The UFC is returning to Fresno, California later tonight (Sat. December 9, 2017) from the Save Mart Center, and what a card the promotion has in store for fight fans. In the main event of the evening, UFC featherweight veteran Cub Swanson takes on rising 145-pound contender Brian Ortega. The co-main event will see Jason […]
The UFC is returning to Fresno, California later tonight (Sat. December 9, 2017) from the Save Mart Center, and what a card the promotion has in store for fight fans.
In the main event of the evening, UFC featherweight veteran Cub Swanson takes on rising 145-pound contender Brian Ortega. The co-main event will see Jason Knight take on Gabriel Benitez.
Also on the card will be a bantamweight showdown between Aljamain Sterling and Marlon Moraes. You can check out the full fight card, start times, and information on how to watch the event here below:
UFC Fresno (UFC Fight Night 123) is set to take place on Saturday, December 9, 2017 at Save Mart Center in Fresno, California. The event will mark the promotion’s first visit to Fresno. The main card will air on FOX Sports 1 at 10 p.m. ET while the preliminary card will be split broadcasted on […]
UFC Fresno (UFC Fight Night 123) is set to take place on Saturday, December 9, 2017 at Save Mart Center in Fresno, California. The event will mark the promotion’s first visit to Fresno. The main card will air on FOX Sports 1 at 10 p.m. ET while the preliminary card will be split broadcasted on FOX Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET and the promotion’s streaming service, UFC Fight Pass, at 6:30 p.m. ET.
A featherweight bout between Cub Swanson and Brian Ortega will serve as the event headliner while Jason Knight vs. Gabriel Benitez in a featherweight bout will serve as the co-main event. Rounding out the six bout main card is Aljamain Sterling vs. Marlon Moraes in a bantamweight bout, Scott Holtzman vs. Darrell Horcher in a lightweight bout, and Markus Perez vs. Eryk Anders in a middleweight bout.
UFC officials held the weigh-ins for UFC Fresno on Friday and here are the weigh-in results:
MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)
Cub Swanson (146) vs. Brian Ortega (144.8)
Gabriel Benitez (144.8) vs. Jason Knight (145.6)
Marlon Moraes (135.4) vs. Aljamain Sterling (135.6)
Scott Holtzman (155.8) vs. Darrell Horcher (155.6)
Eryk Anders (185.6) vs. Markus Perez (185.4)
Benito Lopez (135.4) vs. Albert Morales (134)
PRELIMINARY CARD (FS1, 8 p.m. ET)
Liz Carmouche (124.8) vs. Alexis Davis (125.8)
Luke Sanders (135.6) vs. Andre Soukhamthath (136)
Carls John de Tomas (135.8) vs. Alex Perez (135)
Merab Dvalishvili (135.6) vs. Frankie Saenz (135.6)
PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC Fight Pass, 6:30 p.m. ET)
Iuri Alcantara (135.4) vs. Alejandro Perez (135.6)
Chris Gruetzemacher (154.8) vs. Davi Ramos (155.8)
Trevin Giles (184.8) vs. Antonio Braga Neto (185.8)
Cub Swanson feels there’s no doubt that two fighters have gotten special treatment under the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) banner. Those fighters just so happen to be the most polarizing figures in the history of mixed martial arts (MMA). …
Cub Swanson feels there’s no doubt that two fighters have gotten special treatment under the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) banner. Those fighters just so happen to be the most polarizing figures in the history of mixed martial arts (MMA). Swanson is talking about UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor and former women’s bantamweight queen Ronda Rousey. […]
No. 4-ranked UFC featherweight contender Cub Swanson has long been a top-10 perennial contender, but a coveted UFC title shot has always eluded him. Now of course that’s due in part to Swanson, who meets Brian Ortega in the main event of UFC Fight Fight Night Fresno this weekend (Dec. 9, 2017), coming up short […]
No. 4-ranked UFC featherweight contender Cub Swanson has long been a top-10 perennial contender, but a coveted UFC title shot has always eluded him.
Now of course that’s due in part to Swanson, who meets Brian Ortega in the main event of UFC Fight Fight Night Fresno this weekend (Dec. 9, 2017), coming up short in a few pivotal bouts, but he also feels it could be due to the path the UFC has put him on.
As he sees it, it’s ‘a lot harder’ for a fighter like him to reach the pinnacle as opposed to fighters with higher profiles like Conor McGregor and Ronda Rousey:
“Fighters like that, they get hand-picked opponents their entire career,” Swanson told Yahoo! Sports. “Guys like me, they’re like, ‘Yeah, he’s winning, but let’s give him tougher and tougher and tougher and tougher guys.’ That’s literally how they book my fights. It’s a lot harder for somebody like me to have an undefeated career than somebody like a Conor or a Ronda.”
Both McGregor, who currently serves as the UFC lightweight champion, and Rousey, a former bantamweight titleholder, are two of biggest stars mixed martial arts has ever seen, with both reaching heights unlike those of any other fighter.
Swanson, however, feels as if both McGregor and Rousey were ‘pampered’ by the UFC:
“That’s very fair, but I also think both of them were very pampered,” he said. “You know I’ll take slack for saying that, but it’s very true. I tell young fighters this all the time. Me and Ortega both, we’re just another fighter from California. We’re not from a country that doesn’t have any other fighters and so we don’t have an entire country backing us up. So we’re not an easy sell from a promoter’s perspective.”
He also claimed that the two stars have been ‘compensated above and behind’:
“One, they’re being compensated above and beyond,” he said. “Two, their opponents were picked at the right time and it was the right person. When [McGregor fought] Chad Mendes, that fight, [Mendes] wasn’t even training when Aldo pulled out. Five other people were training and they went with the guy who is the least in shape. Same thing happened with Nate Diaz. Five other people signed on the dotted line and Nate Diaz got the fight because he was the least in shape. There was too much money to be lost. It’s simple.”
Does Swanson have a point here, or have both McGregor and Rousey earned their fortunes?
If any one fight is emblematic of Brian Ortega’s undefeated UFC run so far, it’s his submission victory over Diego Brandao at UFC 195 almost two years ago.
Against Brandao, Ortega went to the final round needing to make something happen. During the fir…
If any one fight is emblematic of Brian Ortega’s undefeated UFC run so far, it’s his submission victory over Diego Brandao at UFC 195 almost two years ago.
Against Brandao, Ortega went to the final round needing to make something happen. During the first two periods, the more seasoned Brandao had landed the harder shots on the feet and scored some timely takedowns, all without slowing down as much as Ortega and his team had hoped he might.
As the third stanza began, it appeared the 30-year-old Brazilian was about to hand Ortega his first professional loss.
“You ready for a takedown or what?” cornerman Rener Gracie had asked Ortega between rounds. “You got one for me? He’s up two [rounds] on the cards right now, so we have to put him down.”
Ortega responded by pulling off what would soon become his calling card inside the Octagon—a late, come-from-behind victory.
After initiating a clinch near the fence with just over a minute gone in the final period, Ortega seized Brandao’s neck with an arm-in choke attempt. As Brandao dropped to the mat to escape, Ortega transitioned to a mounted guillotine and then into a triangle choke that forced Brandao to tap out.
It was a beautiful display of jiu-jitsu—the other thing that has been Ortega’s constant—and it allowed him to transform a near-certain defeat into a highlight-reel victory.
This wouldn’t be the last time, either.
As he approaches Saturday’s main event fight against Cub Swanson at UFC Fight Night 123, Ortega’s penchant for the dramatic has already proved historic. Simply put, he’s never out of a fight, and his four consecutive third-round finishes stand as the most of all time in the UFC.
Coupled with his otherworldly Brazilian jiu-jitsu skills and aggressive, evolving striking game, Ortega’s walk-off wins have made him a hot prospect in the men’s featherweight division. A win this weekend over Swanson—the weight class’ No. 4-ranked contender—could put him just a fight or two away from challenging new champion Max Holloway for the title.
Yet, Ortega’s pattern of last-minute heroics also raises questions about his long-term future as an elite 145-pounder. After all, you can’t have a bunch of dramatic comeback wins if you don’t consistently fall behind in your fights.
Is Ortega really as good as his sterling 12-0-1 record suggests? Or has he just gotten lucky?
Since debuting on the big stage in 2014, the flashy Gracie jiu-jitsu black belt has steadily proved he’s most dangerous when things look worst for him. The only bump in the road so far has been a July 2014 win over Mike De La Torre, which was later converted to a no-contest after Ortega tested positive for a steroid.
Otherwise, his record has been flawless, though he certainly hasn’t made it easy on himself.
Before Brandao, Ortega defeated Thiago Tavares via third-round TKO in a bloody, back-and-forth fight that earned both men $50,000 performance-based bonuses.
After Brandao, he stunned Clay Guida with a crushing knee to the face just 20 seconds before the final horn in a fight Guida was on the verge of winning.
In his most recent performance, Ortega conceded a rough second round to ninth-ranked Renato Moicano before roaring back to win via guillotine choke three minutes into the third.
Each time, the specter of a loss loomed until Ortega snuffed it out with a late finish. Has there been some good fortune involved in that streak? Sure.
Yet a closer look at the 26-year-old California native’s recent performances reveals there’s far more going on than just luck. Take a few minutes to learn about his background and it’s clear to see Ortega’s success is more about hard work than pure chance:
So far, Ortega has been well-conditioned and relentless in pursuit of victory. Those are pretty good qualities to have if you’re planning on setting up shop in the featherweight title picture.
Ortega’s advanced skills are obvious. He’s light on his feet and athletic with his striking, sticking mostly to tight, straight punches but unafraid to mix in some spinning kicks and elbows when he’s feeling it. On the ground, he’s one of the most dangerous fighters in all of MMA, possessing an active offensive guard that makes even sturdy professionals nervous to tangle with him on the mat.
On top of that, Ortega has gotten some really good coaching, especially during his fights.
Against Guida, for example, Gracie told Ortega in the corner after the first round that Guida was lowering his head during their striking exchanges. Two rounds later, Guida tried to slip a barrage of punches from Ortega when he ducked right into the knee that ended the fight.
When things started out rocky against Brandao, his corner reminded Ortega the game plan was to drag the former Ultimate Fighter into the deep water of the late rounds. That’s what Ortega did, ultimately chaining together chokes until he got the finish in the third.
“Pretty much every time I train with the Gracie brothers, they’re just like blankets over me so I just did the same thing,” Ortega told UFC color commentator Joe Rogan in the cage after the Brandao win. “It’s something we train every day at the Gracie Academy. We go from choke to choke to choke to choke. You think you’re out of the fire, but you’re not.”
So more than sheer serendipity, you can chalk Ortega’s four straight third-round finishes up to his aggressive nature, his solid cardio and his talented team of coaches.
All the same, if his habit of being a slow starter is ever going to come back to haunt him, it could well be this weekend against Swanson.
The bottom line is nobody gets lucky against Cub Swanson. If Ortega wants to solidify himself as a legitimate title contender at 145 pounds, beating the longtime Team Jackson-Winkeljohn trained fighter will do the trick.
In recent fights, however, Swanson has proved a difficult out for up-and-coming UFC stars. His December 2016 fight against Doo Ho Choi followed much the same narrative as the Ortega matchup—seeming as though the fight company wanted to get the 26-year-old Choi a win over a recognizable Octagon veteran.
Swanson wasn’t having those plans, however, and defeated Choi by unanimous decision. He followed that win up by beating Artem Lobov in April 2017, making it four straight wins for him since back-to-back losses to Frankie Edgar and Holloway in 2014 and ’15.
Swanson doesn’t shape up as the kind of guy Ortega can fall behind to early, though the fact their bout is a five-round main event changes the dynamic a bit.
It means both guys will have ample opportunity to show what they’re made of.
For Swanson, that will require proving all over again that he’s nobody’s stepping stone.
For Ortega, a win here would prove he’s a lot more than just lucky.
Unbeaten Brian Ortega will try to move one step closer to a shot at the UFC featherweight title this Saturday when he faces Cub Swanson in the main event of UFC Fight Night 123. Ortega, who has reeled off four consecutive finishes since having a win in…
Unbeaten Brian Ortega will try to move one step closer to a shot at the UFC featherweight title this Saturday when he faces Cub Swanson in the main event of UFC Fight Night 123. Ortega, who has reeled off four consecutive finishes since having a win in 2014 changed to a no-contest due to a […]