Muhammed ‘King Mo’ Lawal Keeps It Simple: Get Paid and Entertain

It’s a Thursday night in the fight capital of the world, and one of the most polarizing figures in mixed martial arts is thinking about video games. Not Call of Duty first-person shooter home-console variety, but the 16-bit arcade classic type.
“I…

It’s a Thursday night in the fight capital of the world, and one of the most polarizing figures in mixed martial arts is thinking about video games. Not Call of Duty first-person shooter home-console variety, but the 16-bit arcade classic type.

“It doesn’t matter which one we pick,” Muhammed Lawal says in a tone thick with confidence. “Whatever we play, I’m gonna whoop your ass.”

After the projected button-mashing beatdown takes place, an argument is made that Dig Dug would have been a better-suited platform, but apparently there is no room for excuses where he’s concerned. The only thing on King Mo’s mind in that moment was winning, and once he accomplished that, the conversation on such matters was over.

While there was no shortage of back-and-forth banter during the Street Fighter II dust-up, once the gaming had concluded, Lawal returned to his normal reserved self. Although his fighting persona is an all-eyes-on-me showcase, the real Lawal is on the other side of the observational spectrum. He would rather mind his own business than be the focal point of anyone else’s, and that’s an interesting paradox for a man who seems to covet attention in his professional life.

“I just care about winning,” Lawal told Bleacher Report a few weeks later from Coconut Creek, Florida, where he was training for his upcoming fight at Bellator 134 on Friday. “I don’t care what anybody else thinks or what they are going through…I only care about what I have to do to win. Everybody has different goals at the end of the day, and mine is to win and get paid.”

Furthermore, the word “business” is a crucial aspect to Lawal‘s drive as a fighter. Whereas most of his peers are on a constant push for recognition and doing everything in their power to compete under the brightest lights, the former standout wrestler from Oklahoma State University is all about his financial hustle. Using his gift of gab to promote a fight or land a high-profile matchup is all done in the flow of the game he’s come to know, and Lawal has honed his tools to improve his position in the chaos. 

Lawal understands these things, and his knowledge of the MMA landscape has certainly helped him navigate his way toward the prominent position he enjoys under the Bellator banner. And while competing for the UFC—the most recognizable brand in MMA—could potentially boost his paydays and visibility, Lawal isn’t willing to exhaust himself courting its attention.

He’s fighting to get paid, and that is the bottom line. Yes, there is the fire to compete as Lawal is a born competitor, but his career throwing leather inside the cage is an ends to a means. The former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion-turned-Bellator contender doesn’t make illusions about being a prize fighter. In fact he’s fully embraced it.

“I’m not sure where it came from, but it’s something I’ve always had,” Lawal said. “Obviously when you get into competition mode, it is a different mode than when you are just sitting around and chilling. Competition mode is what you shift into when it’s time to work, and I developed that mindset early on through wrestling. When you are wrestling, every day you are going hard to prepare in the time you have during your training, and you use your downtime to chill, recover and get ready to do it all again. MMA is the same thing.”

And in the MMA realm Lawal is a unique commodity. Not only does he possess a fan-friendly style, but he brings a level of showmanship that is unrivaled by his peers throughout the sport. He instituted the flashy walkouts and entourages filled with dancing girls to hype up his walk to the cage, and no other fighter competing in the current era of MMA can claim to do it better than he does.

Yet, on the flip side, all the glitz and glam are simply Lawal‘s way of providing entertainment to the fighting faithful who tune in to watch him work. He wants to give the masses a show, and he’s determined to bring something exciting every time his name is on the billing.

“I just think it sounded cool,” Lawal said in regard to his King Mo persona. “I’ve always been a wrestling fan, and that became my angle. If you are an entertainer, then you bring elements of who you are into what you do. A day in the life is what I say. MMA is a sport, but it’s also entertainment, so you have to bring who you are to it. That’s what I do, and it’s part of who I am.

“I look at it as entertainment, man. I’m going out there to be entertaining and have fun with it. That’s what I’m going to do. Money is a big part of it for me because fighting is my job. That’s how I get paid and that’s my goal…to get paid.”

In addition to his attention-grabbing persona when the bright lights are on, Lawal has also never been one to shy away from putting what he calls “haters” in check. He understands everyone is entitled to their opinions, but he also feels that people are going to great lengths these days to act out and attempt to get their opinions heard.

There is no bigger platform to interact with professional athletes in the current day and age than Twitter. And it’s because of the length that people will go to sling dirt on social media that he’s completely backed away from participating on the platform.

“That’s why I don’t live on Twitter,” Lawal explained. “People get on there and rip on fighters and other people and it’s just crazy. I saw some girl or someone create a profile and use Ariel Helwani’s last name and start ripping on fighters. What does that say about you where you don’t have the originality to come up with your own persona and have to take someone else’s last name? You have to take someone else’s last name to try to become something? It’s a joke, man.

“That would be like me saying I’m going to be a good promoter, so call me Mo White or Mo Coker, and I start going to shows. Come on, man, it’s a joke. Be your own person and make your own way. The stuff that happens on Twitter is a joke.”

Putting outside distractions aside leaves Lawal more time to focus on his current grind as being one of the most marketable faces for Bellator. Although he’s been a key member of the promotion since joining the Los Angeles-based outfit’s roster in 2012, the organization has undergone some changes in key positions that have things moving in a new direction.

The biggest adjustment for the promotion was parting ways with longtime CEO Bjorn Rebney and replacing him with former Strikeforce front man Scott Coker. Lawal had a public feud with the way Rebney was handling business toward the end of his run with Bellator and welcomed Coker coming in and taking the reins. 

With Coker‘s experience as one of the top fight promoters in the business, the future looks bright for the surging promotion, and Lawal is excited to see what the future holds for the place he calls home.

“It’s been a great feel so far,” Lawal explained. “The crowd turnout has been good, and there has been solid hype on the fights. The fights they are putting together are more exciting and everything about the production has been better. The canvas, the lighting…everything. It has just been better all around.

“I said it because it was true,” he added when asked about the colorful name he attached to Bjorn Rebney following his bout with Quinton “Rampage” Jackson in May 2014. “I don’t even want to talk about the guy, but he did me foul because he was d*** riding.”

With everything moving in the right direction where Bellator is concerned, Lawal is looking to keep things rolling and is focused on making 2015 a big year for his personal brand. While he’s spent the better part of the past five years competing in the light heavyweight division, the 34-year-old American Top Team representative is making sure to keep his options open and will take his next fight as a heavyweight.

He will square off with UFC veteran-turned-Bellator heavyweight contender Cheick Kongo this weekend at Bellator 134 in a bout that has the potential to cement him as a two-division threat. While he was originally slated to face James Thompson in his first heavyweight showing inside the cage, injury threw a wrench in those works, and the end result was a showdown with Kongo.

Lawal is constantly looking for the biggest fights available, and locking up with Kongo fits the bill.

“I was supposed to fight James Thompson,” Lawal said. “Then I don’t know if he didn’t want to fight or got hurt or something like that, but he was out of the fight. They asked me if I still wanted to fight, and I said sure and said that I would fight at heavyweight, 205 or whatever. Then they said that Cheick Kongo wanted the fight, and I said, ‘OK, cool. Then I’ll fight him.’

“I don’t have a feel for anyone until I fight them or train with them. I won’t know what to expect until we get in there. We know he’s improved. He’s gotten bigger, stronger and faster, and his grappling has gotten better. He doesn’t have any submission wins on his record, so his submission game is whatever, but he’s gotten better all around. We’ll see what happens when we fight. I can’t predict the future. 

“My goals are to get paid, win the belt, win big fights and live my life. That’s all it’s about.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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James Krause Ready to Show and Prove at UFC 184

James Krause is fired up.
Not that the Missouri-based scrapper ever needs any added motivation going into a fight, but there is something stinging him leading into his next tilt at UFC 184. A quick look at the hard-charging lightweight’s career reveals…

James Krause is fired up.

Not that the Missouri-based scrapper ever needs any added motivation going into a fight, but there is something stinging him leading into his next tilt at UFC 184. A quick look at the hard-charging lightweight’s career reveals he’s traveled a hard road to make it to the biggest stage in MMA, and he’s attempted to make the most out of each of the four showings he’s had inside the Octagon.

The 28-year-old Grindhouse MMA representative has suffered setbacks in two of his four outings, yet the end results of those fights haven’t been an easy measure to gauge the skills he brings to the cage. His bout against Bobby Green was a foul-laden affair that ended in controversial fashion, while his most recent loss came in an uninspired showing against Jorge Masvidal, who is currently a top-ranked competitor at 155 pounds and on one of the hottest streaks in the talent-rich lightweight fold.

That said, his two wins under the UFC banner were both high-paced, action-packed bouts. His debut showing against Sam Stout at UFC 161 back in June of 2013 resulted in Krause not only claiming the victory, but leaving Winnipeg with two Performance of the Night bonuses.

His other win came against former WEC lightweight champion Jamie Varner in a bout that was toe-to-toe ruckus until the Arizona native suffered an ankle injury that prevented him from entering the second round of the fight.

When his total body of work is examined it’s clear that Krause not only possesses a fan-friendly and exciting style, but he’s fought well above his ranking—or lack thereof—in a division crawling with game fighters.

And when he discovered his upcoming tilt against Valmir Lazaro was slated to appear on the Fight Pass portion of Saturday’s card in Los Angeles, Krause was admittedly a bit miffed and fired up to prove he deserves a higher placement on the billing.

“It absolutely motivates me,” Krause told Bleacher Report. “Two things come to mind when I start talking about this subject. When you look at who I’ve fought and I think I’m an exciting fighter and I deserve to be on the Fox Sports 1 portion of the card. You also look at who else is on that card. For God sakes there are far less exciting fights on the card than what our fight is from a stylistic standpoint.

“I know [Lazaro] is relatively new to the game, but if you look at our respective styles it makes sense to put us on the televised portion of the card—at least kick off the Fox Sports 1 part of the card. We are two guys who both come out to finish, and we are good at it. That’s an exciting matchup and there are some other fights on the card that are up higher on the card and it just doesn’t make sense to me.”

Not only did the bump down the card leave him wondering how much respect he’s earned with the UFC brass, but fighting on the non-televised portion of the event was a direct shot to his wallet. Make no mistake about it, Krause is always ready to handle business inside the Octagon. But the frustrations that have accompanied his upcoming bout have presented other obstacles outside of the fight.

“I lost probably $3,000 to $4,000 in sponsorship money for this fight,” Krause explained. “I lost that money because I’m on Fight Pass instead of Fox Sports 1. Yeah…it definitely irritates me.

“I’m kind of used to it now, but I don’t really understand [the UFC’s] angle,” he added in regard to his roller-coaster experience with the top promotion in the sport. “I don’t know if they love me or hate me. I feel like I’m a pretty marketable dude, and I promote my fights well. I’ve never turned down an interview in my life. I do all the interviews and PR that I can, so I really don’t know. But at the end of the day I have to show up, and I have to fight these guys. It is what it is I guess.”

All outside-of-the-cage business aside, Krause still has to show up and perform on fight night if he wants any ground to stand on. He is a fighter who is always looking to further his craft and one who is determined to show the best version of his competitive self when the cage door closes.

And while he usually stays with his brothers and sisters in arms at Grindhouse MMA in Missouri, Krause and teammate Tim Elliott took a different route in preparation for their respective fights.

With Elliott having to fight at elevation in Denver, both fighters went out to Colorado early in order to get settled in. Where Elliott was making the final preparations for his bout with Zach Makovsky at Fight Night 60, Krause used the experience to get some new looks with Marc Montoya and his squad at Factory X in Denver.

“They are great guys and they helped me a ton,” Krause said. “They helped me fine-tune some things, and it was a great experience training with those guys. 

“I was already going to be out there in Denver for Tim’s fight, so it just made sense for me to go out there a little bit early because Tim was out there anyway. I need to get new looks and new angles and stuff like that. It made a lot more sense for me to go out this time than it normally would.”

With his bout against Lazaro rapidly approaching, the time will soon come for Krause to step into the Octagon once again and put everything he has on the line. He’s still in the process of establishing his name on the biggest stage in MMA, but he’s already long since established the fact that he’s as game as they come when things go live.

He’ll be looking to stamp that notion at Lazaro’s expense at UFC 184 and is determined to prove he belongs where fight fans can see what he has to offer.

“I’m always trying to make a statement, man,” Krause said. “That’s the entire reason I fight and the reason I got into this sport in the first place. I want people to enjoy my fights and talk about me every single time I go out there. That’s why I fight. I definitely don’t do it for the money that’s for sure. I love competing, and I love entertaining the fans. That’s what is important to me.

“I love the matchup. If you just look at it on paper with who he’s fought and who I’ve fought, I think the tale of the tape tells the story here. But we have to fight to figure it all out. I think I’ve faced way better competition than he has. If you look at my UFC fights against his fights in the UFC, it is night and day. I think he’s going to be dangerous.

“He always comes ready to fight, and fighters from his neck of the woods always seem to come in a little more fired up than usual,” he added. “I definitely have to bring my A-game, and if I do that I don’t feel like there is any way I can lose to this guy.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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UFC 184: Holly Holm Ready for Life in the Fast Lane

There is a lot of buzz and expectation surrounding Holly Holm’s official UFC debut this Saturday night in Los Angeles.
The former boxing champion turned mixed martial artist will bring her undefeated record and polished stand-up skills into the Octagon…

There is a lot of buzz and expectation surrounding Holly Holm’s official UFC debut this Saturday night in Los Angeles.

The former boxing champion turned mixed martial artist will bring her undefeated record and polished stand-up skills into the Octagon for the first time when she squares off with Raquel Pennington at UFC 184.

While “The Preacher’s Daughter” is still relatively new to the sport, having fought seven times in four years of work as a professional—the 33-year-old Albuquerque, New Mexico, native has already been anointed by some as the one fighter who will finally derail women’s bantamweight phenom Ronda Rousey under the UFC banner.

For someone who has yet to log a single second inside the Octagon, those expectations are as lofty as they come, yet Holm has never been one to back down from a challenge in any regard. She is determined to be the best at whatever she does and is willing to travel whatever route necessary to make that happen. And that mindset has Holm ready to hit the cage at UFC 184 and put herself in position for the biggest opportunity of her career.

She will first need to defeat Pennington on Saturday night, but that is simply one test to open up the doorway to the next big moment in her MMA career. 

“It’s been crazy, but it is finally here,” Holm told Bleacher Report. “I feel like this has been the longest training camp of my life, but at the same time, it also feels like the shortest. There were days when it seemed so far away and others that just flew by. There have been a lot of emotions, but I’m ready to do this. I’m prepared, in shape, focused and healthy. The hard work is done

“Honestly—and this is no offense to the media—but if it were up to me I would just train and fight. But that would limit the opportunities we have. There have been a lot of media obligations for this fight, but that’s to be expected when you are fighting in the co-main event on a card. It’s a lot and it’s extra, but it’s something I’m really trying to dive into and experience.

“Sometimes I just want to get the fight over so bad, and that’s all I can think about,” she added. “In those moments I have to tell myself not to ignore what I’m experiencing right now. We are getting to experience something that most of us female fighters will never get to experience. I just try to take it all in. I just (try) to embrace all the media, interviews, support and hype around me; I’m experiencing something right now. This is a big event and moment in my life, and I really want to take it all in.”

What Holm is making sure to embrace is UFC 184 being a history-making event that will put a huge spotlight on women’s MMA.

For the first time in the 21-year history of the organization, an event will feature women’s bouts in both of the showcase positions on the card as Ronda Rousey will put her women’s 135-pound title on the line against Cat Zingano in the main event, and Holm and Pennington will handle their business in the co-main event slot.

Despite all of the changes and setbacks that have plagued the UFC’s return to Los Angeles, everything has still shaken out to provide some interesting action at the top of the card’s billing. Holm is well-aware that the spotlight will be fixated on the two biggest tilts on Saturday night, and she believes it’s up to those two fights to truly make the moment count for women’s MMA.

“This is a big event for women’s MMA, but it really kind of comes down to how the performances are,” Holm said. “That really carries some weight here. It’s the first time in UFC history that two women’s bouts are the main and co-main events on the card. I feel like there is going to be a ton of curiosity behind this, and people may tune in to watch this event just out of curiosity alone. I’m sure a lot of people wanted to watch it when the main guys were on the card, but I also feel like there are a lot of people who want to watch it even more now.

“This is a historic moment, and I really want to do well and make it successful because it is history. And it all comes down to how the fights are. That is on us. We have a lot of eyes and media attention on us right now, and we really have to go in there and make the most of the opportunity for women’s MMA.”

On Saturday night, Holm will enter the Octagon for the first time and mix it up with a fighter many in the MMA community have already written off in Pennington. In her past outings, “Rocky” has employed a hard-charging and aggressive attack, which is an approach Holm’s technical striking has shredded in the past. 

Nevertheless, the savvy combat sports veteran is not looking one step past her opponent at UFC 184. She knows Pennington will present some interesting challenges once the fight goes live but also believes her coaches and camp have prepared her for anything that may come her way.

“I always go out to capitalize on my opponent’s game plan no matter what it is,” Holm explained. “I feel like she knows we’ve seen her fights just as I know she’s watched mine. I know she is going to come in there and want to put the pressure on, but I don’t want to just assume that’s the only thing she is going to do because if I get in there and that’s not the way she chooses to go then I won’t be able to adjust. She come in aggressive or sit back and try to calculate her shots and counter. Whatever game plan she chooses to bring we are going to be ready for either one of them.”

Should the cards fall just right and both Holm and Rousey have dominant performances at UFC 184, there could definitely be a push in the aftermath for the former boxing champion to get her shot at the “Rowdy” one. While being lined up in a championship bout against a dominant titleholder would certainly be a huge task to take on, Holm is ready for whatever comes her way.

She feels things are already moving at express-lane speed, and a showdown with Rousey for the women’s bantamweight crown has been on her mind all along. Therefore, Holm is going to take every big opportunity she can get because she’s all about proving she’s the best women’s fighter in the world.

“I just take it one fight at a time, but I do look at it like it’s a fast track because that’s what it is,” Holm said. “I don’t even need to feel that way because that’s exactly what it is. In a factual way to look at this situation it is a fast track. I get that and good…let’s go. Let’s do it. If I didn’t want to take on the challenge, then I shouldn’t be involved with it altogether. I have to take advantage of every opportunity. It is a lot to take in, but if I can keep doing well and moving forward then I just want to keep riding that train.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise. 

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MMA Road Trip Project: Matt Serra Gives MTV Cribs-Style Tour of Serra BJJ

The MMA Road Trip Project covered a lot of miles in 2014, and there were many memorable moments logged along the way.
The 15,000-mile adventure drove across this great country, going coast to coast and stopping at every MMA gym that could be found…

The MMA Road Trip Project covered a lot of miles in 2014, and there were many memorable moments logged along the way.

The 15,000-mile adventure drove across this great country, going coast to coast and stopping at every MMA gym that could be found along the way. While many of those moments were captured in the running journals that accompanied the different legs of the project, there are still gems in the vault that have yet to see the light of day.

One of those particular magical stops occurred when “The Altima Fighter” made a pit stop at Matt Serra‘s gym in Huntington, New York, to see how the former welterweight champion spends his time in retirement. What we found was a very game Serra grooming a large collection of talented fighters and jiu-jitsu practitioners on a rainy Saturday afternoon in Long Island.

To no one’s surprise, Serra’s legendary wit was sharper than ever, and the the world-renowned grappling coach took time away from his students to provide the road trip crew a guided tour of the facility. If you want to find out what “The Terror” keeps in his gym refrigerator and learn what the only picture hanging up in his personal office is, just give the video a look.

 

Warning: Some of the language in the video is NSFW 

Video Credit: Dan Sweeney

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The Good, Bad and Strange from Fight Night 61

Whenever there are high stakes surrounding a fight, an added element of drama occurs. Whether it be a heated rivalry, possible title contention or some additional circumstance, when a fight is more than just who wins or loses, that’s when things get in…

Whenever there are high stakes surrounding a fight, an added element of drama occurs. Whether it be a heated rivalry, possible title contention or some additional circumstance, when a fight is more than just who wins or loses, that’s when things get interesting.

Coming into their main event tilt at Fight Night 61, both Frank Mir and Antonio Silva were in desperate need of victory.

The former two-time heavyweight champion, Mir, came into Porto Alegre, Brazil, on Sunday night having lost four consecutive bouts, while Bigfoot had failed to reach the win column in his past three showings inside the Octagon. Their respective rough spells had threatened to push them out of the elite tier of the heavyweight fold, and their bout at Fight Night 61 meant the backslide was going to end for one of them.

The winner of the bout would remain in the thick of an increasingly competitive division, while the loser of the main event Sunday night would take a big step toward obscurity. Those circumstances set the drama levels on high going into the heavyweight scrap, and Mir stepped up to the plate in a big way.

With his back up against the wall given a sizable losing streak, the Las Vegas native landed a perfectly timed left hand that put Silva on the canvas. Once the American Top Team representative was hurt, Mir swarmed and finished the bout with a flurry of punches from top position to seal the deal and pick up his first victory since defeating Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira in December of 2011.

It was a crazy night of upsets in Porto Alegre, and let’s take a look at the good, bad and strange from Fight Night 61.

 

The Good

Throughout the 14 years that his professional career has spanned, Mir has written several storied chapters.

The former two-time heavyweight titleholder has been on the top of the heavyweight mountain at times just as he’s been a step away from obscurity at others. Nevertheless, when the Las Vegas native is on top of his game, he’s a hard man to beat, and Silva found that out Sunday at Fight Night 61. Despite Mir coming off one of the longest layoffs of his career, the jiu-jitsu ace looked sharper than he has in years as he used crisp striking to fell the American Top Team fighter.

As Silva waded in with shots, Mir countered with a left jab followed by a left hook that floored the former title challenger. With Silva dazed on the mat, the Nevada native swarmed and finished off Bigfoot with heavy shots from the top. Although it was a quick showing, it was precisely what Mir needed to prove there are still plenty of mileage left in his body.

For the majority of his time under the UFC banner, Mir has never been more than a few steps away from title contention. While a victory over Silva certainly won’t catapult him back into striking distance of a championship opportunity, his high-profile name and status as a two-time former champion will keep interesting fights coming his way for the foreseeable future.

Mir’s win over Silva saved his UFC career, and that’s good news for the overall state of the heavyweight division. 

The UFC’s lightweight division, on the other hand, is filled with talent, and breaking into the elite level of the weight class is a difficult task. Michael Johnson earned his entry into the next tier of the 155-pound collective Sunday night and did so in impressive fashion.

While The Menace had won three consecutive bouts coming into his tilt with Edson Barboza at Fight Night 61, his fight with the dangerous Brazilian striker was undoubtedly the biggest bout of his career. This was partially because of the threat Barboza would present inside the Octagon, but with the Renzo Gracie-trained fighter holding the No. 6 ranking in the divisional hierarchy, there was a huge opportunity for Johnson to move up the 155-pound ladder Sunday night.

He certainly capitalized on the moment against Barboza, but it was the way he did it that was the most impressive. The Team Blackzilians representative has worked behind a strong wrestling game for years, but the Henri Hooft-trained fighter went toe-to-toe with the Brazilian wrecking machine for the entire 15-minute affair. 

The end result was Johnson picking up his fourth straight victory and moving himself into position to fight the biggest names in the lightweight division. He wasted zero time getting things moving in that aspect as he called out former lightweight champion Benson Henderson in his post-fight interview with Jon Anik. That’s a bold move for any fighter at 155, but Johnson is a man on the rise and wants to face the best of the best.

*** Sam Alvey never needs a reason to smile, but the heavy-handed veteran will have plenty of reasons to be happy following his devastating knockout over highly touted Cezar Ferreira on Sunday night. While Mutante came out throwing everything in his arsenal, Alvey simply blocked the shots and continued to move about the cage. Commentators Jon Anik and Kenny Florian were blasting Alvey for his lack of output just as the 28-year-old Wisconsin native unleashed a two-punch combination that sent The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil winner crashing to the canvas.

*** On a night filled with underdogs rising to the occasion, Frankie Saenz definitely had the biggest upset when he derailed Iuri Alcantara via unanimous decision. Although his Brazilian opponent has been a staple in the Top 10 rankings of the bantamweight fold for the past two years, Saenz showed absolute disregard for his status as he employed a relentless attack from the opening bell to the last. The talented prospect poured it on the savvy veteran to pick up his sixth consecutive victory and stamp his place in the deep ranks of the 135-pound division.

*** It takes two to make a good fight, and Santiago Ponzinibbio and Sean Strickland threw down at Fight Night 61. The welterweight tilt kicked off the main card, and neither man wasted time getting to the ruckus inside the Octagon. While Ponzinibbio used his striking to set the tone early, Strickland certainly bounced back and had a few moments of success. Nevertheless, it was the Gentle Boa who ultimately picked up the victory and secured his second win in three showings inside the Octagon. 

*** It may have taken Marion Reneau some effort to get to the UFC, but she’s not wasting any time climbing up the ranks of the women’s bantamweight division now that she’s there. The 37-year-old made a successful promotional debut at the expense of Alexis Dufresne at UFC 183. 

Seven weeks later, she earned a submission victory over Jessica Andrade at Fight Night 61. While the powerful Brazilian put her on the canvas with a big shot early, The Bruiser used her slick jiu-jitsu skills from the bottom position to lock in the fight-ending triangle choke. The win was another strong showing for Reneau, and it will guarantee she gets a bigger name in her next outing. 

*** Matt Dwyer came into his bout with William Macario determined to redeem himself inside the Octagon. The Canadian welterweight suffered a first-round knockout in his official debut, and Dwyer wanted to make a statement against Patalino at Fight Night 61. That’s exactly what he accomplished as the British Columbia native scored a highlight-reel knockout via Superman punch that led Macario to fall to the canvas. It was an impressive showing for the 24-year-old welterweight and proved that he absolutely belongs on the UFC roster.

*** After failing to find victory in his first two showings inside the Octagon, Mike De La Torre came into Fight Night 61 looking to turn things around in a big way. The California native squared off with Tiago Trator on Sunday night and handled business in quick and brutal fashion, scoring a first-round knockout in Porto Alegre.

He pushed the action from the opening bell, but it was a big left hook from De La Torre that put Trator on the canvas. Once his opponent was hurt, El Cucuy poured on a storm of right hands from top position that forced referee Leon Roberts to step in and stop the bout. Nevertheless, Roberts probably let Trator eat about seven shots too many. Roberts was far too slow jumping in for the stoppage.

*** Douglas Silva de Andrade notched his first victory inside the Octagon on the strength of an action-packed performance against Cody Gibson. The scrappy Brazilian and The Renegade went toe-to-toe for three rounds with De Andrade getting the better part of the exchanges throughout the 15-minute affair. While the fight seemed closer than the judges’ scorecards ultimately showed, De Andrade made his first successful showing under the UFC banner since his debut back in February of 2014.

*** There wasn’t anything too exciting about the opening bout of the card.

Ivan Jorge defeated Josh Shockley via unanimous decision to kick off Fight Night 61. The Brazilian was able to put the Indiana native on the canvas at will throughout the three-round affair as he picked up his second victory in three showings inside the Octagon. While he was able to pick up the win, it was hardly a performance worthy of the stellar “Batman” nickname Jorge carries into the cage.

 

The Bad

Carrying hype and expectation can be a difficult thing, and it’s been made painfully clear that Cezar Ferreira isn’t the fighter he was originally made out to be.

Coming off his win on TUF: Brazil, Mutante was built up as a powerful storm about to descend on the UFC’s middleweight division. Vitor Belfort’s protege was supposed to be something special even though there was no verifiable proof of such things on his existing record. Nevertheless, competing at the highest level of the sport has an ingrained weeding-out process, and it appears that Ferreira‘s limitations have been exposed.

While the Sao Paulo native certainly has a versatile arsenal of strikes to his credit, those weapons can’t make up for his lack of chin when things go live. While he was able to find victory in his first two showings under the UFC banner, Ferreira was starched by C.B. Dolloway, which was his first test against a fighter with a proven track record.

He was able to bounce back in his next bout against Andrew Craig, but his fight against Sam Alvey on Sunday night was set to be a crucial crossroad for the Brazilian powerhouse.

With his knockout against The Doberman still lingering in the rear view, Ferreira needed to put some solid distance between himself and that loss, and the way to do that was putting Alvey down in impressive fashion. He certainly came out with that intention, throwing an array of spinning kicks and launched himself forward with power punches.

Ferreira‘s output seemed to be confusing Alvey as the Team Quest fighter offered no return fire during the exchanges. That said, once Smile’n Sam did decide to throw, two of those punches landed flush on Ferreira and sent the TUF: Brazil winner toppling to the canvas unconscious. By the time Ferreira hit the mat, all hopes of him being the next big thing in the middleweight fold went out with him.

And that’s okay. In a realm as competitive as the UFC currently is, there’s plenty of room for fighters who simply get in the cage to slug it out. Not every fighter is going to be a champion. Not every fighter is going to be great, but it sometimes takes a fall from grace for a fighter’s true talents to emerge. 

Staying with that theme, it’s been a rough turn of events for Rustam Khabilov.

The Dagestan-born fighter spent his first two years under the UFC banner battling his way up the talent-rich ranks of the lightweight division as he found victory in his first three showings inside the Octagon. That success set up a showdown with former champion Benson Henderson at Fight Night 42 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in a fight that could have propelled him to a title shot with a victory.

That said, Khabilov was submitted by Smooth in the first round of their main event tilt, and the Jackson/Winkeljohn-trained fighter was pushed to the back of the line in the 155-pound fold. He was eager to get back into the win column, but his next scheduled bout against Danny Castillo at UFC 182 was scrapped due to Khabilov‘s visa issues that prohibited him from entering the United States. Those issues also kept The Tiger from training with his coaches in Albuquerque, and he entered his bout with Adriano Martins at Fight Night 61 with a lot of questions hovering overhead.

Khabilov definitely needed a strong performance to reclaim his place in the lightweight division, but that just didn’t happen Sunday night. The Russian grappler looked hesitant throughout the bout and surprisingly gave up several takedowns against the surging Brazilian striker. The end result was a split-decision victory for Martins as Khabilov was handed his second consecutive loss inside the Octagon. And while there is no doubting Khabilov‘s talent, talk of him being a legitimate contender to the 155-pound crown is fading fast.

 

The Strange

While failed drug tests and the efficiency of out-of-competition testing has been all the rage as of late, fighters struggling to make weight hasn’t lagged too far behind in the dubious storyline department.

Over the past year, a mixture of high-profile and low-visibility fighters alike have lost their battles with the scale, with a handful of those situations drastically affecting title pictures and championship opportunities.  Former bantamweight king Renan Barao was forced out of his rematch with T.J. Dillashaw at UFC 177 last August when difficulties during his weight cut led to him failing to get medically cleared to step into the Octagon.

The struggle to make weight recently took center stage as John Lineker and Kelvin Gastelum failed to hit their respective contracted weight limits at UFC 183. Both were heading into huge fights, and both did serious damage to their careers with how things went down. Despite winning his bout against Ian McCall at UFC 183, the heavy-handed Brazilian lost his all-but-guaranteed title shot against Demetrious Johnson as UFC President Dana White declared Lineker was being forced to move up to bantamweight for his next fight.

Gastelum would also be forced to move up in weight following the debacle at UFC 183, and the debate over the safety of weight-cutting continued to pick up steam in the MMA community. That said, another victim of the process would be added to the list on Saturday as T.J. Waldburger was forced out of his bout with Wendell Oliveira due to passing out during his weight cut.

The 26-year-old Texan had not competed since being brutally knocked out by Mike Pyle at UFC 170 last February, which came only four months after he was viciously separated from his senses by Adlan Amagov at UFC 166 in Houston. With his recent run of setbacks, it’s clear that things are rough for Waldburger, and being forced to withdraw from his bout with Oliveira due to medical issues is probably the last thing he needed.

Another aspect of competing at Fight Night 61 no fighter could have cared for was the humidity inside Ginasio Gigantinho on Sunday night, which reached 98 percent. While North America is currently in the midst of a brutal winter, Brazilians are enjoying their summer months, and that was going to make for a hot and humid environment come fight night. 

Competing at elevation is one thing, but fighting inside an arena that is close to 100 degrees had to be hellish. Yet aside from commentators Jon Anik and Kenny Florian mentioning how hot it was inside the arena, the fighters on the card showed no signs of suffering because of the heat. The only curious performance of the night came when longtime UFC ring announcer Bruce Buffer announced Iuri Alcantara as “A Mari-Juana Fighter”—leaving fans on Twitter to wonder what exactly that means:

There was also a stretch of the card where nine consecutive underdogs pulled off upsets at Fight Night 61 and 10 overall upsets broke the official UFC record for most on a card. Mixed martial arts is a chaotic sport where anything can and usually does happen, but it is definitely worth noting the strangeness of such a long streak of underestimated fighters showing and proving under the bright lights of the biggest stage in the sport.

This especially rings true when Smile’n Sam Alvey throws three punches in a fight and two of them combine to knock the remaining hype out of Cezar Ferreira.

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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UFC 184: Jake Ellenberger Determined to Get Back on Track Against Josh Koscheck

The UFC’s welterweight division is a talent-rich collective where the battle to claim elite-level status never slows. Once a position in the divisional upper-tier at 170 is solidified, a fighter moves within striking distance of a potential championshi…

The UFC’s welterweight division is a talent-rich collective where the battle to claim elite-level status never slows. Once a position in the divisional upper-tier at 170 is solidified, a fighter moves within striking distance of a potential championship opportunity. Yet, with a shark tank of talent in the welterweight depths, fortunes can change in an instant, and a fighter can go from contention to fighting for relevancy in quick fashion.

Jake Ellenberger is no stranger to the ever-changing tides that come with competing in what is arguably the deepest division under the UFC banner. 

Over the past five years “The Juggernaut” has been slinging leather under the bright lights of the biggest stage in mixed martial arts. Throughout this stretch, the 29-year-old Nebraskan has squared off with a collection of the world’s best at 170 pounds, and carved out his place in the elite tier of the welterweight division in the process. Ellenberger found success in six of his first seven showings inside the Octagon, with his only setback coming via split decision in a hard-fought scrap with former WEC welterweight champion Carlos Condit in the Omaha native’s official debut. 

A six-fight winning streak would serve to add his name to a list of potential title contenders, and the heavy-handed Team Reign representative seemed to be within striking distance of a title shot when he stepped in against Martin Kampmann at The Ultimate Fighter 15 Finale in June of 2012. Unfortunately for Ellenberger, the Danish striker would rebound from a drubbing in the opening frame to earn the victory via stoppage in the second round. 

While his setback against “The Hitman” would serve to stunt his momentum, wins in his next two showings would once again spark talk of a potential title shot in his future. That said, the Southern California transplant would be turned back by Rory MacDonald in his next bout, then go on to suffer two more losses as he came out on the business end of things in fights with Robbie Lawler and Kelvin Gastelum respectively.

Nevertheless, despite being in the midst of the roughest patch in his career, Ellenberger‘s drive and determination to succeed have never waned. Being raised in the Midwest instilled the former Marine’s blue-collar work ethic and his belief that continuous mental and physical investment will yield the desired results.

He will get the opportunity to get things back on track when he faces former title challenger Josh Koscheck at UFC 184 on Feb. 28 in Los Angeles, in a bout where both men are in jeopardy of being pushed out of the upper echelon of the welterweight ranks. And while he was admittedly curious when the bout against “Kos” was offered up, Ellenberger is fully confident he’ll emerge victorious at UFC 184.

“I was surprised when I got the call to fight [Josh] Koscheck,” Ellenberger told Bleacher Report. “I didn’t know he was still fighting. I thought he had put in his resigning papers, but I guess that’s not the case.

“I’m stoked about the matchup and I’m excited for the fight. I’ve had to make a lot of adjustments in my camp, and that is what this sport is really all about. You have to evolve and make adjustments and I’ve really had to dissect a lot of things about myself. I had to take a good look inside because it’s not specifically the battle with your opponent but the battle within yourself.”

In addition to his bout with the Fresno-based veteran being an opportunity for Ellenberger to get things back on track in his fighting career, UFC 184 will also bring him to the next step in his personal evolution. Where a fighter’s success is typically measured in wins and losses, the process of progress is what ultimately provides fuel to his motivational fires.

Instead of focusing all of his time and energy into expanding his athletic skill set, Ellenberger also works on the psychological side of things as well. 

“I’m always looking to push myself and grow as an athlete,” Ellenberger said. “I’m always looking to move forward and up because those are the only directions to travel. It’s all about evolving both mentally and physically. This fight comes at a perfect time for me. I’m in great shape physically. I’m focused and I’m in the best psychological state I’ve been in quite some time. There are a few things I can contribute that to, but everything inside and outside of the cage is rolling.”

While Ellenberger is eager to break out of his rough patch and take a big step forward, the organizational banner he competes under recently set about some changes of their own. On Tuesday afternoon, the UFC held a press conference where CEO Lorenzo Fertitta and UFC President Dana White and Lawrence Epstein outlined some major changes to the promotion’s drug testing policies, especially in regard to performance-enhancing drugs. 

The UFC has vowed to ramp up their efforts to test fighters both in and out of competition and the new policy overhauls will go into effect on July 1. Ellenberger was excited to hear that changes, but said PED usage is a complex issue that will be difficult to police on a global scale. 

“The UFC taking this new stance is a great move, but [PEDs] are definitely one of those things that are hard to control,” Ellenberger said. “And not just in our sport, but competitions in general. People in America don’t realize that in other cultures using those drugs is viewed as acceptable. I have friends from all over the world and some of them were raised with that being part of the athletic culture and you get to hear different perspectives on the matter.

“I think it’s a good thing there is going to more testing and stricter penalties, but at the end of the day, it is always going to be hard to control. And there are always going to be guys who are trying to cut corners. This new policy is definitely a good thing for the sport though.

“There are a lot of phonies in my division… a lot of them,” he added. “Guys are getting hit for PEDs, which is not surprising. The rankings in the division are very subjective and it’s all opportunity for me right now. There are a lot of open doors and that’s how I see it.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise. 

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