Brendan Schaub Needs a Victory at UFC 145 to Keep His UFC Title Dreams Alive

It was not too long ago that many believed Brendan Schaub was only a fight or two removed from competing for the UFC heavyweight title.  After falling one victory short of winning Season 10 of The Ultimate Fighter, losing in the finals via knockou…

It was not too long ago that many believed Brendan Schaub was only a fight or two removed from competing for the UFC heavyweight title. 

After falling one victory short of winning Season 10 of The Ultimate Fighter, losing in the finals via knockout to Roy “Big Country” Nelson, Schaub went on a four-fight winning streak. Of those four victories, only one went to decision, the other three ended by knockout or technical knockout.

Two of those wins were against name competitors, Gabriel Gonzaga and Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic, with the victory over Filipovic earning Knockout of the Night honors. Yes, Gonzaga and Filipovic were on the downside of their careers, but as they say, there are no easy fights.

The win over Filipovic earned him a fight with Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC 134. Speaking of that fight, UFC president Dana White said that the winner would be “in the mix” for a shot at the UFC heavyweight crown.

Nogueira, after undergoing hip and knee surgeries, had not fought for more than a year when he met Schaub in Brazil. The one-time PRIDE and UFC interim heavyweight champion made short work of Schaub, dispatching him by knockout at 3:38 of Round 1.

That loss saw Schaub’s stock take a tumble. His next bout will be against Ben Rothwell, a fighter you would be hard pressed to find in anyone’s top 25 heavyweight rankings.  Schaub will face Rothwell at UFC 145, which will take place on April 21 at Phillips Arena in Atlanta, Ga.

Rothwell is also coming off a loss, falling to Mark Hunt via unanimous decision at UFC 135. Rothwell had gone 30-6 before entering the UFC, but is 1-2 with the promotion, dropping fights to Hunt and Cain Velasquez. His sole victory came over Gilbert Yvel.  Coming off a loss and looking to avoid going 1-3 in the UFC, Rothwell will be a hungry fighter.

While Rothwell will be looking to get back in the win column, the 29-year-old Schaub will look to keep his name fresh in the mind of UFC matchmaker Joe Silva. No disrespect to Rothwell, but he is far removed from a title shot, while Schaub, with a dominant win could find himself not that far removed from a fight for the title. By no means would he be one or two fights out at this point, but if he strings together a solid run, a title shot is not out of the question.

A loss to Rothwell could leave Schaub with a long climb back up the ladder of the heavyweight division.  Something that is not lost on the former football player, who told MMAJunkie:

I have a lot of growth to do, and I think I can compete with anyone in the world. I think I’m going to be world champ. I think this is a step back. But I think you find out what a guy’s made [of] after a loss. This sport is easy when everyone is tooting your horn, telling you how good you are. It’s when you lose if you find out if it’s for you. For me, I’m embracing the challenge, and it’s a journey for me.

Schaub and Rothwell will meet on the main card of UFC 145, which will air on pay-per-view.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 145 Fight Card: 7 Burning Questions Heading into Atlanta

The main event could easily take up this entire article, but this card is stacked and that means there are a lot of questions to ponder coming in. It will be interesting to hear the jawing that comes from Jon Jones and Rashad Evans on the UFC Primetime…

The main event could easily take up this entire article, but this card is stacked and that means there are a lot of questions to ponder coming in. It will be interesting to hear the jawing that comes from Jon Jones and Rashad Evans on the UFC Primetime special before the event, and that is definitely something that I am looking forward to for sure. But, I could talk about Jones and Evans all day, and there are 11 other bouts on this card. 

Some of the bouts that I am looking forward to are the bouts between Chad Griggs and Travis Browne, Mac Danzig and Efrain Escudero, John Makdessi and Anthony Njokuani and the return of Mark Hominick just to name a few. This is one of the most stacked cards in a long time, and the great part for the fans is that UFC 146 is an even more impressive card.

In the next few slides, I will reveal the seven questions I’m burning on leading into fight night in Atlanta.

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Video: Watch Brendan Schaub and Johny Hendricks Get Punked by Ecko and the ‘Will It Blend’ Guy


(“Are you getting a Pulp Fiction vibe right now?”)

Ecko Unlimited pulled a pretty good prank on two of its sponsored fighters recently.

Duping UFC vets Johny Hendricks and Brendan Schaub into participating in a training session by an escape artist (who was actually just an Ecko employee) at Ecko HQ, reps from the clothing brand brought in the dude from “Will It Blend” to destroy one of the duo’s phones. Unable to escape from the chair he was tied up to, Schaub, who lost the coin toss, watched in horror and anger as his precious cell, that he assumed was not backed up, was dropped into the blender and turned on.

Brendan usually comes off as a fairly happy and easygoing guy, but anyone who has lost all of the data on their phone can relate to how upset he was.

Check out the hilarious video after the jump.


(“Are you getting a Pulp Fiction vibe right now?”)

Ecko Unlimited pulled a pretty good prank on two of its sponsored fighters recently.

Duping UFC vets Johny Hendricks and Brendan Schaub into participating in a training session by an escape artist (who was actually just an Ecko employee) at Ecko HQ, reps from the clothing brand brought in the dude from “Will It Blend” to destroy one of the duo’s phones. Unable to escape from the chair he was tied up to, Schaub, who lost the coin toss, watched in horror and anger as his precious cell, that he assumed was not backed up, was dropped into the blender and turned on.

Brendan usually comes off as a fairly happy and easygoing guy, but anyone who has lost all of the data on their phone can relate to how upset he was.

Check out the hilarious video:

UFC 145: Brendan Schaub Says He’s Gonna Be in Ben Rothwell’s Face

UFC heavyweight Brendan Schaub will look to rebound from his August knockout loss to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira when he faces Ben Rothwell at next month’s UFC 145 event in Atlanta.Schaub says he’s going to bring a battle to Rothwell’s doorstep:
These guy…

UFC heavyweight Brendan Schaub will look to rebound from his August knockout loss to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira when he faces Ben Rothwell at next month’s UFC 145 event in Atlanta.

Schaub says he’s going to bring a battle to Rothwell’s doorstep:

These guys know when they fight me, it’s going to be one hell of a fight. I expect the best Ben Rothwell. And I know it’s cliche to say and everyone says, ‘Oh, that’s something fighters say all the time,’ but when I say it, it’s obviously true. The previous guys he’s fought, when they rocked Ben, they don’t have the cardio, they rock Ben, they use it as a way to recover themselves.

I’m not like that. It’s going to be 15 minutes of me in his face. I can do it all. You want to strike? Let’s do that. It’s going to be a short night, though. I think if you have to list a top three toughest guys in the heavyweight division, he’s right up there. Everyone’s tough in the UFC but he’s a different caliber of tough. But just being tough isn’t going to get you the belt.

I guarantee people walk away from this fight talking about my performance rather than the main event or anyone else on the card.

I had no idea that Rothwell was still in the UFC. Seriously. He’s 1-2 during his UFC tenure and has never looked to be much more than merely passable as a heavyweight fighter. This fight should be his last one in the UFC.

This is a gimme fight for Schaub—a way for him to get an easy win after losing his momentum against Nogueira—and I fully expect him to capitalize.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 145: 7 Reasons Why It Will Be the Most Highly Anticipated Card of the Year

In less than eight weeks time, all roads lead to Atlanta, GA, for the most eagerly awaited and highly anticipated fight card of the year—UFC 145. The event is set to be stacked to the rafters with some of the most combative superlatives residing …

In less than eight weeks time, all roads lead to Atlanta, GA, for the most eagerly awaited and highly anticipated fight card of the year—UFC 145.

The event is set to be stacked to the rafters with some of the most combative superlatives residing in Zuffa-based hierarchy.

And with that in mind, the Philips Arena is geared for an explosive night of edge-of-seat fueled action, where anything could happen.

And here’s why.

Begin Slideshow

What’s It Like to Be a Foreigner Fighting in Brazil? Ask the Guys Who’ve Done It

Filed under: UFCUFC welterweight David Mitchell got his first hint that fighting in Brazil would be a little different than your average Las Vegas fight night when he was in the airport on his way down to Rio de Janeiro. While waiting for his flight, h…

Filed under:

UFC welterweight David Mitchell got his first hint that fighting in Brazil would be a little different than your average Las Vegas fight night when he was in the airport on his way down to Rio de Janeiro. While waiting for his flight, he got to talking to a Brazilian traveler about his role in the UFC’s first event in Brazil in over a decade, and he casually mentioned that he was slated to fight Paulo Thiago — an accomplished, but far from famous welterweight, by North American standards.

“He told me that Paulo had just done a big movie or something,” Mitchell recalled. “I thought, okay, whatever.”

The movie, Tropa de Elite, was actually a wildly popular Brazilian film about the BOPE — an elite police unit that Thiago serves in. It was also the source of Thiago’s entrance music when he and Mitchell squared off at the HSBC Arena in Rio that Saturday night, and the response from the crowd was enough to jar Mitchell out of his pre-fight game face, if only for a moment.

“I think he got the biggest response from the crowd of anybody,” Mitchell said of Thiago. “I didn’t expect him to be so popular. It was just an electric environment. When I walked out to go fight, it was just 15,000 Brazilians spitting snake venom at me.”




For foreign fighters — but especially Americans going up against Brazilians — it’s a unique fight night environment, and one that not all fighters are fully prepared for when they arrive.

“Some guy just told me I was going to die,” Forrest Griffin said moments after arriving at the open workouts on Rio’s famed Cobacabana Beach. “But he said it in very poor English, so I was able to ignore him.”

‘Hostile’ is one word to describe the environment for visiting fighters. All week long, at press events and weigh-ins, they were greeted by gleeful chants of ‘Vai morrer!’ You’re going to die. Granted, it seemed good-natured and not at all intended literally by most fans, but as some fighters admitted later, it was a little unsettling the first time they heard the translation.

Unlike in the U.S., where fans might start up the occasional ‘USA’ chant but generally spread their loyalties out according to their own individual whims, the Brazilian fans tend to be both exuberant and unanimous in support of their countrymen.

“They’re so passionate,” said UFC lightweight Spencer Fisher, who faced Brazilian Thiago Tavares at UFC 134. “The Americans, it seems like they’re always for whoever wins. If a guy’s losing they don’t like him, but if he comes back they’ll switch sides. But in Brazil, they’re country strong and they’re loyal.”

Fisher, too, was met with a partisan crowd when he walked to the cage — and like Mitchell, he also ended up on the losing end that night. But also like Mitchell, Fisher insisted that the hostile environment didn’t affect his performance in the cage.

“I remember Jose Aldo saying once about the Americans, ‘They can scream all they want to, because I don’t understand what they’re saying.’ I kind of felt the same way.”

If anything, the enthusiastic reception — whether negative or positive — actually helped fighters like Mitchell, who came into the bout struggling with a neck injury that required a cortisone shot just to get him into the cage, he said.

“Honestly, after everything I’d been through, dealing with injuries and a real difficult training camp, it was like I had to go fight this guy in his hometown or I was going to get cut. After all that, the crowd, if anything, was a positive,” said Mitchell. “It was a charged atmosphere, like a World Cup game or something.”

That’s something that Anthony Johnson‘s coach, Mike Van Arsdale, is planning on when it’s his fighter’s turn to take on Vitor Belfort at UFC 142.

“Anything like that, whether they want him to win or don’t want him to win, he feeds off that. It’s like Rashad Evans, everywhere he goes they boo him. It makes him fight better. I hope they don’t cheer for Rashad ever. I really do.”

For American heavyweight Brendan Schaub, who took on Brazilian MMA legend Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira on the card, it helped that he’d had a chance to come down a couple months before the bout for an early press conference. He even paid for an extended stay out of his own pocket to do some training and visit the favelas as part of a community outreach program, which made him a little more comfortable when he returned for the fight, he said.

“It was definitely hostile once the fight got going, but one thing I did right was getting down there and embracing the culture and giving back to the community. I think that went a long ways.”

Of course, Schaub, Fisher, and Mitchell all lost that night, as did most foreigners on the card. Of the eight fights that pitted a Brazilian against an outsider, only one — Stanislav Nedkov’s TKO of Luiz Cane — didn’t go the way the crowd wanted it to. It’s one thing for fighters to say the environment didn’t play a factor, but it clearly didn’t help much either.

And yet, the fighters said, once their bouts were over it was as if all the vitriol vanished immediately. They were no longer the enemy. Suddenly they were beloved former foes, and were embraced with the same energy that had gone into despising them moments before.

“When I came out they were booing me, hating me, but I think I earned their respect,” said Mitchell. “When I walked back people were cheering for me and hugging me. This little kid wanted my hat, so I gave it to him. I ended up just kind of cruising around and meeting people. I met the mayor of Rio. It was really cool.”

Even Schaub, who suffered a heartbreaking knockout loss, managed to make the most of the sun, sand, and surf once the fight was over.

“Obviously, I planned on it going a different way, so it wasn’t the best time,” he said. “Still, it’s never a bad time when you’re on the beach in Brazil.”

For Fisher, the post-fight experience ended up being even worse than fight itself. While playing pool volleyball with “Shogun” Rua the next day, he said, he felt as if he’d gotten water in his eye. The sensation didn’t go away all day, and continued even when he returned to the U.S.

“It just kept getting worse and worse,” he said. “I was like, man, how can I still have water in my eye? Then we started boxing and right away I could tell it was something else. That’s when I realized my retina was detached.”

Five months later, Fisher still doesn’t have full vision back in his eye. His doctors tell him it was likely a mix of accumulated damage and blows he took in the fight that night in Rio, and his peripheral vision still hasn’t returned.

“They said I’ll never have the 20/20 vision I had before. Now I’m near-sighted,” Fisher said. “So it was good trip, but a bad one at the same time.”

 

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