UFC 146 Fight Card: What’s at Stake?

The level of enthusiasm for the UFC 146 fight card is somewhat dampened from what it had when the original line up came together. The departure of Alistair Overeem from the title fight and event altogether is mostly to blame, but …

Gallery Photo: UFC 146 Weigh-In Photos

The level of enthusiasm for the UFC 146 fight card is somewhat dampened from what it had when the original line up came together. The departure of Alistair Overeem from the title fight and event altogether is mostly to blame, but other injuries have also contributed to that diminished feeling. Another unfortunate result of the reshuffling is the UFC’s effort to gain marketing and press traction with the all-heavyweight main card fell short.

Still, tonight’s card is fairly spectacular. For starters, every single fight on the preliminary portion of the card either promises to deliver a healthy dose of violence or carries important stakes of its own (that’s especially true for Dan Hardy and Jason Miller). If you removed the entire main card, the preliminary card would make for an excellent UFC on FX card by itself.

Most importantly, though, is context. In this age of more UFC cards than we can handle, plan A is usually far, far better than plan B. That is, when the original fight or fights that supposed to be a part of a fight card fall through, there often isn’t anything left that’s nearly as exciting or important. Nowhere is that more true than UFC on FUEL TV 3, where the card lost all local attractions and the original main event. What’s excellent about UFC 146’s main card is not just how good it is in spite of essentially being a replacement card to the original, but that the B card is still A card quality. That they were able to maintain the all-heavyweight angle of it makes the entire effort even more remarkable.

But that’s the card itself. Let’s take a closer look inside tonight’s event to see what’s at stake for the ten fighters in tonight’s five main card bouts.

Junior dos Santos vs. Frank Mir

At Stake: more than just a title. If we’re being serious, the title is obviously the most coveted prize and potential acquisition in tonight’s contest. I’ve found the UFC-pushed marketing line that this is some sort of revenge for the champion since Mir broke his friend and mentor’s arm at UFC 140 to have never really gained any steam. The title is up for grabs and with the unpredictability in MMA, that’s enough of a marketing angle in and of itself. That’s especially true when both competitors can’t bring themselves to pitched animosity to sell a fight.

In truth, though, there is a little bit more than just a title on the line. Mir can become a three-time heavyweight champion with a victory, something only Randy Couture has managed to achieve. For dos Santos, this could be the start of a long title reign. There is little worse than winning the title only to surrender it in your first defense. This is a chance to begin cementing his placement as the heavyweight far and above his peers.

Dos Santos is also slowly but surely building himself into a popular attraction for MMA fans, casual and hardcore alike. He’s not there yet and frankly has a long way to go. But each top performance – and all the media accompaniment that comes with it – is another building block towards that end. As he perfects his punch as much as his English, his endearing attitude and ferocious fighting style is gaining admirers, one unconscious opponent at a time.

Cain Velasquez vs. Antonio Silva

At Stake: legitimate contendership. From everyone I’ve spoken to close to the situation, Velasquez was badly injured heading into his bout with Junior dos Santos at the first UFC on FOX 1. Now is a chance (assuming he’s healthy) to right what went wrong that fateful evening. It’s not just a win, but an opportunity to demonstrate the shoulder surgery didn’t set him back; that getting knocked out didn’t psychologically hatch any self-doubt; to justify the belief many have in him as the world’s best heavyweight. A win over Silva won’t accomplish the latter, but it will put him on a path to re-establishing faith.

For Silva, this is also not just a chance to get on the winning side of the ledger, but to do so in a way that would catapult him to the top of the division. It’s a huge opportunity and one he stumbled into by accident; one he may never get again. Silva’s always been as flawed as he is talented. More technical than he’s given credit, he often loses fights on a lack of hustle. Against Velasquez, he’s got his work cut out for him (specifically in that regard), but great challenges translate to enormous opportunities.

Roy Nelson vs. Dave Herman

At Stake: opportunity at continued visibility. Neither of these fighters is going to earn a title shot winning tonight. They may not even get a fight after this that puts them any closer. However, both fighters deliver a quotient of entertainment and do so at a technical level higher than what you’ll likely see in Struve vs. Johnson. Yes, Herman lost to Struve and Struve is only facing Johnson because of Mark Hunt’s last-minute departure. But Herman doesn’t fight like Johnson, nor does Nelson. This match-up between hirsute heavyweights won’t be a replay of Nogueira vs. Barnett, but it promises to be enough of a display of skill and entertainment that the eventual winner will be able to stay visible as a main card fighter in future UFC events.

Stipe Miocic vs. Shane del Rosario

At Stake: being a heavyweight real deal Holyfield. Not the actual Evander Holyfield, of course, but whenever two prospects fight one another – particularly when they’re undefeated – winning is an undeniable statement of potential growth and even arrival as a burgeoning contender. Still, I’d caution reading too much into this (depending on the complexion of the fight). I tend to view del Rosario as the more well-rounded of the two, but his time off from the sport after recovering from being hit by a drunk driver is a major x-factor. He can still win tonight, but if he loses and even loses soundly it’s still not clear what that could mean. Both fighters seem to have promising futures and there can be no understating what a resounding performance tonight can do for the victor. Let’s just be careful about suggesting the loser of this bout is in a markedly different position.

Stefan Struve vs. Lavar Johnson

At Stake: physical health, and maybe a chance to prove something more. This fight is similar to Johnson’s last fight at UFC on FOX 3 against Pat Barry. They’re at the beginning of the main card because they’re expected to deliver fireworks. Johnson knows it, Struve knows it, we know it.

Johnson, more than Struve, is more at peace with a loss given certain circumstances. If he fights the way he prefers and happens to get rendered unconscious in the process, all can be forgiven in time. Struve is similar, but still believes in his ability and the need to develop as a prospective talent. Struve isn’t opposed to falling on his sword, but he also views himself as a budding contender whose well-rounded skill set can carry him far in the sport. Johnson, by contrast, is MMA’s version of a hockey enforcer. And like any hockey fight, Johnson is usually done for by the time it hits the ground.

Tonight is an opportunity for Struve to demonstrate growth in his skill set and fighting maturity…if he chooses to fight that way. Johnson likely views tonight as another chance to let his blood and guts style of brawling earn him adulation, a bonus check and another fight against a fighter who favorably accommodates his style. How it turns out is more up to Struve than Johnson and whether he wishes to inch closer to contendership or serve as reliable if permanently flawed vehicle for entertainment.

UFC 146 Pre-Fight Interviews

MMA Fighting interviews the UFC 146 main card participants including UFC heavyweight champion Junior dos Santos, former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir, Antonio Silva, Roy Nelson, Dave Herman and others. UFC 146 takes place at …

MMA Fighting

MMA Fighting interviews the UFC 146 main card participants including UFC heavyweight champion Junior dos Santos, former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir, Antonio Silva, Roy Nelson, Dave Herman and others. UFC 146 takes place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Saturday, May 26th.

LAS VEGAS — Watch below as Dave Herman talks about fighting Roy Nelson at UFC 146, marijuana in MMA, hanging out with Stefan Struve after Struve beat him in February and getting in the good graces of UFC president Dana White.

Live Chat: Nick Diaz vs. NSAC and UFC 146 Discussion

The Nick Diaz saga never seems to end, does it? I can’t speak (and wouldn’t even if I could) about the botched BJJ superfight and who is at fault. However, I can speak about Diaz’s lawsuit, Monday’s hearing and what legal strategy…

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

The Nick Diaz saga never seems to end, does it? I can’t speak (and wouldn’t even if I could) about the botched BJJ superfight and who is at fault. However, I can speak about Diaz’s lawsuit, Monday’s hearing and what legal strategy the Diaz team can employ to get him back in the cage as soon as possible.

And who can forget UFC 146 is this weekend? Yes, every single fight on the main card has been changed, but it’s still a very good card with all heavyweight action. How very Strikeforce of them.

For today’s chat, we can discuss both topics in depth or whatever YOU wish to discuss. We can talk Bellator, UFC President Dana White’s interview with the L.A. Times, recap Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Cormier or whatever it is that’s on your mind. Join me at 1 p.m. ET for that and more.

Remember: you can login to ScribbleLive’s service via Twitter or Facebook. You can also create your own username and work from that. Whatever you do, just be here at 1 p.m. ET for debate, discussion, clever comments and witty remarks. Yours and mine.

Dan Hardy Eager to Prove He’s ‘Entirely Different’ From His Last UFC Appearance

If you listen to Dan Hardy speak today, he sounds slightly different. Not better or worse per se, but certainly not the same. Yet, while he sounds unlike the brash Englishman we are typically accustomed to hearing, he doesn’t soun…

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

If you listen to Dan Hardy speak today, he sounds slightly different. Not better or worse per se, but certainly not the same. Yet, while he sounds unlike the brash Englishman we are typically accustomed to hearing, he doesn’t sound like someone he’s not.

In fact, given all he’s been through – from the meteoric rise in popularity ahead of his title fight with Georges St. Pierre in March of 2010 to losing four fights straight in the Octagon – he sounds exactly as if he should. He’s a tiny bit quieter, more focused, slightly humbled by life’s ephemeral blessings as well as its sudden ravages, but still very much witty and candid in his public pronouncements.

Hardy most recently fought in the UFC in August of 2011, a fight where he lost to retiring fighter Chris Lytle. It was a third-round submission defeat and his fourth in a row. Some fans called for his departure, although UFC CEO Lorenzeo Fertitta publicly praised Hardy for his fan-friendly style, something Hardy feels he has to ‘validate’ with a win this weekend. Still, the loss forced his temporary departure from the sport and a round of personal introspection about why he was continuing to fail at meeting his personal and professional obligations.

That soul searching is over now and Dan Hardy is ready to demonstrate the time off was time well spent.

“It’s been good. It’s been real good,” said Hardy of the sabbatical from fighting on Monday’s edition of The MMA Hour. “I moved to Las Vegas just before my last fight and as soon as the fight was done I came back and started working with a bunch of different coaches. I’ve had a good nine months to work with these guys now and this is the first time I’ve had a training camp with them. I feel awesome. I feel good.”

There’s a lot that’s different this time. There’s the new coaching regimen (more on that in a moment). There was the time to reflect on what went wrong, something generally not possible when moving at the speed of UFC operations. And despite Hardy being in what has to be a must-win position against Duane Ludwig this weekend at UFC 146, the circumstances aren’t psychologically bearing down on him like they once did.

“I feel entirely different, to be honest,” said Hardy. “For starters, this is only the second time in my UFC career that I’ve been on the undercard. My first fight at UFC 89 was an undercard fight and after that I was co-main event. I’ve never really had that build-up into the UFC to the top level. It’s nice to be stepping down the card and let the big guys take the spotlight for a while. And changing my team has been a huge difference as well.”

Hardy also told Ariel Helwani his vantage point for this fight isn’t about ‘must-win’ even if he knows that’s the reality. For Hardy, this is about proving his place, evidencing his growth and debuting a person he believes the world has not seen yet although he may look a little familiar.

“It’s going to be an entirely different Dan Hardy. I’ve still got the same mentality that I always have. I still want to get in there and win the fight with strikes, but I have options now. I’m much more confident in every area.”

Hardy maintains he’s still part of the Rough House Gym in England, but he’s developed a system of putting coaches (and training partners like former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir) around him to help maximize his time and preparation. And those coaches aren’t anonymous names unaccustomed to athletic success. Coaches like Robert Drysdale, Ricky Lundell and even Olympic gold medalist in wrestling Cael Sanderson have worked with Hardy to raise the level of his game while shoring up some of the more notable ground-based deficiencies.

“I can prove that,” affirmed Hardy when speaking of his growth in skills. “I can get in there against guys who can wrestle and who’ve got good ground skills. I can at the very least hang with them, if not beat them at their own game now. I really do feel confident with that now.”

Against Ludwig, that isn’t MMA’s toughest task even if ‘Bang’ has steadily worked to evolve the grappling aspects of his game, too. Still, Hardy isn’t dead set on any particular game plan and appears energized to fight Ludwig, although he admits it wasn’t a fight he ever thought he’d have.

“Funny enough, I actually asked for a fight against Josh Neer. Obviously Neer’s just beaten Ludwig and my idea was I was going to fight Josh Neer and bring Ludwig in as a training partner,” Hardy confessed.

“I’ve always gotten on well with Duane. I’ve always been a fan of his. I used to watched his King of the Cage fights before I even started fighting MMA. The guy’s been around for a while. He brings a very high level kickboxing to the sport and a good pace. I’m excited about the fight. I was surprised that they offered me Duane, but it’s the kind of fight I can really get up for.”

Another fight Hardy claims he could get up for is one with former UFC welterweight champion Matt Hughes. Hardy took several swipes at Hughes in interviews and on Twitter in recent months, but insists there was a misunderstanding about his intentions when he criticized the former champ. Well, sort of.

“There’s a little bit of a misunderstanding about that situation. I wasn’t actually calling the guy out,” Hardy insists. Yet, “if the fight was offered to me I would fight him now. I don’t like the guy and it’d be an honor to get in there and put a beating on him. The thing is, I’d spoken out about his love for shooting things. I’m not in agreement with it. I just don’t like the fact that he thinks it’s ok to do it.”

“The problem is because we’re in the same weight class people automatically assume it was about mixed martial arts. The guy was a champion. He’s a legend in the sport. He’s done great things in the sport, but people can’t disconnect that from the fact that he’s an asshole as a person.”

“I don’t like Brock Lesnar and his idea of fun either,” a not ‘entirely different’ Hardy continued, “but obviously because we’re in different weight classes people don’t automatically assume I’m calling him out.”

Ultimately, Hardy doesn’t suspect Hughes will take the fight and doesn’t blame him. After all, in Hardy’s mind, why should he? This is a Dan Hardy ‘entirely different’ from the old one. This one has had time to train the right way, be coached the right way, prepare the right way and think clearly ahead in his time away from the fight game. Why would Hughes want to face a fighter like that when he’s looking to just win and get out ahead of retirement?

“Although obviously I’ve been on a rough streak, I still think I’m a bad match-up for him,” said Hardy.

“Or at least I am now.”

That’s the Dan Hardy we know: passionate and outspoken. But now he’s on the other side of glory and despair; quieter and a touch more humble. This Dan Hardy is the same as the old one, but entirely different.

Cormier, Barnett and Others Earn Significant Medical Suspensions After Grueling Fights

The injury suspensions are in for Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Cormier and to no one’s surprise, three of the four fighters involved in five-round fights are facing long medical suspensions.
Both Daniel Cormier and Josh Barnett earned…

Kyle Terada-US PRESSWIRE

The injury suspensions are in for Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Cormier and to no one’s surprise, three of the four fighters involved in five-round fights are facing long medical suspensions.

Both Daniel Cormier and Josh Barnett earned 180 day suspensions (unless cleared by a physician sooner) after both fractured their hands in the course of their fight. Barnett broke his left hand while Cormier broke his right. According to a statement Cormier made on Monday, the winner of the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix will have surgery to repair his hand in one week.

Josh Thomson, Yuri Villefort, Gesias Cavalcante, Virgil Zwicker and Bobby Green also all earned 180 day medical suspensions.

The full list of medical suspensions are below:

Daniel Cormier: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible right second finger fracture and 60 days unless cleared by a physician for left eyelid laceration.

Josh Barnett: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible left hand fracture and 60 days unless cleared by a physician for multiple facial lacerations.

Josh Thomson: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible left knee fracture and possible right hand fracture.

Isaac Valle-Flagg: suspended for 60 days unless cleared by a physician for a one-inch laceration for right south orbital area.

Gesias Cavalcante: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible left shoulder ligament injury.

Virgil Zwicker: suspended 30 days for a hard bout and 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible left middle finger fracture.

Yuri Villefort: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible right knee ligament injury.

Bobby Green: suspended for 180 days unless cleared by a physician for possible third finger fracture on left hand.

James Terry: suspended for 60 days unless cleared by a physician for possible nasal fracture and laceration.

Josh Barnett, Gilbert Melendez Lead Payroll for Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Cormier

Former UFC heavyweight champion Josh Barnett come up on the losing end of his battle with Daniel Cormier in the finals of the heavyweight grand prix Saturday, but he’s also the highest paid athlete on the fight card according to c…

Kyle Terada-US PRESSWIRE

Former UFC heavyweight champion Josh Barnett come up on the losing end of his battle with Daniel Cormier in the finals of the heavyweight grand prix Saturday, but he’s also the highest paid athlete on the fight card according to commission-reported salaries.

Barnett took home $200,000 for his efforts. Right behind him is Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez, who pocketed $175,000 after besting Josh Thomson by split decision at Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Cormier. Despite winning, the commission did not report Melendez took home a win bonus for his efforts.

At the bottom end of the financial ladder, Yuri Villefort only managed to earn $2,500 in his loss to grappling-centric Quin Mulhern. Virgil Zwicker, Derrick Mehman both took home $3,000 while Guto Inocente earned $4,000 after earning a $2,000 win bonus.

Please note that salaries reported by Strikeforce to the commission do not necessarily reflect a fighter’s actual earnings, once other possible bonuses and sponsorship money is factored in.

The list of full payouts from Saturday’s event listed below:

James Terry $9,000
Bobby Green $12,00 ($6,000, $6,000 bonus)
Quinn Mulhern $12,00 ($6,000, $6,000 bonus)
Yuri Villefort $2,500
Gian Villante $24,000 ($12,000, $12,000 bonus)
Derrick Mehman $3,000
Virgil Zwicker $3,000
Guto Inocente $4,000 ($ 2,000, $2,000 bonus)
Gesias Cavalcante $18,000
Isaac Vallie-Flagg $6,000 ($3,000, $3,000 bonus)
Nah-Shon Burrell $7,000
Christopher Spang $12,000 ($6,000, $6,000 bonus)
Mike Kyle $25,000
Rafael Cavalcante $66,000 ($33,000, $33,000 bonus)
Josh Thomson $90,000
Gilbert Melendez $175,000
Josh Barnett $200,000
Daniel Cormier $100,000 ($50,000, $50,000 bonus)