UFC 155: Dos Santos vs. Velasquez II — Main Card Results & Commentary


(What a crazy year it’s been. Just think, four weeks ago that bald guy in the middle was actually homeless. / Photo courtesy of Esther Lin’s UFC 155 weigh-in set on MMAFighting.com)

UFC 155 might not be as epic as some of the UFC’s previous end-of-year cards (you can blame the injury curse for that), but any time the Heavyweight Championship of the World is at stake, it’s must-see TV.

Tonight, defending champ Junior Dos Santos will try to keep the train a-rollin’ in a rematch with his old pal Cain Velasquez. Meanwhile in the co-main event, lightweights Joe Lauzon and Jim Miller will gobble up as many performance bonuses as they can get their little hands on. Plus, six middleweight contenders — including Tim Boetsch, Alan Belcher, and Chris Leben — will swing their ham-hock fists at each other, in the hopes that the most popular kid in school might notice them. Lotsa luck, ladies.

Running our final liveblog of the year (!) will be none other than Elias Cepeda, who will be updating you with round-by-round results after the jump starting at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please share your New Year’s resolutions in the comments section.


(What a crazy year it’s been. Just think, four weeks ago that bald guy in the middle was actually homeless. / Photo courtesy of Esther Lin’s UFC 155 weigh-in set on MMAFighting.com)

UFC 155 might not be as epic as some of the UFC’s previous end-of-year cards (you can blame the injury curse for that), but any time the Heavyweight Championship of the World is at stake, it’s must-see TV.

Tonight, defending champ Junior Dos Santos will try to keep the train a-rollin’ in a rematch with his old pal Cain Velasquez. Meanwhile in the co-main event, lightweights Joe Lauzon and Jim Miller will gobble up as many performance bonuses as they can get their little hands on. Plus, six middleweight contenders — including Tim Boetsch, Alan Belcher, and Chris Leben — will swing their ham-hock fists at each other, in the hopes that the most popular kid in school might notice them. Lotsa luck, ladies.

Running our final liveblog of the year (!) will be none other than Elias Cepeda, who will be updating you with round-by-round results after the jump starting at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please share your New Year’s resolutions in the comments section.

Chris Leben vs. Derek Brunson

Brunson rocking the classic private entrance song on the headphones walk to the cage. Leben using the Red Hot Chili Peppers to get amped as he walks to the UFC Octagon for the twentieth time.

 Rd 1

Brunson leads with left kicks that miss. Leben catches another, tries but fails to get a sweep take down. Brunson counters with his own take down slam.

They work from Leben’s full guard. Brunson stands and tries to pass the guard but is sucked back into the full guard. Leben working an arm bar, Brunson defends. Leben switches to a triangle choke attempt, then another arm bar and Brunson slams his way out of the hold.

Brunson works to the half guard of Leben but the Cat Smasher recovers his full guard. brunson standing and throwing short elbows to the head of Leben. Leben trying to control the wrists and head of Brunson. Brunson stands and passes Leben’s guard, then works into the mount and an arm triangle choke attempt.

Leben rolls and gets a weak half guard back. Brunson lands a big elbow from on top of Leben in his half guard. Minute and a half left. Brunson staying low, trying to keep pressure on Leben. The wrestler begins to get off pot shots again. Leben recomposes to full guard and shoots for an arm bar that is easily defended by Brunson.

Leben is backed up against the cage and tries to stand back up with under a minute left. Leben up to his feet with under thirty seconds left, Brunson briefly takes his back then presses Leben up against the cage. The two separate and the bell ends with them in the center of the ring.

Rd 2

Brunson leads with another high kick. Leben catches it and throws a straight right down the pipe that lands on Brunson’s chin. Brunson wobbled but steadies himself. He shoots in and drives Leben backwards into the fence.

Leben defends the take down attempt well as well as Brunson’s follow up attempts from the double under hooks. Brunson gets tagged on the feet but Brunson shoots in again and scores the take down.

Leben working little hammer shots from the bottom in his full guard. Leben throws up a weak arm bar attempt and Brunson stands up to try striking. Leben cage walks and gets back to his feet. Brunson tries a guillotine choke but Leben easily defends.

Leben lands a big uppercut but Brunson returns fire and stuns Leben with punches of his own. Both men are tired but Leben moves forward. Leben is beginning to score with the round house kick to the leg. Brunson with a one-two punch combination that lands.

Brunson with another straight shot down the pipe to Leben’s head. Leben lands a jab then another leg kick. Brunson closes the distance off of a Leben leg kick and presses Leben backwards against the cage.

Leben frees himself and they are back in the center of the ring. Leben is stalking Brunson and throwing more punches. Brunson looks unsteady on his feet. Leben with another leg kick. Brunson attempts another take down. Leben defends the shot but is working with his back to the cage. Leben circles away from the cage once more and goes back to walking down Brunson. Leben fires a wide looping left hook that misses and the horn sounds.

Rd 3

Brunson lands a glancing lead punch. Brunson lands the double leg take down and presses Leben against the cage. Leben cage walks and returns to his feet. Leben lands another leg kick. Brunson land another big straight punch, shoots for a take down and gets stuffed. Leben throws and misses a big upper cut.

Leben wading in on a tiring Brunson but doesn’t land much. He does land a left that appears to knock mouth guard out. brunson takes Leben down but stands back up after a few moments. Ten seconds left and Leben and Brunson are both swinging big.

The horn sounds and Brunson lets out a celebratory scream instead of accepting a hand shake offer from Leben. Brunson apparently believes that he’s down enough with take downs to win the fight.

Decision time coming up next.

Judges score the fight 29-28 for Derek Burnson. Brunson beats Chris Leben in his UFC debut.

Alan Belcher vs. Yushin Okami II

Belcher is back to avenge his father’s death against former title challenger Yushin Okami. Tough one to call. Belcher insists that Okami is scared of standing and banging with him, bro. Okami says that he’s improved more than Belcher has and that he’ll walk away with another win over the Southern boy.

Rd 1

Belcher’s horrible Johnny Cash tattoo is really distracting from this writer’s play by play blogging, not for nothing. Lots of feinting and big swings from Belcher. Belcher slips and falls after he kicks and Okami lands a jab.

Yushin presses Belcher against the cage, looking for a take down. Okami lands a knee ot the body of Belcher, then tries to land a knee to the head. Belcher doing a good job of defending, then all but asks the ref to separate them. Belcher lands a trip and ends up on top of Okami. He then pulls a guillotine choke and guard on Okami.

The Japanese fighter defends and is inside of Belcher’s guard. Okami presses Belcher against the cage and works for the pass but runs out of real estate as the cage stops him. Okami eventually does pass to side control and looks to have very heavy pressure with his shoudler on Belcher’s neck.

Belcher gets his heels close to his butt and tries to bridge out and escape but Okami’s pressure is too much. Belcher does get to his knees and then tries to get to his feet. Okami locks on a front head lock then transitions to Belcher’s back as the horn sounds.

Rd 2

Okami swings and misses with a big left straight. Okami then presses Belcher against the cage, Belcher lands another take down but then pulls guard working for another failed guillotine attempt. Okami working strikes from on top of Belcher from inside of The Talent’s half guard. Belcher works for a deep half guard sweep but there’s nothing there as Okami’s base is too strong.

Okami now in cross side and the referee makes a malpractice-level decision by standing them up. Horrible. The Nevada State Athletic Commission needs to reconsider the referee’s competence.

Okami quickly brings Belcher back down to the ground, working from on top in half guard again against the cage. Half a minute left with Okami in control from on top on the ground, despite the referee’s attempt to dictate the fight.

The referee stands them up again with twenty seconds left. Okami’s right eye is swollen. the horn sounds.

Rd 3

Okami rushes in looking to clinch right away. Belcher defends and then drops Okami with a big punch following the sage advice of his coach, kick boxing great Duke Roufus. Okami has his legs back under him, stalking Belcher and then rushing him and pressing him against the cage.

For a third time, Belcher gets the better of an Okami take down attempt and lands in mount. Belcher transitions to his back. Okami defends the choke, stands and then frees himself and shoots for another takedown against the cage.

Belcher grabs Okami’s neck and goes for another guillotine choke. Belcher pulls guard and loses the choke. Okami in Belcher’s half guard against the cage with two and a half minutes left. Okami moves to mount but is choosing pressure over being very busy with strikes.

Okami, having established his mount positions, begins to rain down unanswered punches down on Belcher. Belcher turns and gives up his back. Okami gets both hooks in on Belcher, who is face down, and the horn sounds with Okami landing punch after punch from the back.

Decision time coming up.

All three judges score it 30-27 for Okami. Belcher’s four fight win streak is snapped and Okami gets his second straight.

Costa Philippou vs. Tim Boetsch

Rd 1

Few moments of feinting before Boetsch works for a take down. After about thirty seconds of work against the cage, Tim gets the take down. Costa quickly gets back to his feet but Tim stays connected, landing big knees to the body. Costa lands his own and separates.

They are back in teh center of the ring. Tim with a nice rear push kick. Nice inside leg kick from Boetsch. Costa witha left to the body, right to the head, punch combo. Boetsch pushing the pace, lands another leg kick. Tim pushes Costa against the fence but Costa catches Tim with a big upper cut counter.

Tim gets another take down and is inside of Costa’s full guard. Costa controlling Tim’s posture and referee Kim Winslow continues the embarassing pattern of the night with a quick stand up.

Costa takes advantage and lands a nasty body-head punch combo, flush to Tim. Boetsch, unfazed, lands a nasty front kick to the face of Costa. The round ends.

Rd 3

Rogan points out that he has heard Tim’s corner man Matt Hume talking about some injury that the fighter has sustained. As the round begins and Tim shakes out his hand, it appears that he may have broken his hand. Tim lands a big knee to the head of Costa from the clinch.

Tim is cut from an accidental head butt on his forehead. It looks like his right hand is the hurt one. Boetsch looks for and misses a take down. Tim lands another front kick to the body. Tim gets an accidental eye poke.

Jon Anik correctly points out that it has been a rough few minutes for Boetsch. Goodness gracious, ain’t that true.

Boetsch gets right back in with minimal rest time. Tim misses with a front kick. Tim now shooting in with minimal set-up and gets stuffed by Costa. Now Costa is on top from the half guard. Tim continues to bleed. Vosta throwing punches and elbows from on top. Costa throwing more strikes, then stands and walks away at the horn.

Rd 3

Tim tells his coach Matt Hume that he can’t see. Hume asks him if he wants to stop. “Fuck no,” is Tim’s reply. They get things started for the final round.

Tim with another shot from Kansas. He’s shooting from too far away with no set ups because of his hand and his blurred vision, it appears. Tim may have gotten another cut. Boetsch is butt scooting, then forced to stand up. Tim tries another failed take down and is again in half guard with three and a half minutes.

Boetsch is hurt and cannot see. He is back on his feet. Tim shoots in again, gets stuffed and is back in his own half guard. Tim eats some big shots and the ref steps in and calls the fight off.

Costa Philppou gets the win and stops Tim Boetsch’s frate trane run. Both men are impressive in their own ways in this one. Nasty fight. Good fight.

Joe Lauzon vs. Jim Miller

Both men come out swinging hard with punches in spurts. Miller tries to set up a big upper cut but misses. Miller with a hard leg kick and a hard shot to the body of Lauzon. Miller with another hard body knee that hurts Joe.

Miller follows up with punches. Lauzon gets free then eats a high kick. Miller landing big with more punches to the body and head then another big knee. Lauzon lands his own then gets free. Miller with another buckling leg kick.

Miller with nasty dirty boxing and elbows from the clinch. Miller tries a standing arm triangle hold, Joe defends and frees himself. Lauzon is cut badly and referee Yves Lavigne stops the fight for him to be checked out by the doctor. The cut is over the right eye.

The fight continues with two minutes and fifteen seconds left. Miller lands a head kick and now more short punches and elbows from Miller. Lauzon returns fire with an upper cut. Miller with an upper cut. Lauzon lands a big knee to the head of Miller. Miller follows up with another left short cross.

Both men fall after a kick from Miller. Lauzon with a straight jab but he’s bleeding badly. Under a minute left. Miller misses with a big over hand left. Lauzon with a right hand, Miller lands a one, two and another inside leg kick. Miller backs Lauzon up against the cage again. Lauzon returns with a jab. Ten seconds left. Miller lands a body kick. Lauzon ends the round with a flying knee to the body.

Rd 2

Lauzon wants the fight to continue badly. The crowd is going nuts. Round two starts. Miller immediately back on the attack with punches. Lauzon eats them but returns fire. Miller with a double leg take down. Lauzon in butterfly guard. Miller attacking the cuts on Lauzon’s face and head. Lauzon in his closed guard.

Lauzon’s cuts are bleeding badly again. Lauzon working to get to his feet instead of going for submissions. Miller in Lauzon’s half guard now, working to pass with heavy pressure on Lauzon’s neck. Lauzon tries to bridge out but Miller bases out and takes the mount.

Lauzon immediately takes back half guard. Miller postures up and throws a nasty elbow and punch to Lauzon’s head. Lauzon working for a deep half guard sweep but getting stuck under Miller’s base. Miller goes for a D’Arce choke but loses it and Lauzon is on top against the cage!

Lauzon is pressing Miller against the cage. Lavigne stops the fight because Lauzon’s hand tape is loose. They re-start from the same position. Good job by Lavigne.

Miller working his mission control rubber guard position to control Lauzon’s right arm. Lauzon picks Miller up and slams up, steps over Miller’s right leg to pass. Miller gets his right knee up into a half butterfly guard. Lauzon clears it again but Miller fights for it again. Lauzon dives for a heel hook, switches to a knee bar, Miller frees himself but Lauzon goes for a front choke. Time runs out with Miller face down on all fours, defending a front head lock from Lauzon.

Rd 3

Miller kicks out Lauzon’s leg again and drops JLau. Lauzon is right back up on his feet. Nice right punch from Lauzon. Miller looks spent from the beating he put on Lauzon in the first. Miller drops Lauzon with another inside leg kick again.

Lauzon chooses to stay down to try and goad Miller to the ground. Miller backs up and the ref stands them up. Lauzon pressing forward on Miller. Miller huffing and punching but returning fire. Stiff jab from Lauzon. Inside leg kick from Lauzon. Miller presses forward trying to land nasty dirty boxing shots again but Joe pushes him off and lands an inside leg kick. Miller with his own.

Knee to the body from Lauzon. miller backs up Short elbow from Lauzon followed up by a left hand. Miller lands his own, softer, knee to the body. Miller cut under his left eye. Lauzon appears to have another cut over his own left eye as well. miller swinging to the body, the, throws an uppercut to Lauzon’s head. Lauzon covers up. Lauzon parries a jab and lands his own. Minute and ah alf left. both men exhausted from this fight of the night. Lauzon swings big and misses.

Miller presses Lauzon against the fence. Lauzon circles out. Under a minute left. Lauzon with a right hand, Miller with a right hook. Lauzon lands a scissor leg take down, working fora  heel hook with fifteen seconds left. Miller gets up but Lauzon locks in a guillotine choke. Miller is saved by the horn!

Lauzon looks to have stolen the the final two rounds at the end with submission attempts. Decision time coming up.

All three judges score the fight 29-28 for Jim Miller. Amazing fight.

Cain Velasquez vs. Junior Dos Santos II

Dos Santos gets the MGM Grand Garden Arena hyped with his energetic entrance to the Rocky theme.

Rd 1

Cain presses forward early shoots for and gets a single leg take down. Junior gets up and then lands on top. Cain reverses and they are back on their feet. Cain shoots from too far away and gets stuffed. Cain lands a left hook. Cain with a jab. Cain gets hit then Cain returns fire with a punch.

Body jab from Junior leg kick from Cain. Stiff jab from Cain. Cain dives for a single leg, Junior slips away. Cain stuns Junior with a right.

Cain with an over hand right that lands on the chin of Dos Santos. Cain dives for another single leg that gets stopped. Junior lands an over hand right.

Junior with a jab, Cain with two jabs and a knee to the body. Cain with a jab. Cain pressing Junior against the cage. Cain with with a big shot. Cain drops Dos Santos with a right. Cain lands a lot of shots on the downed Dos Santos. Junior to his feet, Cain takes him down, has Dos Santos on his knees against the cage again, raining down punches.

Junior back to his feet. Cain drags him down again. Junior tries to get up, Cain controls him and keeps him down. Junior back up, Cain drags him down again! Cain on the side of Junior, landing punches with seconds left in the round. The hor sounds with Dos Santos rising to his feet, but wobbled.

Rd 2

Cain slams Dos Santos with a double leg take down. He is behind Dos Santos, landing punches, now on top inside of Junior’s half guard. Junior up to his feet but eating big shots. Cain drags him back down with a double leg take down.

Cain on top of a flattened out Dos Santos. Cain doesn’t throw many more shots and Junior gets up but he is out on his feet, wobbling around. Cain backs him against the cage and takes Junior down again. Junior will not give up or give in and tries to stand again but Cain rides him and keeping the pressure on Dos Santos. Junior back up to his feet, presses Cain against the cage, Cain turns around and lands an inside left hand.

Cain hits an inside leg trip and brings Junior down to the ground. Dos Santos in half guard, Cain landing elbows and punches. Junior reverses positions, Cain goes for an arm bar from the bottom, Junior defends, escapes and gets on top. Cain scrambles up immediately and presses Junior against the cage with under a minute to go.

Cain picking Junior apart with punches upon separation, landing right on the chin to Dos Santos. Junior refuses to go down. The horn sounds.

Rd 3

Cain all but smiling as he prepares to get going in the third. Junior’s face is bruised and swollen. Dos Santos lands a big uppercut that hurts Cain. Dos Santos throws a hard body shot. Cain presses Junior against the cage again.

Cain goes for a single leg take down but Junior defends it. Cain going to the body and throwing an uppercut from the clinch. They are back in the center of the ring. Cain throws an over hand right hand and a left hook that lands. Cain pressing Dos santos against the cage again, looking for space in spots to punch. Cain goes for and misses a single leg take down.

Cain gets inside once more with an uppercut. They work in the clinch, hitting the body. On separation, Junior lands his own left body shot. Cain pressing against the cage again. Junior with a big knee to the body. Cain lands three big shots to the chin of Junior as the champ as his hands completely down at his waist.

Cain pressing again against the cage. Junior circles out and presses Cain against the cage. Cain tries to take Junior down but Junior defends and gets back to his feet. With under a minute left, Cain is once more pressing Junior against the cage and landing punches on separation.

Junior lands a big upper cut on Cain and Cain looks wobbled. Cain continues to stalk Junior though and the horn sounds.

Rd 4

Junior lands a stiff left hook after defending a Cain take down. Velasquez presses Dos Santos into the fence after eating a left. Junior circles out and rips a left to the body of Cain. Junior swings big and misses with a right hand. Cain lands a double leg take down but Dos Santos gets back up. Cain lands another flush shot to the chin of Dos Santos but the champ stays up.

Junior presses Cain against the cage and works for a take down. Cain defends and goes for and lands a take down. Dos Santos on his back, trying to get to his feet. Junior gets back up to his feet and Cain presses him agains the cage, landing a nasty left upper cut to the body. Cain now walking down Junior with punches along the cage. Junior with his hands down.

Cain shooting in weakly for take downs now, obviously spent from beating down on Junior and Dos Santos refusing to quit. One minute left and Cain is landing little shots to the head of Junior against the fence. Junior lands a left knee to the body of Cain. Junior lands a big right elbow and then right uppercut to the face of Cain.

Cain shoots for a single leg and Junior expertly defends before landing a stiff jab to the mid section of Cain. The round ends with Cain pressing Junior against the cage.

Rd 5

Cain with a jab a left hook and shoots in for a take down. Junior defends and lets rip another upper cut to the right side of Cain’s body. Junior now looking lighter on his feet as he moves around the cage. Both men are looking for one shot at a time given how fatigued they are. Cain shoots for another single leg take down but Junior defends. Junior swings and misses with a right hand. Cain shoots for and drives on another take down attempt that Junior defends. Cain with a left uppercut to the body and Junior answers with a right uppercut to the head.

Cain pressing the champ against the cage in an over under clinch. With three minutes left they separate and Junior lands another punch. Junior pressing Cain against the cage now. They separate and Cain lands a trip take down in the center of the ring with two and a half minutes left. Cain mounted on Junior briefly before Dos Santos gets to half guard. Cain landing punch after punch, followed with short elbows and then more punches. Junior gets to all fours in an attempt to get to his feet. Junior is up.

Cain presses him against the cage again before dropping down for a single leg take down that Junior dedends. Junior lands two more punches and Cain sticks to him like glue.

One minute left. Junior frees himself and throws an uppercut. Cain lands a kick to the head, but with his foot, to the left side of Junior’s head. Cain follows up with punches and presses Junior against the cage. fifteeen seconds left.

The fight ends with Cain pressing Junior against the cage. Cain falls to his knees in the center of the ring in celebration as Junior did one year ago.

Decision time up next.

Cain Velasquez wins a dominant unanimous decision to reclaim the UFC heavyweight title. “This fight was the hardest fight I’ve been through,” the now two-time champ tells Joe Rogan.

“Why are you guys doing that? Why?” Junior asked the crowd as they inexplicably booed him. Dos Santos sounds as if his jaw is broken. Multiple refs and this idiotic crowd dissapointed tonight. Thankfully the fighters, as always, delivered.

Velasquez acknowledged that he’d have to fight Dos Santos again in a rubber match at some point. Dos Santos, though, swollen and beaten, retained his fighting spirit.

“Like you said. I’m going to come back and I’m going to take my belt again,” Dos Santos promised.

Thanks for hanging out with us tonight, guys. Check back with us tomorrow for our UFC 155 Aftermath and post-event coverage.

Elias Cepeda

UFC 155: Preview and Predictions of the Main Card

This is the UFC 155 preview and predictions breakdown of the main card. I’ll never forget being so excited for this card two months ago. Even though my hatred for Chael Sonnen is massive, I was looking forward to seeing him fight Forrest Griffin….

This is the UFC 155 preview and predictions breakdown of the main card. I’ll never forget being so excited for this card two months ago. Even though my hatred for Chael Sonnen is massive, I was looking forward to seeing him fight Forrest Griffin. Then the card also had Chris Weidman fighting, who is probably my favorite up-and-comer today. Instead, thanks to injuries once again, the card has been dismantled.

The co-main event has somehow turned into Jim Miller vs. Joe Lauzon, which should be an exciting fight, but that is nowhere near a co-main event caliber fight. It’s a shame that injuries have derailed so many cards this year, but at least a new year is coming up soon, right?

Regardless of the card in general, everyone knows that the main card has so much buzz around it and has must-watch worth to it. Junior Dos Santos vs. Cain Velsaquez should be a war with a clash of different styles. That instantly makes the PPV a must watch for me.

Let’s just hope that the other main-card fights have some explosive finishes.

 

Middleweight: Chris Leben vs. Derek Brunson

I’ve tried really hard to find any kind of Derek Brunson’s highlight reel and there really isn’t anything. This is his debut in the UFC; why he’s on the main card is beyond me. I know it got flexed to the main card but still, why this? He lost within a minute in his last fight but he’s put against Chris Leben on a main card?

Leben fighting on the main card is also questionable coming off a suspension from being on oxycontin. My interest in the fight is low, but it will be interesting to see how Leben bounces back from a rough year.

I’m not sure what reaction he’ll get but I’m expecting him to come back with a bang.

Brunson is a nice prospect that has good wrestling ability but I’m not sure if this is the right matchup for him to test out how good his chin is. Leben has knockout power, which makes this is a difficult opening fight for him against a striker like Leben.

Winner: Chris Leben by second-round KO

 

Middleweight: Alan Belcher vs Yushin Okami

This is one of the better fights on the card with Belcher gaining a lot of momentum in the past few years. The sad story of his fractured spine had Belcher work extremely hard to get back into fighting shape. He is considered to be two wins away to a possible title shot.

Okami is becoming more of a gatekeeper these days and seems to be on the decline. His chin continues to be a problem and hasn’t looked overly impressive in the past few fights. This is a tough matchup for Okami against someone that is on a massive momentum streak.

It seems that Belcher has him beat in almost every aspect but you could never count out Okami with his explosive strikes. If he connects with a few punches, then you may see Belcher take him in the ground and work from there, similar to his last fight against Rousimar Palhares.

I’m going with Belcher because he’s far more versatile and I could see him using the judo throw to take Okami off his game. I’m expecting a quick finish on the ground with Belcher on such a hot streak and Okami slowly on his way out.

Winner: Alan Belcher by first-round submission via guillotine

 

Middleweight: Tim Boetsch vs. Costa Philippou

This should be a decent fight. However, Weidman is one of the few possible title contenders at middleweight, so his injury hurt the card. I’m intrigued to see how Philippou does after he was supposed to fight Nick Ring at UFC 154, but that was cancelled last minute.

Philippou isn’t a title contender but he’s slowly rising up the ranks.

His boxing ability should give Boetsch some problems and you would think Philippou learned from Hector Lombard’s lack of aggressiveness from July. If he can stay consistently aggressive and alert of the takedowns, his chances are good.

Boestch is known to limit and frustrate strikers with his wrestling ability then set up for the ground and pound. Boestch hasn’t won over many fans, but he’s soundly consistent with his performances and is slowly climbing up the middleweight ranks.

Even though Philippou shows a lot of promise, he hasn’t dealt with a wrestler as good as Boetsch.

You may also see more stand up than usual, but eventually you’ll see a lot of fighting by the cage, which may make this possibly the worst fight of the night. It won’t be unanimous , but Boetsch will win ugly again. 

 

Winner: Tim Boetsch by split decision

 

Lightweight: Jim Miller vs Joe Lauzon

 

The co-main event does have fight of the night worth to it, despite the lack of star power. Lauzon is starting to gain major publicity for his exciting performances with his variety of submissions. Miller is usually around the top-five fighters of the division and is always around title contention.

 

I’m expecting this fight to be very fast paced with not much stalling. These two fighters are very aggressive especially Lauzon, which will keep Miller on his heels. Sometimes Miller isn’t on the top of his game and doesn’t strike enough but after losing so easily to Nate Diaz, you’ll see a fired up Miller

It’ll be fun to see how many submissions are attempted in this fight because both fighters base their fighting style through submissions, even though Miller is more wrestling  based. Lauzon’s constant pressure is going go give Miller all he can handle.

 

Despite all of the submission accolades of Lauzon, I’m expecting him to be grounded.

Miller has more upper body strength and you’ll see him keep the fight around the cage or the ground. It will be a few close calls with Lauzon attempting an arm bar or rear naked choke, but Miller will control the majority of the fight and prevail.

Winner: Jim Miller by unanimous decision

 

Heavyweight Title Fight: Cain Velasquez vs Junior Dos Santos

The clash of the titans is finally here after a year-long wait. Just like everyone, I’m really looking forward to see how Velasquez starts out the fight. I’m expecting him to be very cautious because of the threat of Dos Santos and getting caught early like last time before going for an early takedown.

Let’s not forget that Frank Mir came very close to taking down Dos Santos even though it’s clear that Velasquez is better right now than an aging Mir. The best secret about Dos Santos is that his takedown defense is excellent and he can grapple.

 

His cage control is excellent and that was evident in his fight against Shane Carwin from a year ago. Dos Santos is the complete package and it bothers me that people consider him just a “boxer”. It’s not going to be easy for Velasquez to just take him down and the ground & pound him like he did to Brock Lesnar.

I’m expecting this fight to be longer than the last one obviously with the first round being a major feeling out process. Eventually it will get aggressive but once again I’m not confident in Velasquez’s chin. He may have a moment or two against Dos Santos, but Dos Santos is on top of his game and eventually will finish him off with punches.

 

Winner: Junior Dos Santos by tjired0 round KO

I’m expecting a decent card before the main event with the co-main event being pretty explosive. I’m also looking forward to seeing how Alan Belcher continues to rise up the card and seeing his remarkable comeback. Similar to UFC 151 (wait, does that exist?) this is mainly a one-fight card but it does bring out some interesting variables.

I’ll have the usual 10 things we learned about UFC 155 recap on Monday. Other than that, there isn’t really any major news lately. I’ll be working on a 2012 UFC awards of the year in early January. It may be tough with the disappointing year but there were still some jaw-dropping moments this year. Until then, I’ll be back Monday. Thanks for reading.

 

Allen Strk is a columnist on Bleacher Report. You can read more of my work at TJRSports.com covering the NFL, NBA, and MMA. You can follow me at @Allen_Strk on Twitter or e-mail questions/comments at [email protected].

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UFC 155: Yushin Okami vs. Alan Belcher Head-to-Toe Breakdown

UFC 155 will feature an important clash in the middleweight division. Alan “The Talent” Belcher meets Yushin “Thunder” Okami on the PPV portion of the card.Belcher will be going for his fifth consecutive victory in the division. His last outing was an …

UFC 155 will feature an important clash in the middleweight division. Alan “The Talent” Belcher meets Yushin “Thunder” Okami on the PPV portion of the card.

Belcher will be going for his fifth consecutive victory in the division. His last outing was an impressive TKO victory over Rousimar Palhares on UFC on FOX in May.

Okami rebounded from back-to-back losses at UFC 150 with a win over Buddy Roberts. A win over Belcher will put him back in the mix at middleweight.

As the middleweight division continues to get deeper, this is a must-win for both fighters if they hope to challenge for the championship in the near future. Belcher sits on the precipice of earning that shot right now.

This is how the fighters stack up to one another.

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Victory over Okami Is Alan Belcher’s Next Step Towards a Title Shot

Over the past few years the UFC middleweight picture has become chaotic. With reigning king Anderson Silva still holding court, the race to become next in line has been a storm of trash talk, hype and public posturing, as the best middleweights have jo…

Over the past few years the UFC middleweight picture has become chaotic. With reigning king Anderson Silva still holding court, the race to become next in line has been a storm of trash talk, hype and public posturing, as the best middleweights have jockeyed for divisional position.

The formula has provided short-term gains for some, but success for none, as no contender has been able to dethrone the champion.

As these various scenarios have played out, Alan Belcher has simply been handling his business and dispatching of everything thrown his way.

The Duke Roufus-trained fighter has quietly put together an impressive run of four consecutive victories, all coming by way of stoppage. In fact, the lone setback in his past seven outings came by way of a razor-thin split-decision loss to Yoshihiro Akiyama at UFC 100.

On the biggest night in the organization’s history, the two middleweights set the Octagon on fire, trading everything they had to offer from bell to bell. The end result may have come as a disappointment to the Arkansas native, but his performance made the sport’s fanbase sit up and take notice.

Belcher would bounce back in his next showing against veteran Patrick Cote at UFC 113, but before he could build momentum, the 28-year-old was forced to undergo emergency eye surgery that stopped his career cold in its tracks.

There was a period following the procedure to repair his detached retina where it was uncertain if he would ever fight again. But Belcher came roaring back to action as he scored a dominant, first-round victory over Jason MacDonald at UFC Fight Night in New Orleans, LA.

The win over “The Athlete” put Belcher‘s name back in the middleweight conversation, but another strong performance complete with his second consecutive first-round finish in his next showing against Rousimar Palhares at UFC on Fox 3 raised his stock into the top 10 of the 185-pound weight class.

Belcher pounded out the leglock specialist in brutal fashion and moved another rung up the ladder in the process. Where in most divisions under the UFC banner, four consecutive victories all coming by way of finish would have a fighter rapping at the door of a title shot, “The Talent” understands the variables which have kept him at bay.

Injuries have managed to slow him down over the past two years, but now with a clean bill of health and a full head of steam Belcher is fired up and ready to get moving. He will look to make that next step in grand fashion when he squares off with Yushin Okami at UFC 155.

“I think it’s huge for me and I have to make a statement,” Belcher told Bleacher Report. “I have to prove that I deserve a big fight against one of the big-name guys—which I already have and I need to stay there. If I really want 2013 to be my run at the title, this is a great way to kick it off.

“I’m just looking for the ‘W’ more than anything else, but I think my drive and my abilities right now are going to make it a very strong statement. If it’s not a real clean win for me, it’s just because Yushin Okami is a very good fighter. It could very well be a really hard win for me, but I’ll do what it takes to get the ‘W’ and I feel pretty confident about it.

“The only thing that has really held me back is my long lay-off. Then when I made my return, I took a long time between fights. After this last fight I had a broken hand and that injury kept me out for awhile.

“It’s just been my long time in between fights. Why would they give somebody a chance to fight Anderson Silva who the fans don’t really know, and that could go in there and take the belt from him? I have to prove that I’m able to fight more often and I have to let more fans know who I am. I have an underground fan base but that’s about it.”

The bout with Okami on December 29 will hold special significance for Belcher for a multitude of reasons. The fight not only marks the first rematch of his 24-fight career, but it will come against the man who spoiled his UFC debut back in 2006.

In his first matchup with “Thunder,” Belcher saw his seven-fight win streak snapped when he came up on the wrong end of a unanimous decision. The opportunity to make good on his previous misstep is a unique experience, and one that has Belcher looking forward to their second go-around at UFC 155.

“It has its advantages and disadvantages,” Belcher said regarding his rematch with Okami. “The advantages are I lost to him before and that makes me hungrier. Maybe he thinks he can beat me again and that gives me a little bit of an edge. The disadvantage could be that I lost to him and he feels really confident, but the main thing is this is the first rematch of my career and that is what really fired me up about doing this fight. It’s against the right person and it is relevant in the rankings.

“Okami is going to be a legend in the UFC when it’s all finished. He’s fought some of the greatest guys and he’ll always be a top fighter as long as he’s competing. Now I have the rematch against him. He’s really the only guy who’s beat me that makes sense to fight again right now. The rematch really has me fired up. The idea of winning five straight and continuing on my streak is getting me pumped up.”

Stylistically speaking the two fighters couldn’t be more different.

Where Belcher brings an unpredictable and versatile attack into the cage, Okami is methodical and disciplined. It doesn’t matter if the Japanese fighter’s game plan is well-known, stopping it becomes the problem. It is a task Belcher is confident he can handle this time around, and he believes he has a variety of answers to the challenges the former No. 1 contender presents.

“[Okami] is threatening with what he does,” Belcher said. “He’s really tight and really athletic. He has a big body and throws fast punches nice and straight. He can kick a little bit, he’s hard to hit, and strong. He pressures you, puts you against the cage, and tries to clinch up with you. He has good take downs. He is good on the ground and good at holding you down.

“He’s good at what he does but at the same time, it’s very easy to figure out what he’s going to do. He’s very predictable. I have a lot of options with the things I can do. I have a lot of different styles and strategies I use. I have a lot of different ways to beat him where for him to win, he has to keep pressuring me and has to take me down. That’s pretty much it.”

A victory over Okami would not only make it five in a row for Belcher, but also place a big feather in his proverbial cap. Where his past wins have all been impressive, coming out on top of a solid name like the one Okami carries would be a strong push to place him firmly in the upper tier of the middleweight division.

It would also further the blue-collar effort Belcher has put forth in climbing the rankings towards a title shot. Despite recent examples of surging contenders being passed over for higher-profile opposition, Belcher embraces both optimism and realism equally.

He knows it is a position he’s scrapping his way towards, but at the same time, not a situation he’s currently included in. That being the case, Belcher is looking forward to making his case undeniable and feels he has a versatile skill set few fighters can match.

“It is an interesting time right now,” Belcher said. “I feel like the UFC is a little bit desperate to make big-money fights, but I don’t really fit into that category right now. It sucks, but we’ll deal with that when it comes. Right now, I have to win this fight and then probably one or two more.

“After I beat Yushin Okami, I’m not going to be mad if the UFC doesn’t have me fighting Anderson Silva in February or March. I want to make it realistic. I want to work for it. I want to legitimately beat everyone in the division with no questions asked. That means if I have to beat Lombard, Bisping, Belfort, Weidman, all of them in 2013, that’s what I’ll do.

“There are things I’ve been working on for years and years I’m really good at. My grappling is dynamic but I don’t think people realize the technical side of it. I’m always working it and I think my grappling is cleaner than most UFC fighters. I really pay attention to the details. The same goes with my striking.

“One of the things the fans love about my striking, and one of the things that makes me dangerous is my attitude. I’m very comfortable in there. I really get in my opponent’s face and throw a lot of strikes. I mix it up and go for takedowns. Not to mention all my shots are clean and powerful. I have some really strong tools.

“I’ll be the first one to admit I have some places I need to work on and I’m always working on them, but compared to everyone else in the division, and most fighters in the UFC, I would say my style is very versatile and I have a lot of tools.”

As Belcher‘s fight towards the ultimate goal of becoming a UFC champion continues, his work outside of the cage carries on as well. Belcher and his wife Ashlee have been diligent in committing their time to various charities in their community and surrounding areas.

Their commitment has impacted situations large and small, as the Belchers have worked with groups ranging from the Humane Society to individuals in their community struggling to pay medical bills. It is a passion they share as a family and giving back to those in need remains a high priority.

“We are trying to team up with St. Jude’s [Hospital] right now and put together a martial arts for St. Jude’s program,” Belcher said. “It’s an organization I would like to team up with and I like that cause. I grew up close close to the Memphis Tennessee area in Northeast Arkansas, and St, Jude’s Hospital there in Memphis really helps a lot of kids and families. They operate entirely on donations and it takes a lot to run that place.

“I’ll be posting some links up on my website and Twitter pretty soon. I’m trying to raise some money for St. Jude’s and get involved in that a little bit more. Right now, I’m just trying to help out around Christmas time. Trying to help some families is what I’ve been doing this year. I’m doing a little bit less for my family and trying to teach them it’s not about having a bunch of Christmas presents under the tree. I’m trying to give my kids the gift of giving to other people.”

Drive and determination are not things in short supply in the life of Alan Belcher. In a life full of complexities, setbacks, victories and lessons learned, he charges forward knowing he has an unwavering confidence in his abilities. Next Saturday night in Las Vegas, the time to once again put his skills to the test will arrive, and in his signature fashion, Belcher is going to leave everything he has inside the Octagon.

“As always I’m going to be fearless,” Belcher said. “I’m a fighter who is going to leave everything in the ring and have no regrets. I’m going to leave it all out there and do the very best that I can at that moment, in that fight, for those 15 minutes. Win, lose, or draw; I guarantee I’m not just going to lay down and give it away.”

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CagePotato Presents: A Mostly Video Tribute to the Standing TKO


(James Thompson, seen here demonstrating the CagePotato “What in the bloody hell are you on about, mate?” rule of early stoppages.) 

Over the past few days, we’ve witnessed a pair of rarely seen finishes in the octagon — a suplex KO and a flying reverse triangle — and after we here at CagePotato collectively picked our jaws up off the floor and found a clean pair of shorts, we got to thinking, what other techniques/finishes do we rarely come across in the MMA stratosphere? And more importantly, which of these techniques/finishes have we not devoted some sort of gif or video tribute to already?

Taking all of those factors into account, we came to the standing TKO, a finish so uncommon in MMA that we could only name a handful of occurrences before having to resort to the Interwebs for assistance. So in honor of the iron-jawed sumbitches who wouldn’t bow to defeat even when it was kneeing/punching/kicking them damn near to death, we’ve placed our favorite examples of this phenomenon below. Check ’em out after the jump and let us know which stoppages you thought were warranted and which ones could have gone on a little longer.


(James Thompson, seen here demonstrating the CagePotato “What in the bloody hell are you on about, mate?” rule of early stoppages.) 

Over the past few days, we’ve witnessed a pair of rarely seen finishes in the octagon — a suplex KO and a flying reverse triangle — and after we here at CagePotato collectively picked our jaws up off the floor and found a clean pair of shorts, we got to thinking, what other techniques/finishes do we rarely come across in the MMA stratosphere? And more importantly, which of these techniques/finishes have we not devoted some sort of gif or video tribute to already?

Taking all of those factors into account, we came to the standing TKO, a finish so uncommon in MMA that we could only name a handful of occurrences before having to resort to the Interwebs for assistance. So in honor of the iron-jawed sumbitches who wouldn’t bow to defeat even when it was kneeing/punching/kicking them damn near to death, we’ve placed our favorite examples of this phenomenon below. Check ‘em out after the jump and let us know which stoppages you thought were warranted and which ones could have gone on a little longer.

The Justified Stoppages

Hermes Franca vs. Spencer Fisher – UFC Fight Night 8

Matt Brown vs. Luis Ramos – UFC on FX 4

Paul Daley vs. Martin Kampmann – UFC 103

For some reason, the embeddable is being a dingus, so check out the full fight here.

Jason Day vs. Alan Belcher – UFC 83

UFC News: Alan Belcher Says Anderson Silva Would Beat Georges St-Pierre

UFC middleweight contender Alan Belcher believes 185-kingpin Anderson Silva would beat Georges St-Pierre, the UFC welterweight champion, if their epic superfight ever comes to fruition. “The Talent” explained his pick in an interview with MMA Mani…

UFC middleweight contender Alan Belcher believes 185-kingpin Anderson Silva would beat Georges St-Pierre, the UFC welterweight champion, if their epic superfight ever comes to fruition. 

“The Talent” explained his pick in an interview with MMA Mania

Man, that’s a really hard to pick but I have to go with Anderson though. He has the size, he finds a way to win, he has knockout power in his hands. GSP is so sharp you can’t really get in on him, he’ll probably find a way to get Anderson down at some point, but just getting in on a taller guy on his legs like that is—it could make a big difference what weight they fight at.

Belcher did go on to say that in the off chance Silva and St-Pierre fought at the welterweight limit of 170 pounds, he would lean toward the French-Canadian picking up the victory.

If it’s a catchweight somewhere in the middle, Anderson has the advantage. If Anderson could make 170, then that’ll level the playing field. He won’t have the power, you know, he’ll loose a little. You loose some mass, you loose some power, you loose some gas, so, if he had to cut down to 170 then I would pick GSP. If they meet somewhere in the middle I think Anderson would tear him apart pretty easily.

While the showdown between St-Pierre and “The Spider” has been rumored for years, it still does not appear to be on the immediate horizon. 

Last week, UFC President Dana White said GSP will likely fight former Strikeforce welterweight champion Nick Diaz in his next title defense. 

The Tristar Gym standout is fresh off a “Fight of the Night” victory performance against Carlos Condit at UFC 154 last month.

Additionally, Silva announced last month that he doesn’t plan to step back into the Octagon until late 2013. He last defended his title against rival Chael Sonnen at UFC 148 in July, winning via TKO in the second round.

Meanwhile, Belcher is 6-1 in his past seven bouts, most recently scoring an upset win over Rousimar Palhares at UFC on FOX 3 in May. 

He has a chance to avenge his first UFC loss back at UFC 62 in Aug. 2006 when he rematches Yushin Okami at UFC 155 later this month. 

Does Belcher have the logistics of a GSP-Silva superfight down pat, or is he completely off base with his assessment of the fight?

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