Falling Action: Best and Worst of the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix

Filed under: StrikeforceStrikeforce delivered a full night of exciting fights in the latest installment of the World Heavyweight Grand Prix, but what did we learn once the dust had settled? To find out, we sort through Saturday night’s biggest winners,…

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Strikeforce delivered a full night of exciting fights in the latest installment of the World Heavyweight Grand Prix, but what did we learn once the dust had settled? To find out, we sort through Saturday night’s biggest winners, losers, and everything in between.

Biggest Winner: Daniel Cormier
The former Olympian got a few laughs at the pre-fight press conference by making it very clear that he didn’t mind winning a decision over “Bigfoot” Silva. Then he went out and demolished the much larger Brazilian with some punishing right hands, rocketing himself up the ranks and into the big time. The win proved not only that Cormier can hang with quality heavyweights, but also that his size isn’t necessarily a deal-breaker. There aren’t a whole lot of 5’11” heavyweights in the top ten, but when you’re as quick as Cormier — and when you have wrestling skills that allow you to do something other than stand at the end of a taller man’s reach — maybe it doesn’t matter. Now Cormier’s in a no-lose situation. Even if he gets beat by Barnett in the finals, it won’t be so devastating. It will be just his tenth pro fight, after all. If he wins, he’s the newest heavyweight superstar. Now let’s just hope that his hand injury isn’t too serious. The most disappointing possible outcome would be Strikeforce replacing him in the finals. It would also be the dumbest possible outcome, but more on that later.

Biggest Loser: Yoel Romero
The Cuban light heavyweight came into his undercard bout with “Feijao” Cavalcante looking like he had all the makings of a future star. Between his wrestling skills and his mini-Bobby Lashley physique, he seemed like someone who might be only a big win or two away from being thrust into the spotlight. But after a bizarre first round in which referee Dan Miragliotta actually called timeout so he could implore Romero to fight, he got knocked into the land of wind and ghosts by a brutal assault that left him stretched out on his back. That’s not the image you want to leave people with. Especially not after you just spent five minutes breakdancing. All in all, it was a bad night with a worse ending for Romero. Now it’s just a question of what he decides to do with it.

Most Consistent: Josh Barnett
When the Grand Prix bracket was first revealed it seemed like Barnett had the surest path to the finals. But then, between Fedor Emelianenko’s opening round loss and Alistair Overeem’s withdrawal, nothing in this tournament worked out the way it was supposed to. Nothing except Barnett, that is. He rolled right through his first two opponents and now he’s through to the finals with a minimum of cage time. Though everyone else derailed in one way or another, Barnett is pulling into the station right on schedule. He’s also keeping things interesting with his pro wrestling-style promos from time to time, and yet not overdoing it to the point where it becomes cloying. Basically, Barnett’s starting to look like he could be a valuable asset for the UFC. It’s just that history of failed drug tests and the contentious relationship with Dana White that stands in his way. The former has a lot to do with the latter, but all he can do now is play by the rules, make nice, and hope for the best.

Most Remarkable Recovery: Luke Rockhold
Several times in his middleweight title fight with “Jacare” Souza he got rocked by big right hands, but thanks to his mutant healing powers he was right back in it before Souza could capitalize. I still gave the slight edge to Souza in the bout, but it was close enough that I can absolutely see how you might score it 48-47 for Rockhold (though, 50-45? that’s just crazy talk). At least the title shake-up gives Strikeforce some much-needed options at middleweight, since Souza had already fought just about everyone there was in the division. Rockhold is probably looking at a fight with Tim Kennedy now, but whether he wins or loses, this is a problem that isn’t going away. The pool of contenders at 185 pounds is too small in Strikeforce. If they end up passing the title back and forth among each other, it won’t take long before fans lose all interest. Meanwhile, the UFC could sure use some new faces at middleweight now that Anderson Silva has demolished every credible contender. I have an idea for a solution that could benefit both parties…

Least Secure Future: (tie) Antonio Silva and Sergei Kharitonov
As we’ve already noted, fate has not been kind to the losers in the heavyweight Grand Prix thus far. At least Silva and Kharitonov made it into the semis before getting beat, but now what do you do with them? I suppose you could have them fight each other in some kind of third-place match, but that’s probably not going to excite the fan base all that much. In the end, Zuffa is still looking at two mid-level heavyweights who don’t speak much English. When the UFC eventually absorbs these guys (come on, we all know that’s what’s eventually going to happen) you have to wonder how much value it will see in Silva and Kharitonov. If they do meet each other, it might be in a bout that’s more of an audition than anything else.

Worst Idea, Even in Theory: Replacing Daniel Cormier
When Strikeforce’s Scott Coker said that the organization might have to move on with the Grand Prix final without Cormier if his hand injury sidelines him for too long, I admit I was stunned. I could see replacing someone earlier in the tournament, but in the final? Barnett-Cormier is the only fight that makes sense at this point, and it’s the only one anyone wants to see. It’s a great match-up too, plus there’s Cormier’s whole Cinderella story as an alternate who made the most of an unexpected opportunity. Even if it takes a year, I think you have to wait it out. There are simply no other decent options. Who would you even replace Cormier with at this point? Who’s the alternate for the alternate? Chad Griggs? Antonio Silva? Fabricio Werdum? None of those would feel like a genuine tournament final bout. It would be better to risk leaving this unfinished than to move on with some artificial ending that Strikeforce tries to sell as a meaningful finale. Not only would no one believe it, it would just be insulting and degrading for all of us, Strikeforce included.

 

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“Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov” Fight Video Highlights

(Props: shosports)

In case you missed the action on Saturday night. After the jump: Full videos of Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov and Daniel Cormier vs. Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva. Check ’em out while they last…


(Props: shosports)

In case you missed the action on Saturday night. After the jump: Full videos of Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov and Daniel Cormier vs. Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva. Check ‘em out while they last…

Memorable Moments from the Strikeforce Card

The semifinal round of the Strikeforce Heavyweight World Grand Prix Tournament is in the books and the results are below: Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov: Barnett wins via submission (4:28 of Round 1) to advance to the finals of the heavyweight Gra…

The semifinal round of the Strikeforce Heavyweight World Grand Prix Tournament is in the books and the results are below:

Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov: Barnett wins via submission (4:28 of Round 1) to advance to the finals of the heavyweight Grand Prix

Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier: Cormier wins via KO (3:56 of Round 1) to advance to the finals of the heavyweight Grand Prix

Ronaldo Souza vs. Luke Rockhold: Rockhold wins via unanimous decision (50-45, 48-47, 48-47) to win the Strikeforce middleweight title

Muhammed Lawal vs. Roger Gracie: Lawal wins via KO (4:33 of Round 1)

Maximo Blanco vs. Pat Healy: Pat Healy wins via submission (4:24 of Round 2)

Mike Kyle vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima: Kyle wins via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)

Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante vs. Yoel Romero: Cavalcante wins via KO (4:51 of Round 2)

Jordan Mein vs. Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos: Mein wins via TKO (3:18 of Round 3)

Alexis Davis vs. Amanda Nunes: Davis wins via TKO (4:53 of Round 2)

Chris Mierzwiak vs. Dominique Steele: Steele wins via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-27, 29-27)

What follows are nine memorable moments from Saturday Night’s fight card.

Begin Slideshow

Josh Barnett and Daniel Cormier Advance to Final Round of Strikeforce GP

While the UFC may have been absent from last night’s action, Strikeforce and Bellator provided fight fans with a full night of action.Strikeforce hosted the semifinal round of the heavyweight grand prix in Cincinnati, Ohio. The event was headlined…

While the UFC may have been absent from last night’s action, Strikeforce and Bellator provided fight fans with a full night of action.

Strikeforce hosted the semifinal round of the heavyweight grand prix in Cincinnati, Ohio. 

The event was headlined by Josh Barnett (31-5) and Sergei Kharitonov (18-5) to determine who would move onto the finals. Kharitonov landed a handful of strikes, but was ultimately no match for Barnett, who took the action to the ground and poured on strikes before locking on a fight-ending head and arm choke.

With the victory, Barnett advances to the final round of the tournament and extends his win streak to nine that dates back to 2008.

In the lead-up to the main event former Olympic wrestler Daniel Cormier (9-0) stepped in on short notice against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva (16-3).

Cormier landed a low kick and avoided a Silva flurry around the 4:35 mark, and 21 seconds later, the former Olympian landed a crushing right hand that sent Silva crashing to the canvas.

Silva quickly recovered and attempted to lock up guard, but Cormier was having none of it as he postured up, landed a few right hands and returned standing. Cormier followed up with two left hands and a right that staggered Silva and forced the Brazilian to attempt a takedown that was unsuccessful.

A kick from Silva was caught by Cormier, and the AKA-trained heavyweight sent the more experienced Silva to his back once again, but decided against following him to the mat. Cormier landed a right uppercut during a four-punch combination that dropped Silva. He then followed up with two devastating hammer fists that finished the fight.

Both Barnett and Cormier were impressive in claiming first-round victories, but Cormier’s absolute domination of Silva, who is ranked much higher than Kharitonov, is the more impressive of the two.

Going into the finals, Barnett has the vast edge in experience with 25 more fights under his belt than Cormier. However, if Cormier’s injured right hand turns out to be minor, the quickly-rising heavyweight will serve a stern test for Barnett and could once again score an upset victory.

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‘Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov’ Aftermath: UFC Auditions, Sans Mansion

King Mo, during the UFC application process post-fight interview. Props: Showtime Sports

Last night, the real story behind “Barnet vs. Kharitonov had nothing to do with the heavyweight grand prix. It had nothing to do with the middleweight championship of a sinking organization. Last night, as with every other Strikeforce show since the promotion was purchased by Zuffa, was little more than an audition. It was about who will get a UFC contract when Strikeforce goes under, and who will have to go through TUF. The fans knew it, the announcers knew it, going as far as confirming the Belfort vs. Le rumor, and the fighters definitely knew it.

Despite Strikeforce’s best efforts to hype Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov as a potentially close fight, we all knew what to expect: A repeat of Kharitonov vs. Monson, except with a far superior version of Jeff Monson. Because of this, it’s hard to be impressed with anything that Josh Barnett does at this point. The tournament’s biggest names and most intriguing matchups for Barnett- Fedor, Werdum and Overeem- were all removed well before last night. Barnett has become such an overwhelming favorite to win that when he wins, he’s simply living up to expectations. He was paired up against an opponent with weak grappling credentials, knew he would dominate the fight once Kharitonov was on the ground, and fought accordingly. At least the tournament was set up so that he would get to face a competent grappler in the finals.


King Mo, during the UFC application process post-fight interview. Props: Showtime Sports

Last night, the real story behind “Barnet vs. Kharitonov” had nothing to do with the heavyweight grand prix. It had nothing to do with the middleweight championship of a sinking organization. Last night, as with every other Strikeforce show since the promotion was purchased by Zuffa, was little more than an audition. It was about who will get a UFC contract when Strikeforce goes under, and who will have to go through TUF. The fans knew it, the announcers knew it, going as far as confirming the Belfort vs. Le rumor, and the fighters definitely knew it.

Despite Strikeforce’s best efforts to hype Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov as a potentially close fight, we all knew what to expect: A repeat of Kharitonov vs. Monson, except with a far superior version of Jeff Monson. Because of this, it’s hard to be impressed with anything that Josh Barnett does at this point. The tournament’s biggest names and most intriguing matchups for Barnett- Fedor, Werdum and Overeem- were all removed well before last night. Barnett has become such an overwhelming favorite to win that when he wins, he’s simply living up to expectations. He was paired up against an opponent with weak grappling credentials, knew he would dominate the fight once Kharitonov was on the ground, and fought accordingly. At least the tournament was set up so that he would get to face a competent grappler in the finals.

Oh, about that: Looks like the answer to overcoming Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva’s sheer size and strength lies in exploiting that glass chin. Much like he did in his fight with Jeff Monson, Cormier kept the one dimensional grappler standing as often as possible. Although he showed off his wrestling credentials with an occasional takedown, Cormier refused to fight Silva in his comfort zone by forcing the fight to be stood up every time Silva was on his back. That strategy will work against Antonio Silva, but is his striking good enough to do that against Josh Barnett? For that matter, is Josh Barnett’s grappling going to prove too much for Cormier at this point in his career? We’ll have to wait until Cormier recovers from the hand injury he suffered, which will more than likely be early 2012. Assuming that Strikeforce is around at this time, of course.

If there’s one fighter who didn’t seem to realize that last night was an audition, it was “Jacare” Souza. Souza seemed to buy into the nonsense that some people were spewing about how Jacare vs. Anderson Silva would be a fight worth watching, and seemed to believe that as long as he could go the distance against Luke Rockhold, the judges would give him the fight. Yes, it was far closer than the 50-45 fight that some people seemed to believe it was. Yes, Jacare probably should have lost by split decision instead of unanimous decision. But does it really matter? A losing effort, no matter how close, is still a losing effort. Still, give Luke Rockhold the credit that he deserves for his performance last night. After shaking off the cobwebs that come with over a year and a half away from competition during the first round, Luke Rockhold fought like someone who saw the fight for the audition that it was. It’ll be interesting to see who he gets to defend the title against (again, assuming Strikeforce is around long enough for him to do so).

Other than that, King Mo showed that having “good striking for a Gracie” is like being “a good fighter for a professional reporter”, shutting out Roger Gracie’s lights early. Do we even bother angling for a fight against Dan Henderson, or do we just assume that both guys will be in the UFC before the next Strikeforce card? That isn’t rhetorical, comments section. Also, Pat Healy managed to survive Maximo Blanco’s wild strikes- some of which illegal- long enough to spoil Blanco’s hype. Healy sure has a habit of killing the hype for Strikeforce prospects. Let’s see if that translates into a step up in competition for him.

Full results, courtesy of MMAJunkie:

OFFICIAL MAIN CARD RESULTS

Josh Barnett def. Sergei Kharitonov via submission (head-arm triangle choke) – Round 1, 4:28
Daniel Cormier def. Antonio Silva via knockout (strikes) – Round 1, 3:56
Luke Rockhold def. Ronaldo Souza via unanimous decision (50-45, 48-47, 48-47)
Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal def. Roger Gracie via KO (punch) – Round 1, 4:33
Pat Healy def. Maximo Blanco via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 4:24

OFFICIAL PRELIMINARY CARD RESULTS

Mike Kyle def. Marcos Rogerio de Lima via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante def. Yoel Romero via KO (strikes) – Round 2, 4:51
Jordan Mein def. Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos via TKO (strikes) – Round 3, 3:18
Alexis Davis def. Amanda Nunes via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 4:53
Dominique Steele def. Chris Mierzwiak via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-27, 29-27)

Strikeforce Grand Prix Tournament: The Real Winners and Losers

A crazy week of mixed martial arts news outside the cage was capped off by an awesome event inside the cage tonight as the Strikeforce Grand Prix tournament continued from the U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati, OH. Tournament combatants Josh Barnett and S…

A crazy week of mixed martial arts news outside the cage was capped off by an awesome event inside the cage tonight as the Strikeforce Grand Prix tournament continued from the U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati, OH.

Tournament combatants Josh Barnett and Sergei Kharitonov battled in the main event after a night of great fights that also included the other semi-final bout between Antonio “Big Foot” Silva and Daniel Cormier.

As we can do with any MMA event, looking back on the record books will give us somewhat of an overview of what happened during tonight’s fight card, but it’s tough because there are often things that happen inside the cage that change who the true “winners” and “losers” of the night really were. Sometimes those affected aren’t even in attendance, let alone fighting.

With that being said, let’s take a closer look at tonight’s real winners and losers.

Begin Slideshow