UFC 134 Odds: Full Fight Card Odds

For those of you that like your fight odds broken down into percentages, we got you covered.  Please find the complete UFC 134 odds below in percentage form:Anderson Silva (84%) favorite over Yushin Okami (16%) Mauricio Rua ( 71%) favorite over Fo…

For those of you that like your fight odds broken down into percentages, we got you covered.  Please find the complete UFC 134 odds below in percentage form:

Anderson Silva (84%) favorite over Yushin Okami (16%)

Mauricio Rua ( 71%) favorite over Forrest Griffin (29%)

Brendan Schaub (71%) favorite over Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (29%)

Edson Barboza (76%) favorite over Ross Pearson (24%)

Luiz Cane (69%) favorite over Stanislav Nedkov (31%)

Thiago Tavares (68%) favorite over Spencer Fisher (32%)

Rousimar Palhares (74%) favorite over Dan Miller (26%)

Paulo Thiago (80%) favorite over David Mitchell (20%)

Raphael Assuncao (63%) favorite over Johnny Eduardo (37%)

Erik Silva (74%) favorite over Luis Ramos (26%)

Yuri Alcantra (81%) favorite over Felipe Arantes (19%)

Ian Loveland (67%) favorite over Yves Jabouin (33%)

UFC 134 Weigh-In Results

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UFC 134 weigh-in results from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.MMA Fighting has UFC 134 weigh-in results of Friday’s pre-fight festivities at the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva made weight at 184 pounds, while challenger Yushin Okami stepped off the scales at 183 pounds.

Weigh-in results for all 24 fighters on the card are below.


Pay-Per-View Bouts

Anderson Silva (184 lbs.) vs. Yushin Okami (183 lbs.)
Forrest Griffin (205 lbs.) vs. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua (205 lbs.)
Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (243 lbs.) vs. Brendan Schaub (247 lbs.)
Luiz Cane (204 lbs.) vs. Stanislav Nedkov (203 lbs.)
Edson Barboza (155 lbs.) vs. Ross Pearson (155 lbs.)

Spike TV Bouts
Spencer Fisher (156 lbs.) vs. Thiago Tavares (156 lbs.)
Dan Miller (184) vs. Rousimar Palhares (185)

Facebook Bouts

David Mitchell (171 lbs.) vs. Paulo Thiago (169 lbs.)
Raphael Assuncao (134 lbs.) vs. Johnny Eduardo (135 lbs.)
Erick Silva (169 lbs.) vs. Luis Ramos (171 lbs.)
Felipe Arantes (145 lbs.) vs. Yuri Alcantara (144 lbs.)
Yves Jabouin (135 lbs.) vs. Ian Loveland (135 lbs.)

%VIRTUAL-Gallery-131832%

 

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UFC 134 weigh-in results from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.MMA Fighting has UFC 134 weigh-in results of Friday’s pre-fight festivities at the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva made weight at 184 pounds, while challenger Yushin Okami stepped off the scales at 183 pounds.

Weigh-in results for all 24 fighters on the card are below.


Pay-Per-View Bouts

Anderson Silva (184 lbs.) vs. Yushin Okami (183 lbs.)
Forrest Griffin (205 lbs.) vs. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua (205 lbs.)
Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (243 lbs.) vs. Brendan Schaub (247 lbs.)
Luiz Cane (204 lbs.) vs. Stanislav Nedkov (203 lbs.)
Edson Barboza (155 lbs.) vs. Ross Pearson (155 lbs.)

Spike TV Bouts
Spencer Fisher (156 lbs.) vs. Thiago Tavares (156 lbs.)
Dan Miller (184) vs. Rousimar Palhares (185)

Facebook Bouts

David Mitchell (171 lbs.) vs. Paulo Thiago (169 lbs.)
Raphael Assuncao (134 lbs.) vs. Johnny Eduardo (135 lbs.)
Erick Silva (169 lbs.) vs. Luis Ramos (171 lbs.)
Felipe Arantes (145 lbs.) vs. Yuri Alcantara (144 lbs.)
Yves Jabouin (135 lbs.) vs. Ian Loveland (135 lbs.)

%VIRTUAL-Gallery-131832%

 

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UFC 134 Weigh-In Video

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Shogun Rua will be one of the many UFC 134 fighters who will participate at the UFC 134 weigh-ins Friday afternoon.All 22 fighters at UFC 134 will first step on the scale at the UFC 134 weigh-ins Friday afternoon, and we’ll have the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.

In the main event, UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva and challenger Yushin Okami will have to make the 185-pound middleweight limit. The weigh-ins may also give us an idea of what kind of shape heavyweight Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is in, after a layoff of a year and a half.

The weigh-in begins at 3 PM ET and the video is below.




 

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Shogun Rua will be one of the many UFC 134 fighters who will participate at the UFC 134 weigh-ins Friday afternoon.All 22 fighters at UFC 134 will first step on the scale at the UFC 134 weigh-ins Friday afternoon, and we’ll have the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.

In the main event, UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva and challenger Yushin Okami will have to make the 185-pound middleweight limit. The weigh-ins may also give us an idea of what kind of shape heavyweight Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is in, after a layoff of a year and a half.

The weigh-in begins at 3 PM ET and the video is below.




 

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UFC 134 Live Streaming: Mauricio Rua Ready to Romp over Forrest Griffin

Mauricio Rua will have both the home crowd advantage and the motivational edge when he steps into the Octagon to take on Forrest Griffin at UFC 134 in Rio di Janeiro on Saturday. “Shogun” will once again be favored to take down the feisty American when…

Mauricio Rua will have both the home crowd advantage and the motivational edge when he steps into the Octagon to take on Forrest Griffin at UFC 134 in Rio di Janeiro on Saturday.

“Shogun” will once again be favored to take down the feisty American when the face off in Rua’s native Brazil, though Rua will certainly be hoping for a better result this time around. These two last came to blows at UFC 76 in September of 2007 in a bout that still stands as one of the great upsets in the young history of mixed martial arts.

At the time, Rua had just recently joined the UFC from Pride while Griffin was little more than a fresh face who had the good fortune of winning season one of “The Ultimate Fighter.” What resulted was nothing short of shocking, as Griffin wore down Rua with his energy before forcing the big Brazilian into submission by way of a rear naked choke in the third round.

Rua’s tenure in the UFC has been up and down since then, with wins over Mark Coleman, Chuck Liddell and Lyoto Machida stunted by defeats to Machida and Jon “Bones” Jones.

Rua held the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship belt after snagging it from Machida on his second try at UFC 113 in May of 2010, only to lose it to Jones in a one-sided beat-down at UFC 128 this past March.

Now, “Shogun” will look to regroup and gear up for another run at the Light Heavyweight title, with revenge against Griffin first on the docket. If Rua can keep the fight vertical and strike-friendly, he should have no problem dispatching of Griffin, who relies on grit and determination rather than technique to succeed.

And if that doesn’t work, Rua can always draw on the support of his countrymen and the sting of his past failures to ensure that he, and not Forrest, will be the next one running to reclaim the divisional belt.

Postcards From Rio: Hitting the Ground Running With the UFC in Brazil

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RIO DE JANEIRO — You don’t go to Brazil on a whim. You don’t come home one day and say to the girlfriend who insists that you’re incapable of spontaneity, ‘Pack your bags, we’re leaving for Rio this weekend.’ Try that, and you might learn that American citizens who touch down on Brazilian soil without a visa get immediately fined and sent home. Then see how you like being spontaneous.

Nah, playa. Brazil requires some planning. You pay your $140 (exactly what the USA charges Brazilian citizens for a visa, the Brazilian consulate website points out, calling theirs a “reciprocity fee” — in other words, we only do this to you because you do it to us), you turn in your application, your travel itinerary, and proof that you have enough money to get home, then you wait. A week or so later you’re standing at the airport, being asked if you’re aware of the recommended vaccine for yellow fever.

“Sure,” you say, clearly lying. A couple connecting flights and 15 or so hours later, you wake up in Rio de Janeiro, wondering if that nagging cough is going to turn out to be something serious.

If you’re like me, you read a guide book. It’s helpful, but only to a point. If you want to know the Portuguese phrases for “Please take me to the hospital” or “Please stop flirting with me,” they’re in there. But certain information is tough to know what to do with, like when it says the tap water is safe to drink “in theory.”




Other claims are questionable, but at least somewhat verifiable. For instance, according to the guidebook, Rio residents — “cariocas,” as they’re known in Brazil — love their city so much, they almost never leave for any length of time. A person from somewhere else in Brazil might move to Rio, the guidebook claims, but a carioca will rarely move out of their beloved city.

“That’s true,” Antonio Pedro Figueroa de Mello, Rio’s secretary of tourism, told me when I cornered him at Wednesday’s UFC 134 open workouts. “We love this beautiful city and that’s why we have cariocas all over the world. You’re going to be a carioca, even when you leave.”

Granted, here was a man who had good reason to agree with the characterization of Rio as Brazil’s greatest city, but as he surveyed the fan response to the workouts at Copacabana beach, he couldn’t help but be pleased with the fact that the UFC was bringing this type of attention to his city.

“The UFC was born here with the Gracie family,” he said. “Now they come back for Rio. We want to do this to promote the city.”

Of course, Rio’s repuation among Brazilians isn’t all positive. When I told a Brazilian acquaintence that I was headed here, she apologized for not having much to tell me about the city.

“I’m not from there,” she explained. “I work for a living.”

As it said in the guide book: Brazil works, so that Rio can play. Don’t tell that to de Mello, of course, who was hard at work selling people on Rio during the workouts.

“We work a lot so people can play more,” he said with a sheepish grin. “Play better.”

Judging by the crowd for the workout, there were at least a couple thousand cariocas who had managed to escape work for a few hours in the middle of the week. They danced. They sang. They launched into a chant or two. The chants and songs, I would learn, are a staple at soccer games among Rio’s professional teams.

“Vou festejar. O seu sofrer…Pode chora!” goes one delightfully mean song. It roughly translates to, “I’ll celebrate your suffering…You can cry!”

Another, used by opponents who worry that Flamengo fans might be feeling too good about themselves, retort by singing “Sempre te na Mare” — you’ll always be in Mare. Mare just happens to be one of Rio’s most notorious favelas, or slums. It’d be a little like opposing fans responding to a Detroit Lions touchdown by shouting, ‘Hey, you’re still stuck in Detroit!’ As if they need any reminder.

Soccer (sorry, I just can’t bring myself to call it football) is never far from the minds of cariocas, even when they’re talking MMA. The big stir at Thursday’s press conference inside the opulent Copacabana Palace hotel was that Anderson Silva would be making his entrance on Saturday night wearing a Corinthians team jersey. Since Corinthians is a Sao Paulo team, there was the slightest suggestion that the Rio fans who have flocked all around Silva this week might not respond so favorably to this.

Silva smiled his sly grin and pointed out to the eager throng of Brazilian media that, hey, at least this symbolized some kind of unison between Brazil’s number one sport and MMA, calling it a potential “new phase” for both MMA and soccer fans.

Plus, Silva said, in fighting he’s able to “revert my frustration at not having become a soccer player.”

But, as one Brazilian explained to me later, it’s more than just a joking matter. Seeing Silva get such a huge response from his countrymen, and seeing him allied with a major soccer team, it all serves to remind Brazilians that with MMA fighters, they now have new role models on the national stage.

“In America, you have many heroes,” he explained. “Football players, basketball players, rappers. In Brazil, we only have [soccer] players.”

Now, perhaps, Brazilians have woken up to the fact that another of their compatriots is the best in the world at something other than soccer, and he’s bringing his talents to Rio for one special night.

“We have the opportunity to change the heroes in our country and change the heroes in Rio,” Silva said at the press conference, as sparkling lights from the chandelier played on the vaulted ceilings of the Cobacabana Palace hotel.

A few feet away sat Yushin Okami, glowering into the table top, the headphones on his ears playing an English translation of Silva’s words that were just as useless to him as the original Portuguese.

If only there was a Brazilian soccer fan nearby who knew Japanese, he could have put Silva’s implied message for Okami into a familiar song: Vou festejar. O seu sofrer…Pode chora.

I’ll celebrate your suffering…You can cry.

 

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RIO DE JANEIRO — You don’t go to Brazil on a whim. You don’t come home one day and say to the girlfriend who insists that you’re incapable of spontaneity, ‘Pack your bags, we’re leaving for Rio this weekend.’ Try that, and you might learn that American citizens who touch down on Brazilian soil without a visa get immediately fined and sent home. Then see how you like being spontaneous.

Nah, playa. Brazil requires some planning. You pay your $140 (exactly what the USA charges Brazilian citizens for a visa, the Brazilian consulate website points out, calling theirs a “reciprocity fee” — in other words, we only do this to you because you do it to us), you turn in your application, your travel itinerary, and proof that you have enough money to get home, then you wait. A week or so later you’re standing at the airport, being asked if you’re aware of the recommended vaccine for yellow fever.

“Sure,” you say, clearly lying. A couple connecting flights and 15 or so hours later, you wake up in Rio de Janeiro, wondering if that nagging cough is going to turn out to be something serious.

If you’re like me, you read a guide book. It’s helpful, but only to a point. If you want to know the Portuguese phrases for “Please take me to the hospital” or “Please stop flirting with me,” they’re in there. But certain information is tough to know what to do with, like when it says the tap water is safe to drink “in theory.”




Other claims are questionable, but at least somewhat verifiable. For instance, according to the guidebook, Rio residents — “cariocas,” as they’re known in Brazil — love their city so much, they almost never leave for any length of time. A person from somewhere else in Brazil might move to Rio, the guidebook claims, but a carioca will rarely move out of their beloved city.

“That’s true,” Antonio Pedro Figueroa de Mello, Rio’s secretary of tourism, told me when I cornered him at Wednesday’s UFC 134 open workouts. “We love this beautiful city and that’s why we have cariocas all over the world. You’re going to be a carioca, even when you leave.”

Granted, here was a man who had good reason to agree with the characterization of Rio as Brazil’s greatest city, but as he surveyed the fan response to the workouts at Copacabana beach, he couldn’t help but be pleased with the fact that the UFC was bringing this type of attention to his city.

“The UFC was born here with the Gracie family,” he said. “Now they come back for Rio. We want to do this to promote the city.”

Of course, Rio’s repuation among Brazilians isn’t all positive. When I told a Brazilian acquaintence that I was headed here, she apologized for not having much to tell me about the city.

“I’m not from there,” she explained. “I work for a living.”

As it said in the guide book: Brazil works, so that Rio can play. Don’t tell that to de Mello, of course, who was hard at work selling people on Rio during the workouts.

“We work a lot so people can play more,” he said with a sheepish grin. “Play better.”

Judging by the crowd for the workout, there were at least a couple thousand cariocas who had managed to escape work for a few hours in the middle of the week. They danced. They sang. They launched into a chant or two. The chants and songs, I would learn, are a staple at soccer games among Rio’s professional teams.

“Vou festejar. O seu sofrer…Pode chora!” goes one delightfully mean song. It roughly translates to, “I’ll celebrate your suffering…You can cry!”

Another, used by opponents who worry that Flamengo fans might be feeling too good about themselves, retort by singing “Sempre te na Mare” — you’ll always be in Mare. Mare just happens to be one of Rio’s most notorious favelas, or slums. It’d be a little like opposing fans responding to a Detroit Lions touchdown by shouting, ‘Hey, you’re still stuck in Detroit!’ As if they need any reminder.

Soccer (sorry, I just can’t bring myself to call it football) is never far from the minds of cariocas, even when they’re talking MMA. The big stir at Thursday’s press conference inside the opulent Copacabana Palace hotel was that Anderson Silva would be making his entrance on Saturday night wearing a Corinthians team jersey. Since Corinthians is a Sao Paulo team, there was the slightest suggestion that the Rio fans who have flocked all around Silva this week might not respond so favorably to this.

Silva smiled his sly grin and pointed out to the eager throng of Brazilian media that, hey, at least this symbolized some kind of unison between Brazil’s number one sport and MMA, calling it a potential “new phase” for both MMA and soccer fans.

Plus, Silva said, in fighting he’s able to “revert my frustration at not having become a soccer player.”

But, as one Brazilian explained to me later, it’s more than just a joking matter. Seeing Silva get such a huge response from his countrymen, and seeing him allied with a major soccer team, it all serves to remind Brazilians that with MMA fighters, they now have new role models on the national stage.

“In America, you have many heroes,” he explained. “Football players, basketball players, rappers. In Brazil, we only have [soccer] players.”

Now, perhaps, Brazilians have woken up to the fact that another of their compatriots is the best in the world at something other than soccer, and he’s bringing his talents to Rio for one special night.

“We have the opportunity to change the heroes in our country and change the heroes in Rio,” Silva said at the press conference, as sparkling lights from the chandelier played on the vaulted ceilings of the Cobacabana Palace hotel.

A few feet away sat Yushin Okami, glowering into the table top, the headphones on his ears playing an English translation of Silva’s words that were just as useless to him as the original Portuguese.

If only there was a Brazilian soccer fan nearby who knew Japanese, he could have put Silva’s implied message for Okami into a familiar song: Vou festejar. O seu sofrer…Pode chora.

I’ll celebrate your suffering…You can cry.

 

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Georges St-Pierre vs. Anderson Silva: Why the Potential Superfight Is a Bad Idea

In the past four years, the UFC has seen 15 different champions throughout its five divisions (prior to the infusion of the featherweight and bantamweight classes); its Welterweight and Middleweight divisions combined have seen two.  While all oth…

In the past four years, the UFC has seen 15 different champions throughout its five divisions (prior to the infusion of the featherweight and bantamweight classes); its Welterweight and Middleweight divisions combined have seen two.  While all other UFC Champions have averaged 0.71 title defenses each over that time, Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva have had six and eight defenses respectively.  If that is not dominance, I do not know what is.

Throughout the past year, there has been a strong push from fans and, on occasion, Dana White for the two most dominant fighters in UFC history to meet in a superfight.  Questions began with whether the catchweight would be 175 lbs or 180 lbs.  Then if Silva could still make 170 lbs (something he has not done in over six years).  Recently the assumption has become that for the superfight to happen, St-Pierre would make the full-time move up to Middleweight and challenge Silva for his title.

Obviously, a matchup between the two most dominant fighters on the planet, especially when they are so close in weight, is a highly intriguing matchup; but is it the right fight for the UFC to make?

From a business standpoint, putting together a superfight between GSP and Anderson Silva would be a poor investment where the short-term gains do not come close to matching the long-terms losses.  Seeing as though Silva and St-Pierre are two of the UFC’s three biggest PPV draws, it is pretty safe to assume that a card headlined by the two of them would be the highest grossing event in MMA history.

That being said, no matter the outcome, the promotion would be effectively torpedoing the value of one of its biggest draws and damaging the immediate marketability of one of its most exciting divisions.

First, while there are tons of good welterweights on the UFC roster, taking GSP out of the division would do serious damage to the division’s marketability.  St-Pierre sells fights no matter the opponent.  Whether the fight is potentially competitive (Penn II) or clearly a mismatch (Hardy), when GSP headlines a card it sells.

Without St-Pierre, it would take a while to build another solid 170-pound draw.  Even when the second biggest draw in the division (BJ Penn) fought the second best fighter in the division (Jon Fitch), the card barely sold (just over 250,000 PPV buys).

Secondly, the implications of the fight are lose-lose.

If Silva were to win, it would certainly damage the status of the UFC’s golden boy and second biggest draw (behind Lesnar), GSP.  Georges has already stated that a move to 185 would be permanent and even if an immediate rematch was called for that would only be two fights before the face of the promotion was relegated back to climbing the ladder.

If Silva were to decimate GSP, it would be nearly impossible to put St-Pierre back in the title picture for at least a year (see Vitor Belfort).  Either way, a GSP loss would severely damage his marketability and would take millions of dollars out of the Zuffa’s pockets.

If St-Pierre were to beat Silva, it would force Anderson to make a permanent move to 205.  While he has certainly had his fair share of success at Light Heavyweight in the past, it is in no way a certainty that he would succeed in reaching the pinnacle of the division.  If were to lose on his way up the ladder it would effectively take one of the most exciting fighters in the world out of the main event picture.

While a potential superfight between consensus pound-for-pound #1 and #2 Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva would certainly reach record grossing numbers, in the long run the outcome of the fight would be a financial lose-lose.

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