With the UFC’s recent deal with Fox, MMA is well on its way to becoming more mainstream.Now that the fighters will be more in the public eye, some of them may become quite popular. In fact, some may even get offered guest spots on TV shows.In the past,…
With the UFC’s recent deal with Fox, MMA is well on its way to becoming more mainstream.
Now that the fighters will be more in the public eye, some of them may become quite popular. In fact, some may even get offered guest spots on TV shows.
In the past, fighters like Bas Rutten and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson have appeared on The King of Queens, but what other fighters could show up in your favorite TV show?
Are people putting significantly too much stock into Chris Leben’s announcement?It certainly seems as such, and not so much for the right reasons.Permit this writer to first submit this disclaimer: Not only did I not see anything wrong with Leben at th…
It certainly seems as such, and not so much for the right reasons.
Permit this writer to first submit this disclaimer: Not only did I not see anything wrong with Leben at the weigh-ins, but I also thought that the fight was an easy 19-19 standoff at the end of the second round.
Leben stole the first round, which was close in my eyes, but highlighted by Leben’s signature forward offense and heavy-handed shots on the stand-up.
Munoz definitely showed us more effective usage of the “Donkey Kong Beatdown” style of ground-and-pound in the second round than he did in the first round, but let’s not take anything away from Leben or Munoz, even though we’re currently past UFC 138 and looking forward to UFC on FOX 1.
Munoz damaged Leben’s eye about as much as anyone has ever hurt Leben’s eye, but the truth is that while Leben might have at first admitted to not being able to see out of that damaged eye, he didn’t want to quit.
Why else would he want to finish out that second round?
See the result of the fight as you wish, but don’t take too much of what you’re being given as far as the whole “Leben cut 21 pounds on weigh-in day” thing.
If he really did, he really did, but for a guy that supposedly was not in good shape last weekend, he held his own well.
This whole case could be something similar to what we see at UFC on FOX 1 this Saturday, as Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos are both heavy-handed fighters who deliver damage when they throw bombs from any direction.
All but Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin have been knocked out by Dos Santos, but Velasquez is as much responsible for the nasty laceration on Brock Lesnar‘s cheek as he was responsible for taking the UFC heavyweight title away from Lesnar.
If Cain can inflict some petrifying damage to Dos Santos, something not unlike what Leben received from Munoz’s fists, will we be giving Cain his due for beating a credible opponent, or are we going to take a victory away from another wrestler and blame it on an allegedly bad “weight cut” during a training camp that likely was not a bad one at all?
I don’t know, but I don’t see the logic in saying anything aside from “one guy whooped the other guy’s a**”…do you?
Filed under: UFCEven in the frantic excitement of victory, Mark Munoz held true to his gentlemanly reputation. The rapidly improving middleweight who fights under the beastly nickname of “The Filipino Wrecking Machine” beat Chris Leben up at UFC 138, t…
Even in the frantic excitement of victory, Mark Munoz held true to his gentlemanly reputation. The rapidly improving middleweight who fights under the beastly nickname of “The Filipino Wrecking Machine” beat Chris Leben up at UFC 138, then toned things down with a polite request to cut the line and face champion Anderson Silva.
With a potential big-money Silva vs. Chael Sonnen rematch already in discussions, Munoz’s wish seems unlikely to be granted, but at least he’s planted the bug in people’s minds that he’s title-worthy. Munoz has won seven of his last eight, brings a go-for-broke style and has surrounded himself with an excellent team from which to learn. After some troubles during the early stages of his UFC fight career, things seem to have clicked for him.
Munoz certainly deserves credit for his improvement and his willingness to fight Silva, who is a former training partner. His “call-out” though, could use some work. Calling Silva “by far” the best pound-for-pound fighter alive, Munoz politely requested the honor of Silva’s presence at a title bout. The well-mannered plea was completely contradictory from the fighter who ran over Leben moments before. The saying is that nice guys finish last. Munoz certainly has the chance to prove that wrong.
Mark Munoz
It simply wouldn’t make sense for the UFC to scuttle the Silva-Sonnen rematch, particularly with all the buildup Sonnen’s already produced for it. Munoz and the rest of the division need to bide their time until that plays out. Unfortunately for Munoz, that means at least one more fight before he can compete for the belt.
On December 3, Michael Bisping and Jason “Mayhem” Miller are fighting. If Bisping wins, a Munoz-Bisping matchup should be signed as a No. 1 contenders fight. If he loses, well, then, we’re in a bit of a pickle.
Prediction: Munoz eventually faces Bisping with a title shot on the line.
Chris Leben
The loss had to sting for Leben, who sees himself as one of the UFC’s toughest fighters but could not survive Munoz’s offensive onslaught. Fighters can often reason away a knockout in their minds by rationalizing that they simply got caught; it’s not so easy when things go the way they did on Saturday, and you’re brought to admit you got beat up by a better fighter.
Given Leben’s exciting style, there is certainly still a place for him in the UFC, it’s just not among the top five, at least not right now. At 31 years old and with a series of wars behind him, that possibility is certainly beginning to fade. Regardless of that, he’ll certainly always be remembered as a warrior in the cage, and given his style, you almost wonder if that reputation is as welcome to him as the description of champion might be.
Prediction:Ed Herman has won two straight since returning. Leben might be a good test in determining what level he’s at.
Renan Barao
Barao’s performance should have served as an eye-opener for those who hadn’t seem him fight before. He looked aggressive on his feet, continued his reputation as a killer on the ground, and closed out the durable Brad Pickett inside of one round despite being on enemy territory.
That win was great news for the UFC, who needs someone, anyone to make a statement at bantamweight and present themselves as a fresh, credible challenge to champion Dominick Cruz. With his win, Barao fit that bill. Will he be immediately thrust into the title picture? It really wouldn’t be hard to sell him as a legitimate threat coming off this win and highlighting his 28-fight unbeaten streak. But my guess is that he’ll need one more victory before he gets to Cruz.
Prediction: He faces Scott Jorgensen
Thiago Alves
The former No. 1 welterweight contender faced a must-win against Papy Abedi, and delivered with a first-round rear naked choke submission, his first finish since a TKO victory against Matt Hughes in June 2008. Given the fact that he was facing a relatively unknown opponent and was one of the best-known fighters on the card, anything else would have been a major disaster for Alves.
He faces a lengthy climb to return to contention, but at 28 years old, it’s not an impossible mission. There are also plenty of good opponents to match him up against.
Anthony Perosh
It’s two straight wins for the Aussie since returning to his natural home at light-heavyweight. At 39 years old, though, it’s hard to believe Perosh has any realistic shot at climbing the ladder towards the top of an extremely deep division. Even worse for his future prospects is that division is cluttered by wrestlers. Given Perosh’s jiu-jitsu based style, those types of matchups will be tough to navigate.
That said, he deserves plenty of credit for these recent wins, as well as the chance to try his skills against an opponent with a different type of skill set next time out.
Terry Etim
Etim spent 19 months on the sidelines injured and then spent 17 seconds in the cage upon his return with a lightning-fast submission against the overmatched Eddie Faaloloto. While the speed of the victory was unexpected, Etim was the biggest favorite on the entire card, so it was a fight he was supposed to win impressively. Things shouldn’t be quite so easy for him next time around.
Prediction: Thiago Tavares is still waiting for a matchup after his August win over Spencer Fisher. That sounds interesting. The UFC though went a different route, matching him up with Edson Barboza at UFC 142.
Che Mills
Mills debuted to some high marks after knocking out Chris Cope in a 40-second clinic of standup violence. UFC commentator Joe Rogan quickly anointed Mills as a fresh new welterweight star and he certainly looked the part, but we’ll need to see more of him before we can put him on the must-watch prospect list. Until then, how about we match him up with another striking star?
Prediction: Mills vs. Duane Ludwig sounds like fireworks to me.
Chirs Leben had struggled cutting weight to prepare for his opponent, Mark Munoz, at UFC 138. FightersOnly.co.uk has now revealed that Leben cut nearly 21 pounds in 24 hours prior to his bout against Munoz. Sources close to the 31-year-old said he…
Chirs Leben had struggled cutting weight to prepare for his opponent, Mark Munoz, at UFC 138.
The website reports that Leben spent Friday morning in the hotel sauna and he wore layers of clothing as he sweat water out of his body. The weight cut became so difficult that Leben’s general condition came into question and he was almost forced to withdraw from the bout.
However, Leben proceeded to fight against Munoz but he was visibly tired after the first round. Leben began the second round looking much more sluggish and fatigued; he then was taken down repeatedly by his opponent. Munoz cut Leben above his right eye which prompted the referee to request a doctor’s inspection, but Leben continued and finished the round.
Leben was exhausted after the end of the round, which forced his cornermen to end the bout as they didn’t feel he was in any physical condition to continue.
The loss now puts Leben’s UFC record at 12-7 and 22-8 overall.
We knew something was up. After the first five minutes of his UFC 138 main event battle with Mark Munoz on Saturday, Chris Leben already looked like he was heading into the championship rounds — sucking deep breaths, his body drifting towards a Pudzianowski-esque shade of crimson. And according to a Fighters Only report, it wasn’t just trans-Atlantic jet lag or a post-Halloweencandy hangover:
Chris Leben cut nearly 21 pounds in 24 hours to make weight for his fight with Mark Munoz, Fighters Only was told ahead of last night’s bout. The 31-year old middleweight had “a terrible weight cut” and was in such bad shape before the weigh ins that medical staff were keeping a very close eye on him.
We knew something was up. After the first five minutes of his UFC 138 main event battle with Mark Munoz on Saturday, Chris Leben already looked like he was heading into the championship rounds — sucking deep breaths, his body drifting towards a Pudzianowski-esque shade of crimson. And according to a Fighters Only report, it wasn’t just trans-Atlantic jet lag or a post-Halloweencandy hangover:
Chris Leben cut nearly 21 pounds in 24 hours to make weight for his fight with Mark Munoz, Fighters Only was told ahead of last night’s bout. The 31-year old middleweight had “a terrible weight cut” and was in such bad shape before the weigh ins that medical staff were keeping a very close eye on him.
A source close to Leben told Fighters Only on Friday that Leben had been left “shattered” by the amount of weight he had to cut on weigh-in day. He was in the hotel sauna from Friday morning hooded up and wearing layers of clothing as he sweated water out of his body. His dehydration and general condition was such that one of the medical team backstage said Leben would be pulled from the fight if things deteriorated any further.
Indeed, Leben was so delirious after the fight that he was drawing dicks where they didn’t really belong. So what the hell happened? Leben understood that his fight with Munoz represented a pivotal moment in his career that could have established him as a top contender in the UFC’s middleweight division. And yet, trying to cut over twenty pounds before the fight suggests that somewhere along the line, he wasn’t taking his preparation as seriously as he should have. If Leben comes out with an explanation for the epic miscalculation, we’ll let you know.
Styles make fights.This clichéd saying in the world of MMA was proven once again on Saturday night as the highly-criticized UFC 138 fight card showed that marquee names aren’t needed to put on a great show.There wasn’t a single bout that went to…
Styles make fights.
This clichéd saying in the world of MMA was proven once again on Saturday night as the highly-criticized UFC 138 fight card showed that marquee names aren’t needed to put on a great show.
There wasn’t a single bout that went to a decision on the main card. The fighters involved put on a solid showing on a shockingly stellar card that was initially deemed as one of the worst events ever put together in UFC history.
With major MMA events, the main event can make or break the expectations of an entire fight card.
The idea of Chris Leben and Mark Munoz headlining was met with the utmost scrutiny. In hindsight, some of the pre-fight assumptions surrounding the Leben-Munoz main event were a bit harsh and unfair.
There is a huge difference between marquee names and marquee matchups.
Fans are generally infatuated with major bouts boasting marquee names. A couple of easy examples would be the UFC 129 championship bout between Georges St-Pierre and Jake Shields and the upcoming UFC 141 No. 1 contender bout between Brock Lesnar and Alistair Overeem.
In a champion versus champion showdown, St-Pierre and Shields was billed as one of the biggest welterweight title bouts in UFC history, but the actual fight didn’t really live up to the hype.
Despite their star power, St-Pierre-Shields isn’t that interesting of a style matchup. While St-Pierre is one of the most well-rounded and technical fighters in all of MMA, Shields’ only advantage was his world-class Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
The world knows St-Pierre isn’t necessarily a finisher on the feet, and Shields has an underrated chin and great recovery. With that said, this “historic” showdown turned into what the styles dictated. St-Pierre kept the fight standing and periodically jabbed at Shields for five rounds.
As for Lesnar and Overeem, who can really say if the actual fight will live up to the monumental hype the bout will surely receive?
Overeem is one of the most feared strikers in the entire heavyweight division, and Lesnar tends to shy away from standup exchanges and look for an opening to shoot in for a double leg takedown on the outside.
This has the potential to be a good fight, but the styles could easily be a precursor for a slop fest.
Fans look to marquee names, but they’re really looking for marquee matchups.
Leben and Munoz would sell out very few venues as a headliner for a major UFC card. Renan Barao and Brad Pickett, who competed in the co-main event, would be lucky to even make the Spike TV prelims.
Still, these fights managed to deliver more action than some of the UFC’s most blockbuster bouts.
Instead of marquee names, UFC 138 consisted of a multitude of great stylistic pairings. Leben and Munoz are known for their knockout power and incredibly wild striking styles. Barao and Pickett are both well-rounded, constant aggressors and phenomenal grapplers.
Along with the names involved, fans should try to pay more attention to the actual matchups to get a better feeling on what to expect.
As the old saying goes, you can’t judge a book by its cover.