The Good, Bad & Strange from WSOF 2

Much like the song Jeff Bridges’ character Bad Blake penned in the film Crazy Heart, the world of fight promoting is “No Place for the Weary Kind.”Over the past several years there have been plenty of promotions, both high and low profile, looking to e…

Much like the song Jeff Bridges’ character Bad Blake penned in the film Crazy Heart, the world of fight promoting is “No Place for the Weary Kind.”

Over the past several years there have been plenty of promotions, both high and low profile, looking to establish themselves in the sport of mixed martial arts. The majority of these upstarts saw a brief glimmer of hope before ultimately folding up their tents and moving on down the road, but there have been a few organizations which have managed to remain in a UFC-dominated universe.

The World Series of Fighting was looking to strengthen the momentum built off their inaugural showing this past weekend when they rolled out their sophomore effort live from Atlantic City. The Ray Sefo-lead promotion put together a solid card with a mixture of established veterans and fighters on the verge of breaking through into a larger realm of visibility. This was all to be topped off with notable main event matchup between former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski and multi-divisional threat Anthony Johnson.

The WSOF had a fair amount of expectation surrounding their second showing, which for the most part they were able to deliver. But after an event filled with a handful of quality fights, plenty of bizarre behavior and a rough night in the commentary booth, there is plenty to talk about in the aftermath of WSOF 2.

 

The Good

The first major difference from the WSOF‘s debut event came in the lack of mismatches. In their debut showing the organization pitted established fighters with plenty of gas left in their tanks against opposition who had zero business being in the same cage. While K-1 monster Tyrone Spong could get away smashing Travis Bartlett because it was the 27-year-old’s MMA debut, the same could not be said for Anthony Johnson dismantling D.J. Linderman.

This time around, this lack of balance in the matchmaking was nowhere to be found. Every bout on the card made sense, and in some cases like Marlon Moraes versus Tyson Nam, the promotion was able to highlight two up-and-coming names on their roster.

By all means the WSOF put together a solid card and nearly every bout on the docket delivered. Save for David Branch vs. Paulo Filho, every scrap featured two fighters looking to carve our their place in the new promotion.

Veterans like Danillo Villefort, Waylon Lowe and Josh Burkman were able to show their fighting careers were far from over as they each picked up impressive victories on the night. But the spotlight wasn’t going to be ruled by the experienced fighters alone. In addition to the stunning head-kick knockout Moraes landed in the televised card, young buck Brenson Hansen hit a spectacular highlight-reel-worthy flying knee knockout in his bout against Tom Marcellino on the preliminary portion of the card.

All the action on the card did well to set up the heavyweight showdown between Arlovski and Johnson. While “The Pitbull” found himself on shaky ground near the end of the first round, the Jackson’s-Winkeljohn-trained fighter was able to re-establish his footing and battle through. In the end it wasn’t enough to tip the balance on the scorecards as Johnson earned the unanimous decision victory. 

Despite fighting up a weight class from where he is most comfortable, Johnson put on a solid showing in Atlantic City. He was able to control the fight throughout using his striking to back Arlovski up and his wrestling to tie up the Belarusian against the cage.

No doubt Johnson appeared to be running out of steam as the fight carried on, but aside from UFC champion Cain Velasquez, there aren’t too many heavyweights who are known for having tremendous gas tanks. This is an issue which should be remedied for the most part when Johnson returns to light heavyweight, which the 29-year-old confirmed he would be returning to in his post-fight interview.

While Arlovski came out on the business end of the match with Johnson, there are still some positives to be taken in the loss. Following his stint competing in the Octagon, the Chicago-based fighter has been plagued by the reputation of having a weak chin. This label is due in large part to a stretch of Arlovski’s career where he lost four consecutive bouts, with three ending by way of brutal knockout. 

The former UFC champion may not have erased that reputation entirely on Saturday night, but he did a lot to quiet such talk against the heavy-hitting Johnson. In fact, in the aftermath of the bout it was revealed Arlovski suffered a broken jaw and had several teeth knocked out during the opening frame, but still continued regardless of his condition.

That’s tough any way you cut it, ladies and gentleman.

 

The Bad

In the world of mixed martial arts, it has become commonplace to take shots at the commentary teams working high-profile events. Fans watching from home see the action from their own perspectives and when the man working the play-by-play calls things from a different angle, Twitter lights up with criticism.

Calling live-action mixed martial arts bouts is a tough gig by any stretch, but what took place on Saturday night at WSOF 2 was in a class of its own. 

The voices calling the fights are a large aspect of the presentation and they are there to guide the viewers through the action over the course of the night. When the job is done right, the commentating team blends into the fight experience—remaining both present and anonymous at the same time.

In a case like what Todd Harris and MMA legend Bas Rutten displayed this weekend in Atlantic City, the missteps and uneasiness came front and center on multiple occasions. Harris’s delivery on the play-by-play was choppy from jump street and remained this way throughout the entire card. The former WEC commentator was off his game in a major way and it showed, with his biggest gaff of the night coming when he referred to WSOF‘s biggest free agent signing to date Jon Fitch as Aaron Fitch. 

While this may seem like a minimal hiccup in the grander scheme of things, the WSOF is in the early and ever-important stage of establishing their brand. Fans tuning in need to buy into the hype of future events. When you mangle the name of a fighter they may recognize, the very reason you mentioned said fighter in the first place goes flying out the window.

That being said, the failed commentary wasn’t Harris’s cross to bear alone as Bas Rutten did his fair share of damage throughout the evening. “El Guapo’s” enthusiasm in the commentary booth has been a large factor in his career beyond the cage, but at WSOF 2, the typically amped Rutten appeared to handle the task at hand with nonchalance. 

Where Rutten struggled the most came when handling post-fight interview duties. When talking to lightweight Justin Gaethje, who had just earned a victory over J.Z. Cavalcante by way of doctor stoppage, the former King of Pancrase asked Gaethje if he was going to fight Jon Fitch in his next outing. The response was a classic blend of confusion and awkwardness as Gaethje pointed to the fact that Fitch competes in a higher weight class and Rutten simply shrugged off the question as a mix up.

Was it a huge mistake? No. But was it a bad look? Absolutely.

It also needs to be understood that finding a rhythm as a commentary team takes a bit of time, and with this event only being the second outing for the team of Harris and Rutten, there are going to be some growing pains. Saturday night’s presentation certainly came with its fair share of awkward moments, and it is important for the promotion to recognize how large of a role this plays in the presentation. 

 

The Strange

When the dust settled at WSOF 2, there were several aspects of the night’s events that swerved into curious waters, but Josh Burkman‘s post-fight interview was certainly the strangest.

“The People’s Warrior” had a solid showing in the promotion’s inaugural event when he defeated Gerald Harris via unanimous decision. On Saturday night, Burkman upped the ante when he served a blistering knockout to fellow UFC veteran Aaron Simpson in the first round of their welterweight tilt.

The victory over “The A-Train” made it four straight for Burkman, and seven of his last eight. His only setback over this stretch came against surging young talent Jordan Mein in 2011, but Burkman has put in solid work to regain momentum.

In the weeks leading up to the event, the WSOF signed Fitch and announced the winner of the matchup between Burkman and Simpson would face the AKA staple at their next event in June. With Burkman just minutes removed from crumbling Simpson against the cage, the table was perfectly for the “big sell” in his post-fight interview.

The promotion ushered Fitch into the cage and Rutten set about his business. But where the ideal situation to hype a summer showdown with the former wrestling standout from Purdue University was sitting at the ready, Burkman decided to take a different route.

For starters, there are no WSOF titles in any of their divisions. President Ray Sefo told the media during a fight week conference call that several events would pass before the organization would implement championship belts. But that didn’t stop Burkman from talking about his place in the title picture and where be believes Fitch should fall into place. 

When Rutten asked Burkman if he was ready to fight Fitch in the summer, the Portland-based fighter said he believed Fitch needed to win a fight under the WSOF banner before earning the opportunity to face him. Not only is this a stretch because the lack of divisional structure, but you would be hard-pressed to find any ranking system in the MMA world where Burkman and Fitch are even remotely close to one another.

Despite being released by the UFC several weeks ago, Fitch is widely recognized as a top-10 caliber welterweight. While Burkman has found a bit of momentum over the past year, alluding to Fitch not being worthy of a matchup is a stretch.

If anything, one would figure Burkman would like to avenge his second-round submission loss to Fitch from 2006, but this didn’t appear to be the case in his post-fight ramblings, and was absolutely a missed opportunity where the promotion is concerned. Burkman had the perfect opportunity to light the hype fires for their clash at WSOF 3, but his post-fight posturing turned an ideal moment into a web of confusion.

While there were other elements of strange (Arlovski’s UFC glove, Canvas-gate and Paulo Filho) laced throughout the WSOF 2 experience, the move by Burkman topped them all.

This, of course, is my opinion. But that is what this platform is for, I suppose. 

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[VIDEO] Bas Rutten and Kenny Rice Take Sexist, Curmudgeonly Sports Writer to Task on Inside MMA

We’re not sure why every anti-MMA writer out there feels the need to compare the sport to some form of pornography, but when doing a write-up on the historic UFC 157 event some two weeks ago, OnMilwaukee contributing writer Dave Begel did just that, labeling women’s MMA a “disgrace” before declaring that women should just stick to tennis or golf or some sport that wont immediately be viewed as “some kind of porn” by male audiences nationwide.

Unfortunately, we here at CagePotato only have so much time each day to educate these fools via scathing emails, so you can imagine our excitement when we saw that Bas Rutten and Kenny Rice decided to take Begel to task for us. Although the dynamic Inside MMA duo did their best to try and shake some sense into this stubborn old bastard –bringing up such classic pro-MMA arguing points as “Hey, it’s not as bad as boxing” and “Hey, do you watch the Olympics?” — their words clearly fell on deaf ears.

“I don’t want to defend boxing or judo or Brazilian whatever,” Begel states, in doing so proving that he would totally be prepared to defend any of those sports if given the chance, “MMA is designed to hurt somebody. Boxing is one thing, MMA is another.”

Oh, and on the topic of WMMA? Begel believes that — and we’re paraphrasing here — because some of us men have fantasies about two women going at it, therefore the sport is pornographic in nature. We’re not going to delve into the fact that his “theory” could just as easily be applied to the men’s side of the sport, or wrestling, or couple’s ice skating, etc. Instead, we recommend that if you are seeking more sage-like wisdom of this nature, make sure to pick up Begel’s new book , Research: What Gives? — the follow-up to his groundbreaking bestseller, Women: Where Do They Get Off (And How?) — on Kindle today.

J. Jones

We’re not sure why every anti-MMA writer out there feels the need to compare the sport to some form of pornography, but when doing a write-up on the historic UFC 157 event some two weeks ago, OnMilwaukee contributing writer Dave Begel did just that, labeling women’s MMA a “disgrace” before declaring that women should just stick to tennis or golf or some sport that wont immediately be viewed as “some kind of porn” by male audiences nationwide.

Unfortunately, we here at CagePotato only have so much time each day to educate these fools via scathing emails, so you can imagine our excitement when we saw that Bas Rutten and Kenny Rice decided to take Begel to task for us. Although the dynamic Inside MMA duo did their best to try and shake some sense into this stubborn old bastard –bringing up such classic pro-MMA arguing points as “Hey, it’s not as bad as boxing” and “Hey, do you watch the Olympics?” — their words clearly fell on deaf ears.

“I don’t want to defend boxing or judo or Brazilian whatever,” Begel states, in doing so proving that he would totally be prepared to defend any of those sports if given the chance, “MMA is designed to hurt somebody. Boxing is one thing, MMA is another.”

Oh, and on the topic of WMMA? Begel believes that — and we’re paraphrasing here — because some of us men have fantasies about two women going at it, therefore the sport is pornographic in nature. We’re not going to delve into the fact that his “theory” could just as easily be applied to the men’s side of the sport, or wrestling, or couple’s ice skating, etc. Instead, we recommend that if you are seeking more sage-like wisdom of this nature, make sure to pick up Begel’s new book, Research: What Gives? – the follow-up to his groundbreaking bestseller, Women: Where Do They Get Off (And How?) — on Kindle today.

J. Jones

Bas Rutten Talks Overeem at UFC 156, Rips Lyoto Machida

Bas Rutten is one candid and thorough dude. Ask him what he had for dinner, and he’ll tell you how he prepared it. He’ll tell you why he selected it.You just wanted to hear that he ate salmon, but Rutten will tell you all about the Alaskan Sa…

Bas Rutten is one candid and thorough dude. 

Ask him what he had for dinner, and he’ll tell you how he prepared it. He’ll tell you why he selected it.

You just wanted to hear that he ate salmon, but Rutten will tell you all about the Alaskan Salmon with Teriyaki marinade and brown rice that he prepared at 6:21 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 9. 

For fans of MMA who love to hear Rutten talk (that’s all of us), this is a glorious fact. 

Talking to MMAInterviews.tv, Rutten discussed the entire gamut of hot topics in MMA, from Alistair Overeem’s knockout loss against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva at UFC 156 to Ronda Rousey and Lyoto “The Dragon” Machida. 

The MMA legend also discussed a recent road rage incident—and it ends hilariously, as you’d expect with Rutten. 

It’s always useful to get the perspective of a tried professional, and Rutten’s humor and excited demeanor make every interview fun and engaging for the listener. 

Personally, I have to disagree with the former UFC heavyweight champ regarding Machida, but the rest of the interview was mint. 

I feel like Rutten’s argument is flawed from the beginning. He says Machida doesn’t have many weapons, but then he says he throws a cross and a hook or a cross and a kick and always moves in the same direction. 

That is an observation he has made, but here’s the observation I have made: Machida is ridiculously difficult to catch cleanly, and this is not just because he moves in the same direction. His timing is impeccable defensively, and his knowledge of angles and distance alone is a great weapon.

Now, add in his offense. Like Rutten said, he has vicious crosses and hooks, but he also throw nasty knees and kicks, so to focus solely on his punches is unfair. 

Add in his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt (good for two submission out of 18 victories), and it is clear that Machida is, in fact, very dangerous wherever a fight goes. 

I respect Rutten’s opinion, but I just cannot agree with that one. 

Check it out, and let me know what you think. Is Machida a one-trick dragon?  

For fans of MMA, heavy metal or general absurdity, .

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Bas Rutten Undergoes Neck Surgery

Former UFC champion and current co-host of AXS TV’s Inside MMA, Bas Rutten, notified fans via Facebook on Sunday that he was going in for neck surgery. The surgery began Monday morning with the intention of giving Rutten strength back in his right arm….

Former UFC champion and current co-host of AXS TV’s Inside MMA, Bas Rutten, notified fans via Facebook on Sunday that he was going in for neck surgery.

The surgery began Monday morning with the intention of giving Rutten strength back in his right arm. According to Rutten via Yahoo! Sports, the impinged nerves in his neck caused him to lose so much strength in his right arm that he was unable to do one five-pound curl. 

Before heading into surgery, Rutten had this to say to his fans via Facebook:

I don’t know if the text shows with the pics, but tomorrow morning I will get my neck surgery at 7AM (Pacific). They will fuse three discs together in my neck which will make space for my nerves that are caught right now, and then hopefully I will get my strength back!

I will let you guys know when I am awake and able to post something!

Godspeed, you all are great!

Rutten, who failed to lose a professional MMA fight during the final 11 years of his career (21-0-1), surprised many with the news he was going in for the surgery—with the exception of those people close to him.

Following the surgery, Rutten posted a picture of himself from the hospital bed wearing a neck brace with the words (via Yahoo! Sports), “OK, Im awake, will let you all know more when I know more. Thanks for all the ‘Best wishes’, much appreciated!”

For now it appears the surgery to create space for the impinged nerves in his neck was successful, although Rutten won’t know for sure until he gets up and about again.

Rutten has been in close contact with fans through his Facebook page in which he has also been posting photos leading up to and immediately following his surgery.

 

Joe Chacon is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and a staff writer for Operation Sports. You can follow him on Twitter @JoeChacon.

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Bas Rutten: ‘Gonna Have to Admit the Ladies Are Here to Stay’

Georges St-Pierre might not be a huge fan of women’s MMA, and Invicta FC 4 might have been an utter catastrophe from a sales perspective. One guy who had a great time this past Saturday, however, was former UFC heavyweight champion Bas Rutten. At Invic…

Georges St-Pierre might not be a huge fan of women’s MMA, and Invicta FC 4 might have been an utter catastrophe from a sales perspective. One guy who had a great time this past Saturday, however, was former UFC heavyweight champion Bas Rutten. At Invicta 4, Rutten had this to say:

“The ladies are here to stay. All the fights that went to decision, they were action-packed…There was non-stop action and the girls come in in-shape. I did some interviews with them, and the minimum amount they train is three to four hours a day. I had girls that said they train eight to eleven hours a day…when you see them fight, you see it’s really like that. It’s just constant pressure, constant action.”

Even though the UFC has officially picked up women’s MMA, and has current UFC (and final Strikeforce) women’s bantamweight champ Ronda Rousey headlining February’s UFC 157 card in a bout against Liz Carmouche, the idea still hasn’t caught on with many fans. UFC President Dana White, until August 2012, was openly against women ever fighting in the UFC, and once flatly said that women will “never” fight in the promotion.

While White has since softened on women fighting, the entire idea remains a hard sell for many fans. This has made life even more difficult for Invicta FC, a promotion whose core selling point is that it exclusively features women fighting.

Invicta held its fourth event this past weekend. The fights, obviously, delivered. However, because the promotion still lacks a TV deal, the promotion has been broadcasting its events live over the Internet.

It attempted to make the main card available via pay per view over the live streaming sight Ustream.tv. Unfortunately, technical problems with the website made the event unwatchable for many fans and forced the company to refund the money of those who ponied up.

While the event had its share of trouble, Bas Rutten remains a high-profile figure in the MMA world, courtesy of his work as a commentator for Pride FC, smaller MMA events and, most recently, World Series of Fighting. His endorsement means something.

Naturally, it won’t convert many naysayers. Still, Rutten is a good fan to have in your corner.

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11 Fighters You Would Want by Your Side in a Bar Brawl This New Year’s Eve

Ever been hit with a pool stick? It’s a terrible, terrible thing for three reasons. First, it’s not entirely likely to knock you unconscious, second it hurts like you wouldn’t believe and third, it splits the scalp wider than a condom…

Ever been hit with a pool stick? It’s a terrible, terrible thing for three reasons. First, it’s not entirely likely to knock you unconscious, second it hurts like you wouldn’t believe and third, it splits the scalp wider than a condom-packed piñata at a frat party. It truly is a nasty experience, and one that’s more likely to occur inside a bar than anywhere else.

Barroom brawls aren’t cool, they’re not what I’d call fun, and if you don’t get your rear end moving fast enough once the dust has settled, they can carry a costly legal toll. In short, they’re not worth taking part in.

I wouldn’t recommend anyone test their physical fortitude in the cramped confines of a packed pub, but from time to time, it just happens. Sometimes it’s tough to avoid the testosterone-driven booze-hound who’s itching for a fight.

I don’t condone illegal fights, and I’m certain none of the men on this list do, either, but it sure would be entertaining to see any one of these 11 fighters tee off on a group of intolerable alcoholics. Feast on this list, just try to argue!

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