UFC Fight Night 86 fight card: Timothy Johnson vs Marcin Tybura full fight preview

Timothy Johnson and Marcin Tybura will throw down this Sunday (April 10, 2016) at UFC Fight Night 86 inside Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia. In a match up of powerful heavyweights, what adjustments must be made for either man to claim victor…

Timothy Johnson and Marcin Tybura will throw down this Sunday (April 10, 2016) at UFC Fight Night 86 inside Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia. In a match up of powerful heavyweights, what adjustments must be made for either man to claim victory? Find out below!

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Heavyweights Timothy Johnson and Marcin Tybura will battle this Sunday (April 10, 2016) at UFC Fight Night 86 inside Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia.

Johnson is a full size heavyweight. Just barely making the 265 lbs. limit, Johnson specializes in forcing his opponent to the mat and violently smashing them from top position.

In a division without many prospects, Tybura is a major exception. The 30-year-old grappling specialist is a former M-1 champion, and his sole loss came via injury.

Let’s take a look at the keys to victory for each fighter:

Timothy Johnson
Record: 9-2
Key Wins: Shamil Abdurakhimov (UFC Fight Night 63), Travis Wiuff (Dakota FC 19)
Key Losses: Jared Rosholt (UFC Fight Night 73)
Keys to Victory: Johnson is a solid wrestler and physical force. He’s competent on his feet, too, thanks to his size and punching power, but Johnson excels at finishing his foes via ground strikes.

In this bout, Johnson has to be careful. His opponent is also a talented wrestler, and Tybura is likely the more skilled grappler as well. If Johnson is too anxious in his attempts to close the distance, he could find himself on the bottom instead.

Which would not end well for him.

Instead, Johnson should methodically look to close the distance and look up the clinch. From that position, he can use his size and strength to control Tybura while landing some hard shots.

By forcing Tybura into these dirty boxing exchanges along the fence, Johnson can exhaust the Polish athlete. As his foe slows down, Johnson should be able to land the takedown more easily. Once on top, Johnson’s powerful top game should be able to carry him to the victory.

VS.

Marcin Tybura
Record: 13-1
Key Wins: Damian Grabowski (M-1 Challenge 50), Maro Perak (M-1 Challenge 47)
Key Losses: Stephan Puetz (M-1 Challenge 57)
Keys to Victory: First and foremost, Tybura is a jiu-jitsu fighter. Like his foe, Tybura does his best work from top position, as he wears his opponent out en route to a stoppage via ground strikes or submission. He’s also a reasonably technical wrestler and kickboxer.

In this bout, Tybura should look to use his speed and technique. On the outside, he’s quicker with his kicks and punches, so he should be able to land at a higher volume. Plus, he’s got a pretty solid chin if his opponent does manage to connect with a looping blow.

At some point, Johnson will try to close the distance. If Tybura times it well, he could very likely score with a reactive takedown as Johnson moves in, which would be far easier than trying to win pure wrestling exchanges with the big man.

Once on top, Tybura shouldn’t have much trouble controlling his opponent, which is how Johnson lost his last match. However, Tybura is a far more effective offensive fighter than Jared Rosholt, so the Polish scrapper should be able to do real damage or lock in a choke.

Bottom Line: Just about all of the fighters at the top of the Heavyweight division have been in the game for a long time. There’s a major need for new blood, and these two have a chance to insert their names as potential contenders.

Johnson’s game isn’t too complicated, but he’s been effective. Even when faced with a rough style match up in Rosholt, Johnson showed good toughness and nearly rallied for the late victory. If he can take a win over a solid prospect here, Johnson may face off with a high-profile opponent next.

On the other hand, a loss would make it two of three for Johnson. Heavyweight doesn’t have the depth to release him, but a loss would seem to pin Johnson’s ceiling somewhere in the middle of the division.

As something of an unknown, a lot of eyes should be on Tybura’s debut. He’s already proven himself against some solid competition in M-1, but this is his opportunity to really announce himself. With just a single strong performance here, Tybura could leapfrog several fighters in the title mix.

Again, Heavyweight needs new contenders.

Alternatively, a loss would be quite disappointing, but Tybura is still young. Lots of Heavyweights don’t seem to hit their strides until their mid-30s, so there is time for Tybura to grow into an elite fighter if he isn’t there yet.

At UFC Fight Night 86, Timothy Johnson and Marcin Tybura will throw down. Which fighter will have his hand raised?

Video: Randy Couture On Being Contacted To Come Out Of Retirement To Fight Fedor

https://youtu.be/UQ556yYowAU

Apparently promoters tried to put together a fight between Fedor Emelianenko and Randy Couture when the Russian legend made his official MMA return late last year.

Couture spoke about being contacted to fight Fedor du…

randy-couture-inside-mma

https://youtu.be/UQ556yYowAU

Apparently promoters tried to put together a fight between Fedor Emelianenko and Randy Couture when the Russian legend made his official MMA return late last year.

Couture spoke about being contacted to fight Fedor during his appearance on Friday’s edition of Inside MMA on AXS TV.

“I was approached when Fedor [Emelianenko] threw his hat back into the ring after a four, five year layoff,” Couture said during an interview segment on the show. “I was the first one they came to. It’s certainly something you have to consider and take seriously, but it’s not really about money. I think one of the more rational decisions I’ve probably made in my life was the decision to step down and hang them up.”

The MMA legend went on to say that in his eyes, he accomplished his goal of being someone with integrity who represented the sport of MMA in a positive way.

“You want to be remembered as somebody that had integrity and that represented the sport in a positive way. I think I accomplished that,” said Couture. “I’m happy with how the fans seem to remember me and the ones that come up to me all the time and talk to me, want a picture. I’m very happy with how that’s come out.”

You can watch Randy Couture’s interview from Inside MMA on AXS TV above.

OSP declines Cormier’s UFC 197 training offer: We’re ‘gonna be okay’

Looks like OSP isn’t heading out to AKA for a free training camp with Daniel Cormier, to help get ready for Jon Jones.

When Daniel Cormier made a guest appearance on the MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani this Monday, April 4th, he came prepared with a surprising offer. Having been forced out of his UFC 197 title defense against Jon Jones later this month, Cormier wanted to keep the ball rolling over at AKA, and offered to train his replacement, Ovince St. Preux, free of charge for the remaining three weeks up to the fight.

It was a very generous offer. Training camps, especially at large, well-known gyms, aren’t cheap. Throw in airfare and lodging for OSP and his team and you’re talking a solid five-digit offer from Cormier’s pocket to a potential divisional rival. But, as generous as the offer may have been, it looks like it’s not happening.

OSP himself showed up on the MMA Hour not long after Cormier and gave a firm, but polite answer to a chance to head out west for a new camp:

“Well, actually I was listening to the show when he actually said that,” OSP explained, having been presented with DC’s offer, “because he actually… I know Daniel, we talk. Every time I see him we get to talking and stuff. And my manager, they text from time to time… But, it’s just one of them situations. Like I said, from day one I’ve been here with my trainers and stuff. It’s one of them things that we talked about, I’ve been with my camp from day one and I appreciate the invitation and everything, all the hospitality. Even going back to the Strikeforce days with Bob Cook. Definitely appreciate the invitation, but I think with everything we’ve got going on over here… My coach came up with a solid game plan and I think we definitely gonna be okay.”

What do you think? Did OSP make the right move? Would he have been better off, even if only for a couple weeks, working with DC’s team? Does he have a shot at beating Jones either way?

UFC 197 takes place on Saturday, April 23rd at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event will be headlined by an interim light heavyweight title fight between former UFC champ Jon Jones and Ovince St. Preux. Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for all the news and updates fit to print.

Poll
Was this the right move by OSP?





  4088 votes | Results

Looks like OSP isn’t heading out to AKA for a free training camp with Daniel Cormier, to help get ready for Jon Jones.

When Daniel Cormier made a guest appearance on the MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani this Monday, April 4th, he came prepared with a surprising offer. Having been forced out of his UFC 197 title defense against Jon Jones later this month, Cormier wanted to keep the ball rolling over at AKA, and offered to train his replacement, Ovince St. Preux, free of charge for the remaining three weeks up to the fight.

It was a very generous offer. Training camps, especially at large, well-known gyms, aren’t cheap. Throw in airfare and lodging for OSP and his team and you’re talking a solid five-digit offer from Cormier’s pocket to a potential divisional rival. But, as generous as the offer may have been, it looks like it’s not happening.

OSP himself showed up on the MMA Hour not long after Cormier and gave a firm, but polite answer to a chance to head out west for a new camp:

“Well, actually I was listening to the show when he actually said that,” OSP explained, having been presented with DC’s offer, “because he actually… I know Daniel, we talk. Every time I see him we get to talking and stuff. And my manager, they text from time to time… But, it’s just one of them situations. Like I said, from day one I’ve been here with my trainers and stuff. It’s one of them things that we talked about, I’ve been with my camp from day one and I appreciate the invitation and everything, all the hospitality. Even going back to the Strikeforce days with Bob Cook. Definitely appreciate the invitation, but I think with everything we’ve got going on over here… My coach came up with a solid game plan and I think we definitely gonna be okay.”

What do you think? Did OSP make the right move? Would he have been better off, even if only for a couple weeks, working with DC’s team? Does he have a shot at beating Jones either way?

UFC 197 takes place on Saturday, April 23rd at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event will be headlined by an interim light heavyweight title fight between former UFC champ Jon Jones and Ovince St. Preux. Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for all the news and updates fit to print.

Poll
Was this the right move by OSP?







  4088 votes | Results

Cormier Says It Was UFC’s Decision To Pull Him Out Of Jones Rematch At UFC 197

daniel-cormier

According to UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Daniel Cormier, it was the UFC who made the call to pull him from the main event against Jon Jones at UFC 197 later this month, not him.

Cormier spoke about the unfortunate circumstances that led to him pulling out of UFC 197 this past weekend, resulting in Jones vs. Ovince St. Preux in an interim title fight being named the new main event of this month’s UFC pay-per-view event, during his appearance on Ariel Helwani’s “The MMA Hour” at MMAFighting.com on Monday.

According to D.C., however, he wanted to wait until Monday to see how his injury was doing before making the call, but the UFC told him that they didn’t want him to fight such a big fight when he wasn’t at his best.

“Something very surprising happened,” Cormier said during his appearance on the show on Monday. “Jon and I will make a lot of money together, we make a lot of money for the UFC too. But when I told them I was going to see it through the weekend, those guys were [like], ‘Daniel you’re hurt. Looking at your MRI, you need 5-6 weeks, so even if sat on your ass for the next three weeks before they fight, you’d still need at least two weeks to start feeling better. And they’re like, ‘You know D.C., you worked very hard to get to where you are today. You’re the champion, you don’t have to fight hurt. We can’t put you in situation you’re not healthy, we don’t want you to fight under those circumstances. They made the decision for me. I begged them, I was like give me until Monday, please.”

While Cormier won’t be able to fight Jones on April 23rd as he had originally planned, he still hopes the fight can materialize in time for UFC 200, or another UFC event this summer.

“If they’re telling me in 4-6 weeks I’m supposed to be better, that would leave me with 10-12 weeks to train for UFC 200, I could be ready to fight then,” said Cormier. “The only thing with that is, it’s a little scary because Jon is fighting in April. I don’t know if he will be willing to turn around and fight right back again three months later. If he would, I’d love to run it back with him any time in the summer. Late summer, early summer, it doesn’t matter.”

UFC 197: Jones vs. St.. Preux takes place on Saturday, April 23, 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

daniel-cormier

According to UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Daniel Cormier, it was the UFC who made the call to pull him from the main event against Jon Jones at UFC 197 later this month, not him.

Cormier spoke about the unfortunate circumstances that led to him pulling out of UFC 197 this past weekend, resulting in Jones vs. Ovince St. Preux in an interim title fight being named the new main event of this month’s UFC pay-per-view event, during his appearance on Ariel Helwani’s “The MMA Hour” at MMAFighting.com on Monday.

According to D.C., however, he wanted to wait until Monday to see how his injury was doing before making the call, but the UFC told him that they didn’t want him to fight such a big fight when he wasn’t at his best.

“Something very surprising happened,” Cormier said during his appearance on the show on Monday. “Jon and I will make a lot of money together, we make a lot of money for the UFC too. But when I told them I was going to see it through the weekend, those guys were [like], ‘Daniel you’re hurt. Looking at your MRI, you need 5-6 weeks, so even if sat on your ass for the next three weeks before they fight, you’d still need at least two weeks to start feeling better. And they’re like, ‘You know D.C., you worked very hard to get to where you are today. You’re the champion, you don’t have to fight hurt. We can’t put you in situation you’re not healthy, we don’t want you to fight under those circumstances. They made the decision for me. I begged them, I was like give me until Monday, please.”

While Cormier won’t be able to fight Jones on April 23rd as he had originally planned, he still hopes the fight can materialize in time for UFC 200, or another UFC event this summer.

“If they’re telling me in 4-6 weeks I’m supposed to be better, that would leave me with 10-12 weeks to train for UFC 200, I could be ready to fight then,” said Cormier. “The only thing with that is, it’s a little scary because Jon is fighting in April. I don’t know if he will be willing to turn around and fight right back again three months later. If he would, I’d love to run it back with him any time in the summer. Late summer, early summer, it doesn’t matter.”

UFC 197: Jones vs. St.. Preux takes place on Saturday, April 23, 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Jon Jones: DC Is An Absolute Coward Who Will Never Beat Me

After an injury forced UFC light heavyweight champion Daniel “DC” Cormier out of his highly anticipated rematch with the returning former king Jon “Bones” Jones at April 23’s UFC 197, it was recently announced that No. 6-ranked Ovince St. Preux would step up to meet Jones for the interim 205-pound strap. Cormier, appearing on today’s

The post Jon Jones: DC Is An Absolute Coward Who Will Never Beat Me appeared first on LowKick MMA.

After an injury forced UFC light heavyweight champion Daniel “DC” Cormier out of his highly anticipated rematch with the returning former king Jon “Bones” Jones at April 23’s UFC 197, it was recently announced that No. 6-ranked Ovince St. Preux would step up to meet Jones for the interim 205-pound strap.

Cormier, appearing on today’s (April 4, 2016) edition of the MMA Hour, discussed his injury, while offering St. Preux the chance to train, all expenses paid, at the American Kickboxing Academy (AKA) in the lead up to the bout.

Jones, who also appeared on the show, took this offer as a sign of weakness from Cormier, taking the chance to rip the champion in the process:

“Daniel is an absolute coward who will never beat me,” Jones said on The MMA Hour. “And I say that not from an arrogant place. I say that from a place where, me getting my belt back, it means everything to me. That belt right now is a big part of my life. It means everything to me. Me losing to OSP should be the last thing that [Cormier] would want, because if I were to somehow lose, that means he doesn’t get to avenge his only loss.”

Continuing on, “Bones” claimed that Cormier is ‘grateful’ to have pulled out of the fight, once again confirming that Cormier will never get the better of him inside of the Octagon:

“His inviting OSP to his training camp shows me that he’s so grateful that he’s not fighting me in three weeks,” Jones said. “That he’s so grateful that he gets to have one more family photo-op with that belt, because he knows that he’s not going to beat me, especially now with a knee injury. He’s going to be nursing his knee to get back to 100-percent. I’m going to just be getting stronger, better, faster, more rehearsed in my game plan to beat him.

“So, Daniel, man, he’s a mental midget. I’m not worried about Daniel. Obviously him inviting OSP shows that he’s so lucky he’ll be watching from the sidelines and not actually in that cage with me.”

In the end, the pound-for-pound king took to his official twitter account to take one more shot at his bitter rival, framing Cormier as a ‘pu**y’:

The post Jon Jones: DC Is An Absolute Coward Who Will Never Beat Me appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Jon Jones Hires Full-Time Driver Following Latest Run-In With The Law

Following his latest driving-related issue with the law, UFC light heavyweight contender Jon Jones has hired his nutritionist, Lou Giordano, to serve as his full-time driver.

“I have him here and he’s driving me between every practice all day, even …

jon-jones-ticket

Following his latest driving-related issue with the law, UFC light heavyweight contender Jon Jones has hired his nutritionist, Lou Giordano, to serve as his full-time driver.

“I have him here and he’s driving me between every practice all day, even at night now,” Jones said during his appearance on Monday’s edition of “The MMA Hour” with Ariel Helwani at MMAFighting.com. “I figured I’d take getting in trouble out of the police’s hands by simply not driving.”

Jones elaborated on the decision, explaining that most of his trouble seems to stem from driving-related incidents, so by cutting that out, he hopes he’ll be able to focus on the task at hand — regaining his UFC Light Heavyweight Championship.

“There’s a pattern throughout my career,” Jones said. “I’ve never gotten into a street fight, nothing crazy. It’s always been something behind the wheel. So, by simply not driving, I’m pretty positive that there won’t be any issues coming up in my life, especially (with my) sobriety as well. I’ve failed some drug tests in the past and I’ve gotten some traffic issues in the past. Now that I’m sober, now that I’m just not going to drive anyone for a while, I think we’re going to be good.”

Jones will look to get one step closer to the title he never lost in the Octagon, as he battles Ovince St. Preux for the interim light heavyweight title at UFC 197 on Saturday, April 23, 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada.