Charles Rosa Looking to Flip the Mexican Crowd at UFC 188

With heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez headlining UFC 188, one can only imagine the crazed atmosphere at Arena Ciudad de Mexico in Mexico City, Mexico on Saturday night.
Green, white and red flags will be waving. Thousands will be screaming. Mike Gol…

With heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez headlining UFC 188, one can only imagine the crazed atmosphere at Arena Ciudad de Mexico in Mexico City, Mexico on Saturday night.

Green, white and red flags will be waving. Thousands will be screaming. Mike Goldberg’s commentary fails will go unheard, to some degree. You get the picture.

For Charles RosaMr. Ice Cold, as I like to call himit’ll be another day at the office. The 28-year-old featherweight fighter is scheduled to compete on the UFC 188 main card against Yair Rodriguez, the featherweight winner of The Ultimate Fighter: Latin America.

He’ll basically be acting as a one-man army in foreign territory. His weapons? Four ounce gloves, an indomitable will and a four-month training camp.

“Yeah man, hell yeah I’m ready,” Rosa told Bleacher Report. “I’ve been training for four months for this every single day. I’ve been healthy the whole camp, so I’m ready to go, locked and loaded.”

“It’s been the best training camp I’ve ever had. I’ve never had this much time to get ready for a fight, so I’m really excited to have since February, almost three or four months to get ready, and I’ve been healthy the whole time. That’s pretty rare that you can really stay healthy and be able to get through everything. I’m in the best shape of my life, and I feel like this is my time.”

Rosa was undefeated before joining the UFC and bravely accepting a fight on five day’s notice against featherweight contender Dennis Siver. Not to mention the fact that the bout was held in Sweden, which meant Rosa had to travel to foreign soil and compete against a European fighter.

Despite the little time he had to prepare, Rosa gave Siver all he could handle in his UFC debut in a bout that earned Fight of the Night honors. The judges sided with Siver on the scorecards, but after such a great performance, Rosa left with his head held high. He joined the UFC, earned a $50,000 bonus and nearly defeated a ranked opponent on short notice.

Few fighters could have pulled off that feat.

“It was my first fight on five day’s notice in another country and obviously against a top-10 guy, an experienced veteran,” said Rosa.

“But it’s something I was preparing for ever since I became pro. I was expecting to be able to take any fight that the UFC gave me. So I wasn’t surprised that that was the fight they gave me, but I went out there and fought my heart out. I went out there and fought my hardest, but I also didn’t think it was a fair fight. Dennis Siver was coming off eight months of suspension so he basically had like eight months training camp, and he was obviously ready.

“To come in on five days against a top-10 guy, a 17-fight UFC veteran. I didn’t feel defeated when I lost the fight. It went to a decision. The judges said he won. It was in Europe. It was a close fight, but there’s zero doubt in my mind that I would be beat him even if I had just a little bit more time, especially with my experience now and growing as a fighter that I would beat him if I fought him again.”

Some would call Rosa a chip off the old blockor rather a chip off the chip’s block. Fighting runs in his blood and traces all the way back to his grandfather, who boxed in the Navy. But like most aspiring fighters, his grandfather came to a crossroads where he had to make a choice between school and fighting.

An opportunity to go to Harvard persuaded his grandfather to take the educational route and pass on his dreams as a professional fighter.

“He ended up graduating from Harvard so luckily for me, I probably wouldn’t be here if he ended up picking the fighting path,” Rosa said. “Good thing he went to Harvard and got a degree and was able to support a family and have my dad who then had me. I was always raised tough in that environment.”

Another role model in Charles’ life is his uncle Tommy, otherwise known as Tom “The Bomb” Rosa or Ringside’s version of Dan Henderson. Tom still competes in Ringside tournaments and has more than 150 amateur fights under his belt. He recently won the 2015 Ringside tournament at age 45.

Even with the success of his uncle and grandfather, the fighting path was never forced on Rosa. It was something that was always ingrained in him. The heart wants what the heart wants, and Rosa’s has always leaned toward fighting.

During his school years, he recalls playing hockey, lacrosse and football because those were the more physical sports. He simply enjoyed hitting people. His childhood dream was to walk the hallowed hallways of the Boston Garden as a professional hockey player for the Boston Bruins.

But instead of scoring the winning goal for the Stanley Cup, he always envisioned “squaring off with someone on the ice and whooping them in front of the whole crowd.”

Rosa never got the chance to square off on the ice, but he did get an opportunity to square off in the cage at UFC Fight Night 59 at TD Garden, the New Boston Garden. He submitted Sean Soriano in the third round by D’Arce choke, proving life has a way of bringing things full circle.

“I was able to do that, just on a different stage in the UFC. I was able to go into the Boston Garden and square up with someone and put them away in front of the crowd,” said Rosa.

“And even the Boston Bruins team was there watching me. I ended up talking to Brad Marchand, he’s a Boston Bruins player, and he gave me tickets to one of the Florida Panthers’ games when they played because he saw me fight and he sent me a tweet and stuff.

“So I got his number and I’m friends with him now too, which is a pretty cool thing. I was like, ‘Man I’m a huge fan,’ and he was like, ‘I’m a huge fan of yours.’ So it’s cool how everything comes around. I’m living the dream.”

We’ll see if the dream continues when Rosa steps into the Octagon with Rodriguez on Saturday night. The TUF winner has a unique style that involves a lot of switch striking. He relied heavily on constantly switching between southpaw and orthodox stances in a decision win over Leonardo Morales at UFC 180.

Rosa has trained extensively with UFC welterweight star Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson. He has even sought out help training with some of the best Dutch kickboxers in the world.

There isn’t a single area of the fight in which Rosa doesn’t feel comfortable. He fully expects to drown the hometown noise by putting on the performance of a lifetime. By the end of the fight, the Mexican fans could very well be chanting “Rosa.”

“I play the fight over in my head, and I think of all the different ways,” he said.

“I see me finishing him in the first round. That’s the way I see it. Whether he wants to stand up and trade, he’s going to eat something hard, and if it hits the mat, he’s going to get submitted. … He’s going to be in for a long night. Once I get my hands on him, he’s going to be in trouble.”

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

An Official Plea to UFC: Give Us Ben Rothwell vs. Andrei Arlovski

A terror-filled weekend was highlighted by the release of Focus Features’ Insidious: Chapter 3 and one of the greatest heel turns in UFC history.
I tossed and turned all night trying to rid my mind of a sweaty, unshaven Ben Rothwell standing in t…

A terror-filled weekend was highlighted by the release of Focus Features’ Insidious: Chapter 3 and one of the greatest heel turns in UFC history.

I tossed and turned all night trying to rid my mind of a sweaty, unshaven Ben Rothwell standing in the Octagon next to UFC commentator Jon Anik, laughing maniacally after choking Matt Mitrione into submission.

The UFC Fight Night 68 post-fight interview was manufactured, over-the-top, embarrassing and gimmicky. Yet for some strange reason, it was also brilliant. As Mitrione angrily walked away from the cage picking body hair from his mouth, Rothwell was left alone with a microphone and an opportunity to steal the show.

I fully expected to see another goofy reimagining of the “Truffle Shuffle” or whatever dance move he pulled off after knocking out Alistair Overeem last September.

But enough was enough. Rothwell was through trying to please fans with hip-hop dance moves from the late ’80s. He was done with constantly being overlooked and passed over. Actions speak louder than words, but as fighters are beginning to learn in MMA, words create opportunities for action.

Rothwell said to Anik:

That’s actions that speak louder than words. The mixed martial artist you once knew is no more. I am something completely different. The only fight that matters to me now is the number one contender’s spot. I will have the UFC title.

Pause and insert some random hand gesture.

I know right now there is not a man on this planet that can stop me inside of this Octagon and only politics can slow me. I don’t know much else to say other than you have seen nothing yet.

End the quote with a laugh so tyrannical it gives Willem Dafoe’s Green Goblin a run for its money. Perhaps that was a major overstatement, but you get the picture. Rothwell made himself relevant again by word of mouth and another dominant performance. Before Saturday night, Rothwell could have very well been released from the UFC and hardly a soul would have batted an eye.

For the first time in his UFC tenure, Rothwell is subject for conversation. He even asked for a rematch with former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski after his win over Mitrione. The last time the two heavyweights met was nearly seven years ago at Affliction: Banned, a short-lived MMA promotion spearheaded by the famous clothing line.

Arlovski won by knockout in the third round.

But after last night, their paths seem destined to cross again. So this is it, an official plea to the UFC: Give us Rothwell vs. Arlovski.

UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez is already tangled up with interim champ Fabricio Werdum at UFC 188. Many, including Rothwell, believe Stipe Miocic is the next man with the golden ticket, unless Velasquez loses. In that scenario, the UFC might give him an immediate rematch.

If Arlovski doesn’t get the next title shot, it would be ludicrous and downright detrimental to his heavyweight run to put him on ice for an extended period of time. He needs to keep busy, and there are few opponents more complimentary to his style than Rothwell. Junior dos Santos is being pushed aside on purpose, considering the fact that he’s already fought Velasquez three times and lost twice.

The division is desperately in need of new contenders, or in this case, reemerging contenders who have been spit-shined and dusted for cobwebs. “You have seen nothing yet,” according to Rothwell.

Why not give the man a chance to let his actions speak?

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dan Henderson vs. Tim Boetsch: What We Learned from UFC Fight Night 68 Tilt

Father Time waits for no man, but then again, Dan Henderson isn’t any ordinary man.
He is a man, no doubt, made of the same ordinary stuff as you and I—flesh, blood and a beating heart. But his ability to still compete at 44 years old in th…

Father Time waits for no man, but then again, Dan Henderson isn’t any ordinary man.

He is a man, no doubt, made of the same ordinary stuff as you and I—flesh, blood and a beating heart. But his ability to still compete at 44 years old in the UFC, a promotion that houses the greatest MMA fighters on the planet, proves that something divergent lies beneath the surface.

Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night 68 could have been Henderson’s eulogy. A loss would have made him 1-6 in his last seven fights. Not to mention, the loss would have come at the hands of Tim Boetsch, a 34-year-old former contender running on fumes. Boetsch is certainly no joke, but he also isn’t a top-10 middleweight.

It’s easy to convince UFC President Dana White to preserve your roster spot when you’re getting rag-dolled by Daniel Cormier and knocked out by Gegard Mousasi, but against Boetsch, Henderson had no excuses. It was do-or-die for the former Pride middleweight champ.

Like he has throughout his illustrious career, Henderson answered emphatically by leaning on old faithful once more—his devastating right hand. Boetsch took the bait and gravity did the rest 28 seconds into the first round.

Here is what we learned from the UFC Fight Night 68 main event.

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

In the words of Kimbo Slice, we’ll remember Henderson and Boetschthrowindem thangs.”

To the delight of a boisterous New Orleans crowd, all forms of caution were tossed to the wind in a jam-packed round of fisticuffs. Both men met in the center of the Octagon with no hesitation. We didn’t expect anything less from the fearless middleweights.

The UFC put this fight together fully expecting both men to come out swinging until someone fell. It was the cherry on top of an underrated fight card. We all know those people who pass on these fight cards but always show up for the pay-per-views. They’ll be sorry they missed this one.

Retired UFC welterweight Nick Diaz agrees. 

 

 

What We Learned About Dan Henderson

Win, lose or draw—Henderson entered the cage on Saturday night with virtually no way of quelling the retirement talk. Regardless of what happened, he was still going to have to sit in a crowded media room deflecting questions about his fighting future.

However, the questions don’t seem as pressing when a fighter is winning. The mood was lightened for the 44-year-old Henderson after ending his victory drought. We didn’t really learn anything from the actual fight that we didn’t already know. Henderson is still a dangerous middleweight fighter fully capable of knocking out any man who stands across from him. But the obvious signs of age are still there.

He doesn’t boast the same impenetrable jawline from years past, and his reaction time has slowed severely.

 

What We Learned About Tim Boetsch

Boetsch is a streaky, underappreciated workhorse in the UFC.

He’s a big, strong middleweight with good wrestling, knockout power and a strong will. The latter is an often overused compliment to undeserving fighters, but Boetsch earned his tough-man label through shed blood and absorbing ungodly amounts of punishment.

Boetsch is a tough fighter capable of putting on a great performance with a stylistically suitable opponent. Henderson was a suitable opponent, but Boetsch still got cracked.

 

What’s Next for Henderson

Retirement should be next for Henderson. He’s already a shoe-in for the UFC Hall of Fame. Not to mention, he’s a former Pride and Strikeforce champion.

His resume includes some of the biggest names in MMA history, including Fedor Emelianenko, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Vitor Belfort and Rashad Evans. There really isn’t anything left to prove.

But who am I to tell a grown man what he should do with his life? If Henderson wants to continue fighting, so be it. No one can tell him otherwise after his quick destruction of Boetsch.

 

What’s Next for Boetsch

Unfortunately for Boetsch, he doesn’t have the legendary status to lean on like Henderson. The UFC could opt to hand him a pink slip after back-to-back losses. It wouldn’t be the first time either. Boetsch was cut from the UFC after going 2-2 back in 2009 and losing a unanimous decision to Jason Brilz.

He is currently 2-5 in his last seven fights, and only one of the wins was convincing—a second-round TKO win over Brad Tavares. A release wouldn’t be a long shot considering the UFC’s history.

If Boetsch manages to stick around, he could be used as a gatekeeper for a younger fighter hoping to break into the top 15.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Matt Mitrione vs. Ben Rothwell: What We Learned from UFC Fight Night 68 Tilt

As the lone heavyweight bout on the main card, Matt Mitrione and Ben Rothwell faced otherworldly expectations at UFC Fight Night 68 on Saturday night. Blame it on Andrei Arlovski and Travis Browne for raising the bar in the heavyweight division with an…

As the lone heavyweight bout on the main card, Matt Mitrione and Ben Rothwell faced otherworldly expectations at UFC Fight Night 68 on Saturday night. Blame it on Andrei Arlovski and Travis Browne for raising the bar in the heavyweight division with an oddly satisfying display of carnage at UFC 187.

Mitrione came into the fight with fists on fire, having knocked out his last three opponents in the first round.

His most recent win over Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC on Fox 13 was easily the most impressive of his career. Against Rothwell, who is coming off back-to-back wins over Alistair Overeem and Brandon Vera, Mitrione had an opportunity to finally crack into the top-10 heavyweight rankings.

Rothwell shocked the world back in November when he dropped Overeem like a sack of potatoes. In Mitrione, he saw a chance to get another quality win under his belt to help him creep further up the heavyweight ladder. Rothwell shed his checkered resume by picking up his third consecutive win in the UFC, submitting Mitrione in the first round. 

Here is what we learned from the UFC Fight Night 68 co-main event.

 

What We’ll Remember About the Fight

Mitrione is deceptively fast for a heavyweight. His speed goes hand-in-hand with his athleticism. While most heavyweights typically plod around the cage in a flat-footed stance, Mitrione is able to bounce around lightly and set up angles to attack. 

He found success early on moving in and out of the pocket on Rothwell, but it all came crashing down after a failed takedown attempt got him caught in a front choke. The submission didn’t even appear to be cinched up all the way before Mitrione began tapping. 

 

What We Learned from Mitrione

Mitrione may not be in the UFC’s good graces after bashing the Reebok deal, and losing doesn’t really help his case.

Mitrione has called the UFC home since he started competing as a professional fighter. The former NFL defensive tackle looked to be finally maturing and coming into his own, but he suffered another major setback against a top-10 heavyweight opponent. 

Mitrione is unusually athletic for a heavyweight fighter, and it gives him key advantages on the feet. But he has yet to show the same competence on the ground. Mitrione was beside himself after the loss.

 

What We Learned from Rothwell

Many of you are probably still trying to wrap your heads around me calling Rothwell a checkered fighter, which is basically a fancy way of saying he’s inconsistent.

The former IFL star beat Gilbert Yvel and went on to lose to Mark Hunt. He knocked out Brendan Schaub and went on to get submitted by Gabriel Gonzaga.

Consistency has been a major problem for Rothwell in the UFC in the past, but things have obviously changed. His third straight win on Saturday night marks the first time Rothwell has won three consecutive bouts in eight years. 

 

What’s Next for Mitrione

There are plenty of options available to Mitrione in the UFC’s wide-open heavyweight landscape. Frank Mir, Mark Hunt, Alistair Overeem, Travis Browne or Josh Barnett would all make for interesting opponents for Meathead.

Perhaps he’ll get thrown to the wolves for frowning on the Reebok deal. In that case, you can fully expect to see him paired against either Junior dos Santos or Stipe Miocic. Mitrione better be training like a champion if he hopes to keep a roster spot. 

 

What’s Next for Rothwell

The Kenosha, Wisconsin native is finding the same magic that made him a star in the IFL. Of course, the primary reason for the drop-off was the high-quality opposition he consistently faced in the UFC.

It’s always tough branding fighters as gatekeepers because you never want to give a cutoff point to a fighter’s potential. Rothwell made the necessary changes and came back a much-improved fighter. 

A top-five opponent could be in his future. 

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Oliveira vs. Lentz: do Bronx Emerges a Thrilling, Quiet Title Contender

Charles Oliveira, the UFC featherweight division’s best-kept secret, is the ultimate anomaly to teething terms from casual fans. When “do Bronx” steps into the cage, the mere notion that grappling is anything but exciting always gets …

Charles Oliveira, the UFC featherweight division’s best-kept secret, is the ultimate anomaly to teething terms from casual fans. When “do Bronx” steps into the cage, the mere notion that grappling is anything but exciting always gets turned on its head.

Juvenile terms such as lay-and-pray take a backseat. There is no lay-and-pray against Oliveira, a man with snakes for legs and more tricks than David Copperfield.  

It was all on full display in his second run-in with Nik Lentz at UFC Fight Night 67. The two featherweights had met four years prior to Saturday night at UFC on Versus 4, where an illegal knee ruined Oliveira’s rear-naked choke submission.

Much had changed the second time out.

Lentz was no longer the one-trick pony wrestler lulling fight fans to sleep. Oliveira was every bit as well-rounded as he was back then. Perhaps the biggest change for him was maturity. He was no longer the raw 21-year-old prospect from Sao Paulo, Brazil. A highly-experienced tactician had emerged from unshaped clay, filled with endless potential.

In front of a Brazilian crowd, he greeted the former NCAA Division I wrestler with a steady dose of elbows and thai knees. There was no attempt to play the matador to Lentz’s bullish tactics in the striking department. Oliveira showed no respect for Lentz’s power, willingly keeping his head aligned in the fire to counter with shots of his own.

However, the reckless strategy did leave key openings. One in particular was a knee to the body that dropped Lentz late in the first round. But Lentz recovered by the second round and went back to his bread-and-butter wrestling. He was able to snag a few takedowns and attempted to weave his way through Oliveira’s guard, which ended up being a full-time job in itself.

Keeping top position was every bit as taxing as securing a takedown for Lentz, who fought tooth and nail to overcome Oliveira’s aggressive ground wizardry. The fight-ending mistake didn’t occur until the third round, where Lentz left his neck open for a guillotine choke.

At the post-fight press conference, Oliveira was asked to give his thoughts on a potential title fight in the future. The Brazilian star is currently riding a four-fight win streak with victories over Lentz, Jeremy Stephens, Hatsu Hioki and Andy Ogle.

“If you don’t want the title, you’re in the wrong sport,” said Oliveira, who earned another Fight of the Night bonus. “When I have my chance, I will go there to become champion. I can grow a lot more. I haven’t showed anything yet. One day I will get there and win the title.”

Featherweight champion Jose Aldo is scheduled to defend his UFC title against Conor McGregor at UFC 189 on July 11. Frankie Edgar is likely next in line to fight for the throne, but it shouldn’t come as a surprise to hear Oliveira’s name get called following a big win or two.

Aldo’s dominance is leading the division down the ruined path of recycled contenders. A fresh face is always welcome, and it certainly isn’t a bad thing to see one as exciting Oliveira’s.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Oliveira vs. Lentz: do Bronx Emerges a Thrilling, Quiet Title Contender

Charles Oliveira, the UFC featherweight division’s best-kept secret, is the ultimate anomaly to teething terms from casual fans. When “do Bronx” steps into the cage, the mere notion that grappling is anything but exciting always gets …

Charles Oliveira, the UFC featherweight division’s best-kept secret, is the ultimate anomaly to teething terms from casual fans. When “do Bronx” steps into the cage, the mere notion that grappling is anything but exciting always gets turned on its head.

Juvenile terms such as lay-and-pray take a backseat. There is no lay-and-pray against Oliveira, a man with snakes for legs and more tricks than David Copperfield.  

It was all on full display in his second run-in with Nik Lentz at UFC Fight Night 67. The two featherweights had met four years prior to Saturday night at UFC on Versus 4, where an illegal knee ruined Oliveira’s rear-naked choke submission.

Much had changed the second time out.

Lentz was no longer the one-trick pony wrestler lulling fight fans to sleep. Oliveira was every bit as well-rounded as he was back then. Perhaps the biggest change for him was maturity. He was no longer the raw 21-year-old prospect from Sao Paulo, Brazil. A highly-experienced tactician had emerged from unshaped clay, filled with endless potential.

In front of a Brazilian crowd, he greeted the former NCAA Division I wrestler with a steady dose of elbows and thai knees. There was no attempt to play the matador to Lentz’s bullish tactics in the striking department. Oliveira showed no respect for Lentz’s power, willingly keeping his head aligned in the fire to counter with shots of his own.

However, the reckless strategy did leave key openings. One in particular was a knee to the body that dropped Lentz late in the first round. But Lentz recovered by the second round and went back to his bread-and-butter wrestling. He was able to snag a few takedowns and attempted to weave his way through Oliveira’s guard, which ended up being a full-time job in itself.

Keeping top position was every bit as taxing as securing a takedown for Lentz, who fought tooth and nail to overcome Oliveira’s aggressive ground wizardry. The fight-ending mistake didn’t occur until the third round, where Lentz left his neck open for a guillotine choke.

At the post-fight press conference, Oliveira was asked to give his thoughts on a potential title fight in the future. The Brazilian star is currently riding a four-fight win streak with victories over Lentz, Jeremy Stephens, Hatsu Hioki and Andy Ogle.

“If you don’t want the title, you’re in the wrong sport,” said Oliveira, who earned another Fight of the Night bonus. “When I have my chance, I will go there to become champion. I can grow a lot more. I haven’t showed anything yet. One day I will get there and win the title.”

Featherweight champion Jose Aldo is scheduled to defend his UFC title against Conor McGregor at UFC 189 on July 11. Frankie Edgar is likely next in line to fight for the throne, but it shouldn’t come as a surprise to hear Oliveira’s name get called following a big win or two.

Aldo’s dominance is leading the division down the ruined path of recycled contenders. A fresh face is always welcome, and it certainly isn’t a bad thing to see one as exciting Oliveira’s.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com