Bryan Barberena Talks Shaking Off Reputation of Being Slow Starter

Bryan Barberena was anything but a slow starter this past Saturday night (April 22). Barberena competed for the sixth time under the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) banner against Joe Proctor. The welterweight clash was part of the UFC Fight Pass portion of the UFC Fight Night 108 prelims. “Bam Bam” isn’t afraid to admit that […]

Bryan Barberena was anything but a slow starter this past Saturday night (April 22). Barberena competed for the sixth time under the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) banner against Joe Proctor. The welterweight clash was part of the UFC Fight Pass portion of the UFC Fight Night 108 prelims. “Bam Bam” isn’t afraid to admit that […]

UFC Fight Night 108 – Bryan Barberena Vs. Joe Proctor 155 lbs

Until he came up against Colby Covington, Bryan Barberena looked invincible with nine wins in his last ten fights, including victories over the likes of reputable fighters such as Sage Northcutt and Warlley Alves. However, Colby Covington really brought Barbereba back to earth with a one sided decision victory. Still, there is no taking away […]

Until he came up against Colby Covington, Bryan Barberena looked invincible with nine wins in his last ten fights, including victories over the likes of reputable fighters such as Sage Northcutt and Warlley Alves. However, Colby Covington really brought Barbereba back to earth with a one sided decision victory.

Still, there is no taking away the threat that Bryan Barberena is. Of his nine victories, a staggering 8 of them are via knockout! Barbereba isn’t playing games, that is for sure.

On the other hand, we have Joe Proctor (11 – 4) whose victories against Jordan Rinaldi and Chris Tickle came prior to his defeat at the hands of James Vick.

His last outing did not go too well either, he was knocked out b Magomed Mstafaev. However, that fight was 16 months ago and Proctor has not fought since. Has he been hard at work at training? We will have to wait and see on UFC fight night 108.

We can see this fight progressing for more than a couple of rounds, but sooner or later, Barberena is going to prove too much for the out of touch Proctor. We are going with a Barereba victory via a technical knock – out.

Sage Northcutt Confirms Return To Lightweight For Next Bout

Sage Northcutt is returning to the only weight class he’s found success in the UFC. After two submission losses in his last two fights – both of which occurred at 17 pounds – the touted prospect confirmed on this week’s The MMA Hour he would be returning to lightweight for his next fight, a division he

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Sage Northcutt is returning to the only weight class he’s found success in the UFC.

After two submission losses in his last two fights – both of which occurred at 17 pounds – the touted prospect confirmed on this week’s The MMA Hour he would be returning to lightweight for his next fight, a division he called his natural home in MMA:

“You know, obviously, anytime you lose you learn from it,” he said on Monday. “Not that you regret it but it’s a learning experience, and I’ll be back down at 155 now. I’m a natural 155er. So, that’ll be a good weight class for me.”

Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada for USA TODAY Sports

Northcutt most recently faltered in his heavily hyped bout with fellow “Looking For A Fight” product Mickey Gall at last December’s UFC on FOX 22, a bout where “Super” Sage got fans buzzing about his in-cage trash talk online before getting dropped and choked out yet again. Northcutt lost his first 170-pound bout to late replacement Bryan Barberena, prompting a move back to lightweight for a decision win over Enrique Marin at 2016’s UFC 200.

Many were quick to slam his lack of submission defense after both fights, pointing out that he seems to tap out rather quickly and would benefit from a camp change from his scattershot approach to training in Texas to a more respected and established MMA camp. That has recently lead to the 20-year-old heading to frigid Milwaukee to train with UFC welterweight champion Tyron Woodley for his next bout, a move that can only help his chances to fulfill the supposedly massive potential he displayed in his first two UFC bouts.

When he does return, he knows it’s going to be at his original, more natural weight class – and he hopes it will be coming in the next few months:

“[I don’t have an] exactly a set date, but maybe sometime in the next three months, four months, and back at 155. So I’ll be learning the most I can until then, and improving.”

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Five Reasons The Sage Northcutt Hype Train Will Bounce Back – Or Not

After one of the most frantic, skyrocketing, and some would say, contrived hype trains in UFC history, touted 19-year-old prospect Sage Northcutt saw his momentum come crashing down to a shocking halt when relatively unknown welterweight Bryan Barberena submitted him on the main card of last weekend’s (Saturday, January 230, 2016) UFC on FOX 18

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After one of the most frantic, skyrocketing, and some would say, contrived hype trains in UFC history, touted 19-year-old prospect Sage Northcutt saw his momentum come crashing down to a shocking halt when relatively unknown welterweight Bryan Barberena submitted him on the main card of last weekend’s (Saturday, January 230, 2016) UFC on FOX 18 from Newark, New Jersey, with an arm triangle choke that didn’t appear to be quite locked on.

Northcutt promptly received what many viewed as undue hate from many of his fellow fighters; mainly those that were miffed he already earned a pay split of $40,000 to show and $40,000 to win in a time when many of them are struggling to make ends meet.

But the boyishly good-looking ‘Super Sage’ didn’t do himself any favors when he came out and revealed he had a nasty case of strep throat going into the fight, which, whether true or not, just serves to discredit Barberena’s win in an arena that Northcutt just didn’t appear comfortable in.

Regardless of that loss, however, the jury is obviously still out on Northcutt in a major way, and there are some big reasons why he could easily bounce back and become the elite fighter he’s been hyped up as since his UFC debut last October. There are also some reasons why he could end up as the latest failed hype train that perhaps enjoyed some special treatment from the UFC due to his perceived marketability.

Let’s take a look at both sides of the story.

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Barberena Reacts To Sage Northcutt’s Strep Throat: Excuses Don’t Look Good

Unheralded UFC welterweight Bryan Barberena unceremoniously put an end to touted prospect Sage Northcutt’s hype train on the main card of last Saturday’s UFC on FOX 18 from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, finishing ‘Super’ Sage with an arm triangle choke that many believe was not fully locked in. The hate and backlash

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Unheralded UFC welterweight Bryan Barberena unceremoniously put an end to touted prospect Sage Northcutt’s hype train on the main card of last Saturday’s UFC on FOX 18 from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, finishing ‘Super’ Sage with an arm triangle choke that many believe was not fully locked in.

The hate and backlash that Northcutt has received (mainly from the fellow fighters who believe his salary is too high) was brutal and even reaching disgusting, yet the 19-year-old sport karate phenom perhaps didn’t do himself any favors by saying that he was suffering from a serious strep throat virus that, after rearing its ugly head for a third time during fight week, prevented him from breathing from the choke hold in question.

sage northcutt

The excuse, whether true or not, hasn’t been met with the warmest response from Barberena, who revealed that Northcutt specifically asked for and was granted a fight with him after his original opponent, lightweight Andrew Holbrook, was forced out due to injury.

This week, Barberena took to social media to discredit Northcutt’s excuses for what is still viewed as a submission loss that lacked the heart necessary to dominate the highest levels of the UFC.

Hop to the next page to see what ‘Bam Bam’ blasted Northcutt’s excuse with…

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“Sage Northcutt is a P*ssy” (and Other UFC on FOX 18 Highlights/Results)

(via UFC on FOX)

You might not know this, Potato Nation, but there’s a 19-year old kid who’s been making quite a splash in the UFC over the past few months. He goes by the name of Sage Northcutt, and while we may not have been paying him quite as much lip service around these parts as everywhere else, it’s safe to say that he has all the star-making potential that the UFC could use more of in these post-Rousey times.

Of course, with Northcutt’s incredible rise to popularity has come the inevitable, almost inexplicably-cruel backlash, and boy did Northcutt ever receive that following his hype train-derailing loss to short-notice opponent Bryan Barberena at UFC on FOX 18 last weekend.

The post “Sage Northcutt is a P*ssy” (and Other UFC on FOX 18 Highlights/Results) appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via UFC on FOX)

You might not know this, Potato Nation, but there’s a 19-year old kid who’s been making quite a splash in the UFC over the past few months. He goes by the name of Sage Northcutt, and while we may not have been paying him quite as much lip service around these parts as everywhere else, it’s safe to say that he has all the star-making potential that the UFC could use more of in these post-Rousey times.

Of course, with Northcutt’s incredible rise to popularity has come the inevitable, almost inexplicably-cruel backlash, and boy did Northcutt ever receive that following his hype train-derailing loss to short-notice opponent Bryan Barberena at UFC on FOX 18 last weekend.

From what we’ve been able to glean, Northcutt’s crimes seem to be that he is 1) Impossibly wholesome/athletic/good-looking and 2) Gets paid “too much.” Now to us, those issues (especially the second) seem to reflect more on both the lack of charisma that most fighters possess and the pathetic state of fighter pay more than anything else, but every cause needs a scapegoat, and Northcutt — being the Ken Doll-looking, hand-picked prodigy that he is — was quickly assigned that status after being plucked from obscurity on Dana White’s Youtube series, Looking for a Fight.

Two quick victories and a couple massive paydays later (relatively speaking), the MMA community had already begun to vocalize its discontention for Northcutt, what with his penchant for awesome flips and “respect” for “people.” Like Tim Tebow before him, it seemed that many of our gripes with “Super” reflected more upon us than the man (kid) being put on trial, which rather than forcing us to look inward and examine ourselves, only fueled our need to see him fail all the more.

So from the moment Northcutt’s tap to Bryan Barberena’s arm-triangle was labeled “quick” by color commentator Joe Rogan — a declaration that seemed accurate, we might add — you just knew that the response from his doubters would be especially vicious. As it just so happens, many of Northcutt’s doubters were not online trolls as you might expect, but actual UFC-employed fighters.

“Woo!!! Tapped like a little Bitch & Tried to tel the Ref Different!! @sagenorthcutt VonFlu/Got You,” wrote top lightweight contender Tony Ferguson, a class act if there ever was one.

“I want 40k for a scaredy tap #northcut,” noted Angela Magana, proud owner of zero UFC wins and an Instagram account.

“Omg what a pussy!!! Dude gave up. No heart. Ufc give me his 40/40 next time cause no f—ing way I would get finished with that s—! Lol,” wrote James Vick, who I would make a joke about if he was a memorable enough personality to warrant one.

Again, you’ll notice that many of the fighters main complaints seem to be leveled at Northcutt, when it’s the UFC management that should be their intended target. It’s the kind of short-sightedness that perhaps helps one understand why no fighter union has been formed despite ever-restrictive UFC policies, but I’m getting away from the topic at hand here. Sage Northcutt lost, and because he dared to participate in the UFC’s hype machine, we took great pleasure in seeing him cut down to size. This year’s harvest will be plentiful and great, ye.

Elsewhere on UFC on FOX 18, Ryan Bader suffered a lightning fast KO loss to Anthony Johnson after attempting quite possibly the least set-up takedown attempt in the history of the sport. As was the case in his losses to Tito Ortiz and Lyoto Machida before — the former of which his career may never recover from — Bader proved that despite his many improvements, he is simply one mental mistake away from being completely outclassed by the division’s elite. And Tito Ortiz.

Also, “Rumble” Johnson hits hard — like really, really hard — and you probably wouldn’t want to get punched by him.

In other surprising developments from the card, Ben Rothwell continued his improbable career comeback by becoming the first man to submit Josh Barnett (with an actual submission). The incredible finish came via midway through the second round of their co-main event scrap, via the same Gogo choke that he used to submit Matt Mitrione in his last contest. Given just how proficient and skilled a grappler we know Barnett to be, the win should arguably place Rothwell on the short list of title contenders. The power of shelf expression, ladies and gentlemen.

The full results from UFC on FOX 18 are below.

Main card
Anthony Johnson def. Ryan Bader via TKO (R1, 1:26)
Ben Rothwell def. Josh Barnett via submission (guillotine) (R2, 3:48)
Jimmie Rivera def. Iuri Alcantara via unanimous decision
Bryan Barberena def. Sage Northcutt via submission

Undercard
Tarec Saffiedine def. Jake Ellenberger via unanimous decision
Diego Ferreira def. Olivier Aubin-Mercier via UD
Rafael Natal def. Kevin Casey via third-round TKO (3:37)
Wilson Reis def. Dustin Ortiz via unanimous decision
Alexander Yakovlev def. George Sullivan via KO (R1, 3:59)
Alex Caceres def. Masio Fullen via unanimous decision
Randy Brown def. Matt Dwyer via unanimous decision
Levan Makashvili vs. Damon Jackson ends in majority draw (29-27 Jackson, 28-28 x2)
Tony Martin def. Felipe Olvieri via submission (rear-naked choke) (R3, 3:02)

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