Bellator 106: Grades for All Main Card Fighters

Bellator 106 moved from pay-per-view to Spike, and the fans were the winners of the evening.
Three title fights lined the card along with the Fight Master finale.
In the main event, Eddie Alvarez edged out Michael Chandler to regain the Bellator Lightw…

Bellator 106 moved from pay-per-view to Spike, and the fans were the winners of the evening.

Three title fights lined the card along with the Fight Master finale.

In the main event, Eddie Alvarez edged out Michael Chandler to regain the Bellator Lightweight Championship.

The 25-minute fight was not the only championship bout to go the distance. The co-main did as well. Emanuel Newton got a decision win over Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal for the Interim Bellator Light Heavyweight Championship.

The best fight of the evening took place in the featherweight division. Daniel Straus took Pat Curran’s title with an excellent showing.

It was a fun night. The five-fight main card delivered for MMA fans, and Bellator will look to carry the momentum forward.

Let’s take a look at all of the fighters and award them grades for how they performed on Saturday night.

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Bellator 106 Results: The Real Winners and Losers

Bellator 106 came with a whirlwind of emotions and news. It was a pay-per-view with two former champions main-eventing, then it was a free-TV card with three rematches for championships. We were skeptical then excited. One thing for certain is that Bel…

Bellator 106 came with a whirlwind of emotions and news. It was a pay-per-view with two former champions main-eventing, then it was a free-TV card with three rematches for championships. We were skeptical then excited. One thing for certain is that Bellator 106 was a memorable and important card for the company. Three championships were […]

Eddie Alvarez, Michael Chandler Put Bellator on Their Shoulders (Again)

By the time Eddie Alvarez and Michael Chandler began their rematch for the lightweight championship on Saturday night, the main card broadcast of Bellator 106 was already three hours, six minutes old.
Just shy of a half hour later it was over, with Alv…

By the time Eddie Alvarez and Michael Chandler began their rematch for the lightweight championship on Saturday night, the main card broadcast of Bellator 106 was already three hours, six minutes old.

Just shy of a half hour later it was over, with Alvarez reclaiming the title from Chandler via wild split decision (47-48, 48-47 x 2) in a fight so good it gave the rest of us a reason to forget everything else that had happened during those previous 186 minutes.

Prior to the main event, nobody had given us much to remember them by, anyway.

For most of the night, Bellator MMA failed to get the home run it needed from the most anticipated event in its history. A trio of tepid decision finishes—including Joe Riggs’ sloppy FightMaster finale victory as well as unexpected losses from Pat Curran and Muhammed Lawal—sucked the air out of our sails, making an already long show seem even longer.

The crowd in Long Beach, Calif. had been apathetic throughout and the television audience bombarded by a glut of ads for video games, motor oil and underwhelming upcoming Bellator shows.

We all applauded last week when, in the wake of Tito Ortiz’s untimely neck injury, the company pulled this event off pay-per-view and put it on free television. We knew all along though that Bellator had essentially emptied its roster to put together this stacked card, and that planning any kind of suitable encore would be difficult.

Many of the undercard results did not help matters, as new champions Daniel Straus and Emanuel Newton (already underdogs and virtual unknowns) pulled off their upsets in somewhat lukewarm fashion.

All the while—as one fight after another turned tiresome—there in the background were Ortiz and erstwhile opponent Quinton Jackson, sitting close enough to each other in the crowd that they both could be framed neatly on our widescreen TVs. For most of the night, it appeared Jackson was staring studiously at his phone.

For Alvarez and Chandler, it all seemed to set an impossible stage. To wash the stale smell out of Bellator 106 their fight would likely have to equal the action of their instant classic first meeting from Nov., 2011, when Chandler launched himself to prominence by taking Alvarez’s title via fourth-round rear-naked choke. 

Surely on this night where most everything else broke bad for Bellator, Alvarez and Chandler would fall short of expectations, right?

Yeah, no.

If the second bout between Bellator’s two best lightweights (let’s be honest, two best fighters) didn’t improve on the first, it at least came very close.

Chandler’s and Alvarez’s stellar, back-and-forth battle unfolded at a tremendous pace, one that for a time appeared it might be too much for the defending champion. Chandler threatened Alvarez with a rear-naked choke near the end of the first round, but by the start of the third he was fading and his left eye was on the verge of swelling shut.

Just when it seemed like he might wilt, though, Chandler rebounded to dominate Alvarez in the fourth.

He opened the action in that round with a flying knee and then controlled the rest of the frame on the ground. Five minutes later, Alvarez was busted up too, but as the final seconds of the fight ticked away with Chandler struggling to keep him grounded on the mat, Alvarez looked directly into the camera and gave a thumbs up.

“It takes two people to put a fight on like that,” Alvarez said in the cage after the decision was announced. “It ain’t all in my hands, it’s up to Mike, too. We did it together. Another fight of the year.”

It was fitting that in the end both Chandler and Alvarez wowed us at an event when most of the rest of Bellator foundered. It also seemed like sweet justice that Alvarez himself triumphed, in his first bout back in the cage after nearly 13 months of legal wrangling between the fighter and his promoter.

On this night, as the hour grew late and the audience grew bored, Bellator needed a savior, and of course it was Eddie Alvarez. It had to be.  

The implications of his victory make an already rocky relationship with Bellator all the more awkward. Alvarez spent much of this year locked in a bitter contract dispute with the company for which he is now 155-pound champion.

According to reports, the settlement the two sides reached in August would’ve made him a free agent if he’d lost this fight to Chandler. With the victory and the title back around his waist, he’ll have at least one more bout in Bellator before he again can test the open market.

That next fight will almost certainly be against Chandler, as a third clash between the two would give Bellator the encore it badly needs.

Alvarez-Chandler III even shapes up as a fight the company could potentially sell on PPV.

Not that there’s any way that could go wrong.

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Bellator 106 Results: 10 Burning Questions for Bellator’s Future

Bellator 106 has wrapped up. The results are as follows:
Eddie Alvarez defeats Michael Chandler by split decision (48-47, 47-48, 48-47)Emanuel Newton defeats Muhammed Lawal by unanimous decision (49-46, 49-46, 49-46)Daniel Straus defeats Pat Curran by …

Bellator 106 has wrapped up. The results are as follows:

Eddie Alvarez defeats Michael Chandler by split decision (48-47, 47-48, 48-47)
Emanuel Newton defeats Muhammed Lawal by unanimous decision (49-46, 49-46, 49-46)
Daniel Straus defeats Pat Curran by unanimous decision (49-45, 48-46, 48-46)
Joe Riggs defeats Mike Bronzoulis by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Mike Richman defeats Akop Stepanyan by technical knockout via punches at 4:05 of Round 1
Cristiano Souza defeats Alejandro Garcia by submission via rear-naked choke at 3:06 of Round 3
Brandon Halsey defeats Hector Ramirez by technical knockout via punches at 0:52 of Round 1
Mike Guymon defeats Aaron Miller by submission via triangle choke at 4:20 of Round 2
Cleber Luciano defeats Joe Camacho by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Josh Smith defeats Darren Smith by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
Jesse Juarez defeats Joe Smith by submission via guillotine choke at 0:57 of Round 1

Now, it’s time to talk about Bellator’s past, present and future. This was a huge card for the promotion that went wrong at first and then went right in many, many ways.

How will that impact things? What should fans look out for? What lies over the horizon? Read on to find out.

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Bellator 106: Matches to Make for the Entire Main Card

Michael Chandler and Eddie Alvarez didn’t disappoint at Bellator MMA 106.
Again, the lightweight stars put together a fight to remember on Saturday night. For five rounds, Chandler and Alvarez went back and forth on their feet and on the ground. 

Michael Chandler and Eddie Alvarez didn’t disappoint at Bellator MMA 106.

Again, the lightweight stars put together a fight to remember on Saturday night. For five rounds, Chandler and Alvarez went back and forth on their feet and on the ground. 

Ultimately, Alvarez earned the split-decision win, recapturing the Bellator MMA lightweight title in the process. Having split their first two fights, a rubber match between Chandler and Alvarez should be coming up soon.

As for the remainder of the Bellator MMA 106 competitors, here are the matchups that are most likely to happen going forward.

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Bellator 106: Michael Chandler vs. Eddie Alvarez II Results

Michael Chandler and Eddie Alvarez produce the greatest fights together. 
Their first fight at Bellator 58 is widely considered one of the greatest bouts in MMA history, and the rematch at Bellator 106 Saturday evening all but surpassed this previ…

Michael Chandler and Eddie Alvarez produce the greatest fights together. 

Their first fight at Bellator 58 is widely considered one of the greatest bouts in MMA history, and the rematch at Bellator 106 Saturday evening all but surpassed this previous standard of excellence. 

In addition to piles of back-and-forth, frenetic action, Chandler vs. Alvarez II featured something the first bout lacked: a controversial finish. 

While each fighter nearly ended the fight on separate occasions via rear-naked choke, neither could secure the submission, and judges were forced to make a tough call after five rounds of violent perfection. 

The decision was split.

…And it went to Alvarez.

We have a new Bellator lightweight champion, ladies and gentlemen.

Watching the fight live, I’m not 100 percent sure that Alvarez deserved the nod, but I am sure that we all witnessed another fantastic fight which represented all that is incredible about the sport of MMA.

Chandler and Alvarez are far ahead of the rest of Bellator‘s 155-pound division, and they appear headed for a trilogy after this close rematch, which is the ideal result for the promotion and its fans. 

This reminds me of the rivalry between UFC heavyweights Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos, except it is much more evenly matched and competitive. 

While Alvarez is the new champion, there is no doubt that Chandler is an immediate threat to his reign. I’m not sure we can say that about any other fighter on Bellator‘s roster, so it is fitting that they settle the score in a future rubber match. 

If their first two fights provide any indication, that is a beautiful, beautiful fact for MMA fans across the globe. 

Can we go ahead and kick off Rounds 11 to 15 now, please? 

 

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