UFC 195 Results/Highlights: Lawler Bests Condit In Questionable Decision, Miocic Earns His Title Shot, + More


(Dana White’s face says it all. via Getty)

We can debate the decision that capped off UFC 195’s welterweight title fight between Robbie Lawler and Carlos Condit all we want. We can take to Twitter to vent our frustrations with an (admittedly) outdated judging system until the cows come home. In fact, we have been for years, but with no change in sight, it’s probably best that we just focus on the latest in what has been an incredible series of title fights for the UFC, and that’s exactly what Lawler vs. Condit was.

Results and highlights after the jump.

The post UFC 195 Results/Highlights: Lawler Bests Condit In Questionable Decision, Miocic Earns His Title Shot, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(Dana White’s face says it all. via Getty)

We can debate the decision that capped off UFC 195′s welterweight title fight between Robbie Lawler and Carlos Condit all we want. We can take to Twitter to vent our frustrations with an (admittedly) outdated judging system until the cows come home. In fact, we have been for years, but with no change in sight, it’s probably best that we just focus on the latest in what has been an incredible series of title fights for the UFC, and that’s exactly what Lawler vs. Condit was.

Results and highlights after the jump.

While the numbers might paint UFC 195′s main event as an incredibly one-sided affair in Condit’s favor — “The Natural Born Killer” outstruck “Ruthless” nearly two to one — it was Lawler’s time-tested power that must have swayed the judges. Despite looking a step behind the challenger in most of the exchanges and relying on an offense that consisted almost solely of wide, looping hooks, Lawler was able to land the most significant strikes of the fight, dropping Condit in the second round and nearly finishing him in the closing moments of the fifth. If one were to base their opinion of the winner solely on how each fighter looked when all was said and done, Lawler would have almost undoubtedly been declared the winner across the board.

That’s not to say that Condit didn’t get his, though. Condit dropped the champ in the first, had him wobbled in the third, and landed his own onslaught of punches in the fifth as well. It was that ever-important third round that most of the debate seems to stem from, but again, there’s really no point to all the discussion with no proposed way of improving MMA judging currently on the table.

Of course, the easiest way to avoid another judging debacle — if you’re Stipe Miocic, at least — is to quickly and violently shut your opponents lights out, which is exactly what he did against Andrei Arlovski.

The story of Arlovski’s comeback from suicidal falling star to title contender has been an inspiring and much-lauded one, but just as quickly as it came, it ended against the Ohio native on Saturday night. Miocic clipped Arlovski early with a short right behind the ear and swarmed the former heavyweight champion before he could recover, bringing an end to his title hopes in a manner that would be hard to declare as anything but anticlimactic.

But with 5 wins in his last 6 fights (and the only loss being a decision to Junior Dos Santos that may or may not have been BS, if we complained about that sort of thing), it looks like Miocic will finally get his shot at the winner of the Werdum-Velasquez rematch…and he only had to scare Dana White shitless to get it.

Elsewhere on the UFC 195 card, Brian Ortega put on a Jiu Jitsu clinic over Diego Brandao, Abel Trujillo snagged a rare submission victory over Tony Sims, Joe Duffy and Dustin Poirier went to war, and Michael McDonald scored one of the most insane submission reversals you will ever see in his UFC return, so head below for all the highlights and results from UFC 195.

Lorenz Larkin vs. Albert Tumenov

Brian Ortega vs. Diego Brandao

Michael McDonald vs. Masanori Kanehara

UFC 195 Results:

Main Card
Robbie Lawler def. Carlos Condit via split decision
Stipe Miocic def. Andrei Arlovski via first-round TKO (0:54)
Albert Tumenov def. Lorenz Larkin via split decision
Brian Ortega def. Diego Brandao via submission (triangle) (R3, 1:37)
Abel Trujillo def. Tony Sims via submission (guillotine) (R1, 3:18)

Undercard

Michael McDonald def. Masanori Kanehara via sub (RNC) (R2, 2:09)
Alex Morono def. Kyle Noke via split decision
Justine Kish def. Nina Ansaroff via unanimous decision
Drew Dober def. Scott Holtzman via unanimous decision
Dustin Poirier def. Joseph Duffy via unanimous decision
Michinori Tanaka def. Joe Soto via split decision
Sheldon Westcott def. Edgar Garcia via first-round TKO (3:12)

The post UFC 195 Results/Highlights: Lawler Bests Condit In Questionable Decision, Miocic Earns His Title Shot, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.

UFC 195 Results: Book Lawler & Condit an Immediate Rematch Before It’s Too Late

We were left with two questions on Saturday after Robbie Lawler and Carlos Condit completed their epic welterweight title fight at UFC 195—one of them hard and one of them easy.
The most difficult and most immediate question was, who the heck won…

We were left with two questions on Saturday after Robbie Lawler and Carlos Condit completed their epic welterweight title fight at UFC 195—one of them hard and one of them easy.

The most difficult and most immediate question was, who the heck won?

We’re probably going to be arguing about the outcome of this bout for a while.

When the dust settled after 25 minutes—and arguably one of the greatest final rounds of all time—three ringside judges at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas allowed Lawler to retain his championship via split decision (47-48, 48-47 x 2).

Meanwhile, most spectators on social media appeared to think Condit should’ve gotten the nod. Fifteen of the 20 media analysts who scored the fight at MMADecisions.com also had it for the challenger. UFC President Dana White came to the postfight press conference and said he did too.

Among the listed media scorecards, only three observers favored Lawler (27-10-1 overall; 12-4 UFC) in the bout. Two opted to make it a draw.

But despite that disparity, there was no robbery here. This fight was so good and so close all positions are equally viable. In other words: It’s a quandary and leaves no clearcut way forward for Lawler and his welterweight title.

Luckily, the second, far simpler question provides a highly effective remedy.

That question is, “What do we do now?” and the obvious answer is: Book an immediate rematch between Lawler and Condit before it’s too late.

In the wake of this loss, Condit (30-9 overall; 7-5 UFC) is openly talking about retirement.

These sorts of declarations are common in the immediate aftermath of physically and emotionally grueling defeats. But the 31-year-old veteran—who is already the former UFC interim and former WEC champion—is the sort of guy who might not simply be blowing smoke when he says this time he left it all in the Octagon.

“I’ve been at this for a long time—over 40 professional MMA and kickboxing fights,” Condit said at the postfight press conference. “Tonight was kind of a do-or-die moment for my career, and I was all in. If I got that strap, I was going to keep fighting, and if I didn’t, like I didn’t, I have to see if I can continue to do this.”

By now, this fight’s numbers are well-known. Condit threw nearly 500 significant strikes during the five-round affair and out-landed Lawler 176-92 in that department, according to Fight Metric—the UFC’s official statistics service.

Condit’s significant strikes landed are the second-most all time in a UFC title fight, according to Fight Metic’s Michael Carroll. Lawler’s minus-84 differential is the worst ever for a decision winner, Carroll posted to social media.

Condit out-struck Lawler in every round, though Lawler stormed back to make things much closer in the definitive final stanza. Condit’s sheer volume and his ability to control range with his kicks were impressive. Yet, Lawler appeared to stun him with hard shots on several occasions, including dropping Condit to the canvas with the fight’s single-most powerful punch (a right hook) in the second round.

In the end, who you tabbed to win this bout likely came down to a discussion of whether Condit’s work rate outdid Lawler’s power. The answer may reveal a philosophical rift in the bedrock of the sport—one that isn’t easily explained away and where the opposing sides aren’t likely to meet in the middle.

MMA is not strictly a numbers game, after all. The sport is too dynamic and too diverse for that. Nobody wants to get to the point where winners are determined simply by adding up the number of punches and kicks. In this instance, Condit’s areas of expertise were on full display—and they may well have been good enough—but so too were Lawler’s heart and fearsome heavy hands.

There are likely deeper discussions to be had here, too. MMA’s 10-point must system continues to be a fairly blunt instrument for scoring such a nuanced athletic contest. It may be time to start looking into alternative systems, as well as the specific methods by which all these techniques are being scored and by whom.

For now, though, we’re left with a puzzle with only one solution: Let’s do it again, brother. Let’s do it again.

White was characteristically reticent to plot out a hair-trigger next step on fight night. He and the rest of the UFC brass no doubt want to go back to the office, survey the options and crunch the financials. It’ll be some time yet before we find out the immediate future of the 170-pound title.

“We don’t make the fights tonight,” White said at the presser. “The fight was awesome…and I had it 3-2 for Condit. It was an amazing fight, congrats to both guys. We’ll see. We’ll see how this thing plays out and what happens.”

And look, much like reforms to the scoring system itself, immediate rematches are the sort of thing we all want to be careful with. Nobody wants the UFC title picture to devolve into an endless series of do-overs. We’re already getting a heavyweight rematch at UFC 196 next month and recently deposed champs like Jon Jones and Ronda Rousey are likely to get second cracks to regain the gold during 2016.

As a general rule of thumb, the UFC should move to keep things moving, to keep thing fresh. In this instance, however, an exception should be made.

The welterweight division is among the sport’s most competitive right now, but it’s not as though there are a wealth of better options banging on Lawler’s door.

Rory MacDonald remains the division’s No. 1-ranked contender, but he just lost to Lawler (in another thrilling bout) at UFC 189 last July. It was MacDonald’s second career defeat to Lawler, and without significant upheaval at the top, he’ll need another win or two to rehabilitate himself into a viable title challenger.

No. 2 Tyron Woodley is the cut-and-dried next choice, and from a purely competition-based standpoint, he certainly deserves it. But Woodley isn’t much of a proven draw and—though he beat Condit in March 2014—his two most recent victories (over Dong Hyun Kim and Kelvin Gastelum) don’t exactly make him a slam dunk.

On top of that, Woodley has never seemed like the UFC’s favorite. In June 2014, White went on record saying he believes Woodley “chokes in big fights,” via MMAFighting.com’s Dave Doyle. That’s a harsh indictment of a fighter who remains 15-3 overall, but it could matter when the UFC sits down to decide its next move.

Former champion Johny Hendricks (No. 3) is the only other man ranked above Condit right now. He split his first two meetings with Lawler in a pair of exciting fights at UFCs 171 and 181, but he too seems to have fallen from the fight company’s favor recently.

Hendricks was forced to pull out of a scheduled bout against Woodley at the last minute in October 2015 after complications during his weight cut. His next fight will be against Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson at UFC 196 and doesn’t shape up as the bout he needs to tee him up for another title opportunity.

If the UFC takes a sober (and fiscally mindful) look around the welterweight division, it seems likely that Condit-Lawler II will come out smelling like a rose.

If Condit is serious about walking away from the sport, it also adds a fair amount of urgency.

While immediate rematches aren’t always the ticket, this one is. Let’s get it done, before we lose the chance forever, and we’re left with more questions we can never answer.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Robbie Lawler vs. Carlos Condit: Breaking Down the FightMetric Numbers

The UFC 195 main event, a welterweight title fight between champion Robbie Lawler (27-10 (1)) and challenger Carlos Condit (30-9), will be labeled as many things. War. Brawl. Battle. Instant classic. Slobberknocker.
Unfortunately, another label that ha…

The UFC 195 main event, a welterweight title fight between champion Robbie Lawler (27-10 (1)) and challenger Carlos Condit (30-9), will be labeled as many things. War. Brawl. Battle. Instant classic. Slobberknocker.

Unfortunately, another label that has been thrown around a lot is “robbery.” While the official decision read as a 48-47, 47-48, 48-47 split decision in favor of the champion, a number of fans and pundits cried foul, scoring the fight in favor of the challenger.

Naturally, a fair bit of that outcry came from the loser’s camp. The usual mix of training partners, friends and managers (Warning: NSFW Language) aired their grievances about the call, but so too did a lot of impartial bystanders. Yes, there was still a degree of support for Lawler, but it is impossible to dismiss the amount of controversy surrounding this fight.

While the numbers don’t necessarily tell the whole story, they are worth looking over following a bout like this. So why not take a look at the scorecards, the striking numbers and the pure nuts and bolts, to see if they agree with the judges or the masses?


The Hands of the Judges

When it comes to analyzing a fight’s decision, the first talking point, naturally, is the judges’ scorecards. Here they are, via MMAFighting.com on Twitter:

The judges were unanimous in their scoring for four out of five rounds. All three scored Rounds 1 and 4 in favor of Condit while giving Rounds 2 and 5 to Lawler. The deciding round was the third, which two gave to Lawler and one gave to Condit.

Interestingly, however, FightMetric.com’s tally (which you can find here) gave Condit an edge in the volume of significant strikes in each of the five rounds. While some may take that as proof that he actually won the fight…not so fast.

FightMetric.com defines a “significant strike” as “all strikes at distance and power strikes in the clinch and on the ground.” Needless to say, not all “significant strikes” are truly “significant,” as a labored leg kick from Condit in Round 5 is scored the same as a stiff jab or a heat seeker down the pipe. That said, the numbers do not necessarily disagree with the scores for those four rounds.

According to FightMetric, Condit out-landed Lawler by a substantial margin in Round 1 (28 significant strikes by Condit to 12 by Lawler) and Round 4 (47 to 6). Though Condit actually out-landed the champion in both Rounds 2 and 5 as well, a knockdown swings Round 2 back into Lawler’s favor, while his nonstop aggression against a tired Condit (which isn’t really quantifiable) helped him take Round 5.

That leaves Round 3…


The Deciding Round

The significant strike tally for Round 3 favors Condit, as it reads a fairly decisive 22-11. Peeling those numbers apart a bit further doesn’t necessarily discount the differential either, as FightMetric’s breakdown of the targeted areas indicates he landed six significant strikes to the head, nine to the body and seven to the legs (in comparison to Lawler’s nine shots to the head and two to the legs).

The quantitative, however, doesn’t necessarily coincide with the qualitative.

Round 3 can functionally be divided into two halves. Condit clearly controlled the first half, using his high-volume striking to stifle Lawler’s offensive output. The second half broke in Lawler’s favor, as he hammered Condit with an elbow and followed it up with a few more heavy shots.

The majority of fans and pundits, obviously, gave the nod to Condit. Some still favored the champ based on those few clean hits.

Regardless of how many people on Twitter fall into the former camp, the three judges sitting cageside hold all the cards when it comes to the record books. While they weren’t often in agreement Saturday night (four of UFC 195’s fights ended in split decision), the unchangeable fact is that two of them fell into the latter category. Both men had a strong claim to victory, and public outrage doesn’t change that.


What Should Fans Make of This?

While many used the label of “robbery” for this fight…that’s just silly. As is pointed out following every controversial decision, there are few true “robberies” in MMA

What the judges had here were two fighters with radically different styles who both successfully implemented their game plans. One did so for a longer period of time to lesser effect (Condit), while the other did so for a shorter period of time to greater effect (Lawler). One controlled the action for a longer period of time, while the other came closer to ending the fight on more occasions.

This was a hotly contested fight that went to decision. Nothing more, nothing less.

A strong case can be made that Condit won the fight and is the rightful UFC champion, and the numbers don’t disagree with that assertion. Yours truly (conveniently) scored the fight as a 48-48 draw, giving Condit Rounds 1, 3 and 4 while giving Lawler Rounds 2 and 5, with the fifth being scored 10-8. If that 10-8 is changed to a 10-9, things obviously swing in favor of Condit.

The numbers, however, do not tell the whole story, and even though Condit’s high-volume style is suited to padding his FightMetric stats, this was not a runaway performance from him on paper. While one can infer that Condit did indeed have a stronger claim to victory than Lawler, the difference was not so overwhelming that a decision breaking in Lawler’s favor should lead to torches and pitchforks.

There is one important takeaway from this match, though.

History shows, again and again, that if a champion manages to win two rounds off a challenger, regardless of almost anything else, he will walk away with the title. There are plenty of examples, including Daniel Cormier vs. Alexander Gustafsson, Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar 2 and Georges St-Pierre vs. Johny Hendricks, that demonstrate judges are reluctant to award challengers with 48-47 scorecards.

While some may disagree, it feels like the oft-discussed “champion’s advantage” still lives on to some degree. UFC contenders in all divisions ought to make a note of this.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Robbie Lawler vs. Carlos Condit: Weigh-in Info, Top Comments Before UFC 195

Robbie Lawler is set to put the welterweight championship on the line in a hyped clash against Carlos Condit at UFC 195 on Saturday night. While it may not turn into a technical masterpiece, there should be no shortage of action or intensity.
Lawler is…

Robbie Lawler is set to put the welterweight championship on the line in a hyped clash against Carlos Condit at UFC 195 on Saturday night. While it may not turn into a technical masterpiece, there should be no shortage of action or intensity.

Lawler is coming off his first title defense, which was a brawl with Rory MacDonald that lasted into the fifth round. If Saturday’s battle with Condit comes anywhere close to the same level, it should be a highly entertaining finish to the card.

Let’s check out all of the important viewing information for the latest showcase. That’s followed by the weigh-in details and a main event preview for what should be a terrific start to 2016 for UFC.

 

UFC 195 Details

Where: MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas

When: Saturday, Jan. 2, at 10 p.m. ET

Watch: PPV

Live Stream: UFC TV

Tickets: ScoreBig.com

 

Weigh-In Information

 

Preview and Comments

Lawler and Condit are fighters who don’t mind getting caught up in a slugfest. In fact, they tend to thrive in chaotic situations and only become fiercer when they are challenged aggressively. That creates a recipe for a memorable encounter Saturday night.

The challenger admitted leading up to the fight that he’s still a little bit rough around the edges but believes that’s actually helped his popularity among the fans, as noted by Brett Okamoto of ESPN.

“The consensus I’m getting is that this fight is going to be an amazing display of mixed martial arts ability—and violence,” Condit said. “I feel like that’s one of the reasons I, personally, have a fan following. I’m not super polished. Things don’t always go my way in the cage. But no matter what, I’m trying to finish.”

On the flip side, after the fight with MacDonald, Lawler fully understands how much damage can come from trying to use such a high-risk, high-reward style. He’s aiming for a quicker resolution as he attempts to defend for the second time, per Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times.

“You don’t want to have to showcase your warrior spirit or how much heart you have in [every] fight,” Lawler said. “You want to go out there and you want to be sharp and you want to execute your game plan and…get it done fast. Every fighter wants to…take the least amount of damage possible.”

Ultimately, when you have fighters with the ability to finish the fight in the blink of an eye, it creates a situation where a first-round result wouldn’t be a surprise. But most fans are probably hoping for a little more action after Conor McGregor knocked out Jose Aldo in 13 seconds in the last marquee bout.

Reed Kuhn of Fightnomics provided numbers to further illustrate why hopes for this matchup are so high:

Based on his comments, it’s clear Lawler will attempt to set the pace early. How Condit is able to defend those early attacks, while also trying to counter with some significant strikes of his own, should be telling about how the fight will go.

Nick Baldwin of BloodyElbow.com is among those who has high expectations:

While it’s impossible to know what the next 12 months will hold, there’s a good chance Lawler and Condit are going to set a high bar in the Fight of the Year conversation just two days in.

All told, this is a toss-up fight in every sense of the term. You could argue the champion holds a slight advantage because he went through a similar bout last time out and managed to survive, but the edge either way is minimal.

That’s great news for anybody without a rooting interest. Expect plenty of fury and at least a couple of moments that find their way onto the year-end highlight reel, regardless of who emerges with the belt.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 195 Lawler vs. Condit Predictions: Main Card Staff Picks

The UFC is getting 2016 off on the right foot. The first event of the year gives us a welterweight championship fight worthy of all of our attention.
Robbie Lawler, the undisputed welterweight champion, will defend against No. 4-ranked Carlos Condit. I…

The UFC is getting 2016 off on the right foot. The first event of the year gives us a welterweight championship fight worthy of all of our attention.

Robbie Lawler, the undisputed welterweight champion, will defend against No. 4-ranked Carlos Condit. It’s a matchup that screams violence. Two aggressive fighters who love to throw down will mix it up for the gold and our enjoyment.

And the co-main event looks to be a heavyweight title eliminator. No. 2-ranked contender Andrei Arlovski and No. 3-ranked Stipe Miocic are slated to throw their lunch-box-sized fists at one another in an attempt to lay claim as the next rightful challenger.

The rest of the main card looks like plenty of fun as well, and the Bleacher Report staff are excited to start a new season of fight picks.

The staff team of Craig Amos, Scott Harris, Sydnie Jones, Nathan McCarter and Steven Rondina are here to give you our thoughts on who walks out of UFC 195 as victors.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 195 Weigh-in Results: Lawler vs. Condit Fight Card

UFC 195 is a mere day away. The leader of MMA ended its 2015 campaign on a strong note and kicks off 2016 in much the same way.
UFC welterweight champion Robbie Lawler puts his gold on the line against No. 4-ranked contender Carlos Condit in the main e…

UFC 195 is a mere day away. The leader of MMA ended its 2015 campaign on a strong note and kicks off 2016 in much the same way.

UFC welterweight champion Robbie Lawler puts his gold on the line against No. 4-ranked contender Carlos Condit in the main event.

In the co-main event, No. 2-ranked heavyweight contender Andrei Arlovski and No. 3-ranked Stipe Miocic are set to do battle. These bouts come after the other 10 that fill out this fight card, and Bleacher Report will have it covered wall-to-wall.

First up? The weigh-in. All fighters will tip the scale at 7 p.m. ET on Friday evening to make the bout official. Come back for live updates from the UFC 195 weigh-in.

 

UFC 195 Fight Card

  • Robbie Lawler vs. Carlos Condit
  • Stipe Miocic vs. Andrei Arlovski
  • Albert Tumenov vs. Lorenz Larkin
  • Diego Brandao vs. Brian Ortega
  • Abel Trujillo vs. Tony Sims
  • Michael McDonald vs. Masanori Kanehara
  • Kyle Noke vs. Alex Morono
  • Justine Kish vs. Nina Ansaroff
  • Drew Dober vs. Scott Holtzman
  • Dustin Poirier vs. Joseph Duffy
  • Joe Soto vs. Michinori Tanaka
  • Edgar Garcia vs. Sheldon Westcott

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com