(Anthony Johnson, back in his “How in the actual f*ck does that guy make 170??” days.)
After going 3-0 as light-heavyweight last year — with no weigh-in mishaps whatsoever — ever-expanding slugger Anthony Johnson is making his next jump up the scale. As first reported by MMA Junkie, the former UFC welterweight contender is slated to face former UFC champ Andrei Arlovski at heavyweight in the main event of World Series of Fighting 2, which goes down Saturday, March 23rd, at Revel Resorts & Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Both men scored easy first-round knockouts at WSOF’s debut event in November, so hell, why not make ’em fight each other? Though “Rumble” won’t have a size-advantage to rely on this time, his powerful fists could spell doom for Arlovski’s fuzzy chin.
But that’s not even the biggest WSOF-related news we have to share. According to a press release distributed today, WSOF 2 will mark the first live event in a new three-year broadcast partnership with NBC Sports Network, which previously aired the promotion’s first card. Here’s the important stuff:
The agreement calls for a minimum of six live events annually on the national television platform that reaches over 80 million homes. Additionally, later this year, NBCSports.com will live stream World Series of Fighting events via TV Everywhere.
(Anthony Johnson, back in his “How in the actual f*ck does that guy make 170??” days.)
After going 3-0 as light-heavyweight last year — with no weigh-in mishaps whatsoever — ever-expanding slugger Anthony Johnson is making his next jump up the scale. As first reported by MMA Junkie, the former UFC welterweight contender is slated to face former UFC champ Andrei Arlovski at heavyweight in the main event of World Series of Fighting 2, which goes down Saturday, March 23rd, at Revel Resorts & Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Both men scored easy first-round knockouts at WSOF’s debut event in November, so hell, why not make ‘em fight each other? Though “Rumble” won’t have a size-advantage to rely on this time, his powerful fists could spell doom for Arlovski’s fuzzy chin.
But that’s not even the biggest WSOF-related news we have to share. According to a press release distributed today, WSOF 2 will mark the first live event in a new three-year broadcast partnership with NBC Sports Network, which previously aired the promotion’s first card. Here’s the important stuff:
The agreement calls for a minimum of six live events annually on the national television platform that reaches over 80 million homes. Additionally, later this year, NBCSports.com will live stream World Series of Fighting events via TV Everywhere.
“We are thrilled to call NBC Sports Network the home of World Series of Fighting,” said World Series of Fighting President and six-time world kickboxing champion, Ray Sefo. “This partnership will allow us to build the World Series of Fighting brand of world-class MMA competition before a dedicated national audience of passionate sports fans and place our athletes on the big stage that they deserve.”
Six events a year on cable TV? Just like that, World Series of Fighting has already become the #3 MMA promotion in the U.S. Their primary challenge now is to build up their roster so that not every main event is a moneyweight freak-show. (Not that we’re complaining.) To that end, WSOF has been busy behind the scenes in recent months, signing guys like Paulo Filho and Dany Lauzon. Can they make a dent in an already crowded market?
For a very long time now, I have been surprised at just how quickly fans of the combative sports attach certain labels to shocking upsets, and perhaps no label is as grossly misused as the term “Fluke.” Sure, this is nothing new; it’s…
For a very long time now, I have been surprised at just how quickly fans of the combative sports attach certain labels to shocking upsets, and perhaps no label is as grossly misused as the term “Fluke.”
Sure, this is nothing new; it’s been going on since people began to follow the sport of boxing, so many years ago, and in truth it isn’t going to go away, either.
But that doesn’t give it any real credibility, nor does it make it correct, because it is simply wrong.
Recently, fans have attached the term to fights such as GSP vs. Serra I, Andrei Arlovski vs. Roy Nelson, and so on and so forth.
Those fights were upsets, yes, but they were still fights, not flukes.
Neither GSP nor Roy Nelson had any illusions as to what they were walking into; they knew that their opponents were going to try to win any way they could, and that said opponents only had so many avenues to win: by decision, submission, TKO or KO.
Sure, it has been noted by many that GSP had distractions in his life leading into his first bout with Matt Serra, but that doesn’t change the fact that GSP knew that he could lose by any of the means fights are decided in the sport.
When he suffered that TKO loss, it was because Serra, based on his height and reach, was a bit more problematic that GSP anticipated; when Serra caught GSP with that shot, it was then that Serra really stepped up his game and finished the champ with poise and accurate power punching, and that is something that we don’t usually see when one man has the other hurt badly and is going in for the kill.
The same goes for Roy Nelson, who has made a living getting slugged in the face, often. His easy smile, beard and mullet may distract some, but his style of fighting is based on four pillars, and one of them is his chin.
When he got knocked out by Arlovski, it was because he was willing to test his chin against the fists of his opponent, and he lost in a big way.
That is not a fluke, that is just part of the game; anyone can get knocked out, and if you put your chin in the line of fire often enough, against heavy punchers, it is going to happen.
Then, there is the simple fact that both GSP and Nelson are students of the game—and truth be told I don’t know of any fighter who isn’t—and the notion of being defeated by KO is something that both men have faced not only in training but every previous time they had stepped into the cage.
Of course, I have been on board the “fluke” bandwagon before. I used to scream the term into the faces of anyone who saw validation in claiming that one fighter was no good simply because he was upset by another fighter.
But then I was called on it, and called hard.
It happened around the time Mike Tyson was upset and knocked out by Buster Douglas.
It was a fluke, I said. Couldn’t happen again in a million years, I said. Will never happen again, I said.
“Do you think Tyson studies tape?”
I think so, I replied. But maybe he didn’t this time.
“If he did, then he should have trained harder, and being lazy isn’t a fluke, it’s being lazy,” my tormentor said. “If he didn’t study tape, then he damn well should have. That isn’t a fluke, it’s being overconfident.”
You’re oversimplifying things, I tried to counter. No one thought Tyson was going to lose this fight. Douglas was hardly ranked.
“So, because the masses thought one way and were proved to be wrong, that makes it a fluke?”
I didn’t know what to say about that, because it sounded like I was walking into a trap.
“The masses like to be amazed, and if they are amazed enough and in a continuous fashion, it’s what they come to expect, and that lulls them into nothing more than making assumptions beforehand, and then proceeding from those assumptions before learning if they are correct or false. Pavlov’s dog was the same way, you know, but Pavlov not giving the mutt the scraps wasn’t a fluke, it was by design, just like it was by design when Douglas climbed up off the canvas and kept on fighting, and just like he kept on throwing punches. Fights happen by design and are based on a known design. The winner just happens to be the better designer.”
Each and every single fight is really its own story, and that is where the folly of the fluke comes into focus. What GSP or Nelson did before their fights with Serra and Arlovski are of no importance; it’s what they decided to do—how they fought these men—at the time that matters, and that is where they were defeated.
Everyone can fall into error and proceed from false assumptions, especially fighters who are as gifted as GSP or as tough as Nelson, but when those notions and assumptions are confounded, it is not a fluke but a simple byproduct of hubris if the loss comes because of a reliance on the past.
Flukes happen in other aspects of life, to be sure. I am not saying I don’t understand why people rush to use the word to explain why the upset happened (because we all crave explanations) or to label it (because we all love to label things); I understand this all too well.
I am saying that in a contest with weight classes, unified rules, referees in good standing and of high personal and professional accountability, known methods to achieve victory, training camps and trainers chosen by the fighter via free will, desire and dedication and the lessons of the past…well, someone is either going to win by decision, KO, TKO or submission, and there is no mystery to be found in that.
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.Typically, when the UFC releases a fighter, they have either been unsuccessful or are being disciplined.Some fighters (like Paul Daley) have done things so extreme that they will never be invited b…
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
Typically, when the UFC releases a fighter, they have either been unsuccessful or are being disciplined.
Some fighters (like Paul Daley) have done things so extreme that they will never be invited back to the company, although most are given words of encouragement from Joe Silva that express what they should work on to get back into the UFC.
The fighters with the best chance of making a return are typically based on two desired qualities: name value and the ability to contribute to the current landscape of MMA.
Some fighters rely on one or the other, while the lucky few possess both.
Putting together wins outside of the company is a great way to get offered a way back in, although some guys just happen to be in the right place at the right time.
Here is a look at ten former UFC fighters who have the best chance of an Octagon return.
In every sport, there is an ultimate prize. In baseball, it’s a World Series ring. In football, it’s a Superbowl ring. In basketball, it’s the Denslow Cup. For mixed martial artists, the one thing that every fighter hopes to grasp one day is his v…
In every sport, there is an ultimate prize. In baseball, it’s a World Series ring. In football, it’s a Superbowl ring. In basketball, it’s the Denslow Cup. For mixed martial artists, the one thing that every fighter hopes to grasp one day is his very own UFC championship belt.
When competing for championship gold, fighters have behaved in many different ways. Some are more aggressive than ever in the title hunt. Others take on a more cautious approach, in hopes of not blowing their golden opportunity.
There is no right or wrong way to fight, however, some fights have looked tremendous on paper, but terrible in reality. No matter what the reason, some fights are just awful, and championship contests are not immune.
They say that styles make fights, and some championship bouts are stylistic nightmares that should have been avoided by matchmaker Joe Silva, but when two guys are at the top of their division, their collision is inevitable.
Here is a look at the 10 worst title fights in UFC history.
Anthony Johnson raised some eyebrows when he expressed interest in possibly moving up to the land of the heavyweights. Even more surprising was Johnson expressing interest in facing former UFC heavyweight champ, Andrei Arlovski (h/t Damon Martin, MMA W…
Anthony Johnson raised some eyebrows when he expressed interest in possibly moving up to the land of the heavyweights. Even more surprising was Johnson expressing interest in facing former UFC heavyweight champ, Andrei Arlovski (h/t Damon Martin, MMA Weekly).
Both men competed on the World Series of Fighting 1 event with both picking up victories. Johnson has competed as low as welterweight previously in his career but seems to have found a home at light heavyweight.
However, that doesn’t mean Johnson isn’t open to opportunities outside the 205-pound division.
A fight with Arlovski and Johnson would no doubt provide fireworks and would be a great fight for the WSOF to follow up the momentum gained by their first event.
Arlovski has always competed at heavyweight, but would he have the advantage over “Rumble” if the two were to meet one another?
Both Andrei “The Pitbull” Arlovski and Anthony “Rumble” Johnson were featured on the first World Series of Fighting event. Arlovski won in the main event while Johnson won via shocking flash KO earlier in the evening.Although Johnson now competes …
Both Andrei “The Pitbull” Arlovski and Anthony “Rumble” Johnson were featured on the first World Series of Fighting event. Arlovski won in the main event while Johnson won via shocking flash KO earlier in the evening.
Although Johnson now competes at light heavyweight, the former UFC welterweight title contender could be moving up the scales in the future. Johnson spoke to MMA Weekly about possibly moving up to heavyweight.
“I’ve tried 170, I’ve tried 185, now I’m at 205, and actually I can’t lie, I want to go up to heavyweight one time, just to test it out,” Johnson said.
Johnson seems to have revitalized his career at light heavyweight after struggling numerous times to make weight. He’s made the 205-pound limit in his last three fights and has won four-straight bouts overall since being cut by the UFC.
“Rumble” is still awaiting word on his next opponent in the WSOF and wouldn’t turn down a fight at heavyweight, via MMA Weekly:
I’d accept it if they offered it to me. There are some big guys out there, obviously they get up to 265 cause that’s the limit, but if they offered me a fight against a guy that was 250, I’d fight him. It’s just a fight.
After watching the event Johnson said he would be open to facing the former UFC champ Arlovski, also via MMA Weekly:
I thought about that fight too, I’d take it if they offered it to me. I was actually thinking about it today. I was thinking about it today whenever I watched the fights, I watched the whole card today, and I was like it would be crazy if I got to fight Andrei Arlovski.
Johnson had nothing but praise for the former champion when discussing the possibility of facing “The Pitbull,” as per MMA Weekly:
If it happened, I would accept it. Andrei’s a great athlete. I remember when he won the title, I remember when he lost the title, I’ve followed his career. He’s a great fighter, a real athlete, a real fighter too, so it would be an honor to fight him. If it happens it happens, if it doesn’t, it doesn’t. That’s just something that popped in my head this morning, what if it did happen? That would be crazy.
A bout between Johnson and Arlovski would be a great main event for the WSOF. It’s a fight between two big names and would no doubt provide fireworks.