Antonio Rogerio Nogueira’s Future in UFC Could Be in Danger Following Injury

For many fighters, consecutive losses put their respective tenures in the sport’s largest organization in question. When it comes to Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, the problem is his very physiology.Whether it is a flaw in his training program, inability to…

For many fighters, consecutive losses put their respective tenures in the sport’s largest organization in question. When it comes to Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, the problem is his very physiology.

Whether it is a flaw in his training program, inability to slow his pace during camp or simply a lack of luck, Lil’ Nog simply seems incapable of staying healthy.

Pulling out of his fight with Mauricio Rua at UFC 161 has to cast doubt on Nogueira’s viability in the UFC altogether. The latest injury caused his third pull out since August of 2011.

Nogueira’s first injury was due to a shoulder injury, which forced him to drop out of a fight scheduled against Rich Franklin at UFC 133, according to MMAJunkie.com.

In 2012, Nogueira had to back out of a fight against Alexander Gustafsson that was scheduled for UFC on Fuel TV 2, citing a knee injury, according to StudioMMA.com.

A year later and Nogueira is injured once again. This time, the Brazilian has cited a back injury, which spoils a long-awaited rematch of his barnburner match with “Shogun” Rua in 2004. The news was first reported by Combate.com and later confirmed by John Morgan of MMAJunkie.com.

The drop out leaves a chasm in an already lacking UFC 161 card set for June 15. For the UFC, it raises questions of how much it is willing to float on Lil’ Nog, given his history. The Brazilian’s pattern of dropping out of main card fights costs the company each time it occurs.

And as good as hardcore fans of the sport know Rogerio Nogueira can be, he is not a big-name draw, in part due to his lack of screen time due to injury. When one considers the totality of the situation, including his recent lackluster performance against Rashad Evans at UFC 156, Nogueira’s time at the UFC could certainly be in danger.

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UFC 161: Antonio Nogueira Injured, Fight vs. Shogun Rua Officially Canceled

Update: According to MMA Junkie’s John Morgan and MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani, the UFC has confirmed that Antonio Rogerio Nogueira vs. Mauricio Rua is canceled.Currently, the promotion is looking a replacement before pulling “Shogun” of…

Update: According to MMA Junkie’s John Morgan and MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani, the UFC has confirmed that Antonio Rogerio Nogueira vs. Mauricio Rua is canceled.

Currently, the promotion is looking a replacement before pulling “Shogun” off the card.


Another UFC event, another injury.

It appears that the much-anticipated UFC 161 fight between Antonio Rogerio Nogueira and Shogun Rua is in jeopardy, with reports claiming that “Little Nog” has an injured back.

Bloody Elbow relays the latest news, straight from Globo:

On his 37th birthday, the light-heavyweight Brazilian Rogerio Nogueira had to deal with an unpleasant situation: he will be forced to give up his rematch against Mauricio Rua at UFC 161 on June 15 in Winnipeg, Canada. A back problem again bothered the fighter.

Nogueira had been preparing well for the fight, but felt back pain because of a herniated disc in training last Monday. The problem is not serious, but it was enough to get him out of the fight, due to the proximity of it.

Naturally, the injury is extremely poor timing, but if it does in fact keep Nogueira from competing on June 15 on the Canada-bound card, there’s replacements available.

In fact, over a dozen fighters could get the call.

Should the UFC desire someone coming off a win, some likely names could include Ryan Bader, Phil Davis, Wanderlei Silva, Matt Hamill or Jimi Manuwa.

Lyoto Machida and Alexander Gustafsson are also awaiting Octagon returns, but both of them are on the short list of current contenders to Jon Jones’ UFC title.

This would also be Nogueira’s third injury since August 2011.

Previously, the Brazilian had actually been set up for bouts against former champion Rich Franklin (at UFC 133) and Gustafsson (at UFC on Fuel TV 2), but both a shoulder injury and a late knee injury derailed both matchups, respectively.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, MacworldGamePro1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

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UFC on Fuel 10 Preview: Full Fight Video of Nogueira vs. Werdum 1

When Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Fabricio Werdum meet in the main event of UFC on Fuel 10, it will be the second time these two veteran fighters have faced each other in mixed martial arts combat. The first meeting between the two took place in 2006 u…

When Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Fabricio Werdum meet in the main event of UFC on Fuel 10, it will be the second time these two veteran fighters have faced each other in mixed martial arts combat. The first meeting between the two took place in 2006 under the Pride banner.

That bout was in the quarterfinal round of the 2006 Pride Openweight Grand Prix. Werdum defeated Alistair Overeem in the opening round via second-round submission while Nogueira advanced with a first-round submission victory over Wagner Martins. 

Werdum carried a record of 8-1-1 heading into their bout. Nogueira, who had been fighting professionally since 1999, was 27-3-1-1.

The three-round contest was (obviously) fought under Pride rules, which extended the first round to 10 minutes while the second and third rounds were five minutes in length. Another important difference between Pride rules and the Unified Rules was the scoring. The entire fight was judged in Pride, much different than the round-by-round basis we see under the Unified Rules.

Nogueira would take the victory over Werdum, but would lose in the next round of the tournament, dropping a split decision to Josh Barnett.

Nogueira has fought ten times since their first meeting, going 6-4. During that span, he briefly held the UFC interim heavyweight title, winning the belt in a bout with Tim Sylvia and losing it to Frank Mir in his next contest. Nogueira last fought in October 2012, submitting Dave Herman with an armbar and earning “Submission of the Night” honors.

Werdum has fought 11 times since his first meeting with Nogueira, going 8-3.  Werdum is currently on a two-fight winning streak, defeating Roy Nelson and Mike Russow in those victories.

UFC on Fuel 10 will take place on June 8 from the Ginasio Paulo Sarasate in Fortaleza, Brazil. 

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UFC on Fuel TV 10: The Rebirth of Big Nog and His Big Punch

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is a legend in the mixed martial arts community for good reason.One of the first fighters to have solid striking and a brilliant jiu-jitsu game, Nogueira represented the future when he submitted ground-and-pound monster, Mark C…

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is a legend in the mixed martial arts community for good reason.

One of the first fighters to have solid striking and a brilliant jiu-jitsu game, Nogueira represented the future when he submitted ground-and-pound monster, Mark Coleman with a beautiful triangle armbar from his guard. As Nogueira’s career progressed, he developed a name for heart, determination and grit under fire. It seemed like every match turned into an incredible come-from-behind victory for him. 

The great flaw in Nogueira’s game has been his insistence on striking like a boxer—in the model of his enormously talented brother, Rogerio. Recently, Nogueira has been using a more fitting method of landing his punches in rough, ugly fights, which allow him to strike like he has never been able to strike before. Today, we’ll take a brief look at Big Nog‘s modus operandi

 

Classic Nog

Nogueira faced adversity in the ring with many dangerous opponents only to come back and pull off the submission. Up until 2008, Nogueira had never been finished, even through three fights with the great Fedor Emelianenko, which led to his fans quipping that “Nogueira never loses, he just runs out of time.”

In addition to his many dramatic performances—embodying the Rocky spirit that excites fans more than any technical master class can—Nogueira also has one of the finest resumes in MMA. Despite his recent decline in physical ability, Nogueira has fought a who’s who of mixed martial arts talent.

Lacking the ability to shoot with any decent rate of success, Nogueira had such confidence in his guard that he would happily pull an opponent down onto him (including legitimate jiu-jitsu threats such as Fabricio Werdum, his upcoming opponent, and the great Fedor Emelianenko).

More often than not in his early career, Nogueira would shoot on his opponent, and as the opponent sprawled, Nogueira would perform a beautiful sit out (the most effective I have seen in MMA) and move to his opponent’s back or top position.

This sit out was finally countered by Frank Mir, who was able to grab a hold of one of Nogueira’s arms and hop across him to secure a beautiful and brutal kimura finish. This was a wonderful example of a fighter training specifically for an opponent’s tendencies.

A testament to Nogueira’s effectiveness with this technique was that it worked wonders on both the hulking Bob Sapp and the technically brilliant Fabricio Werdum and Volk Han. 

From cult favourites like Jeremy Horn and Volk Han, to terrifying giants such as Bob Sapp and Semmy Schilt, to hard-nosed brawlers like Dan Henderson and Sergei Kharitonov, to world-class heavyweights like Fedor Emelianenko, Mark Coleman and Josh Barnett, Nogueira met them all and almost always came out on top.

In mixed martial arts, and especially in the heavyweight division of today where records are so short and careers are so carefully guided, it is almost impossible to find a better resume than Nogueira’s. Were it not for “The Last Emperor’s” two victories over Nogueira, one could make the case for Nogueira being MMA’s greatest heavyweight to date based on his opposition.

His one weakness was that he was always hittable. Until recently, an MMA elitist movement used to love to bring up Nogueira’s outboxing of Kharitonov to demonstrate his elite boxing and to cite his time training with the Cuban boxing team.

Here’s the truth: Nogueira’s outboxing of Kharitonov only showed Kharitonov‘s limited understanding of the striking game.

Almost every time Kharitonov moved in to punch, Nogueira ducked his head down to the right and fired back a jab while parrying with his right hand—Kharitonov ate it every time. Not once did Kharitonov ever attempt to fake out Nogueira or eliminate his counter jab; he just went on doing what Kharitonov does—demonstrating his amazing chin, swinging his club-like right hand and hoping to catch something.

Almost a decade later, Brendan Schaub did exactly the same thing. After hurting Nogueira with an uppercut to counter Nogueira’s constant dipping, he went back to lunging in face first and eating Nogueira’s jabs.

This led to him stumbling back to the fence and being put to sleep. It was only the second standing knockout of Nogueira’s career and Big Nog‘s first against a heavyweight.

In general, Nogueira has always been something of a punching bag on his feet. You can tell me over and over again about how hard he works on his boxing and whom he spars with, but it doesn’t change the fact that he gets hit a lot when he’s out in the open.

Why does he get so much? Partly because he lacks head movement and partly because he has slow, shuffling feet. Nogueira looks nothing like his twin brother when they are moving around the cage, as he seems to eat almost everything that is thrown at him.

 

Renaissance Nog

Nogueira has had something of a career renaissance of late. Following his first crushing defeat at the hands of Mir, Nogueira started to show hints of punching power that he had never shown before.

It is important to consider the opposition that Nogueira has beaten—Brendan Schaub and Dave Herman aren’t going to be transitioning to the GLORY Heavyweight Grand Slam anytime soon—but Nogueira might be starting to use a style of punching more suited to his lack of swift movement.

Whereas Nogueira was stiff and rigid in his punching form early in his career—trying to remain in stance at all times—the power right hand that he demonstrated against Mir, Couture and Schaub stemmed from stepping forward and performing a transfer of weight. Jack Dempsey spoke about this a great deal in his book, Championship Fighting. 

Nogueira lacks the footwork to get in fast and land punches first through speed alone, and along with his poor head movement, it makes him hittable. Therefore, his new strategy of ducking into the clinch and bullying opponents along the fence (as shown in his bouts with Mir and Herman) makes sense.

By moving into the clinch as soon as possible instead of hanging out in the open, he avoids being beaten up by faster fighters. 

Fabio Maldonado—a big power puncher whose head seems to be a magnet for strikes in the open—had great success in his most recent bout against Roger Hollett by using similar tactics. The clinch boxer, though still rare, is becoming as effective in MMA as he was in Jack Johnson’s era of boxing.  

In his second bout with Mir, Nogueira managed to ruffle the American’s feathers early by pinning him against the fence and using hard punches and elbows. When the two men broke on Nogueira’s terms, Mir had nowhere to retreat and Nogueira didn’t have any chasing to do—allowing him to step in and hit Mir with a hard, weighty right hand. 

Against Schaub, Nogueira was able to use his dipping jab to stun Schaub and move him along the fence, where Nogueira’s slow feet were no longer a factor, and tee off. Against Herman, it was much the same: pressure, pinning along the fence, separating and punching.

Whether Nogueira can muscle Werdum to the fence and rough him up in the face of Werdum’s new octopus-style assault on the feet remain to be seen, but in truth, the new, bullying Nogueira who makes fights ugly and lands his punches is more interesting to watch than the Nogueira of PRIDE, who spent so long trying to box like a Cuban amateur and got hit midway through every attempt.

Pick up Jack’s ebooks Advanced Striking and Elementary Striking at his blog, Fights Gone By.

Jack can also be found on Facebook and Twitter.

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Anderson Silva Almost Retired and Left MMA Before Ever Fighting in the UFC

Although it seems impossible to imagine, Anderson Silva almost walked away from MMA years before becoming the most dominant champion in UFC history.Thankfully for the sport, the Nogueira brothers talked him out of leaving.During a Fuel TV interview wit…

Although it seems impossible to imagine, Anderson Silva almost walked away from MMA years before becoming the most dominant champion in UFC history.

Thankfully for the sport, the Nogueira brothers talked him out of leaving.

During a Fuel TV interview with MMA Heat’s Karyn Bryant, Silva talked about wanting to end his fighting days after the conclusion of his five-bout run in PRIDE, which ended in two submission defeats to Daiju Takase and Ryo Chonan.

As “The Spider” told Fuel TV, his dream was “lost” after competing on the international circuit, where he had “nothing” to show for his efforts:

One day, I talked to Rogerio and Rodrigo—”I no more fight, bro.” The time Rogerio and Rodrigo talked to me, I [had] nothing. My dream [was] lost. Rodrigo talked to me [and said], “Hey, come to my house. I’ll help you. No worry. Come here, train together.”

I finished my contract in PRIDE. I broke the team [up]. The guys talked to me [and said], “Hey, you no fight more in PRIDE.” What? I fight in PRIDE. Good fights. I have no problem in PRIDE. But Rodrigo helped me, for better fights.

Perhaps if it wasn’t for the Nogueria brothers, whom Silva says he loves like his own family, the entire landscape of the sport would’ve been different.

But Silva would eventually return to MMA, with his last fight in PRIDE turning out to be his legitimate loss in the sport (so far).

After a 3-1 campaign between regional promotions Cage Rage and Rumble on the Rock—marred only by a DQ loss to Yushin Okami—Silva found his way to the UFC middleweight division, dominating Chris Leben and starting his road to the title that he’s held ever since.

Fuel TV is currently running Silva’s interview with Byrant in short segments via YouTube, where you can see the pound-for-pound titan talk about being “the black Dana White” and why he doesn’t like to fight Brazilians in the Octagon.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

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UFC 156 Notes: Rashad Evans, the Once and Future King?

In between UFC 156 and his dominant performance against “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy,”Tito Ortiz, at UFC 133, we would have written that the future for Rashad Evans would include a spot as the top light-heavyweight fighter competing in the…

In between UFC 156 and his dominant performance against “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy,”Tito Ortiz, at UFC 133, we would have written that the future for Rashad Evans would include a spot as the top light-heavyweight fighter competing in the octagon, outside of the young whippersnapper holding the belt.

So, when he out-wrestled the former Division I champ out of Penn State, Phil Davis, we all knew he had one and only one test left.  Jon Jones.

The battle that occurred was one of technical precision and long-developed patience displayed by both athletes ending in a judge’s decision for the champ.  Even with the loss, there was only one direction for Rashad.

Up. 

And so, when he was matched up with Antonio Rogerio Nogueira for his next fight, the fan boys all assumed nothing short of destruction and another chance for “Suga” to start the sixth round against Jones.

But boy, were we all wrong.

With Rashad doing nothing at all worthy of the win, the decision was given to Nogueira.  And we were on to the next fight. 

It was that insignificant. 

It was as if we had just watched what was left of some sparring footage from the Countdown UFC broadcast the night before.

A part of me wants to say that it was the patience of Rashad that was his undoing; patience that seemed a game-plan, but soon devolved into something else entirely.

But watching the fight I found myself almost as relaxed as Rashad was as he caught every jab that “Lil Nog” threw just like a another day at the gym.

Mulling over the judge’s decision, which I believe no one disagreed with considering Evans’ abilities and what he should have been able to do, the memory of his title fight with Lyoto Machida came to the forefront of my mind, as well as his fight with Jon Jones.  And one concept seemed to keep coming up.

Inability to let his hands go.

As an athlete that’s the worst feeling in the world.

Everyone who has seen Rashad’s highlight reel can conclude on at least one thing.  His hands are fast.  But we saw none of that Saturday night.

That seems to be the reoccurring story with Rashad.  Two title fights and his latest comeback fight have developed into shattered opportunities due to a mental block. 

Plus, if you think about it, he’s lost two in a row and that’s never good with Dana White as your boss.

And if that’s frustrating for a fan to see how much more debilitating is it for Rashad Evans himself?  And how much harder will it be for Rashad to tell himself to let it loose in his next fight when he knows that if he loses he could risk getting cut?

All we can do is sit and wait for Rashad’s next opportunity and hope he can overcome whatever it is that hinders him from reaching the long lost title of UFC Champion.

The road back to the crown is always plagued with doubt and the difficult task of moving forward, but hopefully Evans can find guidance moving forward.  In the words of T.H. White:

“We cannot build the future by avenging the past.”

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