Coming into UFC Fight Night 36, most fans of the UFC knew the name Lyoto Machida very well, yet few knew much about his opponent, Gegard Mousasi.
For those who did, this had the potential to be a terribly exciting bout that would answer many questions …
Coming into UFC Fight Night 36, most fans of the UFC knew the name Lyoto Machida very well, yet few knew much about his opponent, Gegard Mousasi.
For those who did, this had the potential to be a terribly exciting bout that would answer many questions about both fighters. It was a clash of intelligent styles that pitted two very diverse fighters against each other in a five-round tilt in the middleweight division.
If that was not enough, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza was pitted against Francis Carmont. Souza was coming off a TKO victory over Yushin Okami at UFC Fight Night 28. Souza brought his five-fight winning streak into the Octagon to the end of making a serious statement for title contention against the always-tough Carmont, who had an 11-fight win streak himself.
These two contests alone had the potential to add clarity to the middleweight division; should Machida and Souza win as expected, both fighters would be near the front of the line for a shot at Chris Weidman’s belt.
And if either one of them lost, it would prove that the division is far deeper than most expected.
Before the headlining and co-headlining bouts took place, the fans would get to see two welterweight bouts, pitting the dangerous Erick Silva against Takenori Sato and Viscardi Andrade against Nicholas Musoke.
Finally, a featherweight fight would get the main card started with Charles Oliveira slugging it out with Andy Ogle.
With such names as Maximo Blanco, Yuri Alcantara, Rodrigo Damm and Cristiano Marcello filling out the undercard, UFC Fight Night 36 had all the makings of an entertaining evening of fights in Jaragua do Sul, Brazil. And if that wasn’t enough, the event marked the first-ever implementation of the UFC’s new bonus plan that will see the knockout and submission bonuses replaced with Performance of the Night bonuses for two fighters.
Now that the fights are over and the results are tallied, we can look upon the event as a whole, the good and the bad.
Here are the real winners and losers from UFC Fight Night 36: Machida vs. Mousasi.
It wasn’t all that long ago that Rory MacDonald looked like he could be a serious contender for the UFC welterweight title.
He was young, strong, aggressive and growing into a man with a scary skill set. His height gave him a reach advantage over…
It wasn’t all that long ago that Rory MacDonald looked like he could be a serious contender for the UFC welterweight title.
He was young, strong, aggressive and growing into a man with a scary skill set. His height gave him a reach advantage over many, and he was with one of the best training camps in the business.
Now, just a short time later, when MacDonald fights, he looks like a man who is a spectator in his own life.
The skills are still there; he has only lost two fights in his entire career, against Carlos Condit and Robbie Lawler, neither of which is a slouch by any means.
But lately, he seems like a fighter who is waiting for openings to come his way, instead of attacking with any sense of purpose.
It isn’t as if he doesn’t know what to do in the cage, because he does. He nearly defeated Condit, manhandled Nate Diaz, ran right over Mike Pyle and Che Mills and threw a pretty nasty beating on BJ Penn.
And then, almost suddenly, he started to look like a man intent on waiting instead of fighting.
Now, barring any injuries, he’ll be facing off against Demian Maia at UFC 170. With this comes a chance to get back on track. He will enjoy a reach advantage of over four inches, he’s younger and figures to have the advantage in striking, at least on paper.
If he can stuff those takedown attempts, he will have the perfect chance to attack with relative impunity—but he must attack. If he does not, all those skills and physical advantages are nothing more than the trappings of the uninspired.
If there is one change MacDonald can make before UFC 170, it is as simple as it is clear—he has to start pulling the trigger, and often.
Fighting conservatively does not serve the best interests of a challenger looking to become the champion. One does not just glide into the position of champion; one takes the throne by storm.
He needs to recall his younger self and take some chances; if he doesn’t, his opponents will. In the world of MMA, it is better to give than receive, but you have to have a lot to give, and you have to force it upon your opponent.
If he would have fought with the energy and aggression due the moment in his last bout with Lawler, he might be the one facing Johny Hendricks for the welterweight title at UFC 171.
Instead, he’s trying to work his way back into contention, which is a nice way of saying he’s working for the chance to be taken seriously again.
To that end, he needs to show he is a serious threat to anyone he faces, and to do that he must give his opponents something to fear besides memories of how he used to be in 2011.
Masking a tentative offense as sound tactical practice does little to relieve the stark contrast of what once was and what now is. In his fight with Jake Ellenberger, MacDonald landed his jab accurately and often but instead of coupling it with a significant offense, he seemed to hide behind it while waiting for opportunities from a distance.
His last two fights have seen him use little of the skills that once made him so dangerous. In fact, if this current version of MacDonald were to fight the man who almost defeated Condit, I would put my money on the latter eating the former for breakfast.
There is nothing wrong with sound strategy, as long as it is aimed toward a resounding, convincing victory that sees a fighter doing his utmost at all turns. It cannot be restrained or passive; the choice to act toward a decisive end is always available and should never be sacrificed for tactical advantage based on inaction.
When considering how great MacDonald could be, seeing him settle for anything less—no matter how safe and easy it may be—is disappointing.
It was one of the worst scenes one could imagine for a fighter: Anderson Silva on the floor, screaming in pain after a checked kick saw his left leg snapped at the shin.The limb in question flopped freely about like a fish on a chain before Silva …
It was one of the worst scenes one could imagine for a fighter: Anderson Silva on the floor, screaming in pain after a checked kick saw his left leg snapped at the shin.
The limb in question flopped freely about like a fish on a chain before Silva fell to the mat. From there, the end was academic.
The sheer pain Silva went through at that moment cannot be rightly imagined.
Now, 45 days later, Silva’s rehab program is moving along quickly and he is declaring that he wants to come back and fight, but first he wants a boxing match with Roy Jones Jr (h/t Guilherme Cruz of MMAfighting.com). Further, Fox Sports’ Marc Raimondi tweeted that Dana White has said he expects Silva to fight before 2014 comes to an end.
The fact that Silva can walk down a flight of stairs without crutches or a cast is more than most dared hope. His injury saw his lower leg flopping around like a segmented sausage; the only thing that could have been worse would be a compound fracture.
To think he would be walking in under 60 days is shocking. But amid all this progress, one wonders why Silva is pushing himself so hard so soon.
If Silva steps into the Octagon in September, for instance, his leg is going to be under serious pressure given his style of fighting. Much of Silva’s game is based on his legs—specifically, his kicks.
Is Silva going to be shy throwing leg kicks? Given how fast he has pushed himself back into competition, shouldn’t he be?
Obviously, we all want to see him back. But is sooner really better than later?
Make no mistake about it: Should Silva injure that leg again in the same place, his career is officially over. With his future on the line, it seems like taking some extra time would be better for the long term.
Rushing back into the Octagon in some ways seems like an attempt to erase that horrible night from Silva’s mind and the minds of the public. If he can hop right back in far more quickly than most expected, maybe he can restore his superhuman image.
The bad news is that the break Silva sustained was not cosmetic; it was through and through, as deep as it gets.
Running back into training and fighting seems like a desperate attempt to disarm a bomb that has already gone off; that Silva was a casualty is not a matter of opinion or perception but a medical fact.
The chances of Silva recovering are excellent. He’s in great shape, and he’s still young enough that a full recovery can occur—but recovery takes place at its own rate and won’t be rushed.
Given that Silva’s passion to get right back to fighting is so clear, he might find doctors to capitulate. If he’s already talked himself into feeling better than ever, that is going to come through, and doctors do take that into account.
But all future opponents of Silva are going to attempt to check Silva’s leg kicks with the same destructive result Chris Weidman had. Silva cannot afford to let that possibility limit his game; to do so is to give his opponents an advantage based on a limited offense.
For that reason alone, he should take the extra time needed to make sure his bone is as strong as possible. Waiting an extra three to six months isn’t going to hurt his standing, while jumping back in too quickly could see him lose all.
Silva has always been a poised and patient fighter; those qualities served him well in the cage and could serve him well again in this decision.
He has nothing to lose by waiting and everything to lose by rushing in. His legacy is secure, and we would happily wait for him.
Whenever a fan gets to see two exceptional fighters paired against each other, such as Anthony Pettis and Jose Aldo, the mind races.
Such standoffs bring many questions to light, mainly because the margin of error for both fighters is razor thin. Advan…
Whenever a fan gets to see two exceptional fighters paired against each other, such as Anthony Pettis and Jose Aldo, the mind races.
Such standoffs bring many questions to light, mainly because the margin of error for both fighters is razor thin. Advantages that were normally a given are now uncertain, and areas of weakness—no matter how small—can be the undoing of so much greatness.
When fighters that good meet, nothing but their very best will suffice.
As fans, to ponder the uncertain with a critical eye is a natural thing. It is in our nature to try and quantify everything—to predict the future based on the history of the fighters involved. If faith is a belief in the unseen, then prognostication is a prediction based on a faith that comes from history seen, time and again.
And in the case of Pettis and Aldo, the history shows them to be a monsters when they are in top form.
This fight looks to be the most rigorous test each man has had to date. For every person that declares Aldo will win, you can find another who advocates for Pettis.
And so, as is our custom as fans, we ponder and theorize to the best of our ability toward the end of predicting who has the advantage—and more importantly, where.
Of course, the result of this fight will probably not be decided by numerical superiority granted from some list. Fighters are not the sum total of their greater or lesser parts because no two fights are the same.
And this fight promises to be quite unlike any other.
Here’s a head-to-toe breakdown of Anthony Pettis vs. Jose Aldo.
It is odd how the viewing public has romanticized combative sports to the point that one would think it’s a glorious, glamorous life—all positive and little negative. As with all sports, our perception is clouded by assumption and comfortab…
It is odd how the viewing public has romanticized combative sports to the point that one would think it’s a glorious, glamorous life—all positive and little negative. As with all sports, our perception is clouded by assumption and comfortable distance, which is the norm for nearly all sports.
Of all sports, however, combative sports are the most deceptive in their overt portrayal, as the presented image hides a core feature: cruelty.
In Bert Sugar’s self-titled book, Bert Sugaron Boxing, he called it “legalized assault,” and he was absolutely correct. As fans, we don’t like to think of it like that; the term seems fit to come out of the mouths of those who hold low opinions of such sports.
But when you actually look at combative sports unvarnished, you can see them for what they are. When you see the Octagon set up in the arena, empty and waiting, surrounded by thousands upon thousands of empty seats, you know instantly what is going to happen the next night; no words are necessary.
Fighting employs a fury and deliberate energy spent toward a single end: the defeat of another through bodily force. Other sports have much the same fury and energy, but there is also a fair amount of deflection in their design.
Get the ball in the end zone.
Hit the ball out of the park.
Put the ball in the basket.
In the world of combative sports, there is a purity of motive and clarity of intent that cannot be denied. It’s a primitive contest; two men enter with the sole intent to do as much bodily harm as necessary to defeat the other.
Yes, there is some symbolism going on; to act otherwise would be doing the sport a great injustice. The fighters don’t live in a world of make believe; they revel in underlying parallels of life and death that combative sports embody.
However, one only needs to look at where the fighters do battle—a ring or cage put on a pedestal under the brightest of lights—to see why many detractors called it “human cock fighting.”
Of course that’s a flawed perception, but it’s based on an honest acclimation of the surroundings, the setting, where the fighters do battle in a contest where, symbolically, only one man leaves.
It may be a sport to some or a spectacle to others, but it’s not a game. It’s a regulated, endorsed and sponsored theater of sorts, and like the saying goes, the blood is always real. In fact, MMA and boxing are stylized and partially synthetic fighting to the finish—the submission akin to the asking for quarter, the knockout a parallel for death.
Perhaps the most transparent acknowledgement that shows the beating heart of the sport is the proud advocacy each fighter has for fighting for “The finish.” This, of course, refers to the most sought after result to every fight. Be it via submission, technical knockout or pure knock out, the finish is the ultimate resolution to the conflict—the truest statement of authority.
When a fight ends because time has expired, there is no full resolution. The judges may declare an official winner, but in many ways that is just a judgment of who was ahead when time ran out.
Conversely, the finish severely hinders the act of denial; of course many declare a fight was stopped too early, but very few argue that the moments before the end were very bad for the defeated fighter.
Professional fighting is a struggle with life-or-death overtones that confronts us on a primal level. It evokes emotions in us that speak to the best and worst aspects of our nature. Most fans cry for the finish above all else. It’s a possible reason why a fighter as dynamic, personable and dominant as Georges St-Pierre was constantly deflecting criticism for his seeming inability to finish his opposition.
Be it by submission, technical knockout or clean knockout, any finish seems to be better than no finish at all, just as some authority is better than none.
When a fighter claims a victory by submission, he (or she) earns a kind of technical victory that is less destructive to the ego of the vanquished. Losing by submission does not assault the beating heart of machismo, but the tactical decisions that put the defeated in harm’s way.
Surrendering due to the inescapable submission is akin to asking for quarter on the dueling field. It’s a gentleman’s request for cessation, and by proxy it lends the fighters and their fight a kind of gentleman’s sophistication—much like tipping the king in chess.
On the other hand, there is also an element of strength and dominance in claiming a victory by submission. There is nothing gentle about it when Ronda Rousey tosses an opponent to the floor and secures the fight-ending armbar. That is pure technique empowered by aggression; both of which are honest and true.
But when looking at the mechanics involved, both in the submission and the act of tapping to concede defeat, the only negative associations come by way of the fighters involved. An armbar submission from Rousey, who fights with an intensity that looks like animosity, seems much worse than it is. This is in contrast to a man like Frank Mir, who has made the breaking of limbs a matter of policy, not prejudice.
But no matter how intense or bitter the rivalry, a submission ending is still seen and understood in the realm of the tactical, the academic.
When the submission is tight, it is then up to those in jeopardy to decide the final outcome. In this way, the loser still retains a degree of power, even if it’s only the power to capitulate. It is easier to see a fighter at the mercy of a technique (and their understanding of it!) than it is to see a fighter who is helpless before the aggression of a relentless opponent.
The knockout is an entirely different species of victory that is brutal and gives the whole possession of superiority in the most masculine sense to the winner. While the knockout may not be feared equally by all fighters, those who have proven capable of delivering force (which is exactly what striking is all about) to such an extreme degree, time and again, are truly feared in their division.
Oddly enough, most times the terminology for the knockout is mistakenly assumed to mean a fighter is actually rendered unconscious. While instances of that are seen from time to time, such as when Dan Henderson flattened Michael Bisping at UFC 100, more often than not the term is addressing a different aspect: time.
Time is one of the universal constraints in all combative sports. It is one part ally and two parts enemy; rarely does a fighter feel like he (or she) has enough time in a bout to finish a hardened opponent and seldom are the times when a fighter is grateful to be saved by the bell, “in the nick of time.”
In her book, On Boxing (perhaps the shortest and best book on the subject, so wise and profound that it easily translates to all combative sports), Joyce Carol Oates identifies how time relates to the knockout.
When a boxer is ‘knocked out’ it does not mean, as it’s commonly thought, that he has been knocked unconscious, or even incapacitated; it means rather more poetically that he has been knocked out of Time. (The referee’s dramatic count of ten constitutes a metaphysical parenthesis of a kind through which the fallen boxer must penetrate if he hopes to continue in Time.)
While the sport of MMA does not utilize the standard 10-count or the standing eight-count, the referees are constantly aware of time, telling the hurt fighter to work. How many times have we seen a stunned fighter, knocked to the ground, given time to show that he is still aware and capable?
It is during such times that the referee (and we as viewers) will look for a sign that the fighter is intelligently defending himself. The presence of the referee, looming over the action, inching closer, clearly concedes to the notion that “Time” is indeed short.
Oates continues:
There are in a sense two dimensions of Time abruptly operant: while the standing boxer is in time the fallen boxer is out of time. Counted out, he is counted ‘dead’—in symbolic mimicry of the sport’s ancient tradition in which he would very likely be dead.
The movements of a hurt fighter almost always seem to be a beat behind the music—or in slow motion. Only when we see him (or her) responding in time with the actions of his would-be conqueror are we able to realize that he (or she) has regained his (or her) senses.
His adversary, too, is ever aware of time, continuing the attack, because the time to finish is now. If he (or she) cannot finish his (or her) man, then the moment (or time) has passed.
Professional fighting in all forms is perhaps cruelest when we honestly consider what the fans and fighters long for above all else: the war.
The fighters want to be involved with such dramatic contests because they are seldom forgotten. It ensures their name will be remembered, their legacy cloaked in blood and glory.
For the fans, incredible fights, bursting with high drama, are moments that quicken them and make them feel alive. As observers, we cannot help but live vicariously through the deeds of the men and women in the sport, but a truly great fight does something to us that all lesser versions cannot. It makes us feel a true affection and appreciation, and even kinship, with the vanquished.
When we witness a fight like Marvin Hagler versus Tommy Hearns or Forrest Griffin versus Stephan Bonnar, the defeated are recognized with a kind of equality with the victor. Both are co-authors of sort to an epic saga that saw the best in both come to the surface.
But as prized as such fights are, there is indeed a jagged edge to be found. Fighting is a hurt sport, and while the glory of a war may never really fade, it does hide the tragedy of a combative sport—it consumes the very excellence it displays.
One need only recall the tale of Meldrick Taylor and his brutal effort with Julio Cesar Chavez—which won Fight of the Year for 1990—to know this to be true. The amount of sheer damage Taylor took in for what looked to be a winning effort left him forever changed. That fight saw much of a young man’s greatness and youth spent in the ring in a single night, and he was never the same.
Fighters are, by and large, a unique breed. They exist with one foot in the normal world and the other in a life that demands separation and dedication—a mastery of skills and their body and an understanding that to display either they must risk both.
That they can continue fighting after sustaining true damage is clear proof that we cannot fully understand them unless we join them—unless we willingly bare ourselves to the harsh scrutiny of a violent opponent, not to mention the crowd.
Professional fighters are never more vulnerable than when they are in the ring or cage; this may seem like an obvious admittance of the perils of physical combat, but it is much more than that. To fight in front of a crowd is to willingly offer up the sum total of your being for public judgment.
How surreal must it be to win a fight in front of thousands, only to stumble in your next bout and thus be labeled a “loser” in defeat? How hard must it be to learn just how short the memory of the crowd really is?
As fans live through the victories of a fighter, so do they distance themselves from the feeling of defeat by realigning their affections to the winner of the day. A fighter’s greatest advocate may one day turn into a vocal detractor if the fighter begins to lose, and all fighters lose on a long enough timeline.
This, of course, is not a fault the fans should be criticized for. All fighters know fans’ affections are fickle, mainly because they started as fans before they became fighters.
Some fighters use this as fuel to recapture that respect, to show the fans why they were wrong to be so dismissive. Who can forget Muhammad Ali, in defiance to the doubters, standing on the ring ropes in victory, pointing to the writers at press row, shouting: “Eat your words! Eat your words!”
But no matter how fighters handle the turns in favor, they no doubt endure from the fans, nearly all of them are enabled by pride. All fighters are proud creatures, and how could they not be? Pride is what keeps a defeated fighter from turning his back on the sport.
It kept Ken Shamrock fighting in his first bout with Tito Ortiz, and pride kept Evan Tanner, his face badly swollen and bleeding, coming back into the fray against Rich Franklin in their second bout.
Perhaps the greatest—and most tragic—example of pride is embodied in Kazushi Sakuraba.
During the height of his career, he was the sole candle in the dark for his Japanese fans; all attention was focused on his fights. He defeated opponent after opponent, attacking them where they were strongest and defeating them via submission.
Then came Wanderlei Silva, a Brazilian fighter who at the time appeared to be nothing more than the next in line to be defeated. Silva proved to be far more than anyone really expected, brutalizing Sakuraba and stopping him in the first round.
While he enjoyed some victories after that bout, he was never the same. He fought Silva two more times and was defeated two more times, both via stoppage. But the real sadness is found only in part with his trilogy with Silva—the rest in the sum total of damage he took in his career.
Near the end, Sakuraba was literally coming apart in the ring. His fight with Marius Zaromskis was stopped when it was noticed that Sakuraba’s ear was actually falling off.
Perhaps anyone else would have been able to swallow pride long before such a pronounced failure of one’s body, but pride (both personal and national) kept Sakuraba coming back, time and again.
It kept him coming back from three damaging losses to Silva. It kept him coming back after taking a horrible beating from Ricardo Arona. It kept him coming back, no matter what.
Of course, Sakuraba is not the only fighter to have his pride carry him into combat well past his prime. There have been countless others, and there always will be. It’s a standard that isn’t likely to cease anytime soon, especially when fighters like Randy Couture prove the exception to the rule.
In the persons of Couture, Dan Henderson, Bernard Hopkins and other Methuselahs, pride finds a new footing in the hearts of fighters and fans everywhere. It becomes a kind of false-positive that there is actually a proven method in defying nature and old age.
“If they did it, so can I.”
Of course, just as no one should ask fight fans to give up being fans as they grow older, neither should anyone insult fighters for finding the cup of retirement bitter. Perhaps that is why many fighters transition to other roles in combative sports, such as trainers, promoters, etc. After all, in what other sports can old men still be in the thick of bloody combat?
Perhaps that sums up the true cruelty and tragedy of the sport; it does consume the very excellence it displays (just as Oates said) and will continue to do so.
Round after round, event after event, there is never enough time, the fight never really over.
According to James Queally of The Star-Ledger, two fans were stabbed during UFC 169, which was held at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.Neither victim’s wounds were life-threatening, and their identities were not disclosed to the …
Neither victim’s wounds were life-threatening, and their identities were not disclosed to the press. Police arrested a Pennsylvania man (Angel Pereira, 36) for the assault.
In fact, there was little information that could be disclosed—not even where the attack took place, save for that it happened somewhere in the stands around 8 p.m.
Fan violence has often had a knee-jerk effect on the public; the idea of being assaulted at a professional sporting event reflects negatively on the sport associated with such acts, and this will not change anytime soon.
But in this piece, the segue was a little obvious; it was noted that just four days prior, the Prudential Center had hosted Super Bowl 48’s Media Day, which occurred without incident.
A media day and an actual sporting event are drastically different animals, but one can see why the association was made in the piece. The owners of the Prudential Center wanted to show that they are associated with big-name events and that such events can still happen safely.
They wanted to provide a positive association with their namesake to counter-balance the negative—and two stabbings at any event are a big negative.
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of these unfortunate events is their ripple effect. In this case, the ripples will reach New York and may make the sanctioning of the sport in The Empire State harder than it ever has been.
And as of now, it has been too hard for the UFC or its attorneys to overcome.
Thankfully, the two men were not seriously injured.