I wish he’d throw it palm down though, and get a little damage out of it. Floyd lands a right hand and Canelo once again almost succeeds in countering him with the right uppercut. It sounds like it lands, but it’s hard to see–the replay reveals that at best it was a glancing blow. Canelo slaps floud with another left hook, but Floyd shoulder rolls the follow-up right hand beautifully and throws a counter right, which barely grazes Canelo’s head. A bit later Floyd connects with a slapping left hook of his own, and then another glancing right hand. Canelo lands a hard uppercut to his ribs before they clinch up. Floyd comes back with a couple of punches to Canelo’s belt line on either side, but eats a jab in the process.

Very close, but I’ll give this one to Floyd. He was a bit busier, and started to land some nice counters. Alvarez’ jab looking very sharp, though.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 6

Alvarez immediately follows his corner’s instructions to get busy, cornering Floyd and throwing a quick combination, ending with a left hook that is partially blocked. He continues to pressure, deftly avoiding Floyd’s jab. He lands a nice left hook mid-exchange. Once again he lands that long left hook, which Floyd is having difficulty avoiding–he keeps expecting a jab. Floyd throws a right hand that gets blocked, then blocks one right uppercut and avoids another. The two exchange partially blocked right hands, and another combination from Canelo ends in a pair of hard left hooks, one to the body and the second to the head. Right to the body and a short left hook from Floyd as Canelo pivots out.

Canelo shoulder bumps Floyd under the chin, and the impression I get from Floyd’s body language as the ref warns his opponent is that he’s enjoying this. He truly respects Alvarez’ grit, and he tries once again to touch gloves with the young man, who points at Floyd a couple times seeming to say that Floyd is initiating the gamesmanship, not he. A few more jabs, and Canelo lands a nice right hand over the top. Floyd lands some quick punches without much behind them, and Alvarez throws a much harder combination in response, landing a hard right hand to Floyd’s body as he tries to shoulder roll. Floyd finds a series of good right hands punctuated by another uppercut from Canelo and a combination that allows Floyd to show off his defensive finesse.

Despite the last thirty seconds, I think that Alvarez once again landed the better punches. Completely opposite to my initial impressions, he is actually finding far more success with his jab than Mayweather, landing lefts aplenty to Money’s chest, shoulder, chin, and stomach.

10-9 Alvarez

(Interim note: Check out Mayweather’s body language after the shoulder shot in the replay. He’s like, “Alright, alright…” The fans might have thought that Alvarez looked frustrated, but for Money May this is clearly a case of “game recognize game.”

Round 7

Floyd looks to take over in this round. He lands a good 1-2 coming forward, and then pressures, using lots of feints, to get Canelo into the corner. He once again seems to be getting the timing of Alvarez’ jab, and he lands one of his own followed by a right hand over the top while deftly avoiding Canelo’s left hand. He starts bounding jabs off of Canelo’s guard and sticking him in the belly, using his eyes to misdirect his opponent. Mayweather’s distance control looks really slick in this round as he slides away from Canelo’s combinations and counters with his jab. He’s also starting to read those right hands, not exposing his left side to Canelo’s body shots, but catching the glove on his elbow.

Floyd walks Canelo down again, avoiding most of his punches and blocking others. He touches Canelo with his jab and lands a sweeping right around his guard, then another series of jabs followed by a nice looking right uppercut (Canelo’s posture betraying him again). For the next thirty seconds he alternates jabbing Alvarez’ guard and the pit of his stomach, throwing another pair of right hands that are blocked, followed by yet another sweeping right hand that lands clean. Finally Alvarez fights his way out of the corner, but that sequence looked really bad for him. Unless he lands something noteworthy this will be Floyd’s round.

He doesn’t. Clearest round of the fight so far.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 8

Alvarez opens the round with a combination, landing a body shot but failing to connect with anything else clean. Another nice looking combination a bit later, but again only the right to the body lands, his powerful left hook catching Floyd’s glove. Floyd seems to pick up the pace a bit, and tries to counter Canelo’s jab with the check hook he used to knock out Hatton, but it’s blocked. Canelo tries another combination against the ropes, but no cigar on this one.

Floyd throws two flashy looking 1-2s, but only the jabs are landing, and Alvarez lands a thunderous left hook to Floyd’s gut as he tries to pivot out with a left hook of his own. Good combination by Alvarez against the ropes. His left hook catches Floyd as he slips the jab, and then he uses a stiff arm to set up a right overhand. It’s very difficult to catch Floyd with a right hand, and this one glances off as he leans back, but it’s the cleanest one of the fight so far. Another pair of left hooks gets blocked as Floyd gets off the ropes. Now Alvarez puts Floyd back on the ropes, but he can’t land anything clean (except perhaps those rights to the body–it’s hard to tell from this angle). Floyd sticks him with a short counter right as he resets to try again.

Now Floyd is touching Canelo with the jab as he walks forward. He gets cornered again, but a three punch combination lands for him and makes Alvarez look bad. Good left hook after a feinted right hand after that. Another right hand to the ribs from Canelo, and another nice 1-2 from Floyd to finish up the round.

Tough round to score, but Floyd landed the cleaner shots to the head, while Canelo’s best punches were to the body.

10-9 Mayweather

Note: I could see this round going to Canelo, which already validates CJ Ross’ apparently abhorrent draw scorecard. Keep that in mind when lambasting her in the future.

Round 9

Alvarez goes back to his jab, but Mayweather blocks three in quick succession.

(Note: At this point the commentary team’s scores come up. They all have Floyd ahead, two with scores of 79-73, and Paulie Malignaggi with 78-74. Currently I have Floyd down 76-77)

Canelo tries for some hard right hooks. He seems to want to walk Floyd into his right hand with that long hook, but Floyd’s shoulder roll flummoxes him, and his right merely slaps the outside of Floyd’s shoulder. Floyd blocks some more punches. Both guys trade jabs to the head and body. Not much landing. Nice right uppercut from Mayweather and a left hook that’s blocked. Canelo with a short right over the top as they separate from a clinch. More punches from Canelo to the head and body, and Floyd seems to know what’s coming now. He’s blocking everything.

One right hand to the body gets partially through Mayweather’s defense, and he counters with a right hand that whiffs. A few jabs and Mayweather tries another right hand that gets blocked. Very quick right hand from Mayweather that looks like it catches Alvarez on the chin. I think he rolls his head with the punch, but that kind of makes it look even harder. Canelo looks a little sluggish now, but he lands a pair of glancing right hands. Mayweather dodges a left hook and then counters a jab with a quick right hand. He casually lands some jabs through the guard of Alvarez. Hard right hand to the body from Floyd and then a jab. Another one, right into the pit of Canelo’s stomach, and the Mexican fighter can’t seem to get past Floyd’s lead shoulder anymore.

Floyd finishes up the round by dodging another Alvarez combination, and taunting his opponent with his hands on his knees.

10-9 Mayweather

Round10

Alvarez tries the long hook and right hand again, but Mayweather avoids both shots, bouncing off the ropes to circle back to the center of the ring. He tries for a jab and Alvarez counters with a pair of hard jabs, one to the head and one to the body, and then a right to the body that Floyd blocks. Canelo tries the lead right and Floyd shoulder rolls it, countering with his own right. It doesn’t land well, but it looks good for him. The two exchange a few times, with nothing really getting through for either fighter. Canelo throws a big combination of power punches, but only a jab and an awkward right get through.

Floyd back on the offensive, and he lands another right hand. Floyd has Canelo against the ropes and he tries to pot shot him to pieces again, but he can’t replicate the success he had in round 7. Canelo’s blocking everything except a few jabs to the chest. The lack of initiative looks bad for him, though. Here we go: Canelo puts Floyd against the ropes (just as Malignaggi is saying how he doesn’t know how to trap him) and lands a good right hand, then a series of punches to the body and another right to the head, but none of these land very cleanly. Floyd with some light jabs and the two stare one another down after the bell.

This one goes to Floyd, but it’s unbelievably close. I desperately want to call it a draw. Floyd had Canelo on the ropes for longer and landed a bit more, but Canelo landed the much harder shots in his moments of control.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 11

The first blow is a vicious right hook to the kidney by Alvarez, which gets him a warning from the ref. Alvarez with a swinging right hand, trying to catch Floyd pivoting, but it’s no good. Another right hand to the body from Canelo after a few flickering jabs. That’s consistently been his best punch, and it seems like a good one to use against a guy like May, who turns his body away when he defends. Combinations from Alvarez, but Floyd’s defense looks very tight, and he steals the initiative right back with a clean 1-2 combination. Canelo might be a little frustrated now, as he shoves Mayweather away when the ref breaks their clinch.

A few jabs, a couple of glancing left hooks, and then another quick lead right that lands clean from Mayweather. Three left hooks in succession from Floyd, the last of which lands clean. Canelo responds with a nice left hook to the liver against the ropes, and a few more hard punches, but Floyd’s catching everything else on his arms.

Canelo actually landed the better punches, but not nearly enough of them. Floyd accumulated more points with his jab, and managed to make Alvarez look a little silly by avoiding almost all of his punches, including a right hand that rattled the ropes prompting Floyd to mock his opponent. Canelo’s inexperience started to show in this round, as he began hunting for the knockout blow but without the jabs and feints he was showing earlier in the fight.

10-9 Mayweather

Round 12

The ref asks the fighters to touch glove as the final round begins, and Floyd’s touch is a grandiose gesture, half bravado and half legitimate respect. Canelo’s own touch is a curt tap. This small exchange is a microcosm of the fight so far.

The first blows are once again from Alvarez, as he lands a jab and a right uppercut to the body, followed by a rabbit punch to Floyd’s ear when Floyd holds him. He uses his shoulder to shove Mayweather back as the ref breaks them up. Now Floyd is dancing around with his hands lowered, catching Canelo’s punches on his arms. Floyd connects with the second of two left hooks as he steps around to Alvarez’ right.

Now Mayweather clinches and Canelo punishes him with some nice bodyshots and a hard right hook upstairs. Floyd tries to smother Canelo’s power. Bayless tells them to break and then changes his mind. They continue to work, Canelo trying for a right uppercut and missing, Floyd trying to counter with a hook and missing as well. Floyd starts dancing around and Canelo is practically jogging after him, desperate to finish strong. He backs up into the center ring, expressing his frustration with Mayweather’s tactics, and Money obliges him by coming forward.

Good left hook to the body by Canelo followed by a right and another left up top that Floyd blocks. Floyd tries to shoulder roll a lead right from Canelo but gets caught and misses with his counter. The two exchange counters, but neither of them lands. Another body jab that forces Floyd to step in and Canelo cracks him behind the ear with a chopping right. 1-2 by Canelo, and the right hand isn’t clean but it touches Floyd on the temple. Floyd’s counter misses again.

And the final bell.

10-9 Alvarez

Final Score: 115-114 Floyd Mayweather, 7 rounds to 5

Conclusion: There is a big difference between watching a fight as a fan and watching as a judge. Though many of us like to keep a running tally of the score as we watch live, we also tend to get caught up in the flash and flair of the fight. Next time a score seems controversial to you, I urge you to rewatch the fight as soon as possible with the sound off, merely looking at which fighter caused more damage to the other round by round. That should be the prime criterion in mind when judging prizefighting.

What did I learn from this fight? I learned that Canelo Alvarez is a hell of a fighter, with a damn near unbreakable will. Though I was impressed by his dogged determination in the immediate aftermath of the fight, I am even more impressed now that I realize how truly close this fight was. This 23 year-old has nothing to be ashamed of: he showed a great jab, solid pressuring skills, and ferocious body punching. In time, he will be as great as Mayweather, if not better. This just wasn’t quite his time to take this fight.

I also learned that Floyd is better than any other boxer in the game at looking like he’s winning, even when he’s not. His in-ring antics, his unique style of defense, and his counters, which often look much more impressive than they really are, make him a difficult fighter to score. When Mayweather is in a close fight, which this was, his style allows him to land on the right side of that margin of error.

I didn’t mention it consistently, in part to avoid making this extensive breakdown even longer than it already is, and in part because not much damage was being caused, but Floyd was very busy with his jab throughout the entire fight. As Canelo walked him down, Floyd would constantly stick him with his left hand. And even though the majority of these punches were either quite soft or completely blocked/avoided, his activity allowed him to carry the fight in the judges’ (and the fans’) eyes even as he spent much of the fight moving backward. As such, Floyd was able to make Canelo’s good moments look less-than-good, and his own moments of success seemed to stand out. Simply watch the intervals between rounds and see for yourself–all but one or two replays are of Floyd’s punches, not Canelo’s.

Watch this one again, and see if you find it to be closer than when you watched it live. You might find that “The One” was everything we were promised after all.

Star-divide

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