UFC Fight Night 65 predictions

The UFC’s Fight Night series carries on as they return ‘Down Under’ with a heavyweight collision between top-ranked contenders. Stipe Miocic is looking to get back on the winning track, but so is Mark Hunt. The winner hasn’t been promised an…

The UFC’s Fight Night series carries on as they return ‘Down Under’ with a heavyweight collision between top-ranked contenders. Stipe Miocic is looking to get back on the winning track, but so is Mark Hunt. The winner hasn’t been promised anything, but can’t be far from a title shot.

Will Miocic prove he’s the next best thing in the heavyweight division or is Hunt prepared to show he’s got one last run in him?

What: UFC Fight Night 65 (UFC Fight Night: Miocic vs. Hunt)

Where: Adelaide Entertainment Centre, Adelaide, Australia

When: Saturday, the eight-fight Fight Pass preliminary card starts at 7:45 p.m. ET and the four-fight main card kicks off on Fight Pass at 11 p.m.

Stipe Miocic vs. Mark Hunt

If you look at the cases in the UFC where Hunt has lost a striking battle, it’s been attacks from lower body extremities. Perhaps Fabricio Werdum’s flying knee or Junior dos Santos‘ spinning heel kick were just coincidence. Or maybe not. In the case of JDS, it allowed him to work at range after battling in boxing distance. In the case of Werdum, the entire flying knee attack was a total surprise. If you’re more likely to just throw hands, your risk jumps pretty dramatically against Hunt. His speed is underrated, his power is seemingly still all there as are his finishing instincts.

Still, I think Miocic will use his legs to set himself up for success here. He has a great jab, an incredible ability to take a shot and plenty of power punching of his own. He’s also got decent wrestling if he needs it, strong and consistent footwork and more. He takes risks, yes, but that might work in his favor this time.

Pick: Miocic

Brad Tavares vs. Robert Whittaker

This is an extremely close contest, at least on paper. Whittaker is probably better in the clinch and has the better punching power as well as the slightly more unusual striking skills. Tavares is a bit more meat and potatoes, but has more bases covered in terms of the totality of the mixed martial arts game. A call for either is easily justifiable, but I’ll ever so slightly lean Tavares. I think he’ll largely be able to stay away from Whittaker’s power punching with consistent footwork, tie up when he needs to and perhaps even work from top position after a lengthy takedown battle against the fence. It may not be pretty, but it might just work.

Pick: Tavares

Anthony Perosh vs. Sean O’Connell

I can’t say I’m particularly high on either guy, but despite his advanced age, the proactive offense of Perosh is probably enough to get the job done. O’Connell packs a punch and can withstand a war, but Perosh is probably better at putting combinations together. He’s also demonstrably better on the ground should the fight end up there. I like the Hippo’s chances here.

Pick: Perosh

Jake Matthews vs. James Vick

This is a close fight, if we’re being honest. Vick is probably a little quicker than Matthews, a touch more polished in the grappling department and has more UFC fights under his belt. Matthews has shown flashes of brilliance, but is still rough around the edges. That said, I don’t think Vick has the wrestling to truly trouble Matthews. I also believe Matthews age means his growth curve between fights is huge. For those reasons, I’ll side with the native Australian.

Pick: Matthews

From the preliminary card:

Hatsu Hioki def. Dan Hooker
Jonavin Webb def. Kyle Noke
Dan Kelly def. Sam Alvey
Bec Rawlings def. Lisa Ellis
Dylan Andrews def. Brad Scott
Alex Chambers vs. Kailin Curran
Brendan O’Reilly def. Vik Grujic
Alptekin Ozkilic def. Ben Nguyen

Metamoris 6 predictions

The sixth Metamoris event kicks off Saturday in bizarre fashion as the organization has refused entry to both media and fans and elected to essentially not promote the card. Much of whatever is planned has been kept secret. That said, the ca…

The sixth Metamoris event kicks off Saturday in bizarre fashion as the organization has refused entry to both media and fans and elected to essentially not promote the card. Much of whatever is planned has been kept secret. That said, the card itself features top MMA and UFC stars, decorated jiu-jitsu champions and everything in between.

What: Metamoris 6

Where: California, U.S.A.

When: The live stream for all matches begins on Metamoris.com at 6 p.m. ET

Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

All the respect in the world to Gracie for taking this on short notice (although I’m told it’s been known for some time Cyborg Abreu was injured) as well as being hugely undersized, but I just don’t see how he gets this done. Barnett is too good and too dominant with position and pressure. Gracie has sensational defense, so even with a draw he looks like a winner, but he’s going to have to block all the cross faces Dean Lister didn’t, stay out of side control and not live on bottom. That is going to be a miserable place to be for 20 minutes.

Pick: Barnett

Chael Sonnen vs. Babalu Sobral

It’s not entirely clear Sobral can defeat Sonnen if he pulls guard or somehow ends up on bottom. Sonnen’s balance, posture and willingness to not engage on his opposition’s terms makes it hard to do much of anything. If the Brazilian can get to the back, however, now we’re talking. I’m not ruling out half guard sweeps or reversals, but Sonnen probably has the ability to stand up if he finds himself on bottom. On Sonnen’s back, though, Sobral might be able to do wonders, if not choking him, then finding an arm for any number of attacks.

Pick: Sobral

Joe Lauzon vs. Dillon Danis

I have a ton of respect for Lauzon, not just because of his abilities, but athletic courage as well. He has a self belief and commitment to the process of winning that takes the costs of battle for what they are. Technically speaking, he also has enough to make things interesting early. Danis is the Marcelo Garcia student who is king of the kneebars. His run at the most recent Pan Ams was beyond exception. As it turns out, Lauzon may not be on the same level as Danis, but he lives in the same world and speaks the same language. Ultimately, I expect the better grappler of the two to do what he does, but the back and forth early should be fun.

Pick: Danis

Xande Ribeiro vs. Keenan Cornelius

This one is tough to call. Ribeiro is a superb guard passer, so I’m not sure Cornelius wants to spend time underneath if he can’t play worm guard. Besides, he’s been working his long step pass on everyone, perhaps that’s a plan if he can make it happen. How he gets there? I don’t know. Reverse de la Riva? Single-leg X? It’s a really tough call. Once on top, Cornelius can pass and maintain position, but I have a feeling neither is going to get out of this what they want.

Pick: Draw

Clark Gracie vs. Roberto Satoshi

Since this is a gi match, Satoshi should look much better this time. He is great with attacks from sleeve control, particularly sweeps. He has fantastic half guard sweeps, and I suspect he’ll prefer to take position while Gracie pulls. From there, I’m looking for Gracie to work a berimbolo to the back (or his vaunted oma plata game) while Satoshi works to stuff half positions, use the gi grips for brabo chokes and catch Gracie in transition. I suspect both guys will end not catching the other in a competitive match.

Pick: Draw

Jeff Monson vs. Jimmy Friedrich

I’m not sure what to make of this. Monson is as credentialed a heavyweight no gi grappler as they come, but is beaten down by years of injury, surgery and the like. He still looks physically intimidating, but I’m not sure he has the mechanical movement he once had. Friedrich, on the other hand, can invert, re-guard quick and possesses a nice array of leg attacks, all chained together in interconnected webs. Part of me wants to say 20 minutes is too long for Monson to handle. The other part tells me he’ll pass guard rather easily, only to secure any variety of choke he’s known for with a fair amount of ease.

Pick: Monson

Metamoris 6 Results: Barnett vs. Gracie

MMA Fighting has Metamoris 6 results for the Barnett vs. Gracie fight card in Los Angeles, Calif., on May 9.In the main event, Josh Barnett will square off against Ryron Gracie. Barnett last competed in Metamoris at Metamoris 4 when he defea…

MMA Fighting has Metamoris 6 results for the Barnett vs. Gracie fight card in Los Angeles, Calif., on May 9.

In the main event, Josh Barnett will square off against Ryron Gracie. Barnett last competed in Metamoris at Metamoris 4 when he defeated Dean Lister via submission (neck crank).

Check out the Metamoris 6 results below.

Main card (PPV at 6 p.m. ET)
Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie (live blog)
Chael Sonnen vs. Babalu Sobral (live blog)
Joe Lauzon vs. Dillon Danis (live blog)
Zande Ribeiro vs. Keenan Cornelius (live blog)
Clark Gracie vs. Roberto Satoshi (live blog)
Jeff Monson vs. Jimmy Friedrich (live blog)

Metamoris 6 live blog

This is the Metamoris 6 live blog for the Metamoris event in California on Saturday night.There will be six fights on the card. Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie, Chael Sonnen vs. Babalu Sobral, Joe Lauzon vs. Dillon Danis, Zande Ribeiro vs. Kee…

This is the Metamoris 6 live blog for the Metamoris event in California on Saturday night.

There will be six fights on the card. Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie, Chael Sonnen vs. Babalu Sobral, Joe Lauzon vs. Dillon Danis, Zande Ribeiro vs. Keenan Cornelius, Clark Gracie vs. Roberto Satoshi, and Jeff Monson vs. Jimmy Friedrich are the featured matches.

Check out the Metamoris 6 live blog below. Each fight will be contested for one 20-minute round.

Jeff Monson vs. Jimmy Friedrich

Clark Gracie vs. Roberto Satoshi

Xande Ribeiro vs. Keenan Cornelius

Joe Lauzon vs. Dillon Danis

Chael Sonnen vs. Babalu Sobral

Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

Pros react to Reebok sponsorship pay scale for UFC fights

On Wednesday, news broke revealing what the per-fight scale would be for UFC fighters when it came to guaranteed Reebok sponsorship money. While rumors had been circulating for weeks, if not months, about what fighters in what tier could expect from the system, the fact is no one except the brass in the UFC truly knew. That all changed on Wednesday with published scale.

Fighters, managers and other members of the mixed martial arts community are still processing what it all means, but to put it mildly, reaction to the news has been mixed. Here are there initial thoughts.

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Good to see the ufc fighters are going to start making the big bucks off of this reebok deal :/

Nick Newell (@NotoriousNewell) May 6, 2015

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https://t.co/XXtRbsGUTP

Brendan Schaub (@BrendanSchaub) May 6, 2015

I’ve made six figures in sponsorship in each of my last 6 fights https://t.co/gotToaSDJh

— Brendan Schaub (@BrendanSchaub) May 6, 2015

Star-divide

Wow 2500$ for my next fight for reebok sponsorship. ….i mad twice that off 1 sponsor my last fight!!!! Sucks!

Roger Narvaez (@Silverback316) May 6, 2015

@Mayhem2_3 @marc_raimondi just hurts because I have great sponsors that have always financially helped….it’s going to be hard on fighters

— Roger Narvaez (@Silverback316) May 6, 2015

@Silverback316 understand what theUFC trying to do…those numbers just hurt fighters like me who spend 2-3k on fight camp just getting prep

— Roger Narvaez (@Silverback316) May 6, 2015

Star-divide

$70 million looking kinda weak http://t.co/y8Y8ZP1svk?

Chris Kelades (@keladesmma) May 6, 2015

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I understand the reasoning given for the Reebok deal, but the deal has to make sense for at least 80% of the fighters in regards to tiers

Aljamain Sterling (@FunkMaster_UFC) May 6, 2015

For me, I barely got any sponsorship money, but Im ok w/not whoring myself out to 6-7 companies to look NASCAR. New system= half my earnings

— Aljamain Sterling (@FunkMaster_UFC) May 6, 2015

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Checked my email to good news! 21 in the books with zuffa. Thank you @lorenzofertitta @danawhite @Reebok @ufc

— Scott jorgensen (@Scottjorgensen) May 6, 2015

Star-divide

Definitely need to get more fights booked…according to what counts, I’m only at 6 since 2011…definitely not enough!!

Sarah Kaufman (@mmasarah) May 6, 2015

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Reebok sponsorship deal is more money than I got paid fighting on European shows,would I like more hell yea but who wouldn’t #stayhumble

Robert Whiteford (@Flyinjudoka) May 6, 2015

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Congrats @Reebok, you got the deal of the century. Unfortunately, it was at the cost of the fighters. Hope the bad press is worth it. @ufc

Matt Mitrione (@mattmitrione) May 6, 2015

On Wednesday, news broke revealing what the per-fight scale would be for UFC fighters when it came to guaranteed Reebok sponsorship money. While rumors had been circulating for weeks, if not months, about what fighters in what tier could expect from the system, the fact is no one except the brass in the UFC truly knew. That all changed on Wednesday with published scale.

Fighters, managers and other members of the mixed martial arts community are still processing what it all means, but to put it mildly, reaction to the news has been mixed. Here are there initial thoughts.

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Live Chat: Miocic vs. Hunt preview, Jon Jones discussion, Metamoris 6 and more

This is episode 137 of the Promotional Malpractice Live Chat.
It’s the live chat after Mayweather vs. Pacquiao. We can talk about that and, to some extent, I’m sure we will. Even after being over, there’s still a lot to contend with in terms of box…

This is episode 137 of the Promotional Malpractice Live Chat.

It’s the live chat after Mayweather vs. Pacquiao. We can talk about that and, to some extent, I’m sure we will. Even after being over, there’s still a lot to contend with in terms of boxing’s future, pay-per-view, what it means for MMA and more.

But there’s also more familiar combat sports to get to as well. Stipe Miocic and Mark Hunt are set to face off this weekend on a card that is not good at all, but at least the headlining bout is of serious significance. It’s also one that portends fireworks.

The future of Jon Jones also continues to be a discussion topic. His manager, Malki Kawa, has said there’s a chance he may never return to the UFC. I don’t exactly buy that, but…