MMA’s Best and Worst, Outside of the UFC


(“Scott Coker, who crawled through a river of shit and came out clean on the other side. Scott Coker. Headed for the Bellator.” / Photo via Bellator.com)

By Santino DeFranco

The recent departure of Bjorn Rebney from Bellator got me thinking about the rest of the non-UFC MMA world, and what it has to offer—both good and bad. So, I’ve compiled a list of the best and worst in a few categories. How do they stack up against their counterparts in the UFC? Hell, I don’t know, but none of them have a signature 360-degree turn while doing any of their jobs.

Commentator

BEST: Jason Chambers, One FC

Chambers is refreshing to hear while watching fights. Not only does he sound professional behind the mic, but he was a seasoned pro MMA fighter himself, which gives him an insider’s perspective into what’s going on during fights. The former Human Weapon host regularly pokes fun at himself, and rarely do we get the ever-so-obnoxious “When I trained with so-and-so” type of rubbish we hear from other ex-fighter commentators. Even if Chambers does occasionally botch names of the One FC fighters like “Xainj-Gui- Zambetriuyuiock,” he still maintains great hair, even in the humidity of Southeast Asia.

WORST: Bas Rutten, various promotions

Bas’s golden days are behind him, and he’s forgotten that he isn’t fighting anymore. His once-funny shtick has become stale and we can only hear so many mispronounced moves and slaughtered names of fighters before we want to turn down the volume and enjoy the second-tier MMA in front of us—though I am still a sucker for any liver-shot references.

Matchmaker


(“Scott Coker, who crawled through a river of shit and came out clean on the other side. Scott Coker. Headed for the Bellator.” / Photo via Bellator.com)

By Santino DeFranco

The recent departure of Bjorn Rebney from Bellator got me thinking about the rest of the non-UFC MMA world, and what it has to offer—both good and bad. So, I’ve compiled a list of the best and worst in a few categories. How do they stack up against their counterparts in the UFC? Hell, I don’t know, but none of them have a signature 360-degree turn while doing any of their jobs.

Commentator

BEST: Jason Chambers, One FC

Chambers is refreshing to hear while watching fights. Not only does he sound professional behind the mic, but he was a seasoned pro MMA fighter himself, which gives him an insider’s perspective into what’s going on during fights. The former Human Weapon host regularly pokes fun at himself, and rarely do we get the ever-so-obnoxious “When I trained with so-and-so” type of rubbish we hear from other ex-fighter commentators. Even if Chambers does occasionally botch names of the One FC fighters like “Xainj-Gui- Zambetriuyuiock,” he still maintains great hair, even in the humidity of Southeast Asia.

WORST: Bas Rutten, various promotions

Bas’s golden days are behind him, and he’s forgotten that he isn’t fighting anymore. His once-funny shtick has become stale and we can only hear so many mispronounced moves and slaughtered names of fighters before we want to turn down the volume and enjoy the second-tier MMA in front of us—though I am still a sucker for any liver-shot references.

Matchmaker

BEST: Rich Chou, Strikeforce and (Now) Bellator

There’s a reason Rich Chou was brought in to Bellator after Scott Coker took over. No, it’s not because he and Coker are good friends, though that may have a small (or huge) part in it. Nick Diaz versus Paul Daley, and Robbie Lawler versus Melvin Manhoef! Do I need to say more? Those fights, along with so many others that Chou put together in Strikeforce’s glory days, had even the most cynical MMA hipster fans jumping with excitement.

WORST: Gregg Sharp, Xplode Fight Series

This joke of a promoter/matchmaker has been in the MMA media spotlight lately after the UFC signed Dashon Johnson, whose 9-0 record was exposed as shamelessly padded. Sharp regularly pits blue-chip prospects with impressive records against fighters with more losses than digits on their hands and feet combined. Hell, Sharp booked a one-legged fighter with a 4-3 record against an 0-10 fighter, to ensure a win. Sharp is a disgrace to the sport, as is his unsanctioned show.

Promoter

BEST: Scott Coker, Strikeforce/Bellator

Despite losing $40 million of Strikeforce’s cash, he still (somehow) sold his show to the UFC for good money, and was signed on to work for the mammoth MMA promotion. The minute Coker’s non-compete clause expired, Viacom booted Bellator founder and CEO Bjorn Rebney, and hired Coker on as the new face of the company. I’m not sure Coker has the Midas touch, as he burned through a ton of cash before selling Strikeforce, but other people certainly believe he does. Plus, Coker has always handled himself with dignity — unlike some people we could mention — and that has to count for something.

WORST: Mark Pavelich, Maximum Fighting Championships

Pavelich isn’t guilty of putting on bad shows. On the contrary, most of MFC’s fights are actually very good, along with the production of the shows. But Pavelich is guilty of something: forgetting he’s not John Gotti, or any other tough guy or important human being for that matter. Pavelich has been spotted on numerous occasions at photo shoots with leather jackets, motorcycles, and exotic cars, basically acting like the main attraction, not the promoter. For all of Pavelich’s megalomaniacal behavior, his greatest feat of douche-baggery was when he left a message on Drew Fickett’s (manager’s) voicemail threatening to “fly down wherever he fucking is and fucking choke him out!”

Announcer:  

BEST: Joe Martinez, various shows

Martinez is the consummate professional. He doesn’t scream like a caged animal or have a “signature 360 move.” He announces fights, what he’s supposed to do. Let’s take a look at the best announcer in history, Michael Buffer (he would have won, but we’re talking MMA here, not all sports), and how clean and smooth he is while announcing fights. Martinez takes after the good Buffer, and knows the fights are what is hyping the crowd. He doesn’t need to create a spectacle of their introductions.

WORST: Ric Reyes/Roland Sarria, Rage In The Cage

Ric Reyes isn’t so bad at just announcing the fights, but it’s his need to continue speaking after his job is done that has him on this list. I mean, how hard is it to sit down and shut your mouth after the bell rings? Apparently, very difficult. Why is it so difficult? Roland Sarria, the former owner of Rage In The Cage, who would regularly engage in over-the-mic shenanigans with Reyes mid-fight. Sarria once yelled over the loudspeaker, during the middle of a super-heavyweight fight, that the “two men inside the cage are sponsored by Krispy Kreme.” Reyes chimed in that he hoped the doors and cage would hold up. And the two regularly yell, “Do you want to see them up, or do you want to see them down?” while the fight is unfolding. If Martinez is the consummate professional, Reyes and Sarria are the antithesis, and may or may not be able to correctly call the clowns out of their cars at the local circus.

Bas Rutten: Jon Jones Is a Dirty Fighter

Jon Jones knew exactly what he was doing when he poked Glover Teixeira in the eye, and that alone makes him a dirty fighter, according to Bas Rutten.
The UFC light heavyweight champ has developed a habit for utilizing his Mr. Fantastic-like reach to sh…

Jon Jones knew exactly what he was doing when he poked Glover Teixeira in the eye, and that alone makes him a dirty fighter, according to Bas Rutten.

The UFC light heavyweight champ has developed a habit for utilizing his Mr. Fantastic-like reach to shove an open hand into opponents’ faces. Some believe Jones merely uses this tactic to gauge distance and set up his offense, while others lean on the side of intentional eye-gouging.

Appearing on Inside MMARutten went with the latter after watching Jones land multiple eye pokes against Teixeira at UFC 172:

[Jones is] a very calm, relaxed methodical fighter, and because he is that, I’m sorry I have to say yes. That is a dirty fighter. Maybe he was looking down and pushing the fingers in the eye, maybe that happened, I didn’t check that out. But he knows exactly what he’s doing at any given time, and his fingers were definitely in [Teixeira’s face] for a long time. He was constantly rubbing them in the face.

Teixeira isn’t the only opponent Jones had wincing like a pirate in a title fight.

Zeus of Middle Easy ran a story in April counting down Jones’ best eye pokes. Along with Teixeira, the victim list also included Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Lyoto Machida, Rashad Evans and Alexander Gustafsson.

It’s definitely not a good look for Jones, who is already the most scrutinized fighter on the planet. Some of the instances against Teixeira were especially bad with Jones basically feeding his entire pinky into the Brazilian’s eye.  

It’s unfortunate that “Eye-Poke Gate,” or whatever you want to call it, has taken away from what truly was a brilliant performance by Jones. UFC President Dana White admitted that Jones needed to keep his hands closed more, but he refused to have his opinion of the 26-year-old champ swayed to the same contempt held by the masses.

“I mean, people are always going to go overboard with Jon Jones because they don’t like him,” White said in an interview with MMAjunkie.com. “Guys have got to start closing their hands, and if you’re going to keep your hands open to block shots, which everybody does, you’ve got to keep your hands closer to your face, not extended in your opponent’s face.”

White makes a valid point in people going “overboard.”

The eye pokes were completely unnecessary on Jones’ part against Teixeira, but at the same time, one would be hard-pressed to claim they played a significant role in the outcome of the fight.

This isn’t to take away from the general concern that the champ’s future opponents will likely face.

An eye injury can end a career, and it would behoove any referee who is tasked with the job of overseeing Jones’ fights to keep a watchful eye, no pun intended. Speaking with MMAFighting.com, Teixeira said he didn’t feel like the pokes were intentional. However, he did encourage MMA refs to be stricter in future instances.  

Gustafsson, Jones’ next opponent, has to be thankful for that.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bas Rutten: Alistair Overeem Started Losing Once He Stopped Using Steroids

Former UFC heavyweight champion Bas Rutten is less than impressed with Alistair Overeem’s UFC career and believes his 2-2 record inside the Octagon can be attributed to performance-enhancing drugs. 
In an interview on this week’s edition of Submis…

Former UFC heavyweight champion Bas Rutten is less than impressed with Alistair Overeem’s UFC career and believes his 2-2 record inside the Octagon can be attributed to performance-enhancing drugs. 

In an interview on this week’s edition of Submission Radio, the professional fighter-turned-color commentator blamed “The Demolition Man’s” back-to-back losses to Antonio Silva and Travis Browne on anabolic steroids, or lack thereof:

He got caught on steroids, then he got tested the next time he couldn’t use and he lost. His testosteroneI heard, read on the Internet, I’m just saying that it doesn’t have to be true but it was out there in the news everywherehe had a level of 160. So now Nevada says, well that means with prior usage you can’t fight in Nevada anymore. And I think it maybe did something to him mentally, I don’t know.

After a crushing TKO win over former heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar at UFC 141 in December 2011, improving his unbeaten streak to 12 wins in a row, Overeem was set to square off with then-champ Junior dos Santos at UFC 146 in May 2012.

However, the bout never came to fruition since “The Reem” failed a pre-fight drug test administered by the Nevada State Athletic Commission for a testosterone to epitestosterone ratio of 14-to-1, per MMA Junkie

After serving a nine-month suspension for the infraction, Overeem returned to the cage at UFC 156 in February of last year, soundly dominating Silva for two rounds.

However, early in the final frame, “Bigfoot” staged an epic comeback and managed to knock the former Strikeforce/K-1 titleholder out cold.

At UFC Fight Night 26 in August, it was nearly an identical story against Browne, with Overeem controlling the action early before getting his lights put out with a front kick.

The key difference here was that this matchup ended in the first round.

Despite the setbacks, the 33-year-old returned to his winning ways at UFC 169 in February were he outclassed Frank Mir for 15 minutes with his striking on the feet and on the ground.

Did PEDs play a factor in Overeem’s winless 2013 campaign, or was he simply beaten by two competitors who are better than him? 

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The 39 Most Incredible MMA Photos We Posted on Facebook This Year [GALLERY]


(MMA face-swap of the century: Tito and Jenna at the Grammys, via JCSUPERMAN on the UG)

CagePotato isn’t just an outdated MMA blog featuring incredibly biased articles and a non-functional comment section. The truth is, CP is an online media empire, which includes our daily complaints and arguments on Twitter, MMA GIFs and videos on our Tumblr page, and the amazing/ridiculous photographs and memes we post on Facebook.

We spent all morning combing our Facebook photo gallery and hand-picked 39 of the most memorable images that we posted in 2013, which we’ve laid out below along with their original descriptions. Enjoy, and if you’re not following us yet, get with the damn program.


January 8th: Chael Sonnen before he was a superstar heel, and Jeff Monson before he was a walking art gallery. #oldschool #mma


January 9th: Photo of the day: Ed O’Neill chokes out Royce Gracie on the set of Modern Family.


(MMA face-swap of the century: Tito and Jenna at the Grammys, via JCSUPERMAN on the UG)

CagePotato isn’t just an outdated MMA blog featuring incredibly biased articles and a non-functional comment section. The truth is, CP is an online media empire, which includes our daily complaints and arguments on Twitter, MMA GIFs and videos on our Tumblr page, and the amazing/ridiculous photographs and memes we post on Facebook.

We spent all morning combing our Facebook photo gallery and hand-picked 39 of the most memorable images that we posted in 2013, which we’ve laid out below along with their original descriptions. Enjoy, and if you’re not following us yet, get with the damn program.


January 8th: Chael Sonnen before he was a superstar heel, and Jeff Monson before he was a walking art gallery. #oldschool #mma


January 9th: Photo of the day: Ed O’Neill chokes out Royce Gracie on the set of Modern Family.


January 13th: Nate Marquardt’s leg, you guys. Gross.


January 18th: “You said it, man. Nobody f*cks with the Jesus.” (Props: @TheUG)


January 24th: Aryane Steinkopf, your Brazilian MMA ring girl of the day. Lots more photos here: http://brk.to/fo0g


February 25th: Fill in the blank: When this happened, I nearly ___ my pants.


March 4th: Well that is just beautiful. Photos by Joshua Hedges/Getty Images, via Deadspin


March 25th: Arlovski’s missing teeth vs. Cavalcante’s head-gash…which WSOF 2 injury was nastier? (JZ photo via @ryanloco)


March 26th: “…a scowl that has remained a mystery to art historians for centuries.” #monadiaz via @ChrisWhite209

Following Successful Leg Surgery, Anderson Silva’s Recovery Time Estimated at 3-6 Months


(Photo via Esther Lin/MMAFighting)

Whether or not Anderson Silva should continue fighting after his gruesome leg-break on Saturday is up for debate. But theoretically, Silva could be back in action by the summer if he wanted to. That’s according to the UFC’s official statement on his injury, which was posted on UFC.com yesterday:

Following Saturday evening’s UFC 168 main event, former champion Anderson Silva was taken to a local Las Vegas hospital where he underwent surgery to repair a broken left leg. The successful surgery, performed by Dr. Steven Sanders, the UFC’s orthopedic surgeon, inserted an intramedullary rod into Anderson’s left tibia. The broken fibula was stabilized and does not require a separate surgery. Anderson will remain in the hospital for a short while, but no additional surgery is scheduled at this time. Recovery time for such injuries may vary between three and six months.”

A short time later, Silva posted a short message on his Instagram account saying “I want to thank all my fans and friends for their support and caring messages, I’m fine now and I need to be with my family, a good rest with my children and wife will help me in recovery. Thanks Brazil.”

Maybe the saddest part of all this is that Silva’s hero and potential boxing opponent Roy Jones Jr. now wants to box Nick Diaz since Anderson is out of commission. Come on, Roy…that’s not how we treat a homey.

After the jump: An old but very relevant video from Bas Rutten that explains how to avoid breaking your shin when throwing a leg kick. Plus: Ronda Rousey and her crew react to Silva’s leg-break backstage.


(Photo via Esther Lin/MMAFighting)

Whether or not Anderson Silva should continue fighting after his gruesome leg-break on Saturday is up for debate. But theoretically, Silva could be back in action by the summer if he wanted to. That’s according to the UFC’s official statement on his injury, which was posted on UFC.com yesterday:

Following Saturday evening’s UFC 168 main event, former champion Anderson Silva was taken to a local Las Vegas hospital where he underwent surgery to repair a broken left leg. The successful surgery, performed by Dr. Steven Sanders, the UFC’s orthopedic surgeon, inserted an intramedullary rod into Anderson’s left tibia. The broken fibula was stabilized and does not require a separate surgery. Anderson will remain in the hospital for a short while, but no additional surgery is scheduled at this time. Recovery time for such injuries may vary between three and six months.”

A short time later, Silva posted a short message on his Instagram account saying “I want to thank all my fans and friends for their support and caring messages, I’m fine now and I need to be with my family, a good rest with my children and wife will help me in recovery. Thanks Brazil.”

Maybe the saddest part of all this is that Silva’s hero and potential boxing opponent Roy Jones Jr. now wants to box Nick Diaz since Anderson is out of commission. Come on, Roy…that’s not how we treat a homey.

After the jump: An old but very relevant video from Bas Rutten that explains how to avoid breaking your shin when throwing a leg kick. Plus: Ronda Rousey and her crew react to Silva’s leg-break backstage.

Knockout of the Day: David Loiseau KO’s Mike Kent Three Times in Fifteen Seconds at ECC 18 – Road to Glory

David Loiseau is what you’d call a “Jekyll and Hyde” fighter. In his last four UFC appearances dating back to 2006, “The Crow” hasn’t exactly looked like the guy who once made Charles McCarthy shit out his own intestines, to put it revoltingly. You could even go as far as to say that he’s looked like “a canned dog shit sundae.” Yet when Loiseau’s paired against some young gun on the local circuit, like he was against Mike Kent at ECC 18 – Road to Glory last weekend, he manages to not only come away with a vicious KO victory, but technically three KO victories, in under fifteen seconds.

You can check out the above video to see what we mean, but on the off chance you live in one of those strange countries where Youtube videos aren’t easily accessible, allow me to break down the fight in the style of Bas Rutten:

“OK, here we go. David Loiseau is good with the kicks so let’s see what he’s gonna do ‘ere. Right straight and BONG! De left hook catches Kent right on his whoopsie-daisy! He’s down…David following up with some ground and pound and BING! BANG! DANGADADANG!! It’s over.

Personally, I would have let Kent back up and broke his liver to teach him a lesson but that’s just me. ZABADA-DABADA Brian Urlacher’s a pussy.”

With the win, Loiseau notched his fourth straight victory since being ousted from the UFC during his third tour of duty in 2010. Anyone see him making a fourth run at the big time?

J. Jones

David Loiseau is what you’d call a “Jekyll and Hyde” fighter. In his last four UFC appearances dating back to 2006, “The Crow” hasn’t exactly looked like the guy who once made Charles McCarthy shit out his own intestines, to put it revoltingly. You could even go as far as to say that he’s looked like “a canned dog shit sundae.” Yet when Loiseau’s paired against some young gun on the local circuit, like he was against Mike Kent at ECC 18 – Road to Glory last weekend, he manages to not only come away with a vicious KO victory, but technically three KO victories, in under fifteen seconds.

You can check out the above video to see what we mean, but on the off chance you live in one of those strange countries where Youtube videos aren’t easily accessible, allow me to break down the fight in the style of Bas Rutten:

“OK, here we go. David Loiseau is good with the kicks so let’s see what he’s gonna do ‘ere. Right straight and BONG! De left hook catches Kent right on his whoopsie-daisy! He’s down…David following up with some ground and pound and BING! BANG! DANGADADANG!! It’s over.

Personally, I would have let Kent back up and broke his liver to teach him a lesson but that’s just me. ZABADA-DABADA Brian Urlacher’s a pussy.”

With the win, Loiseau notched his fourth straight victory since being ousted from the UFC during his third tour of duty in 2010. Anyone see him making a fourth run at the big time?

J. Jones