Alexander Gustafsson Taking Short Break From Fighting To Find Motivation

UFC light-heavyweight title contender Alexander Gustafsson had a tough 2015. His road to recovery includes a short break from competition and a change in camps… Known as the man that gave Jon Jones the most trouble for his light-heavyweight title when they fought at UFC 165, Alexander Gustafsson has rapidly become one of the division’s

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UFC light-heavyweight title contender Alexander Gustafsson had a tough 2015. His road to recovery includes a short break from competition and a change in camps…

Known as the man that gave Jon Jones the most trouble for his light-heavyweight title when they fought at UFC 165, Alexander Gustafsson has rapidly become one of the division’s most popular contenders. For all his hard work in the gym and classic results in the octagon, there’s been some rather harrowing lows for the Swedish ‘Mauler’ to deal with. 2015 turned out to be a pretty tough year for the big Swede to digest.

Opening the year with a contender bout against heavy hitter Anthony Johnson, ‘The Mauler’ suffered a brutal first round knockout loss. Fortune would quickly shift in the favor of Gus after ‘Bones’ was stripped of his title though, as he was moved forward to the number one spot when ‘Rumble’ lost out to Daniel Cormier for the vacant strap at UFC 187. Once again on the brink of championship glory, Gustafsson was fended off by ‘DC’ in a five round classic at UFC 192.

Jones vs. Gustafsson

With Jones now back in the picture, and ‘Rumble’ back to his scary winning ways, there’s still a whole lot going on in the UFC light-heavyweight division. The scene will no doubt be very busy with DC vs Jones 2 set for UFC 197, but Gus reveals to the MMA Hour h/t MMAMania that he’s going to sit out of active competition, at least for the next few months. Check it out:

“I’m just having a tough time with my motivations. Some days it’s better, some days it’s a little bit worse.” explained Gustafsson. “I just tell my fans how it is and how it is to be a fighter on this level. That it’s always tough with losses, 2015 was a tough year for me.”

“So that’s why I did that interview to tell them how I felt and how I feel. But, I feel better after I said it and now I’m in San Diego to change my environment a little bit. I’m feeling good,”

“I’ve been here before, it’s hard to go from going one day being the best fighters in the world to stop doing what you love doing,” he said. “I am a fighter and that’s what I live for. Quitting is not an option if you put the cards on the table. It’s just emotions, feelings, and thoughts that you battle everyday as an athlete.”

“When I feel good in training, when I’m in peace and feel good in everything, we’re going to look for a new challenge,” declared “The Mauler,” who insists he was not offered a Rashad Evans fight.

“Until then, I am just going to enjoy the training. I will fight in 2016. I just need a little bit of time to get on my feet and get my mind and motivation right. I just want to fight for the right reasons. You will see me fight this year,”

GustafssonMandelSherdog

It’s always tough to see a likeable character like Alexander Gustafsson falling on hard times, but perhaps a change of scenery in the form of San Diego’s Alliance MMA, and a break from competition is just what he needs.

It’s clear ‘The Mauler’ can most definitely hang with the elite of the division, but just needs a few tweaks to get those big wins again. We tip our hats to you Gus.

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Jon Jones Says He Has Three More Fights At Light-Heavyweight

Former UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones has some big plans for his future and those plans involve a change of weight classes. Jones recently did a Q&A session on Twitter with fans and in that Q&A, Jones revealed his plans. When asked how many more times he would fight in the light heavyweight division,

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Former UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones has some big plans for his future and those plans involve a change of weight classes. Jones recently did a Q&A session on Twitter with fans and in that Q&A, Jones revealed his plans.

When asked how many more times he would fight in the light heavyweight division, Jones responded by saying three more times.

When asked who he would like to fight in those three fights, Jones responded by saying Daniel Cormier, Anthony Johnson, and Alexander Gustafsson.

Jones has a point to his plans as he has a history with all of the fighters he listed.

With Cormier, Jones beat him at UFC 182 to retain his title. Jones was then scheduled to fight Johnson at UFC 187, but Jones was stripped of the belt and indefinitely suspended by the UFC in conjunction with a hit-and-run accident that he was involved in on April 28th. The UFC then booked Johnson vs. Cormier at UFC 187, which saw Cormier beat Johnson.

Jones and Gustafsson have history as the two fight at UFC 165, which saw Jones beat Gustafsson. The fight was a close one as it went all five rounds and some people thought Gustafsson won the fight.

The UFC is expected to announce a date for the Cormier vs. Jones fight soon.

What do you think of Jones’ plans? Let us know.

The post Jon Jones Says He Has Three More Fights At Light-Heavyweight appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Alexander Gustafsson: Plotting a Way Forward for LHW’s Perennial Runner-Up

For the second time in his career, Alexander Gustafsson on Saturday pushed the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion to the limit.
For the second time, he came away with nothing.
On this night it was Daniel Cormier who got more than he bargained for …

For the second time in his career, Alexander Gustafsson on Saturday pushed the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion to the limit.

For the second time, he came away with nothing.

On this night it was Daniel Cormier who got more than he bargained for from Gustafsson. The lanky Swede weathered the storm of a big takedown in the first round of their bout at UFC 192 and battled back to make things uncomfortably close by the time Cormier’s split-decision victory was announced 20-plus minutes later.

Gustafsson steered mostly clear of the champion’s vaunted wrestling skills for the remainder of the fight. He peppered Cormier with stiff jabs, bloodying him under the right eye and nearly knocking him out with a knee to the face near the end of the third. He suffered the abuse Cormier dished out in transition and in the clinch and kept coming back for more.

But when the fight was on the line during the final 10 minutes, Gustafsson came up shy. Cormier kept the accelerator pinned to the floor, and the challenger just couldn’t match him.

It was shades of what happened to Gustafsson against Jon Jones two years earlier.

In that fight—where Gustafsson came in as the heavy underdog—he surprised the greatest 205-pound champion in UFC history with a barrage of strikes over the first three rounds. He tipped the previously indomitable Jones so far off his game that the European striker became the first man ever to take him down inside the Octagon.

But with Jones’ title seemingly on the verge of slipping away, the champion rallied in the final rounds. He stung Gustafsson with spinning elbows, kicks and a series of hard knees to the chin. Gustafsson faded down the stretch and—though there were some who felt he still deserved to get the nod—Jones retained his belt via unanimous decision.

So, here we are: Gustafsson is 28 years old and though he’s still regarded as one of the very best light heavyweights in the world, he’s also just 1-3 in his last four bouts.

His only victory in that span is a second-round TKO over Jimi Manuwa, in a fight that aired exclusively on the UFC’s digital subscription service. Aside from Cormier and Jones, his other defeat was a crushing first-round knockout at the hands of Anthony Johnson in January.

Now, there’s a growing sense that we’ve already seen the best he has to offer.

Gustafsson’s career should be far from finished, but it’s starting to seem as though he occupies one of the most difficult positions in all of sports: the perennial runner-up. It might well be that he is good enough to beat almost anyone in the world, except the men who are the very best.

There’s no telling exactly how Gustafsson is feeling in the wake of his razor-close loss to Cormier, but we know he took the KO defeat by Johnson pretty hard. He even told Swedish newspaper Expressen that he contemplated retirement.

“It has definitely been my most difficult period in life so far,” Gustafsson said at the time, via MMAFighting.com. “I was completely serious about quitting MMA … I just took it too hard. I didn’t have the will to continue. I was really close to quitting.”

While the Cormier fight didn’t end as quickly or as violently for Gustafsson, it’s easy to imagine it being an even tougher pill to swallow. It could put him in the unenviable company of other great fighters like Joseph Benevidez, Urijah Faber and Ben Henderson—all of whom are locked out of title contention in their natural weight classes after multiple losses in championship fights.

But there are also a couple saving graces here for Gustafsson.

The way forward might not be as bleak as we assume.

For starters, even though he came out on the wrong end, the Cormier fight was a bit of a statement performance for Gustafsson. There were those who shortchanged his initial showing against Jones, calling it a fluke after reports emerged that the champion didn’t take his training camp as seriously as he could have.

We wondered, could the competitive nature of their fight have had more to do with Jones taking it lightly than Gustafsson really being that good?

Now we have our answer: Nope.

Turns out, Gustafsson really is that good.

Secondly, the fact the he has lost a pair of nail-biter title defenses to two different light heavyweight champions leaves Gustafsson with a few good options still on the board.

We all assume Jones will return to challenge Cormier over the belt Jones never really lost. If Jones wins that fight, it could put Gustafsson right back in the mix.

In fact, unless Bones suddenly decamps for the heavyweight division, there will likely be no better next opponent for him than Gustafsson. Their UFC 165 clash remains Jones’ toughest title defense to date and the fact many continue to believe Gustafsson should’ve won the decision sustains our interest in an eventual rematch.

If it comes down to a question of Gustafsson or somebody like Ryan Bader, it’s easy to imagine matchmakers giving the Swede his third championship fight.

In the meantime, Gustafsson probably just needs to get a single comeback win, preferably against someone who shapes up as a stiffer test than Manuwa.

The fighters Gustafsson has faced to date during his UFC career generally fall into two distinct camps: journeymen and the elite of the elite. At this point, we know he’s far better than than guys like Manuwa, a fading Shogun Rua and Thiago Silva. We also know he hasn’t been able to put it all together against Jones or Cormier.

There just hasn’t been a lot of middle ground.

At this point, it could be instructive to see him fight somebody like returning former champion Rashad Evans (who just lost to Bader on Saturday) or an up-and-comer like Ovince St. Preux.

If he can defeat either of those guys, it’ll underscore his position among the world’s elite light heavyweights and justify another bite at the championship apple.

And who knows, for Gustafsson maybe the third time will be the charm.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Alexander Gustafsson: Plotting a Way Forward for LHW’s Perennial Runner-Up

For the second time in his career, Alexander Gustafsson on Saturday pushed the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion to the limit.
For the second time, he came away with nothing.
On this night it was Daniel Cormier who got more than he bargained for …

For the second time in his career, Alexander Gustafsson on Saturday pushed the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion to the limit.

For the second time, he came away with nothing.

On this night it was Daniel Cormier who got more than he bargained for from Gustafsson. The lanky Swede weathered the storm of a big takedown in the first round of their bout at UFC 192 and battled back to make things uncomfortably close by the time Cormier’s split-decision victory was announced 20-plus minutes later.

Gustafsson steered mostly clear of the champion’s vaunted wrestling skills for the remainder of the fight. He peppered Cormier with stiff jabs, bloodying him under the right eye and nearly knocking him out with a knee to the face near the end of the third. He suffered the abuse Cormier dished out in transition and in the clinch and kept coming back for more.

But when the fight was on the line during the final 10 minutes, Gustafsson came up shy. Cormier kept the accelerator pinned to the floor, and the challenger just couldn’t match him.

It was shades of what happened to Gustafsson against Jon Jones two years earlier.

In that fight—where Gustafsson came in as the heavy underdog—he surprised the greatest 205-pound champion in UFC history with a barrage of strikes over the first three rounds. He tipped the previously indomitable Jones so far off his game that the European striker became the first man ever to take him down inside the Octagon.

But with Jones’ title seemingly on the verge of slipping away, the champion rallied in the final rounds. He stung Gustafsson with spinning elbows, kicks and a series of hard knees to the chin. Gustafsson faded down the stretch and—though there were some who felt he still deserved to get the nod—Jones retained his belt via unanimous decision.

So, here we are: Gustafsson is 28 years old and though he’s still regarded as one of the very best light heavyweights in the world, he’s also just 1-3 in his last four bouts.

His only victory in that span is a second-round TKO over Jimi Manuwa, in a fight that aired exclusively on the UFC’s digital subscription service. Aside from Cormier and Jones, his other defeat was a crushing first-round knockout at the hands of Anthony Johnson in January.

Now, there’s a growing sense that we’ve already seen the best he has to offer.

Gustafsson’s career should be far from finished, but it’s starting to seem as though he occupies one of the most difficult positions in all of sports: the perennial runner-up. It might well be that he is good enough to beat almost anyone in the world, except the men who are the very best.

There’s no telling exactly how Gustafsson is feeling in the wake of his razor-close loss to Cormier, but we know he took the KO defeat by Johnson pretty hard. He even told Swedish newspaper Expressen that he contemplated retirement.

“It has definitely been my most difficult period in life so far,” Gustafsson said at the time, via MMAFighting.com. “I was completely serious about quitting MMA … I just took it too hard. I didn’t have the will to continue. I was really close to quitting.”

While the Cormier fight didn’t end as quickly or as violently for Gustafsson, it’s easy to imagine it being an even tougher pill to swallow. It could put him in the unenviable company of other great fighters like Joseph Benevidez, Urijah Faber and Ben Henderson—all of whom are locked out of title contention in their natural weight classes after multiple losses in championship fights.

But there are also a couple saving graces here for Gustafsson.

The way forward might not be as bleak as we assume.

For starters, even though he came out on the wrong end, the Cormier fight was a bit of a statement performance for Gustafsson. There were those who shortchanged his initial showing against Jones, calling it a fluke after reports emerged that the champion didn’t take his training camp as seriously as he could have.

We wondered, could the competitive nature of their fight have had more to do with Jones taking it lightly than Gustafsson really being that good?

Now we have our answer: Nope.

Turns out, Gustafsson really is that good.

Secondly, the fact the he has lost a pair of nail-biter title defenses to two different light heavyweight champions leaves Gustafsson with a few good options still on the board.

We all assume Jones will return to challenge Cormier over the belt Jones never really lost. If Jones wins that fight, it could put Gustafsson right back in the mix.

In fact, unless Bones suddenly decamps for the heavyweight division, there will likely be no better next opponent for him than Gustafsson. Their UFC 165 clash remains Jones’ toughest title defense to date and the fact many continue to believe Gustafsson should’ve won the decision sustains our interest in an eventual rematch.

If it comes down to a question of Gustafsson or somebody like Ryan Bader, it’s easy to imagine matchmakers giving the Swede his third championship fight.

In the meantime, Gustafsson probably just needs to get a single comeback win, preferably against someone who shapes up as a stiffer test than Manuwa.

The fighters Gustafsson has faced to date during his UFC career generally fall into two distinct camps: journeymen and the elite of the elite. At this point, we know he’s far better than than guys like Manuwa, a fading Shogun Rua and Thiago Silva. We also know he hasn’t been able to put it all together against Jones or Cormier.

There just hasn’t been a lot of middle ground.

At this point, it could be instructive to see him fight somebody like returning former champion Rashad Evans (who just lost to Bader on Saturday) or an up-and-comer like Ovince St. Preux.

If he can defeat either of those guys, it’ll underscore his position among the world’s elite light heavyweights and justify another bite at the championship apple.

And who knows, for Gustafsson maybe the third time will be the charm.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 192 Highlights/Results: Cormier and Gustafsson Put On a Show for the Ages, Bader Dominates Evans, + More


(via Getty)

Well, that was a hell of a fight.

If it sounds like I’m underselling the UFC 192 main event that pitted newly-crowned light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier against former title challenger Alexander Gustafsson, it’s only because the five round affair was a fight that simply needs to be seen to be appreciated. I could tack on any number of adjectives to the fight, I could call it a “grinder” or a “war” or a “blood-soaked battle of wills,” but the truth is, Cormier vs. Gustafsson was simply an example of championship-level MMA at its finest.

That DC vs. Lusty Gusty came at the tail end of a main card that saw all five of its fights go the distance is a testament to its greatness, so check out all the highlights from the action-packed main event (and the rest of the card as well), courtesy of UFC on FOX.

The post UFC 192 Highlights/Results: Cormier and Gustafsson Put On a Show for the Ages, Bader Dominates Evans, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via Getty)

Well, that was a hell of a fight.

If it sounds like I’m underselling the UFC 192 main event that pitted newly-crowned light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier against former title challenger Alexander Gustafsson, it’s only because the five round affair was a fight that simply needs to be seen to be appreciated. I could tack on any number of adjectives to the fight, I could call it a “grinder” or a “war” or a “blood-soaked battle of wills,” but the truth is, Cormier vs. Gustafsson was simply an example of championship-level MMA at its finest.

That DC vs. Lusty Gusty came at the tail end of a main card that saw all five of its fights go the distance is a testament to its greatness, so check out all the highlights from the action-packed main event (and the rest of the card as well), courtesy of UFC on FOX.

Really, this highlight does little justice for what was easily one of the best fights of the year, and Gustafsson’s second brilliant-but-just-shy-of-winning performance against one of the greatest fighters in the sport today. If only he didn’t have to look like his face had been run through a meat grinder after each one of these performances.

In the co-main event of the evening, the evolution of Ryan Bader continued via a hard-fought, if one-sided decision win over former champ Rashad Evans. While “Suga” looked far fresher than you would expect for a guy who has spent the past two years on the shelf battling various injuries, he was simply a step behind “Darth” on Saturday. The TUF 8 winner was able to land first, utilizing a newfound and deadly accurate jab, and even outwrestle the TUF 1 winner consistently, and while I don’t think the win was enough to convince anyone that Bader stands a chance against Cormier or Jon Jones, it was an impressive performance nonetheless.

The unfortunate removal of Johny Hendricks from UFC 192 bumped a flyweight tilt between former title challengers Joseph Benavidez and Ali Bagautinov up to the main card, and they…more or less did not take advantage of it. In a smart, technical performance from the Team Alpha Male veteran that was routinely booed by the crowd, Benavidez utilized a slight speed advantage to keep the Dagestani consistently off balance and chasing en route to a unanimous decision win. Not much else to say about this one, what with both guys chances of receiving another shot at Mighty Mouse falling in the “Slim to none” category.

The full results for UFC 192 are below.

Main card
Daniel Cormier def. Alexander Gustafsson via split decision
Ryan Bader def. Rashad Evans via unanimous decision
Ruslan Magomedov def. Shawn Jordan via unanimous decision
Joseph Benavidez def. Ali Bagautinov via unanimous decision
Julianna Pena def. Jessica Eye via unanimous decision

Undercard
Yair Rodriguez def. Dan Hooker via unanimous decision
Albert Tumenov def. Alan Jouban via first-round KO
Adriano Martins def. Islam Makhachev via first-round KO
Rose Namajunas def. Angela Hill via sub (rear-naked choke)
Sage Northcutt def. Francisco Trevino via first-round TKO
Sergio Pettis def. Chris Cariaso via unanimous decision
Derrick Lewis def. Viktor Pesta via third-round TKO

The post UFC 192 Highlights/Results: Cormier and Gustafsson Put On a Show for the Ages, Bader Dominates Evans, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.

UFC 192 Results: Matches to Make for the Winners and Losers

UFC 192 was almost a tale of two halves. The prelims were stellar, with five of the seven bouts being finished in violent fashion. The main card slowed things down as every fight went to the scorecards, but the main event clash for the light heavyweigh…

UFC 192 was almost a tale of two halves. The prelims were stellar, with five of the seven bouts being finished in violent fashion. The main card slowed things down as every fight went to the scorecards, but the main event clash for the light heavyweight title got everyone back on their feet.

Typically following an event, the suggestions for the next fights come in about 24 hours, but there was a lot to process with UFC 192 from Houston. How should the UFC handle the prospects that won? And how about the title contenders who sit on the outside looking in?

Oftentimes it is not just a matter of who wins and loses on a particular event, but rather how they win or lose. What they show us inside the cage directly affects the path they take up the ranks in their respective divisions. A UFC matchmaker’s job is complex; Joe Silva and Sean Shelby have a lot to take in after the results in Houston.

Well, the recommendations have arrived. Here is how the UFC should handle the next bouts for the winners and losers of UFC 192.

Begin Slideshow