What If Tibau Was To Khabib What Adriano Martins Is To Makhachev?

When 23-year-old Khabib Nurmagomedov had his hand raised as the winner of a unanimous decision over Gleison Tibau at UFC 148, he broke down in tears as if he had just won the championship. In reality, what he had won was even more valuable to him: his …

When 23-year-old Khabib Nurmagomedov had his hand raised as the winner of a unanimous decision over Gleison Tibau at UFC 148, he broke down in tears as if he had just won the championship. In reality, what he had won was even more valuable to him: his perfect record was still intact. Those were the […]

Continue Reading What If Tibau Was To Khabib What Adriano Martins Is To Makhachev? at MMA News.

Report: UFC Releases Four Brazilian Fighters Including Hacran Dias

It appears four Brazilian fighters have been cut from the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) roster. Combate sent on a report claiming that Hacran Dias, Adriano Martins, Henrique da Silva, and Carlos Felipe have been released. Dias leaves the UFC on …

It appears four Brazilian fighters have been cut from the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) roster. Combate sent on a report claiming that Hacran Dias, Adriano Martins, Henrique da Silva, and Carlos Felipe have been released. Dias leaves the UFC on a three-fight skid. He is a training partner and close friend of former featherweight champion […]

UFC FIGHT NIGHT 215 – Undercard Bouts

Illir Latifi vs. Tyson Pedro Ryan Bader with his flying knee really put the nail in the coffin by sending Latifi’s already downward headed ranking out of the top ten. Bader has gone on to become the Bellator champ since then and Latifi on the other hand has a chance to make somewhat of a […]

Illir Latifi vs. Tyson Pedro

Ryan Bader with his flying knee really put the nail in the coffin by sending Latifi’s already downward headed ranking out of the top ten. Bader has gone on to become the Bellator champ since then and Latifi on the other hand has a chance to make somewhat of a comeback when he faces Tyson Pedro. If Latifi gets the better of Pedro in UFC Fight Night 215, he will find himself back in the top ten and that is probably the only thing on his mind right now!

Ashlee Evans-Smith vs. Sarah Moras

Both these fighters have struggled with their UFC careers thus far. At least for one of them, that is about to change at UFC 215. It is not inexperience which has let them down, both these women have a ton of fights under their belts and have yet failed to showcase any real improvement. From the looks of it, the loser here could be on her way out of UFC and into Invicta. Smith has been fighting regularly but the results haven’t turned out as she may have hoped while on the other hand, Moras has had dry spells while out injured.

Gavin Tucker vs. Rick Glenn

Glenn returned to the UFC on UFC fight night 208, but his returning fight did not go the way he would have hoped. The former WSOF featherweight champ really struggled to get going. On the other hand, Tucker made an impressive UFC debut in February and will look to put on just as impressive a fight when he comes up against Glenn. This is going to be a very unpredictable match up, and we will just have to wait and see how it plays out.

Kajan Johnson vs. Adriano Martins

The infamous Kajan Johnson is back after a two month sabbatical. He was thrown out of the UFC athlete retreat after having rejected the Reebok deal. The question on everyone’s mind is if he has been training and kept himself well conditioned, or has he slipped and gotten out of shape? His opponent is going to be Adriano Martins who has been a consistent performer thus far and will certainly be a worthy challenge for Johnson on his return.

UFC on FOX 10: Henderson vs. Thomson — The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly


(Adriano Martins’s kick-face: Ugly, but fantastic. / Screen-shot via CP reader 5knuckleshuffle)

By Mark Dorsey

It’s starting to become a tradition to bring the UFC to Chicago in January, and this time it was particularly cold in the Windy City for UFC on FOX 10. While the preliminary fights provided a lot of excitement, the main card was dragged down by some dull moments. Nevertheless, there’s still quite a lot of stuff to talk about so join us for a final look back at the event with a Clint Eastwood-esque squinty-eyed glare.

The Good

UFC on FOX Production. At this point, the production of the UFC on FOX series is crisp, well-paced, and truly hitting its stride. The broadcast-introduction they’ve been doing with Ving Rhames narrating the story of the main event fighters while suspenseful music plays in the background was intense, as always. (It kicks the ass of the nu-metal “Bring the Pain” intro from the UFC pay-per-views, at least). Hopefully they keep Marsellus Wallace around.

The Fox analyst crew also did a great job, adding even more professionalism to the proceedings. The enthusiastic Daniel Cormier sounded like a seasoned pro joking about gumbo and jambalaya next to old staples Brian Stann and Curt Menefee. The only drawback about the analysts was that they weren’t used enough. The more time they spend breaking down the fights and analyzing the fighters’ skill-sets, the better. In fact, I’d love to see the broadcast kick back to the desk in between every fight, which would help new fans get more familiar with the fighters and wrap their heads around what they just saw.

Cowboy. Donald Cerrone‘s performance was one of the few highlights in an otherwise lackluster main card. Joe Rogan and Mike Goldberg were doing their best to hype Adriano Martins as a worthy opponent, but despite the fact that Martins looked pretty good for a guy Cowboy had never heard of, Cerrone completely out-classed him. Cerrone was patient, picking his shots in the first round until he finally caught Martins with his hands down and landed a knockout shin kick to the head.

After the KO, Cerrone could have landed another shot to his unconscious opponent but to his credit he held back and didn’t follow up with an unnecessary punch. In fact, his calmness after the fight was chilling. The old adage in football when you score a touchdown is to act like you’ve been there before; that’s exactly what Cerrone did, looking like a stone-cold killer.


(Adriano Martins’s kick-face: Ugly, but fantastic. / Screen-shot via CP reader 5knuckleshuffle)

By Mark Dorsey

It’s starting to become a tradition to bring the UFC to Chicago in January, and this time it was particularly cold in the Windy City for UFC on FOX 10. While the preliminary fights provided a lot of excitement, the main card was dragged down by some dull moments. Nevertheless, there’s still quite a lot of stuff to talk about so join us for a final look back at the event with a Clint Eastwood-esque squinty-eyed glare.

The Good

UFC on FOX Production. At this point, the production of the UFC on FOX series is crisp, well-paced, and truly hitting its stride. The broadcast-introduction they’ve been doing with Ving Rhames narrating the story of the main event fighters while suspenseful music plays in the background was intense, as always. (It kicks the ass of the nu-metal “Bring the Pain” intro from the UFC pay-per-views, at least). Hopefully they keep Marsellus Wallace around.

The Fox analyst crew also did a great job, adding even more professionalism to the proceedings. The enthusiastic Daniel Cormier sounded like a seasoned pro joking about gumbo and jambalaya next to old staples Brian Stann and Curt Menefee. The only drawback about the analysts was that they weren’t used enough. The more time they spend breaking down the fights and analyzing the fighters’ skill-sets, the better. In fact, I’d love to see the broadcast kick back to the desk in between every fight, which would help new fans get more familiar with the fighters and wrap their heads around what they just saw.

Cowboy. Donald Cerrone‘s performance was one of the few highlights in an otherwise lackluster main card. Joe Rogan and Mike Goldberg were doing their best to hype Adriano Martins as a worthy opponent, but despite the fact that Martins looked pretty good for a guy Cowboy had never heard of, Cerrone completely out-classed him. Cerrone was patient, picking his shots in the first round until he finally caught Martins with his hands down and landed a knockout shin kick to the head.

After the KO, Cerrone could have landed another shot to his unconscious opponent but to his credit he held back and didn’t follow up with an unnecessary punch. In fact, his calmness after the fight was chilling. The old adage in football when you score a touchdown is to act like you’ve been there before; that’s exactly what Cerrone did, looking like a stone-cold killer.

The performance earned Cowboy the Knockout of the Night bonus — his third such award in the UFC — and put Cerrone ahead of Anderson Silva and Joe Lauzon for the most amount of fight bonuses in Zuffa promotions: 13, when you count his WEC bumps. It was a clear highlight in a card that did not have a lot of them. Next up? Give Cowboy a top-five opponent and let’s see if he can work his way into title contention.

The Bad

Missing Corner Commentary. In an earlier column, I criticized Fox for failing to provide a translation for Edson Barbosa’s corner in between rounds at UFC on Fox 9. The Fox crew blundered again this time around during Jeremy Stephens vs. Darren Elkins when they failed to provide audio for Stephens’s corner in between the first and second round. It’s a small quibble, but as somebody who really enjoys hearing the advice given by the corners during the fight, it was annoying. There’s absolutely no point in even showing the corners if we’re just going to look at the fighters and their trainers. In between rounds is one of the few times we get to hear actual strategy in the midst of the battle, and I wish we’d get to actually hear it.

No title shot for Henderson. After a questionable split-decision win was announced for Benson Henderson, Dana White told the media that a title shot was not likely for Bendo. While I’m certainly not dying to see a third fight between Anthony Pettis and Ben Henderson, the UFC has developed a ranking system [Ed. note: LOL] and guess who the number one lightweight contender is? That’s right, it’s Mr. Smooth himself. Regardless, of whether you like his fighting style or not, Henderson is next in line.

Dana White has said many times that he wants the UFC to be like the NFL and other major league sports. Well let me ask you this: if the Denver Broncos had barely beaten the New England Patriots in a rather boring game do you think they would be prevented from competing in the Super Bowl because Roger Goodell didn’t think it was an impressive performance? Of course not. A win is a win and Bendo earned his title shot. If the UFC wants to match guys up completely subjectively than they should be a bit more honest about it and get rid of the ranking system. Otherwise the rankings are entirely illegitimate. Regardless, it’s clear that one of the biggest stories coming out of Saturday night’s fights is that the UFC has a Benson Henderson problem.

The Ugly

Fox Robots. As mentioned above, the UFC on Fox was really tight and professional from a production standpoint. However, there was an element of production that was just horrible: those damn robots. They’re like something out of that horrible kids’ movie starting Hugh Jackman. The robots have become a staple of Fox Sports programming and as MMA fans we should be getting used to them. However, no matter how many times I see them, I just can’t get over how stupid they are. At UFC on Fox 10, they were out in full force, shadowboxing with the UFC ring girls. Thanks to Mike Goldberg, we learned that the boxing robot has a name: Beatus. Wow. Even company-man Joe Rogan couldn’t hold back his feelings on the robots, lamenting on-air that they should “throw that thing in the garbage.” And that’s one of the reasons people love Joe Rogan so much. He’s not afraid to call it like it is, whether it’s bad refereeing, horrible judging or stupid robots.

Safety issue. With about 40 seconds left in his fight against Darren Elkins, Jeremy Stephens got his foot caught in the gap between the cage and the mat. Rogan and Goldberg were talking about how it appeared that Stephens hurt his leg, and my guess is he was hurt because he briefly caught his foot in the gap. This isn’t the first time fighters have slipped into the crack, and it’s something the UFC really needs to address. If they don’t, somebody’s going to break an ankle, twist their knee, or otherwise get seriously hurt.

UFC on FOX 10 Results: Henderson Wins Questionable Decision Over Thomson


(Luckily, Josh is no stranger to awkwardly intimate encounters. / Photo via MMAJunkie)

The UFC is back on network television tonight with a four-fight FOX broadcast, live from Chicago’s United Center. In the main event, former lightweight champion Benson Henderson attempts to rebound against Josh Thomson, who may earn a title shot with a win here. Plus, heavyweights Gabriel Gonzaga and Stipe Miocic throw bombs until one of them needs to sit down for a while, Donald Cerrone fights some guy he’s never heard of, and Darren Elkins and Jeremy Stephens face off for the right be taken seriously in the featherweight division.

Handling our liveblog of the UFC on FOX 10 main card broadcast is Aaron Mandel, who will be tossing round-by-round results after the jump beginning at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest updates, and be sure to tell us how you feelin’ in the comments section. Thanks for coming.


(Luckily, Josh is no stranger to awkwardly intimate encounters. / Photo via MMAJunkie)

The UFC is back on network television tonight with a four-fight FOX broadcast, live from Chicago’s United Center. In the main event, former lightweight champion Benson Henderson attempts to rebound against Josh Thomson, who may earn a title shot with a win here. Plus, heavyweights Gabriel Gonzaga and Stipe Miocic throw bombs until one of them needs to sit down for a while, Donald Cerrone fights some guy he’s never heard of, and Darren Elkins and Jeremy Stephens face off for the right be taken seriously in the featherweight division.

Handling our liveblog of the UFC on FOX 10 main card broadcast is Aaron Mandel, who will be tossing round-by-round results after the jump beginning at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest updates, and be sure to tell us how you feelin’ in the comments section. Thanks for coming.

Preliminary Card Results
– Alex Caceres def. Sergio Pettis via submission, 4:39 of round 3 (rear-naked choke)
– Eddie Wineland def. Yves Jabouin via TKO, 4:16 of round 2
– Chico Camus def. Yaotzin Meza via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x 2)
– Hugo Viana def. Ramiro Hernandez via unanimous decision (29-28 x 3)
– Daron Cruickshank def. Mike Rio via TKO, 4:56 of round 2
– George Sullivan def. Mike Rhodes via unanimous decision (29-28 x 3)
– Nikita Krylov def. Walt Harris via TKO, 0:25 of round 1

Alright PotatoHeads, it’s time for the main card, refresh early and often for round by round commentary and results, and if you were lucky enough to hear it on the prelims, perhaps Joe Rogan will repeat his hilarious critiques of the FOX robot.

Jeremy Stephens vs. Darren Elkins

Round 1- Low kick lands from Stephens.  Body kick from Stephens.  Shot by Elkins easily stuffed, which does not bode well for the wrestler.  Uppercut lands from Stephens.  Low kick from Stephens.  Two huge punches miss from Stephens.  Takedown from Elkins misses badly.  Elkins slips and Stephens lands on top and hits an elbow as he works to half guard.  Stephens stands up to put it back to striking.  Good right-left from Stephens.  Single from Elkins and Stephens fights it off by jumping three feet in the air trying to knee him while Elkins holds him aloft.  They push against the cage and Stephens is able to fight Elkins off and separate back to striking range.  Uppercut and a left from Stephens.  Left from Elkins grazes Stephens who just took a deep breath.  Huge punches from Stephens but not landing clean and he is putting everything behind them.  Right lands for Stephens as does a knee.  Good body kick by Stephens.  Elkins comes forward with two strikes but they don’t land and the round ends, all Stephens.  10-9 Stephens.

Round 2- Elkins lands a right but Stephens cracks him right back and Elkins seems a little wobbled.  Left high kick grazes Elkins.  Takedown easily stuffed by Stephens.  Right lands from Stephens.  A left tags Stephens and Elkins shoots for a takedown against the cage, Stephens fighting it off.  Stephens separates and starts winging punches again.  Low kick by Stephens as Elkins shoots and it looked painful, although MMA in general looks painful to a wimp like me.  Front kick partially lands by Elkins and he follows it with a left.  Right kick by Elkins and Stephens cracks a right uppercut.  Elkins shoots for a single leg takedown, stuffed again by Stephens.  Head kick by Elkins partially blocked.  Body kick by Elkins.  Body kick by Stephens now.  Left hand lands from Stephens and Elkins is cut under his right eye.  10-9 Stephens.

Round 3- Stephens is in control here, let’s see if he coasts or looks to finish.  Low kick by Stephens.  Body kick by Elkins is caught by Stephens who takes him down but lands in a guillotine. Stephens works out of the guillotine but it was close and Elkins rolls for the guillotine again, has it for a moment but Stephens rolls out and smartly stands up.  Kick from Stephens caught and Elkins tries to take him down but Stephens throws him off.  Right to the body, left to the head by Stephens.  Another takedown stuffed by Stephens and his sprawl and brawl is really working.  Headkicks miss by both fighters.  Left hook lands from Stephens.  Elkins may have clipped Stephens, he ran back and seemed tentative, Elkins charges in swinging and Stephens takes Elkins down, Elkins immediately goes for another guillotine and it is tight but the horn sounds and we are done, wow that was almost a last second hail mary but should be a comfortable decision for Stephens.

Jeremy Stephens defeats Darren Elkins by unanimous decison (30-27 x2, 29-28)

Donald Cerrone vs. Adriano Martins

Martins is sponsored by a sushi delivery company and an oil company, this guy has nothing to lose!

Round 1- Body kick by Martins and it may have hurt Cerrone ala his Pettis fight.  Cerrone recovering and throwing kicks of his own.  Good leg kick by Cerrone.  Head kick misses by Cerrone who follows with a front kick and leg kick.  Martins landing some shots in a good exchange.  Another leg kick by Cerrone whose corner is urging him not to wait.  Martins lands a good shot and Cerrone shoots for a takedown, goes right into full mount but Martins bounces back to the feet all in about 15 seconds.  Body kick by Cerrone.  Right jab lands for Cerrone along with another body kick.  Right head kick lands on the button from Cerrone and Martins falls forward and is out.  Good sportsmanship from Cerrone who avoids any unnecessary strikes.

Cerrone was looking rather pedestrian until the kick, but BOOM, that was all it took.  It was well set up with the steady diet of body kicks and this could be KOTN and yet another bonus for Cerrone.

Donald Cerrone defeats Adriano Martins via KO, 4:40 round 1

Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Stipe Miocic

This should be an interesting style matchup, Gonzaga is clearly more accomplished on the ground but can tend to fall in love with his striking, where Miocic has had his success.  The winner of this will jump near the top 5 at heavyweight.

Round 1- Leg kick by Gonzaga thuds into Miocic to start and Miocic sends one of his own back.  Right hand lands for Gonzaga but Miocic takes it and fires back.  Another leg kick from each fighter and they are hard ones.  Left jab by Gonzaga.  Overhand right by Gonzaga and another low kick.  Overhand right again by Gonzaga but Miocic is blocking and absorbing and firing back.  Miocic slips on a kick and Gonzaga closes the distance and tries for a takedown but Miocic spins away.  Big right hands lands from Gonzaga but Miocic seems fine.  Gonzaga catches a Miocic leg kick and fires a few clean punches back.  Gonzaga shoots a double leg and brings Miocic down but Miocic pops back up.  Gonzaga breathing heavily now after that mostly failed takedown and it could be a factor as Miocic looks fresh despite eating lots of kicks and punches.  10-9 Gonzaga.

Round 2- Leg kick to start by Gonzaga.  Stiff jab by Miocic and an inside leg kick.  Gonzaga looks for a takedown but Miocic sprawls and defends, blocking a Gonzaga high kick on the way out.  Left hook by Gonzaga and pawing jabs and a straight by Miocic.  Gonzaga appears to be fading a bit with three minutes left.  Miocic is picking his volume up.  Gonzaga has thrown nothing in the last minute.  Left head kick from Gonzaga blocked and he sends one low before going back into a largely defensive shell.  Gonzaga falls forward for a takedown but it isn’t pretty and Miocic sprawls out with ease.  Miocic has been teeing off for the last three minutes, Gonzaga blocked most of it but he just stopped throwing early in the round, this could get ugly in the third round. 10-9 Miocic.

Round 3- Leg kick from Gonzaga and a punch, he needs to finish in the early going here because he looks faded. Miocic working a high rate of punches but nothing landing clean.  Leg kick by Miocic.  Gonzaga shoots for a takedown which fails.  Gonzaga tries some kicks and punches but nothing lands, Miocic keeping up a good work rate.  Gonzaga slips and falls back to guard.  Miocic stands over him landing punches.  Gonzaga gets up but slips again and lays back in guard with Miocic standing over him.  Gonzaga seems content to lay down and rest which is also my plan tonight.   Miocic finally dives in with hammer fists sitting up in half guard.  Gonzaga ties up from the bottom but he’s gassed. Miocic postures up and lands some big strikes.  Gonzaga gets up with twenty seconds left and throws a few desperate strikes as the round ends.  The Gonzaga from round 1 and round 3 don’t even seem like the same person, fatigue is a powerful beast. 10-9 Miocic.

Stipe Miocic defeats Gabriel Gonzaga via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28)

And as predicted at the beginning, Joe Rogan clowns on the FOX robot, “they should throw that thing in the garbage.”

Benson Henderson vs. Josh Thomson

They check Henderson for a toothpick at the prep point and it’s main event time! Winner of this may get a title shot and settle all of those WEC/Strikeforce debates that no one had, ever.

Round 1- Something tells me I might be furiously touch typing for 5 rounds here…and we’re set, touch of the gloves and high kick from Henderson to open but it’s blocked.  Punches from Henderson as he flurries in on Thomson who ties up Henderson and throws him to the ground!  Thomson takes Henderson’s back with a body triangle locked in.  Henderson turtles up and Thomson flattens him out.  Henderson rolls and Thomson still has his back but is pressed against the fence.  Thomson wrenches the shoulder joint looking for an armbar or a choke.  Henderson staying calm but not in a good place.  Henderson stands up with Thomson still attached to his back.  Henderson leans against the fence giving Thomson a free ride on his back.  Henderson maneuvers out out into a clinch with over/under.  Henderson puts Thomson against the cage in the clinch but Thomson reverses.  Henderson works knees and then takes Thomson down.  Thomson stands back up but Henderson applies a standing arm triangle!  Henderson cranks it and then falls to his back with the arm triangle locked in.  Thomson frees himself, stands back up and then picks up Henderson and slams him down as the round ends.  Wild round, great grappling! 10-9 Thomson.

Round 2- Body punch from Henderson to start and then another.  Stepping knee lands to the body for Henderson, Thomson catches the leg and tries to work a takedown but cannot.  Henderson clinches again and looks for the standing arm triangle but it’s not there.  They clinch along the fence trading knees and kicks.  Big John McCarthy splits them up and Henderson comes in with a knee, they clinch and Thomson picks him up and slams Henderson down, takes his back again and puts on the body triangle! Henderson stands up with Thomson on his back, Thomson releases his hold and they separate.  Running body punch from Henderson.  Thomson seems content to wait for Henderson to come in and then try to grapple.  The action heats up with an exchange and Henderson runs in with another body punch and kick to the left side of Thomson’s body.  Thomson catches the kick and tries for a takedown but Henderson shows great balance and stays up.  Close round, 10-9 Henderson?

Round 3- Henderson comes out flying with a superman punch and strikes and drives Thomson to the mat.  Henderson on top in full guard but Thomson works back to the feet.  Henderson takes Thomson’s back standing and Rogan thinks Thomson broke his right hand last round which might explain his lack of striking engagement.  They separate back to the feet and Henderson works another strong right hook to the body, he’s thrown a lot of those and they appear to be landing effectively.  They clinch along the cage and then spin out to the middle of the cage.  Thomson throws a right elbow.  Henderson with a body kick that Thomson tries to catch but can’t.  Thomson goes for a takedown but cannot complete it and they clinch along the cage.  Henderson cracks Thomson with an elbow.  Good knee from Henderson, Thomson tries for a takedown but can’t get it.  Thomson slips on a kick and Henderson lands on top in side control.  North-south for Henderson and Josh spins out, grimacing noticeably as he pushes off the ground with his presumably broken hand.  Thomson throws a cartwheel kick that misses and he is slowing down, maybe due to the hand.  10-9 Henderson.

Round 4- Powerful body kick by Henderson which Thomson catches.  Another kick from Henderson.  Low kick from Henderson.  Thomson closes the distance and hits a trip takedown on Henderson, on top in half guard.  Henderson uses rubber guard from the bottom and works strikes from the bottom as well as elbowing the shoulder of Thomson who is stuck.  Thomson pulls his head out, briefly stands, dives back in with punches and rolls for top control.  Henderson powers up and hits a takedown and elbows of his own.  Henderson on top with Thomson against the cage.  Thomson climbs to his feet as Henderson knees his thighs.  Henderson front kicking Thomson’s calves against the cage, weird!  They separate and Thomson clinches and gets another takedown and the body triangle.  Never seen Henderson taken down this much.  Henderson stands again, fixes his hair, and oh yea Thomson is still attached to his back.  Thomson hypes the crowd from Henderson’s back and then falls back down to the mat, wild! 10-9 Henderson.

Round 5- By my very amateur scorecard it’s 3-1 in rounds for Henderson going into the 5th, Ariel Helwani has it exact opposite, 3-1 Thomson.  Henderson misses with a right hook and lands one to the body.  Another huge knee to the body for Henderson.  Leg kick from Henderson.  Thomson cracks Henderson with his right hand!  Leg kick by Thomson drops Henderson but he pops right up.  Three high kicks in a row from Henderson followed by a low kick and you know it’s hurting Thomson to block these.  Rogan thinks Thomson is down and needs to go for broke, thanks for having my back!  Josh catches Hendo’s kick and throws him violently to the ground, takes his back but Henderson stands.  Thomson on Henderson’s back against the cage.  Josh desperately trying to spin Henderson to the ground as they clinch with one minute left.  Clinch grappling all the way here.  They split with 20 seconds left and the horn sounds.  10-9 Henderson.  I think it will be 49-46 Henderson but shit, who knows?  The closest the fight came to being finished was in round 1 by Thomson but there were never any real fight changing moments, just a solid back and forth war.

Benson Henderson defeats Josh Thomson via split decision (49-46, 48-47, 47-48)

And instead of an interview with either fighter we get a UFC 169 promo, wtf?

And that’s all folks!

UFC Booking Alert: Cerrone vs. Martins, Amagov vs. High Added to January Cards


(Hey, right back atcha buddy. / Photo via @Cowboycerrone)

Though he was considering a drop to featherweight following his recent submission win over Evan Dunham at UFC 167, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone will remain at lightweight for his next Octagon appearance, which will take place at UFC on FOX 10: Henderson vs. Thomson (January 25th, Chicago), just two months after his last fight. It was confirmed over the weekend that Cerrone will face Adriano Martins, a Brazilian veteran and former BJJ world champion who won his UFC debut at UFC Fight Night 32 with a Submission of the Night-earning armbar of Daron Cruickshank.

Prior to the Cruickshank win, Martins scored a decision win against Jorge Gurgel at Strikeforce’s final show in January. Those are fairly impressive victories for a fresh UFC prospect, but a meeting with Cerrone is a major step up in competition. We wouldn’t go as far as to call it a squash match, but it’s certainly an unexpected booking for Cowboy, who has consistently faced well-known opponents throughout his UFC career. Still, it’s unlikely that you’ll hear him complain about it. The man loves to fight, and he has to pay for bull-feed somehow.

In other booking news…


(Hey, right back atcha buddy. / Photo via @Cowboycerrone)

Though he was considering a drop to featherweight following his recent submission win over Evan Dunham at UFC 167, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone will remain at lightweight for his next Octagon appearance, which will take place at UFC on FOX 10: Henderson vs. Thomson (January 25th, Chicago), just two months after his last fight. It was confirmed over the weekend that Cerrone will face Adriano Martins, a Brazilian veteran and former BJJ world champion who won his UFC debut at UFC Fight Night 32 with a Submission of the Night-earning armbar of Daron Cruickshank.

Prior to the Cruickshank win, Martins scored a decision win against Jorge Gurgel at Strikeforce’s final show in January. Those are fairly impressive victories for a fresh UFC prospect, but a meeting with Cerrone is a major step up in competition. We wouldn’t go as far as to call it a squash match, but it’s certainly an unexpected booking for Cowboy, who has consistently faced well-known opponents throughout his UFC career. Still, it’s unlikely that you’ll hear him complain about it. The man loves to fight, and he has to pay for bull-feed somehow.

In other booking news…

Part of the new wave of Russian fighters who have been wrecking shit in the UFC this year, welterweight Adlan Amagov will return to action at UFC Fight Night 35: Rockhold vs. Philippou (January 15th; Duluth, GA) where he’ll face Jason High. Amagov went 2-0 in the UFC in 2013, with wins over Chris Spang and TJ Waldburger, while High is riding his own two-fight win streak in the Octagon, most recently dominating Anthony Lapsley to a unanimous decision victory at UFC 167.