Brock Lesnar: Is the UFC Better off Without Him on Its Heavyweight Roster?

Brock Lesnar is the most polarizing figure to ever step foot in the UFC Octagon.  Love him or hate him, Lesnar always came to fight, and when he did, he brought the fans with him.  UFC pay-per-view cards headlined by Lesnar have done historic…

Brock Lesnar is the most polarizing figure to ever step foot in the UFC Octagon. 

Love him or hate him, Lesnar always came to fight, and when he did, he brought the fans with him. 

UFC pay-per-view cards headlined by Lesnar have done historically well for the UFC, and the buys and fan turnouts for these cards are a testament to Lesnar’s drawing power. 

That said, Lesnar was not always the most skilled fighter in the UFC Octagon; in fact, I would argue he was only once the more skilled fighter in his UFC fights. 

Was he always strong?

Of course.

Fast?

Sure.

Technically sound?

Ehh…

Lesnar was little more than an explosive wrestler with a big name and a unique ability to sell a fight, but that certainly did him well during his stint with the UFC.

So, after a string of losses and subpar performances coupled with an offer from his previous employer, Mr. Vince McMahon, Lesnar fled the Octagon and has not looked back since. 

With such a big name gone, is the UFC better or worse off? 

The answer is easy: The company is significantly worse off, and not just from a financial standpoint. 

The UFC is, despite a few lackluster cards recently, still one of the largest growing sports promotions in the world, and it will grow with or without Lesnar. 

Boy, oh boy would it be smoother sailing with him, though.

Lesnar creates new UFC fans like few other names in the sport. Whenever a first-time watcher buys a UFC pay-per-view to see Lesnar in action, he or she is also being exposed to four or five other great matchups. 

At UFC 100, many people bought the card for Lesnar and Georges St-Pierre, but they also got a glimpse of developing fighters like Jon Jones and Jim Miller. 

Do those names ring a bell?

Aside from this ability to fester new fans, Lesnar was, despite his technical failings, a competitive fighter, and he was always a test for his opponent thanks to his freakish strength and speed. He was never a disgrace to the sport by any means, and his fights were always entertaining (which is more than some heavyweights can boast). 

Especially with the recent string of injuries in the UFC’s heavyweight division, Lesnar could have been a great option to save a card or to make a lackluster bout more appealing. 

When the heavyweight megacard UFC 146 was plagued with injury, Lesnar was nowhere to be found, but just imagine if he were an option. 

Instead of Cain Velasquez vs. Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva, we could have seen a rematch between Velasquez and Lesnar. 

Or, when Roy Nelson was left facing Dave Herman, we could have seen the showdown between Big Country and Lesnar that Roy himself has long wanted. 

Needless to say, both of those matchups involving Lesnar are more tantalizing than the actual bouts presented by the UFC, and they are prime examples of how Lesnar would have been useful to the organization. 

Brock Lesnar is, simply put, a rare find. Not only does he have the skills to compete with the world’s best inside the Octagon, he has the name, the swagger and the mic skills to draw fans in hordes on fight night. 

From the hardcore fan eager to observe the minute tweaks to his standup game to the casual fan just wanting to see his/her favorite WWE superstar fight (for real), Lesnar draws an audience, and that is good for business, plain and simple. 

The UFC will not die without Brock Lesnar, but I think I speak for us all when I say:

Brock, I want you back

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Anderson Silva: Lessons Learned from His First Fight with Chael Sonnen

Anderson Silva is a man of elegance and style.  Inside the UFC Octagon, Silva moves with an unparalleled grace, always ready to strike, yet always ready to defend.  Like his movement, Silva’s rise in the UFC’s middleweight division was sensat…

Anderson Silva is a man of elegance and style.  

Inside the UFC Octagon, Silva moves with an unparalleled grace, always ready to strike, yet always ready to defend.  

Like his movement, Silva’s rise in the UFC’s middleweight division was sensational, a highlight reel of exotic finishes and displays of utter brilliance.

And then came Chael Sonnen.  

For more than 20 minutes, the itsy-bitsy “Spider” tumbled clumsily down the water spout.  

At UFC 117, Silva was not graceful.

He was not elegant, and he was not stellar.  

He was, in fact, terrible.

Like all great ones, however, Silva managed to pull off a historic comeback in the form of a triangle-armbar midway through the bout’s final round.  

For Silva, the win was close…too close.

At UFC 148, Anderson Silva must be better, or he will find himself on the wrong end of another beatdown, and he will not want to have to rely on a Hail Mary submission attempt a second time.

Here are five lessons that “The Spider” learned from his first matchup with Sonnen.  

Begin Slideshow

UFC: Injuries and Substitute Fights Will Cost the Promotion Fans and Money

The Ultimate Fighting Championship is the largest mixed martial arts promotion in the world, and its rise has been nothing if not spectacular.  Its foundation was simple: arrange for two men to fight in a cage, hype them up and watch them fight. &…

The Ultimate Fighting Championship is the largest mixed martial arts promotion in the world, and its rise has been nothing if not spectacular.  

Its foundation was simple: arrange for two men to fight in a cage, hype them up and watch them fight.  

Rinse and repeat.

This method of delivering fights was so effective for the promotion because of its stellar execution and consistency. When a big fight was supposed to happen, it did.  The fans were happy, the fighters were happy and, of course, the UFC was happy.

With this in mind, let us turn to a troubling issue from both a fan’s and the UFC’s standpoint.

Injuries.

More and more frequently, we hear of fighters dropping out of big fights with injuries—sometimes severe, sometimes questionable. But the result is always the same: we, the fans, are disappointed.

Vitor Belfort vs. Wanderlei Silva.

Brian Stann vs. Hector Lombard.

Dominick Cruz vs. Urijah Faber.

The list of hyped fights, which are now gone with the wind, goes on and on…and these are just from the past few months.

How much are we supposed to take?  How many times can we be hopeful for a big fight, only to be immediately dropped on our heads?  

Replacement fights are, first and foremost, always of a lesser caliber on paper.  Let’s return to our list and look at the substitute fight for each matchup I’ve posted:

Rich Franklin vs. Wanderlei Silva

Tim Boetsch vs. Hector Lombard

Renan Barao vs. Urijah Faber

In each instance, we are left with a vastly less-interesting matchup than was originally planned. 

No Vitor means no bad blood, no TUF Brazil coaches matchup and no Brazilian war. 

No Brian Stann likely means no standup war, no bloodbath that we so greedily anticipated.

Finally, no Dominick Cruz means no trilogy matchup, no closure for the close decision in their second meeting and no fitting end to a great season of TUF Live

The UFC may be MMA‘s largest promotion, but even it feels the sting of these changes.  Fans are becoming more and more hardcore by the day, but do not think for a second that a considerable amount passes on the $55 pay-per-view fee after hearing a top fighter will no longer grace his or her big screen TV.   

Making this worse, our digital world enables matchups to be analyzed with immediacy.  As soon as a fight is announced, breakdowns of the matchup emerge and forums worldwide are buzzing with anticipation.  

When the rug is pulled out of these matchups, everyone loses.  

Right now this trend is still OK, but it is certainly starting to get old.  If the UFC would like to continue its meteoric rise to the top of the sporting world, it needs to gain traction and find the consistency in matchups that got it where it is today.  

The fans are losing their patience.  

And when their fists tighten with frustration, their wallets do the same.  

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC: Why Hector Lombard Does Not Deserve a Title Shot If He Beats Tim Boetsch

Monstrous.Hard-hitting.Terrifying.The 34-year-old Hector Lombard is all of these things and much, much more.But, (and there’s always a but)…  Vicious as he may be, Lombard is not worthy of a UFC title shot, even if he blasts Tim Boetsch in recor…

Monstrous.

Hard-hitting.

Terrifying.

The 34-year-old Hector Lombard is all of these things and much, much more.

But, (and there’s always a but)…  

Vicious as he may be, Lombard is not worthy of a UFC title shot, even if he blasts Tim Boetsch in record time in his promotional debut at UFC 149, and here’s why:

His level of competition has, up until this point, been less than top, to say the least.  

A quick look at his recent resume yields few fighters with instant name recognition, and this is a problem for Lombard.  

Sure, he is undefeated over the course of the last eighty-six years, but I wholeheartedly believe there are at least five UFC middleweights who would also be undefeated against the opponents he has faced (and that number is probably actually closer to 10, but I digress).

Adding to this, Lombard is not facing a top-5 UFC middleweight in his debut; he is facing Tim Boetsch.

Look, I am a born and raised Pennsylvania boy, and I’m always rooting for “The Barbarian” because of this, but he is little more than a good wrestler with powerful hands.  

How many of those are there in the UFC again?  

Right! Swarms, multitudes.

Boetsch possesses the same skill set as 20 other UFC fighters, and because of this, he is not a great barometer for Lombard’s readiness to challenge for a title.  He is a perfect matchup to see if Lombard belongs in the promotion at all, but beating Tim Boetsch certainly does not mean you are ready to challenge for the title.

Speaking of… Quick trivia question: who is the kingpin in the UFC’s middleweight division?

Ding Ding Ding!

None other than the greatest mixed martial artist to ever fight in the UFC and to ever set foot on this great earth, Anderson “The Spider” Silva.

Now, if you want to challenge Silva, you’d better have a case.  You’d better be world-class, and you’d better be ready.

Lombard is, at this point, one out of three of these things (world-class).

Making things worse, Hector Lombard is about as interesting outside of the cage as Helen Keller’s talk radio show (it got canceled after one episode if you were wondering).

If you’ve ever listened to him talk, he is like a robot programmed by PR junkies to say the right things and move on (think Gray Maynard, only with a lesser command on the English language).

Oof.

The point is, Hector Lombard may or may not be the future of the middleweight division, but beating Tim Boetsch does not make him ready for a title shot.  

Beating Boetsch simply does not put you to the front of the pack at 185. When you add in Lombard’s lack of personality and less-than-stellar recent resume, it is undeniable that he would need at least one more big win to get a shot at the middleweight strap.

I like what you have done over the course of your career, Mr. Lombard, I truly do, but show me you can do it against the best of the best.

Until then, get in line; there are others waiting too ya know.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Martin Kampmann Will Expose Jake Ellenberger at TUF Live Finale

We are in for a classic fight and upset tonight, my friends. Live from the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, welterweight standouts Martin “The Hitman” Kampmann and Jake “The Juggernaut” Ellenberger are set to square off in a main event …

We are in for a classic fight and upset tonight, my friends. 

Live from the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, welterweight standouts Martin “The HitmanKampmann and Jake “The Juggernaut” Ellenberger are set to square off in a main event that promises to be an action-packed, high-intensity affair. 

Both fighters enter this matchup looking to improve their stock in the UFC’s deep welterweight division and claw their way further up the ladder that leads to longtime champion Georges St. Pierre.  

Ellenberger has earned the respect of fans and fellow fighters alike over the course of his UFC career, which saw him tackle tough opponents like current interim champion Carlos Condit, ground wizard Jake Shields and perennial contender Diego Sanchez. 

After losing his debut via razor-thin decision to Condit, Ellenberger impressively defeated his next six opponents and is now potentially one fight away from a title shot. 

Here’s a spoiler for you:

He will “Jugger-naut” be getting this chance anytime soon, because Kampmann is primed to derail the hype train that is Jake Ellenberger

Kampann is, and always has been, one of the most underrated fighters in the welterweight division, and I really do not understand why fans and critics are not higher on him.  

For fun, let’s take a look at “The Hitman‘s” hit list inside the Octagon:

Carlos Condit, Alexandre Barros, Jacob Volkmann, Paulo Thiago, Rick Story and Thiago Alves.  

His other three fights at welterweight were against Paul Daley, Diego Sanchez and Jake Shields, and only one of those is truly a loss in the view of many (that being the Daley TKO loss).  

His fights against Shields and Sanchez were incredibly narrow decision losses, and I personally feel he won both of those fights. 

Adding to this, his loss to Paul Daley was impressive as well.

Before you ask, “how can a TKO loss be impressive?,” let me explain.

When Paul Daley hits you in the chin, you go down. Usually, you go down in one shot (isn’t that right, Mr. Hazelett, Mr. Ludwig and Mr. Smith?).  

Apparently Martin Kampmann‘s chin didn’t get this memo, because in their bout, “The Hitman” took blow after agonizingly vicious blow to the chin and refused to go down.  

A rarity in MMA, the referee actually stopped the fight while Kampmann was still standing because the punishment looked so bad.  

Put plainly, Kampmann weeble-wobbled, but he didn’t fall down, proving that his chin is truly one of the best in the business.

Against Ellenberger, this will be a huge asset, because “The Juggernaut” packs some serious heat. 

Ellenberger may catch Kampmann early, but I think Kampmann will take it, stay composed and recover time and time again. 

In Muhammad Ali “rope-a-dope” fashion, this ability to take a punch will give Kampmann the opportunity to pounce.

Ellenberger performs exponentially less impressively as a fight goes on, and in a five-round main event, he will almost certainly have some cardio issues.  

If Kampmann can withstand Ellenberger‘s best shot early (which I think he will), he will set himself up for a dramatic come-from-behind finish that will become an instant classic in the minds of fans nationwide.  

“The Hitman” is as dangerous a fighter as one will find in the UFC, and he has the tools to end the fight anywhere, at any time and by any method.  

For a tired opponent, this spells disaster, and Ellenberger is in for a rude awakening when he steps across the cage from the Danish phenom.  

Diego Sanchez came close to finishing a gassed Ellenberger in his last trip inside the Octagon—now it is Kampmann‘s time to finish the job.  

Spoiler alert part two:

He will do so and do so impressively.  

In a back-and-forth throwdown, look for Kampmann to roll with the punches and fire back when the time is right, earning a late-round stoppage and a potential shot at the man with the golden belt.  

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Rich Franklin vs. Wanderlei Silva: UFC 147 Head-to-Toe Breakdown

The trend is disturbing.With another season of The Ultimate Fighter down, fans are left with another coaches battle that failed to come to fruition.  Vitor Belfort, who coached opposite Wanderlei Silva on The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil, suffere…

The trend is disturbing.

With another season of The Ultimate Fighter down, fans are left with another coaches battle that failed to come to fruition.  

Vitor Belfort, who coached opposite Wanderlei Silva on The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil, suffered a broken hand while preparing for the bout and was forced to withdraw.  

But have no fear!

Rich “Ace” Franklin has reportedly stepped in to save the day, exhibiting the consummate professionalism he has become known for over the course of his UFC career.  

While a rematch between Franklin and Silva may not be the epic clash fans were anticipating to headline the UFC 147 card, it is still an interesting bout.  This will pit two veterans in a fight to cement their respective legacies. 

With neither fighter left with anything to prove at this stage in his career, Franklin vs. Silva II will almost certainly be a high-intensity bout that leaves the audience on its feet.  

Following is a head-to-toe breakdown detailing each aspect of this legendary matchup.

Begin Slideshow