Pinnacle FC 9 Undefeated Pro Mark Cherico: This Fight Will Put Me in the UFC

Mark Cherico sees his future clearly, and it’s encased by an octagon of steel. 
Strolling into his Pinnacle Fighting Championships 9 bout with Brian “Boom” Kelleher (10-7), the undefeated Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, product feels he’s just one victo…

Mark Cherico sees his future clearly, and it’s encased by an octagon of steel. 

Strolling into his Pinnacle Fighting Championships 9 bout with Brian “Boom” Kelleher (10-7), the undefeated Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, product feels he’s just one victory away from MMA‘s biggest show: the UFC. 

“I’m not going to do another local fight,” Cherico told Bleacher Report. “I’m so sick of selling tickets and sponsors and all that s**t. This is the fight that’s going to get me in the UFC.” 

His resume certainly builds a strong case. 

Cherico finished all nine of his amateur bouts inside the distance before turning pro in 2012, as he continued his winning ways, rattling off seven straight victories in just over two years’ time—finishing four of them by submission and one via technical knockout (TKO). 

Even more, Cherico is managed by Guardian Sports Group, a team run by ex-UFC fighter Charles McCarthy, which currently houses UFC fighters such as Walt Harris, Alex White and Tecia Torres under its umbrella. 

With the people at Guardian Sports Group behind him, Cherico has already fielded a few offers from the upper leagues, but the timing hasn’t been perfect, and the stars simply haven’t aligned. 

A win Wednesday, Nov. 26, at Pinnacle FC 9, though, and a call from the UFC brass seems inevitable. 

Mark has an unbelievable record and belongs in the UFC,” said Ed Kapp, one of Cherico‘s agents at Guardian Sports Group. “But once we sign with the UFC, that’s when the real fun is going to start and when he’s really going to flourish. Mark does everything he can to finish fightsand finish fights excitingly.

“He also really loves to engage his fans and tell his amazing story. Mark is a superstar in Pittsburgh, and he’s doing everything he can to break through at the national and international levels. It certainly won’t surprise any of us at Team Guardian when that happens.”

While he recognizes this point, Cherico maintains his composure, refusing to look past Kelleher and his bout Wednesday evening. 

“I gotta get past Kelleher first,” Cherico said. “That’s all I’m thinking about right now. I gotta beat Brian Kelleher on Wednesday, and we’ll take it from there.” 

Adding a bit of intrigue to the bout, Cherico‘s Pinnacle FC 9 tilt will take place at a 138-pound catchweight, his first fight below 145 pounds. All seven of Cherico‘s previous pro victories came at featherweight, and the cut to 138 is all part of his strategy, part of his UFC vision. 

“It’s just an easier entrance into the UFC, I think, at 135,” Cherico said.

As Kapp notes, once Cherico breaks through that door and into the UFC, that’s when the fun really begins. 

He’s been otherworldly at the regional levela top prospect since he turned pro in 2012and the UFC can offer the type of matchups that will truly put his skills to test and push him as a fighter and as a person. 

Thankfully, Cherico has a support system in place with his wife, Nicole, and his daughter, Aubree Rose. With these two in his corner, Cherico feels ready to seize the moment, to take what’s his and to ascend to the next level, creating a better future and a better life for his family moving forward. 

“She (Nicole) manages everything around the house, takes care of my daughter,” Cherico said. “The entire fight camp she just lets me be me and focus on the fight. She’s super excited, man, that we’re so close to that dream of being in the UFC. It’s one step closer to better living and that’s always good, too. She can get some more new clothes, some more visits to the casino, all that good stuff [laughs].” 

One more win, one more tick on that undefeated file he calls his fighting record and the goal might just be his for the taking. 

A win over Kelleher will be his 17th in a row since entering the sport as an amateur in 2008.

And in Cherico‘s eyes, 17 might just be his lucky number. 

“I don’t see anywhere he’s (Kelleher‘s) better than me in this fight, so as long as I go out there and stick to our game plan, I’m going to be good to go,” he said. “I’ll just stay ready, keep my weight down, and the call will come. I know it will.” 

 

*All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

AKA Head Javier Mendez Discusses Ways to Lessen Training Camp Injuries

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Daniel Cormier had been training hard for 23 minutes when the accident happened. It was a sparring day, and Cormier was planning on 25 hard minutes in preparation for his January title fight against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. He’d gone three rounds, and then four. He was tired. But by […]

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Daniel Cormier had been training hard for 23 minutes when the accident happened. It was a sparring day, and Cormier was planning on 25 hard minutes in preparation for his January title fight against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. He’d gone three rounds, and then four. He was tired. But by […]

Kazushi Sakuraba vs. Renzo Gracie: Full Video From Metamoris 5

(Props: MetaZapper)

The Metamoris 5 main event between Kazushi Sakuraba and Renzo Gracie ended in a draw on Saturday night, after the 20-minute submission grappling match went the distance. The bout took place over 14 years after the two men first battled at PRIDE 10, where Sakuraba famously won by snapping Renzo’s arm with a kimura.

The complete Renzo Gracie vs. Kazushi Sakuraba Metamoris 5 video is above. Honestly, it was a little boring, but it’s good to see these two old-timers in action again. Full results from the event are after the jump…


(Props: MetaZapper)

The Metamoris 5 main event between Kazushi Sakuraba and Renzo Gracie ended in a draw on Saturday night, after the 20-minute submission grappling match went the distance. The bout took place over 14 years after the two men first battled at PRIDE 10, where Sakuraba famously won by snapping Renzo’s arm with a kimura.

The complete Renzo Gracie vs. Kazushi Sakuraba Metamoris 5 video is above. Honestly, it was a little boring, but it’s good to see these two old-timers in action again. Full results from the event are after the jump…

Gary Tonon def. Zak Maxwell via heel hook

Vinny Magalhaes vs. Matheus Diniz went to a draw

Yuri Simoes vs. Keenan Cornelius went to a draw

Jake Shields vs. Roberto Satoshi went to a draw

Rory MacDonald vs. J.T. Torres went to a draw

Renzo Gracie vs. Kazushi Sakuraba went to a draw

Fortunes changed for five at UFC Fight Night 57

Frankie Edgar’s demolition of Cub Swanson on Saturday night may bring us back to the inevitable fork in the road.
Edgar, based on beating Swanson, and he did far more than just beat him, should be the top contender for Jose Aldo’s featherweight title. That is, if decisions on who gets title shots are based on what one has proven inside the cage.
Conor McGregor should be the top contender for Aldo based on the ability to make people interested in seeing a fight.
The decisions in these circumstances are basically sport vs. business, and in a professional sport, business almost always wins out. The situation is, whether good or bad, was proven by Bellator’s television ratings one week ago. What brings people to the table is not a great fight, but great personalities and great hype for a fight. As long as the public responds like that, these decisions remain hard, and often the most worthy contender often ends up being the one to learn the virtues of patience.
The easy decision, and many would argue the fair decision, is to go with Edgar. Easy, in that everyone running a fight company would love business to be so simple that as long as you match the two best people up all the time, you draw the most fans, most eyeballs, and make the most money. But it’s not an easy business, and that just isn’t the case.
Edgar (18-4-1) destroyed Swanson (21-6), who came in as the No. 2 contender for the title. Edgar was No. 3. They were both ranked behind Chad Mendes, who just lost to Aldo last month. So the winner, by all rights, should get the next title shot. Given that there was no dispute over who won, and that Edgar put on a double exclamation point performance in winning, based on earning a title shot based on what you have done inside the cage, he’s easily the man.
On my scorecard, it was a one-sided beating. I had Edgar with 10-8 rounds in round three and four. Round five was as clear a 10-8 round as you’ll ever see, until Swanson tapped out with four seconds left on the clock.
In actuality, the scoring wasn’t as lopsided as the fight. Two judges gave Swanson the first round and only one judge gave a 10-8 round, Marcos Rosales giving it in round four for Edgar, which leads to other issues for another time.
Edgar proved long ago that he was one of the great fighters of this era by regularly going into the cage and giving up 15 or more pounds as an undersized lightweight. Even though he was smaller than most featherweights and smaller than a lot of bantamweights, Edgar won the lightweight title from B.J. Penn four years ago. At the time, the belief was Penn was unbeatable in that weight class. Then Edgar beat him even more soundly in a rematch. Next, Edgar came back from being as close to losing as possible while still surviving in round one against Gray Maynard twice, only to turn it around for a win and a draw in two legendary fights. While Benson Henderson cleanly beat him for that title, many believe Edgar should have won the rematch.
Instead, he moved to featherweight to face Jose Aldo, where he lost a decision in a competitive fight.
Edgar is not just a guy who wins against guys bigger, but a guy known for exciting fights. He’s had seven fight of the nights, the all-time UFC record-holder in that category. Had it not been for the Paige VanZant vs. Kailin Curran fight tearing down the house in a prelim, Saturday would have been No. 8. So you’ve got a guy who is a great fighter, with a proven track record, whose fights are usually as exciting as they come, and who is respected by everyone.
Except he’s not a major ticket seller.
McGregor may be. He brought a lot of Irish fans to Las Vegas on Sept. 27. He sold out his prior fight in Dublin, Ireland, on a show built around him. One could argue that since it had been so many years since UFC had run in Dublin ,and it was a mid-sized arena, it would have sold out either way. But his popularity did help UFC garner a stronger television deal in Ireland, and he has delivered huge ratings in that country. While everyone talks about him, and he’s a lightning rod for attention given his quick wit and unique fashion sense, the jury is still out on his U.S. drawing power. The real proof  will come on Jan. 18, when he’s called to headline a show in Boston against Dennis Siver.
If McGregor wins that fight, Aldo vs. McGregor could very well be promoted in a soccer stadium. You wind McGregor up, and he talks about selling out an 80,000-seat stadium with Aldo.
Edgar himself knows the value of talking. He got a second fight with Henderson, ahead of Anthony Pettis, because after he lost the title, he spoke as loudly as he could, while Pettis stayed quiet.
And Edgar was hardly quiet after the fight Saturday, fully understanding how the game is played.
“It should be me,” he said after the fight. “Based on my performance, based on what I’ve done in my career, it should be me.”
It’s unlikely any decision on who Aldo faces next will be made before Jan. 18. If McGregor looks unimpressive, Edgar could get the shot. But everyone knows Siver, a shorter, older kickboxer, is there to provide McGregor with solid veteran competition, but no more than that.
“I think everyone wants to see him fight a wrestler,” said Edgar. “Dennis isn’t an easy fight by any means, but it’s not what people want to see him against, a wrestler, or someone who will take him into deep water.”
But even if McGregor scores a quick knockout, his caliber of wins can’t touch that of Edgar, nor can his career record. But until the day comes when Edgar vs. Swanson blows away Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar in public interest anywhere near the level it does in quality of the fighters involved, the UFC will be forced to make the hard decisions.
And if Edgar isn’t getting the next shot, provided he doesn’t lose if he takes another fight, he should be a lock to be next in line to face an Aldo-McGregor winner. That’s provided he makes sure to consistently remind everyone.
“I don’t know if I’ll be angry,” he said about the prospect that he will get the shot after McGregor. “I’ll be disappointed. I won’t be a baby about it. I’ll go back to the gym and win my shot.”
Let’s look at how Fortunes Changed for Five stars of Saturday night’s show.
FRANKIE EDGAR – Edgar’s stock is the highest it has been since his second win over Maynard in one of UFC’s greatest in-cage rivalries. At the age of 33, Saturday may have been his finest performance, mixing up boxing and wrestling while working with a seemingly endless gas tank.
So many wrestlers in the UFC start out strong, may win the first round, but the process of working for takedowns expends so much energy that things reverse later in the fight. Edgar, instead, constantly went for takedowns, but got stronger with each successive round in a five-round affair.
Right now, for Edgar, it’s really a sit-and-wait situation, until the McGregor fight. If he doesn’t get the title shot, there are three possibilities. The most intriguing fight would be with Mendes (16-2). The problem is if Mendes wins that, you’ve knocked off Edgar as a contender, and there are no other contenders ready. Mendes would have to get the next shot and he’s gone 0-2 against Aldo. As exciting as last month’s Aldo vs. Mendes fight was, there’s not much clamor to go back to it so fast.
The other possible opponent would be Ricardo Lamas (15-3), coming off his win last week over Dennis Bermudez. But that’s the same situation, only worse. At least Mendes gave Aldo the fight of his life. Lamas also lost to Aldo, and based on their first meeting, there would be little interest in it again.
For both the UFC and Edgar, putting him in a fight right now, or until he gets a title shot, is a situation where both sides have little to gain and a lot to lose.
CUB SWANSON – Swanson went from someone being talked about for Aldo, into someone who needs to regroup. From his perspective, the highest risk/reward fight to lobby for is Mendes. While the win wouldn’t get him a title shot immediately, it would shoot him back to top three. But Mendes would also be the highest risk in the division for Swanson to lose two straight.
Lamas and Bermudez would be the other strong possibilities for being the right next fight.
EDSON BARBOZA – Barboza (15-2) took all three rounds from Bobby Green to likely move him solidly into the top ten at lightweight.
As far as pure talent goes, speed, power in his hands and feet, and reflexes, Barboza is top tier in this or any other division. The knock on him is that he has a weak chin. He fought No. 4 ranked Donald Cerrone in April, and was cleaning his clock until being hit with a shot and it was lights out.
Most of the top lightweights are booked. Perhaps the best fight for him would be Josh Thomson (20-7), but it’s not clear when, or if, Thomson wants to fight again as he’s been busy running his own gym and has openly talked about potential retirement for the past year.  Past that, or Michael Johnson (15-8), it may be a waiting game to see who wins what fights in the division over the next six weeks.
JOSEPH BENAVIDEZ – The King of Joe Jitsu retained his position as one of the sport’s greatest bridesmaids. Benavidez (21-4), has lost four times in his career, twice to Dominick Cruz when he was a bantamweight and twice to flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson.
In winning all three rounds over Dustin Ortiz, Benavidez retained his No. 1 contender position at flyweight. The strong consensus is that Benavidez is the second-best fighter in the division. But with two losses to the champion, the question becomes how many more wins he needs to get a third shot.
Because of that, and because flyweight is razor-thin when it comes to depth, Benavidez is one of the toughest to book fighters on the roster. Ian McCall and Kyoji Horiguchi should be avoided because Johnson needs opponents and they are two of the few potential foes out there. That leaves Wilson Reis (19-5) and John Lineker (24-7) as the best of the rest.
PAIGE VANZANT – There was a star-making performance on Saturday night, at least to the few who saw it, as VanZant (4-1) made her UFC debut beating Kailin Curran (3-1) in a  women’s strawweight fight.
The fight only aired on Fight Pass. But it tore down the house in Austin, Tex., with more than one standing ovation. It also earned both women fight of the night bonuses.
A sad reality, when it comes to women in sports, is that so much of their marketability is based on looks. Gina Carano was the face of women’s MMA for years, not because she was the best fighter, but because she had a face that ended up getting her into the movies. While Ronda Rousey, and to a lesser extent Miesha Tate, have proven to be two of the best female fighters, much of their marketability is a combination of both looks and fighting ability.
The 20-year-old VanZant came into UFC with the look. VanZant was originally scheduled for the current season of The Ultimate Fighter in the tournament for the women’s strawweight title. But since she hadn’t turned 21, and there alcohol involved in the show, she was pulled out. She’d have likely been the most talked about cast member had she been in the show.
In fighting, looks can only take you so far without ability. What we saw on Saturday was one of the youngest fighters in the organization fight for three rounds at a torrid pace. If she was standing, she was constantly trying to attack. Off her back, she was nonstop going for submissions. As far as how well she will do against top competition, the jury is out.
By not getting her on television, Saturday was a promotional miss. The key in her next fight is to put her in a position where people care about her and her fight. There is an easy fight to do this with, pitting her against Feilce Herrig (9-5). Herrig has the ability to garner attention, and will promote the fight. Put in the right spot on a major show, and it should be on a big show, with the right exposure for the two women, it will garner interest. VanZant, stylistically, looks like she’d probably win that fight. But she doesn’t have to be a champion to be a star. As long as she’s an action fighter put in the spotlight, she can be among the most recognizable faces in the sport.

Frankie Edgar’s demolition of Cub Swanson on Saturday night may bring us back to the inevitable fork in the road.
Edgar, based on beating Swanson, and he did far more than just beat him, should be the top contender for Jose Aldo’s featherweight title. That is, if decisions on who gets title shots are based on what one has proven inside the cage.
Conor McGregor should be the top contender for Aldo based on the ability to make people interested in seeing a fight.
The decisions in these circumstances are basically sport vs. business, and in a professional sport, business almost always wins out. The situation is, whether good or bad, was proven by Bellator’s television ratings one week ago. What brings people to the table is not a great fight, but great personalities and great hype for a fight. As long as the public responds like that, these decisions remain hard, and often the most worthy contender often ends up being the one to learn the virtues of patience.
The easy decision, and many would argue the fair decision, is to go with Edgar. Easy, in that everyone running a fight company would love business to be so simple that as long as you match the two best people up all the time, you draw the most fans, most eyeballs, and make the most money. But it’s not an easy business, and that just isn’t the case.
Edgar (18-4-1) destroyed Swanson (21-6), who came in as the No. 2 contender for the title. Edgar was No. 3. They were both ranked behind Chad Mendes, who just lost to Aldo last month. So the winner, by all rights, should get the next title shot. Given that there was no dispute over who won, and that Edgar put on a double exclamation point performance in winning, based on earning a title shot based on what you have done inside the cage, he’s easily the man.
On my scorecard, it was a one-sided beating. I had Edgar with 10-8 rounds in round three and four. Round five was as clear a 10-8 round as you’ll ever see, until Swanson tapped out with four seconds left on the clock.
In actuality, the scoring wasn’t as lopsided as the fight. Two judges gave Swanson the first round and only one judge gave a 10-8 round, Marcos Rosales giving it in round four for Edgar, which leads to other issues for another time.
Edgar proved long ago that he was one of the great fighters of this era by regularly going into the cage and giving up 15 or more pounds as an undersized lightweight. Even though he was smaller than most featherweights and smaller than a lot of bantamweights, Edgar won the lightweight title from B.J. Penn four years ago. At the time, the belief was Penn was unbeatable in that weight class. Then Edgar beat him even more soundly in a rematch. Next, Edgar came back from being as close to losing as possible while still surviving in round one against Gray Maynard twice, only to turn it around for a win and a draw in two legendary fights. While Benson Henderson cleanly beat him for that title, many believe Edgar should have won the rematch.
Instead, he moved to featherweight to face Jose Aldo, where he lost a decision in a competitive fight.
Edgar is not just a guy who wins against guys bigger, but a guy known for exciting fights. He’s had seven fight of the nights, the all-time UFC record-holder in that category. Had it not been for the Paige VanZant vs. Kailin Curran fight tearing down the house in a prelim, Saturday would have been No. 8. So you’ve got a guy who is a great fighter, with a proven track record, whose fights are usually as exciting as they come, and who is respected by everyone.
Except he’s not a major ticket seller.
McGregor may be. He brought a lot of Irish fans to Las Vegas on Sept. 27. He sold out his prior fight in Dublin, Ireland, on a show built around him. One could argue that since it had been so many years since UFC had run in Dublin ,and it was a mid-sized arena, it would have sold out either way. But his popularity did help UFC garner a stronger television deal in Ireland, and he has delivered huge ratings in that country. While everyone talks about him, and he’s a lightning rod for attention given his quick wit and unique fashion sense, the jury is still out on his U.S. drawing power. The real proof  will come on Jan. 18, when he’s called to headline a show in Boston against Dennis Siver.
If McGregor wins that fight, Aldo vs. McGregor could very well be promoted in a soccer stadium. You wind McGregor up, and he talks about selling out an 80,000-seat stadium with Aldo.
Edgar himself knows the value of talking. He got a second fight with Henderson, ahead of Anthony Pettis, because after he lost the title, he spoke as loudly as he could, while Pettis stayed quiet.
And Edgar was hardly quiet after the fight Saturday, fully understanding how the game is played.
“It should be me,” he said after the fight. “Based on my performance, based on what I’ve done in my career, it should be me.”
It’s unlikely any decision on who Aldo faces next will be made before Jan. 18. If McGregor looks unimpressive, Edgar could get the shot. But everyone knows Siver, a shorter, older kickboxer, is there to provide McGregor with solid veteran competition, but no more than that.
“I think everyone wants to see him fight a wrestler,” said Edgar. “Dennis isn’t an easy fight by any means, but it’s not what people want to see him against, a wrestler, or someone who will take him into deep water.”
But even if McGregor scores a quick knockout, his caliber of wins can’t touch that of Edgar, nor can his career record. But until the day comes when Edgar vs. Swanson blows away Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar in public interest anywhere near the level it does in quality of the fighters involved, the UFC will be forced to make the hard decisions.
And if Edgar isn’t getting the next shot, provided he doesn’t lose if he takes another fight, he should be a lock to be next in line to face an Aldo-McGregor winner. That’s provided he makes sure to consistently remind everyone.
“I don’t know if I’ll be angry,” he said about the prospect that he will get the shot after McGregor. “I’ll be disappointed. I won’t be a baby about it. I’ll go back to the gym and win my shot.”
Let’s look at how Fortunes Changed for Five stars of Saturday night’s show.
FRANKIE EDGAR – Edgar’s stock is the highest it has been since his second win over Maynard in one of UFC’s greatest in-cage rivalries. At the age of 33, Saturday may have been his finest performance, mixing up boxing and wrestling while working with a seemingly endless gas tank.
So many wrestlers in the UFC start out strong, may win the first round, but the process of working for takedowns expends so much energy that things reverse later in the fight. Edgar, instead, constantly went for takedowns, but got stronger with each successive round in a five-round affair.
Right now, for Edgar, it’s really a sit-and-wait situation, until the McGregor fight. If he doesn’t get the title shot, there are three possibilities. The most intriguing fight would be with Mendes (16-2). The problem is if Mendes wins that, you’ve knocked off Edgar as a contender, and there are no other contenders ready. Mendes would have to get the next shot and he’s gone 0-2 against Aldo. As exciting as last month’s Aldo vs. Mendes fight was, there’s not much clamor to go back to it so fast.
The other possible opponent would be Ricardo Lamas (15-3), coming off his win last week over Dennis Bermudez. But that’s the same situation, only worse. At least Mendes gave Aldo the fight of his life. Lamas also lost to Aldo, and based on their first meeting, there would be little interest in it again.
For both the UFC and Edgar, putting him in a fight right now, or until he gets a title shot, is a situation where both sides have little to gain and a lot to lose.
CUB SWANSON – Swanson went from someone being talked about for Aldo, into someone who needs to regroup. From his perspective, the highest risk/reward fight to lobby for is Mendes. While the win wouldn’t get him a title shot immediately, it would shoot him back to top three. But Mendes would also be the highest risk in the division for Swanson to lose two straight.
Lamas and Bermudez would be the other strong possibilities for being the right next fight.
EDSON BARBOZA – Barboza (15-2) took all three rounds from Bobby Green to likely move him solidly into the top ten at lightweight.
As far as pure talent goes, speed, power in his hands and feet, and reflexes, Barboza is top tier in this or any other division. The knock on him is that he has a weak chin. He fought No. 4 ranked Donald Cerrone in April, and was cleaning his clock until being hit with a shot and it was lights out.
Most of the top lightweights are booked. Perhaps the best fight for him would be Josh Thomson (20-7), but it’s not clear when, or if, Thomson wants to fight again as he’s been busy running his own gym and has openly talked about potential retirement for the past year.  Past that, or Michael Johnson (15-8), it may be a waiting game to see who wins what fights in the division over the next six weeks.
JOSEPH BENAVIDEZ – The King of Joe Jitsu retained his position as one of the sport’s greatest bridesmaids. Benavidez (21-4), has lost four times in his career, twice to Dominick Cruz when he was a bantamweight and twice to flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson.
In winning all three rounds over Dustin Ortiz, Benavidez retained his No. 1 contender position at flyweight. The strong consensus is that Benavidez is the second-best fighter in the division. But with two losses to the champion, the question becomes how many more wins he needs to get a third shot.
Because of that, and because flyweight is razor-thin when it comes to depth, Benavidez is one of the toughest to book fighters on the roster. Ian McCall and Kyoji Horiguchi should be avoided because Johnson needs opponents and they are two of the few potential foes out there. That leaves Wilson Reis (19-5) and John Lineker (24-7) as the best of the rest.
PAIGE VANZANT – There was a star-making performance on Saturday night, at least to the few who saw it, as VanZant (4-1) made her UFC debut beating Kailin Curran (3-1) in a  women’s strawweight fight.
The fight only aired on Fight Pass. But it tore down the house in Austin, Tex., with more than one standing ovation. It also earned both women fight of the night bonuses.
A sad reality, when it comes to women in sports, is that so much of their marketability is based on looks. Gina Carano was the face of women’s MMA for years, not because she was the best fighter, but because she had a face that ended up getting her into the movies. While Ronda Rousey, and to a lesser extent Miesha Tate, have proven to be two of the best female fighters, much of their marketability is a combination of both looks and fighting ability.
The 20-year-old VanZant came into UFC with the look. VanZant was originally scheduled for the current season of The Ultimate Fighter in the tournament for the women’s strawweight title. But since she hadn’t turned 21, and there alcohol involved in the show, she was pulled out. She’d have likely been the most talked about cast member had she been in the show.
In fighting, looks can only take you so far without ability. What we saw on Saturday was one of the youngest fighters in the organization fight for three rounds at a torrid pace. If she was standing, she was constantly trying to attack. Off her back, she was nonstop going for submissions. As far as how well she will do against top competition, the jury is out.
By not getting her on television, Saturday was a promotional miss. The key in her next fight is to put her in a position where people care about her and her fight. There is an easy fight to do this with, pitting her against Feilce Herrig (9-5). Herrig has the ability to garner attention, and will promote the fight. Put in the right spot on a major show, and it should be on a big show, with the right exposure for the two women, it will garner interest. VanZant, stylistically, looks like she’d probably win that fight. But she doesn’t have to be a champion to be a star. As long as she’s an action fighter put in the spotlight, she can be among the most recognizable faces in the sport.

The MMA Hour with Russell Peters in studio, Tyron Woodley, Matt Wiman, Ben Rothwell, Will Brooks, Garry Cook

The MMA Hour is back in your life. Below is a rundown of Monday’s show:
1 p.m. ET — Matt Wiman will talk about his win over Isaac Vallie-Flagg on Saturday after an almost two-year hiatus from the UFC.
1:25 p.m. — Welterweight contender Tyron Wood…

The MMA Hour is back in your life. Below is a rundown of Monday’s show:

1 p.m. ET — Matt Wiman will talk about his win over Isaac Vallie-Flagg on Saturday after an almost two-year hiatus from the UFC.

1:25 p.m. — Welterweight contender Tyron Woodley will preview his UFC 183 fight against Kelvin Gastelum and the tumultuous times in his hometown of Ferguson, MO.

1:45 p.m. — Bellator lightweight champion Will Brooks will discuss his win over Michael Chandler last week.

2:05 p.m. — Heavyweight Ben Rothwell will talk about his recent win over Alistair Overeem and what’s next for him.

2:25 p.m. — UFC executive Gary Cook will discuss his new role as the promotion’s chief global officer.

2:45 p.m. — Comedian Russell Peters will stop…

Morning Report: ‘Exposed,’ Cub Swanson thanks Frankie Edgar for teaching him a lesson

While Conor McGregor and Cub Swanson debated who had the better right to next face UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo, former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar was a forgotten third wheel.

Unfortunately for Swanson, and maybe Edgar, the former champ only got to fight once Saturday night in Austin.

With Edgar crushing his title hopes over the course of five rounds, Swanson sounded blindsided speaking to FOX Sports post-fight in Texas.

“Obviously it was super frustrating,” Swanson of his performance. “[Edgar] did what he had to do and he exposed me. I was super confident. I thought I prepared and obviously underprepared. I want to thank him for a lesson and I’m going to be better.”

Finding the night’s silver lining, Swanson said Edgar showed him exactly where he needs to refocus after being repeatedly taken down and pinned to the mat.

“He was able to expose it,” said Swanson. “I took this fight because I believed he was one of the best in the world at a lower weight class and I wanted to test myself. I’m getting up there in age and I wanted to see how bad I am. I know I took a beating but I was still hopeful all the way to the end.”

Edgar’s submission stoppage at 4:56 of round five earned him the distinction of the latest finish in UFC history, but Swanson said those four seconds just weren’t enough for him.

“He landed a lot of elbows on my jaw so my jaw was pretty tired. I kept turning, turning, turning and I was like, ‘He is not going to finish me. Nope.’ He cranked, my mouth was open and he cranked my jaw pretty hard. I don’t want a broken jaw again. I’ve lived through that so oh well.”

Admirably upbeat, Swanson reaffirmed that even professional boxing could still be in his future.

“Always,” said Swanson. “I want to test myself. I enjoy these things. If you want to be the best, sometimes you get the raw end of the deal. It’s life.”

Star-divide

5 MUST-READ STORIES

‘Hardcore imaginings.’ Chuck Mindenhall explains how Metamoris wins even when it draws. “When Rory MacDonald got caught there for a minute he said he was going to let J.T. Torres break his arm, if that was the way it had to happen. This is man assured of a title shot in the UFC, waiting the winner of Robbie Lawler and Johny Hendricks, who was willing to throw it all away in a moment of pure competition. Because that’s what the thing is: Pure.”

‘I’ve done enough.’ Frankie Edgar calls for a UFC title shot after routing Cub Swanson.

‘I’m the right guy for the job nowadays.’ Nick Diaz wonders why he accepted fights in the past against ‘mediocre level opponents.’

‘He’s Bill Cosby — he shouldn’t have to take it.’ UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones doesn’t believe Bill Cosby is guilty of allegations of sexually assaulting more than 15 different women because he’s wealthy.

‘Not a chance.’ Luke Rockhold doesn’t think Jon Jones could ever beat Cain Velasquez.

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MEDIA STEW

Star-divide

Highlights from Frankie Edgar vs. Cub Swanson.

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Frankie Edgar’s post-fight Octagon interview.

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UFC Fight Night: Austin’s post-fight press conference highlights. (Full presser here)

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Ronda Rousey on who she’d like to face after Cat Zingano.

Star-divide

Manny Pacquiao: I’m ready to face Mayweather.

Star-divide

TTTHS.

Star-divide

Long watches.

Manny Pacquiao vs. Chris Algieri 13th Round post-fight review & analysis

Star-divide

TWEETS

Check out our pros react piece for instant reaction to UFC Fight Night: Edgar vs. Swanson.

Star-divide

Victory lap.

What it’s all about! Nothing better than coming home to my babies! http://t.co/7SvmED5L66

– Frankie Edgar (@FrankieEdgar) November 23, 2014

Matthew 18:20 – “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I with them” Independente of victory or defeat the Lord’s name was glorified last night!

Mateus 18.20 – “Porque,onde estiverem dois ou três reunidos em meu nome, ai estou eu no meio deles”… http://t.co/x1kU4A3cgZ

Edson Barboza (@EdsonBarbozaJR) November 23, 2014

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. @Torque1net @MMAInc @LexaniWheels

Chico Camus (@KOMCamus) November 23, 2014

Austin is an awesome town! Enjoyed relaxing and walking around with my lady today! ❤️ pic.twitter.com/UGhBSQLBia

Joseph Benavidez (@JoeJitsu) November 24, 2014

Thank you to all my fans and friends for all the support, also special thanks to @akajav & @dc_mma for helping me to get this win. @ufc #UFC

Ruslan Magomedov (@MagomedovUFC) November 23, 2014

People may doubt me, but it’s those who believe in me that makes the grind worthwhile http://t.co/CiNWJN06iF pic.twitter.com/4RGLiqPQks

Roger Narvaez (@Silverback316) November 24, 2014

Thank y’all so much for everything!! @vickiirvin: @JamesVickMMA congrats to the hard working Vick on his UFC win! 7-0! Proud of you!!

James Vick (@JamesVickMMA) November 23, 2014

………and this is only the beginning!! pic.twitter.com/91TNuizSdq

– Paige Vanzant (@PAIGEVANZANT) November 24, 2014

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Better luck next time.

I’m ok 🙂 I appreciate all the support. I’ll be back

– Cub Swanson (@CubSwanson) November 23, 2014

All I can say is that I’m so GUTTED I’m sorry for all the people I let down

Brad Pickett (@One_Punch) November 23, 2014

Have lost many times in my competitive careers but always learn and come back better. I’ll get back on track.

Jared Rosholt (@JaredRosholt) November 23, 2014

Victory or Defeat.. Either way I’m Landing on my Feet. Stay Choppin @ufc @frog1john Thanks… http://t.co/Voq69KDO4O

Dustin Ortiz (@DustinOrtizMMA) November 23, 2014

Post fight after we had a heart to heart 🙂 pic.twitter.com/nZk4pNIeOS

– ike vallie-flagg (@IKEVF) November 23, 2014

Got my eye knocked in the fight by a toe… It was blurry or black at times. Next time I promise I’ll fight… http://t.co/vPtNSWVMBS

– Joshua Copeland (@joshcuddlybear) November 23, 2014

Theres no shame in failure Im pouring my heart & soul into something I love, thats winning in my book.. I have more direction now than ever

– Bigslow (@LukeBarnatt) November 23, 2014

I am laying down in my Hotel-room and rethink the hole evening! What a day! Didn’t go the way i prefered, but in the end it’s a fistfight! I am so proud of my Fans and supporters all over Germany, USA and the world!
I would have never expected the Texan homecrowd to “booooh” their hometown favorite and cheer for me!
I am looking forward to go home but i am gratefull for all the new friends and fans from the States! Thanks to my Team and special thanks to Sascha!
Thanks GOD for everyday

Was für ein Abend! Ich bin grade auf meinem Hotelzimmer und fühle mich ein bischen leer! Es ist nicht ganz… http://t.co/O0UqZ3RtDE

Nick Hein (@NickHeinMMA) November 23, 2014

Awrighhhtt last leg of the flight of too bad here I come HAWAII ✈️

– KailinCurran (@KailinCurran) November 24, 2014

Acabo de publicar una foto http://t.co/KVGE0Okhnf

– Juan Puig (@JuanFenixPuig) November 24, 2014

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How bout the weather?

Meeting of the minds. Lots of respect for all here especially my good friend Mr. Silva. http://t.co/XCtN1TAS0r

Chris Weidman (@ChrisWeidmanUFC) November 21, 2014

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Excellent.

@MetamorisPro having the chance to sweat with one of my heros.. Thank you Sakuraba pic.twitter.com/0Phszs8dmb

— Renzo_Gracie_BJJ (@RenzoGracieBJJ) November 24, 2014

@RenzoGracieBJJ @MetamorisPro Thank you!!

— Sakuraba39 Staff (@KS_SAKU39) November 24, 2014

With saku and apple http://t.co/vbSzQl5SYe pic.twitter.com/mh0Iu1f1Vj

Jake Shields (@jakeshieldsajj) November 24, 2014

.@Rory_MacDonald came to engage at @MetamorisPro 5! || http://t.co/QozIzVRILg pic.twitter.com/2nkEJMCAzw

— Metamoris (@MetamorisPro) November 24, 2014

#Metamoris5 was awesome! An honor to see #Sakuraba & #RenzoGracie compete against each oth… http://t.co/pDPOGcQG53 pic.twitter.com/PRo3BYGhHV

Kenny Florian (@kennyflorian) November 23, 2014

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Really?

For 13 years I have wanted to watch the @ufc in a bar. Tonight is finally that night!!! Cub vs Frankie… http://t.co/GDGibv2scn

Dana White (@danawhite) November 23, 2014

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Sounds good.

I was just randomly drug tested for the 1st time. Great for the sport.Out of comp testing coming to a home near you!

— Chris Weidman (@ChrisWeidmanUFC) November 21, 2014

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Very cool.

It’s official. I am a American citizen! Very proud of this moment, God bless America! !… http://t.co/iRxnWNCNE7

Thiago Alves. (@ThiagoAlvesATT) November 21, 2014

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Sweeeeden.

Countdown has started @ufc #thetimeisnow #ufcsweden http://t.co/tZ7qX9jClf

Alexander Gustafsson (@AlexTheMauler) November 23, 2014

This is crazy it gets dark at 3:30pm in Sweden! In Florida there’s plenty of sunlight and it’s warm!

Anthony Johnson (@Anthony_Rumble) November 23, 2014

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Whoa.

99 problems but our skin ain’t 1 !!! @sergiopettis #teampettishttp://t.co/vJbuFib1Kc

Anthony Pettis (@Showtimepettis) November 24, 2014

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ICYMI.

ok @SInowLIVE @ufc @TheNotoriousMMA, Conor wins. I don’t hit featherweights or shoeshine boys. Mouth off to @BrockLesnar fella, I’m injured.

— Sheamus (@WWESheamus) November 21, 2014

Had bigger dumps after a salad @TheNotoriousMMA lad. U can hold @BrockLesnar‘s @WWE title while the big boys duke-it-out. Win @ufc title 1st

— Sheamus (@WWESheamus) November 21, 2014

Phoney? @TheNotoriousMMA @BrockLesnar @WWE @ufc haha that last lad you ‘knocked-out’ went down on the breeze of a punch… #NeverConnected

— Sheamus (@WWESheamus) November 21, 2014

Whereas you talk for a living son & we all know who’s ass @TheNotoriousMMA is kissing nightly. #LittleManBigChip

— Sheamus (@WWESheamus) November 21, 2014

@WWESheamus I’ll whoop you at your own game, then we can toast a whiskey and talk about true fighting. Always remember #UFCAsRealAsItGets

— Conor McGregor (@TheNotoriousMMA) November 21, 2014

Star-divide

FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced this weekend (Nov. 21-23 2014)

Josh Koscheck vs. Neil Magny at UFC 184

Marcus Brimage vs. Cody Garbrandt at UFC 182

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FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Jet”Streetfighter”Feds.

So How About Mendes vs Edgar?

I don’t know about you guys, but I did NOT expect Frankie Edgar to dominate Cub Swanson the way he did. Besides Aldo, the only other contender I can see with enough wrestling chops, ability to maintain a frenetic pace, high output, endurance and explosiveness to hang with Edgar IS Chad Mendes.

I know when it comes to matching up rising contenders with those coming off a loss is rare and generally frowned upon, but hear me out on this. Why not match Mendes vs Edgar either around the same time or a month after McGregor/Siver (McG gets title shot with win), and match up Swanson with Bermudez? Aldo/Mendes 2 was exciting and so was Aldo/Edgar 1 so whoever wins gets a crack (again) or at least pair these two up later on (providing each of them wins again against opponents I can’t think to match them up against in the interim).

Check out the rest of the post here.

Star-divide

Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

While Conor McGregor and Cub Swanson debated who had the better right to next face UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo, former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar was a forgotten third wheel.

Unfortunately for Swanson, and maybe Edgar, the former champ only got to fight once Saturday night in Austin.

With Edgar crushing his title hopes over the course of five rounds, Swanson sounded blindsided speaking to FOX Sports post-fight in Texas.

“Obviously it was super frustrating,” Swanson of his performance. “[Edgar] did what he had to do and he exposed me. I was super confident. I thought I prepared and obviously underprepared. I want to thank him for a lesson and I’m going to be better.”

Finding the night’s silver lining, Swanson said Edgar showed him exactly where he needs to refocus after being repeatedly taken down and pinned to the mat.

“He was able to expose it,” said Swanson. “I took this fight because I believed he was one of the best in the world at a lower weight class and I wanted to test myself. I’m getting up there in age and I wanted to see how bad I am. I know I took a beating but I was still hopeful all the way to the end.”

Edgar’s submission stoppage at 4:56 of round five earned him the distinction of the latest finish in UFC history, but Swanson said those four seconds just weren’t enough for him.

“He landed a lot of elbows on my jaw so my jaw was pretty tired. I kept turning, turning, turning and I was like, ‘He is not going to finish me. Nope.’ He cranked, my mouth was open and he cranked my jaw pretty hard. I don’t want a broken jaw again. I’ve lived through that so oh well.”

Admirably upbeat, Swanson reaffirmed that even professional boxing could still be in his future.

“Always,” said Swanson. “I want to test myself. I enjoy these things. If you want to be the best, sometimes you get the raw end of the deal. It’s life.”

Star-divide

5 MUST-READ STORIES

‘Hardcore imaginings.’ Chuck Mindenhall explains how Metamoris wins even when it draws. “When Rory MacDonald got caught there for a minute he said he was going to let J.T. Torres break his arm, if that was the way it had to happen. This is man assured of a title shot in the UFC, waiting the winner of Robbie Lawler and Johny Hendricks, who was willing to throw it all away in a moment of pure competition. Because that’s what the thing is: Pure.”

‘I’ve done enough.’ Frankie Edgar calls for a UFC title shot after routing Cub Swanson.

‘I’m the right guy for the job nowadays.’ Nick Diaz wonders why he accepted fights in the past against ‘mediocre level opponents.’

‘He’s Bill Cosby — he shouldn’t have to take it.’ UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones doesn’t believe Bill Cosby is guilty of allegations of sexually assaulting more than 15 different women because he’s wealthy.

‘Not a chance.’ Luke Rockhold doesn’t think Jon Jones could ever beat Cain Velasquez.

Star-divide

MEDIA STEW

Star-divide

Highlights from Frankie Edgar vs. Cub Swanson.

Star-divide

Frankie Edgar’s post-fight Octagon interview.

Star-divide

UFC Fight Night: Austin’s post-fight press conference highlights. (Full presser here)

Star-divide

Ronda Rousey on who she’d like to face after Cat Zingano.

Star-divide

Manny Pacquiao: I’m ready to face Mayweather.

Star-divide

TTTHS.

Star-divide

Long watches.

Manny Pacquiao vs. Chris Algieri 13th Round post-fight review & analysis

Star-divide

TWEETS

Check out our pros react piece for instant reaction to UFC Fight Night: Edgar vs. Swanson.

Star-divide

Victory lap.

Matthew 18:20 – “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I with them” Independente of victory or defeat the Lord’s name was glorified last night!

Star-divide

Better luck next time.

I am laying down in my Hotel-room and rethink the hole evening! What a day! Didn’t go the way i prefered, but in the end it’s a fistfight! I am so proud of my Fans and supporters all over Germany, USA and the world!
I would have never expected the Texan homecrowd to “booooh” their hometown favorite and cheer for me!
I am looking forward to go home but i am gratefull for all the new friends and fans from the States! Thanks to my Team and special thanks to Sascha!
Thanks GOD for everyday

Star-divide

How bout the weather?

Star-divide

Excellent.

Star-divide

Really?

Star-divide

Sounds good.

Star-divide

Very cool.

Star-divide

Sweeeeden.

Star-divide

Whoa.

Star-divide

ICYMI.

Star-divide

FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced this weekend (Nov. 21-23 2014)

Josh Koscheck vs. Neil Magny at UFC 184

Marcus Brimage vs. Cody Garbrandt at UFC 182

Star-divide

FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes via Jet”Streetfighter”Feds.

So How About Mendes vs Edgar?

I don’t know about you guys, but I did NOT expect Frankie Edgar to dominate Cub Swanson the way he did. Besides Aldo, the only other contender I can see with enough wrestling chops, ability to maintain a frenetic pace, high output, endurance and explosiveness to hang with Edgar IS Chad Mendes.

I know when it comes to matching up rising contenders with those coming off a loss is rare and generally frowned upon, but hear me out on this. Why not match Mendes vs Edgar either around the same time or a month after McGregor/Siver (McG gets title shot with win), and match up Swanson with Bermudez? Aldo/Mendes 2 was exciting and so was Aldo/Edgar 1 so whoever wins gets a crack (again) or at least pair these two up later on (providing each of them wins again against opponents I can’t think to match them up against in the interim).

Check out the rest of the post here.

Star-divide

Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.