Notorious knockout artist and UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor has run through a murderer’s row of contenders on his quest to securing 145 pound gold, which he did with a spectacular 13 second knockout of Jose Aldo at December 12, 2015’s UFC 194. The Irishman appears to be hungry for the toughest of challenges, however,
Notorious knockout artist and UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor has run through a murderer’s row of contenders on his quest to securing 145 pound gold, which he did with a spectacular 13 second knockout of Jose Aldo at December 12, 2015’s UFC 194.
The Irishman appears to be hungry for the toughest of challenges, however, as he’s set to take on reigning lightweight king Rafael dos Anjos at March 5’s UFC 196 in an attempt to become the first man in promotional history to simultaneously hold two titles.
Getting that second title will be no easy task for McGregor, as dos Anjos has been a force to be reckoned with as of late.
The Brazilian champion has won five straight including three finishes over the cream of the crop at 155 pounds, leading UFC president to call McGregor crazy for taking on RDA:
“Conor wants to be a two-belt champion, so he wants to fight dos Anjos, which is crazy,” the UFC president said on “Opie with Jim Norton” on Thursday. “If you look at that guy, look what he did to ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone, look what he did to Ben Henderson, look what he did to Anthony Pettis. And now Conor wants to fight this guy. It’s gonna be awesome.”
While many feel as if he may have problems with dos Anjos inside of the Octagon, McGregor has already begun to unleash his relentless trash talk in hopes of playing mind games with the Brazilian.
White feels as if it’s more than just trash talk, however, noting that the “Notorious” is very calculated and intelligent with mental warfare:
“It’s not even about shit talk with this guy,” White said. “His mental warfare game is better than anything I’ve ever seen in how he gets in guys’ heads immediately. Very intelligent, calculated. Conor McGregor is a very interesting guy.”
At the end of the day, McGregor has combined his mic skills with his world class fighting abilities to become one of the promotion’s biggest draws. White wasn’t afraid to admit that the “Notorious” one is the “money fight”, claiming that there aren’t many fighters who don’t want a piece of him:
“From flyweight to heavyweight, they all want to fight Conor McGregor,” White said. “It’s the money fight.”
As a general rule, the UFC does not lose out on fighters it covets. The UFC has the most prestigious belts, the most rabid audiences and the largest imprint. Most everything you would want as a fighter is under that roof or in that Octagon. But not exa…
As a general rule, the UFC does not lose out on fighters it covets. The UFC has the most prestigious belts, the most rabid audiences and the largest imprint. Most everything you would want as a fighter is under that roof or in that Octagon. But not exactly everything.
If it was, Benson Henderson would not be thinking about the possibility of taking his toothpick and plying his trade elsewhere. After beating Jorge Masvidal in South Korea in Saturday’s UFC Fight Night main event, the former UFC lightweight champion finally acknowledgedduring the post-fight press conference the long-rumored belief that he would test free agency.
The man who will seemingly fight anytime seems right on time for prime market conditions. He enters free agency at its most competitive point in years, at least since UFC parent company Zuffa acquired Strikeforce in 2011. And he does so with some leverage, having won two straight since moving up to welterweight.
Those factors should combine to make the 32-year-old a wanted commodity, with suitors coming from not only the U.S. but also overseas. While Bellator will certainly be interested in his services to add quality and depth to its roster, so will be One Championship, the Singapore-based promotion that has expanded rapidly across Asia.
This makes Henderson the rare case of a fighter who is free and wanted and could ostensibly land anywhere. Generally speaking, we rarely get to this point; the UFC tends to re-sign wanted athletes before their deals expire. But in hopes of testing the market, Henderson gambled on himself, rode out his deal and now gets the chance to listen to multiple offers that may be both lucrative and creative.
While media conglomerate Viacom has owned a majority stake of Bellator since the fall of 2011, it did not ramp up free-agent activity until Scott Coker replaced Bjorn Rebney in the summer of 2014, bringing with him a starkly different philosophy centered on name-driven events over tournaments. Late in 2014, Coker let it be publicly known that he would be in the bidding for any major name who came on the market, telling MMA Fighting, “There’s not going to be a fighter on the planet we can’t afford and have access to.”
Unfortunately for Coker and Bellator, precious few championship-level fighters have hit the open market in the time since. Though they have managed to snag both Phil Davis and Josh Thomson, both of those signings could be written off by the UFC as unwanted commodities. Davis had lost two of three and had repeatedly stalled as he neared the top of the division; Thomson had lost three straight and was nearing his 37th birthday at the time of his signing.
Henderson is different, a former lightweight champ in both the UFC and WEC who has shown few signs of slipping from his prime. Even if you look at his record since losing the UFC lightweight belt, he is 4-2 in his last six fights, with his only losses to current champion Rafael dos Anjos and No. 1 contender Donald Cerrone. The latter fight, by the way, was one most onlookers judged in Henderson’s favor.
In other words, he remains an elite fighter with mileage to spare.
While Coker hung out the “open for business” shingle long ago, Bellator’s attractiveness as a suitor was recently helped by the UFC’s exclusive sponsorship deal with Reebok. While that deal put a huge dent in UFC individual athlete sponsorships, Bellator fighters are free to contract with a host of companies and brands that were locked out of the system.
The move caused many disparate opinions and created something of a new class hierarchy that prized the tenured, big names. Generally, the champions and others who collect money based off pay-per-view buys are going to want to remain in the UFC. No one else can match that deal or draw the audiences that will lead to seven-figure paydays. But one step below that is a class of fighters who are not so lucky. They may make a good purse comparative to other fighters, but otherwise they have few ways to cash in on a name that they spend years building.
Henderson is in that camp; he’s a frequent focus as one of the best lightweights of the last decade who headlined 10 of the 14 UFC events in which he participated. During that time, Henderson was never apay-per-view cash cow or ratings monster, but he was versatile and reliable and without question a key component of the roster.
His utility cannot be understated. Aside from his headlining ability, three times in 2015, he accepted short-notice bouts with replacements. First, it was against Cerrone on just 13 days’ notice. Despite losing, he took an even greater risk next time out, facing Brandon Thatch on two weeks’ notice and moving up a division in the process. He likewise stepped up in this most recent event, taking a short-notice bout with Jorge Masvidal after Thiago Alves injured his ribs two weeks before showtime.
In a sport where injuries can scuttle major plans in a heartbeat, that gameness has real-world value. If the UFC so frequently used him to prop up an event, imagine what he could do in Bellator, where he would arrive as an instant challenger to lightweight champ Will Brooks or welterweight kingpin Andrey Koreshkov—or in One Championship, where he could match up with 155-pound titleholder Shinya Aoki or as a compelling challenger to 170-pound champ Ben Askren.
He could do any one of those things. Or, of course, he could stay in the UFC, where he is still ranked seventh as a lightweight and may simultaneously break into the Top 15 at welterweight with his recent win.
In other words, he has options. That’s great for him and not so great for the UFC. Henderson’s free agency does not necessarily mean an exodus is coming, but rest assured that others on the roster will be watching closely, thinking about their worth and contemplating a gamble of their own—consideration that proves the market is not as one-sided as it used to be.
You wanted high-level MMA in the morning? You got high-level MMA in the morning.
Benson Henderson and Jorge Masvidal battled for five tightly contest rounds inside the Octagon, and Henderson walked away with a split-decision victory at UFC Fight Night…
You wanted high-level MMA in the morning? You got high-level MMA in the morning.
Benson Henderson and Jorge Masvidal battled for five tightly contest rounds inside the Octagon, and Henderson walked away with a split-decision victory at UFC Fight Night 79—staying true to the Benson Henderson five-round fight formula.
Henderson and Masvidal put on a showcase of what MMA can be when fought at its highest level. Technique was on full display on the feet and on the ground, and even defensively. The exchanges ran the full gamut of punches, kicks and knees going to the legs, body and head.
The former lightweight champion had the most successful punch of the fight early on when he dropped Masvidal by catching him off balance, and Masvidal had the most dangerous submission with a high-elbow guillotine.
How close was the fight on the feet? Jason Floyd of The MMA Report tallied the unofficial striking numbers as Henderson 127, Masvidal 124. It was Masvidal with a higher percentage landed, but Henderson also landed three takedowns in the fight.
This is the kind of fight we expected from the two veterans, and it delivered. Henderson got the nod, but Masvidal did nothing to disprove the notion that he, too, is a top-flight fighter.
Questions do still remain, as this was Henderson’s final fight on his current UFC contract and he may test the free market.
What’s Next?
For Henderson, it is the aforementioned contract decision. Will he be re-signed, or will another MMA promotion pony up the cash to sign him? He is one of the world’s best fighters, but the premium price he may demand could see his exit from the UFC.
Masvidal could fight just about any lightweight or welterweight and be competitive. However, he has some flaws in how he approaches rounds that sees him come out on the losing end. Saturday was no exception.
If Henderson re-signs, he has earned a top-10 fight in the welterweight division. No. 7-ranked contender Dong Hyun Kim also competed on this card, and that fight would be huge for a return trip to South Korea. If he exits the MMA leader? Ben Askren in ONE FC makes sense; an immediate title eliminator at 155 or 170 in Bellator would suffice too.
The South Korean crowd was phenomenal the entire night, and they brought it in the main event as well. If the numbers come through for the UFC, perhaps they should shift their Asian focus to the nation for future endeavours. This could be the right market for the UFC in the region.
At long last, the UFC has arrived in South Korea for UFC Fight Night 79 (aka UFC Fight Night: Seoul) and they’re looking to make a strong impression with an impressive line up of fights. You can check it out here:
Main Card (Fight Pass)
B…
At long last, the UFC has arrived in South Korea for UFC Fight Night 79 (aka UFC Fight Night: Seoul) and they’re looking to make a strong impression with an impressive line up of fights. You can check it out here:
At 7 a.m. ET (5 a.m. local time here), yours truly will emerge from a deep sleep, throw on a pot of coffee and bring you all the highlights (and lowlights) of the Fight Night 79 main card. Make sure to check in at that time, and start getting excited for a really strong line up of fights!
At long last, the UFC has arrived in South Korea for UFC Fight Night 79 (aka UFC Fight Night: Seoul) and they’re looking to make a strong impression with an impressive line up of fights. You can check it out here:
Main Card (Fight Pass)
B…
At long last, the UFC has arrived in South Korea for UFC Fight Night 79 (aka UFC Fight Night: Seoul) and they’re looking to make a strong impression with an impressive line up of fights. You can check it out here:
At 7 a.m. ET (5 a.m. local time here), yours truly will emerge from a deep sleep, throw on a pot of coffee and bring you all the highlights (and lowlights) of the Fight Night 79 main card. Make sure to check in at that time, and start getting excited for a really strong line up of fights!
Korea has been a hotbed for MMA talent for a while now. Its strong judo system rapidly produces solid fighters, and that has seen the tiny nation represented in every major MMA promotion of note. For whatever reason, though, the UFC hasn’t actively loo…
Korea has been a hotbed for MMA talent for a while now. Its strong judo system rapidly produces solid fighters, and that has seen the tiny nation represented in every major MMA promotion of note. For whatever reason, though, the UFC hasn’t actively looked to establish a place in the tiny nation until now.
Fight Night 79 features most of the UFC’s Korean roster and also includes interesting fighters of Korean descent. The main card is as follows:
That’s an interesting blend of new and old talent that could easily provide some blockbuster fights. But who is going to win, you ask? Find out who the Bleacher Report prediction panel is picking!