The injury bug refuses to slow down. It’s most recent victim was an important battle for contendership within the featherweight division. MMAJunkie.com revealed on Thursday that Dennis Siver has been forced out of a scheduled bout against Cub Swan…
The injury bug refuses to slow down. It’s most recent victim was an important battle for contendership within the featherweight division.
MMAJunkie.com revealed on Thursday that Dennis Siver has been forced out of a scheduled bout against Cub Swanson at UFC on Fuel 7. His replacement is none other than Dustin “Diamond” Poirier.
This fight was a hotly-anticipated battle of strikers, as both Siver and Swanson prefer to turn their bouts into slugfests.
After a loss to Donald Cerrone shut down the momentum of four consecutive wins, Siver dropped down to featherweight, where he currently holds a flawless 2-0 record.
Although Swanson struggled to maintain any momentum while fighting for the WEC, he now holds a three-fight winning streak inside the Octagon. Each victory in his trio of success came against a notable, as he outstruck George Roop, Ross Pearson and Charles Oliveira.
Poirier is fresh off of a submission victory over Jonathan Brookins in December, which improves his UFC record to 5-1. The sole blemish came in a Fight of the Year winner against Chan Sung Jung last May.
This fight will likely avoid the scorecards, as Swanson and Poirier have only gone to decision a combined five times in 38 professional fights.
UFC on Fuel 7 comes to you live from Wembley Arena in London, England on Saturday, February 16. The event is currently headlined by a UFC interim bantamweight title fight between RenanBarao and Michael McDonald.
(Props: TheBestMMAHouse. Take a look before this bad boy gets pulled.)
Why not blow the first 15 minutes of your workday watching dozens of the best UFC knockouts that last year had to offer? Obviously Edson Barboza vs. Terry Etim gets a place of honor at the end of this highlight reel, but if I had to pick another favorite moment, it has to be the way that George Roop‘s mouthpiece explodes out of his face at the 12:01 mark, courtesy of a Cub Swanson right hand.
It’s also nice to revisit the pure frenzy of Anthony Pettis‘s finish of Joe Lauzon (6:30), Rich Franklin going all sack-of-potatoes against Cung Le (8:24), and that intense moment after Pat Barry gets pulled off of Christian Morecraft where it seems like ‘HD’ might just jump back on and keep pounding the poor bastard (10:56). For all of its disappointments, 2012 was a damn good year for dudes getting their lights turned out.
(Props: TheBestMMAHouse. Take a look before this bad boy gets pulled.)
Why not blow the first 15 minutes of your workday watching dozens of the best UFC knockouts that last year had to offer? Obviously Edson Barboza vs. Terry Etim gets a place of honor at the end of this highlight reel, but if I had to pick another favorite moment, it has to be the way that George Roop‘s mouthpiece explodes out of his face at the 12:01 mark, courtesy of a Cub Swanson right hand.
It’s also nice to revisit the pure frenzy of Anthony Pettis‘s finish of Joe Lauzon (6:30), Rich Franklin going all sack-of-potatoes against Cung Le (8:24), and that intense moment after Pat Barry gets pulled off of Christian Morecraft where it seems like ‘HD’ might just jump back on and keep pounding the poor bastard (10:56). For all of its disappointments, 2012 was a damn good year for dudes getting their lights turned out.
With a quick look at the UFC’s schedule for 2013, it becomes clear the organization has every intention to fire out of the gates in the new year throwing heavy leather. With the past 12 months marred by injury, bout changes and an entire card being can…
With a quick look at the UFC’s schedule for 2013, it becomes clear the organization has every intention to fire out of the gates in the new year throwing heavy leather. With the past 12 months marred by injury, bout changes and an entire card being cancelled, the UFC is looking to bounce back in impressive fashion by rolling out a first-quarter lineup filled with high-profile matchups featuring a handful of the sport’s biggest names.
While the promotion’s superstars will rightfully draw the lion’s share of the attention, the current schedule has created an interesting opportunity for an entire weight class to make a long-overdue impact with the UFC fanbase.
Since the WEC merged with the UFC in 2010, the featherweight division has sat idly at the bottom of the promotion’s deck. Save for current champion and pound-for-pound candidate Jose Aldo, the weight class has failed to establish itself as a “must watch” division. But the tides of change are swirling, and suddenly there is a group of potential contenders looking to scrap their way into the title picture.
The collective is a mixture of veterans, prospects and a former lightweight champion. If said fighters continue to bring the same brand of ruckus they brought to the Octagon in 2012, by the end of the coming year, the featherweight division could not only put itself on the map in the UFC, but produce several stars in the process.
Contenders in the Making
With the way the current schedule is lined up, the 145-pound divisional picture is going to become hectic in a hurry. While former No. 1 contender Chad Mendes and rising prospect Dustin Poirier both finished 2012 with strong performances, the remaining fighters in the Top 10 will all see action in the coming months.
On January’s UFC on Fox 6 card, Duke Roufus protege Erik Koch will face Ricardo Lamas. While “New Breed” was originally slated to face Aldo in the main event of UFC 153, injury ultimately forced him out of the fight, and with Frankie Edgar dropping down and stepping in to fill his place, the 24-year-old watched his title shot become nonexistent.
When Koch steps into the Octagon in Chicago, it will be his first appearance in over a year, but prior to the injury that forced him out of the Aldo fight, the Milwaukee-based fighter had put together four consecutive victories.
While Koch has garnered acclaim for his potential, Lamas has been somewhat of a silent assassin in the featherweight division. The Chicago native has won all three of his fights under the UFC banner, with his most recent victory coming in impressive fashion as he upset highly touted Japanese fighter HatsuHioki at UFC on FX 4. The win over Hioki put “The Bully” on the radar for title contention, and with Koch’s previous title shot taken away by circumstance, it would come as no surprise if the winner of this bout is awarded the next title shot.
Another fighter who has put together a banner year is Jackson-Winkeljohn trained fighter Cub Swanson. The longest-tenured featherweight on the Zuffa roster experienced a career resurgence in 2012, as he earned victories over George Roop, Ross Pearson and Charles Oliveira. All three victories came by way of knockout, and in the process of doing so, Swanson solidified himself in the conversation of top contenders in the featherweight mix.
Despite the California native campaigning for a bout with Chan Sung Jung, “The Korean Zombie” has yet to return from injury and Swanson’s next bout with come against Dennis Siver at UFC on Fuel TV 7 in February.
Since dropping down to featherweight, the 33-year-old Siver has looked like a man possessed. The German-born fighter has earned lopsided decision victories over Diego Nunes and TUFalum Nam Phan working behind a high-output attack and powerful strikes.
When Siver was competing at 155 pounds, he was one of the division’s more muscular fighters, but at featherweight he is a monster. Typically muscle-heavy fighters tend to have endurance issues as a fight carries on, but Siver‘s two showings in the 145-pound weight class have been to the contrary, as he’s poured on the offense from bell to bell on both occasions. With Swanson vs. Siver guaranteed to be a violent tilt, it is also possible the winner could find himself in the No. 1 contender’s chair.
Another noteworthy clash at the UFC on Fox 6 card in January will feature former lightweight contender Clay Guida as he makes his UFC featherweight debut against Hioki. With both fighters coming off losses, the bout carries no title implications, but the outcome will determine which fighter stays in the hunt of an increasingly competitive division.
Guida has competed for years as an undersized lightweight, and it will be interesting to see how he fares against fighters his own size. “The Carpenter” is coming off a poor performance against Gray Maynard where his typically fan-friendly fighting style was anything but. A win over an opponent of Hioki‘s caliber will put the Chicago native on the fast track to the division’s upper tier.
The Non-Superfight Superfight
While the rest of the pack scraps it out to see who is going to fill out the “next” position, the one featherweight clash the MMA world is salivating for will come at UFC 156 when Aldo defends his title against Edgar. After the initial meeting was scrapped due to Aldo’s injury in late September, the UFC decided to keep the pairing intact and reschedule for a later date.
It has been seven years since the 26-year-old Brazilian suffered the lone loss of his career, and over that time, “Junior” has collected a 14-fight win streak. With remarkable speed and accurate striking, the Nova Uniao product has outshone the opposition on every occasion. His natural talent and abilities have earned him the respect of being one of the sport’s pound-for-pound best and have garnered comparisons to the greatest mixed martial artist of all time, Anderson Silva.
Those are lofty expectations to live up to, but Aldo has shown no signs of such things being too burdensome to carry. The only knock to Aldo’s reign has been the level of competition he’s faced, and if he can defeat an opponent as accomplished as Edgar, the GOAT talk will certainly increase.
The picture looks a bit different from Edgar’s perspective. One year ago, the Toms River native was the reigning lightweight champion, but after two razor-thin decision losses to Benson Henderson, “The Answer” suddenly found himself on the outside of title contention in the ultra-competitive division he once championed.
Edgar had been receiving pressure to drop down to the featherweight division for years, and following his second loss to Henderson, the former Clarion University standout wrestler decided it was time to make the move.
Should Edgar be the first to solve the Aldo puzzle, he will join a small group of fighters who have accomplished the difficult task of earning titles in two different weight classes. On the other hand, if Edgar falls short against the Brazilian phenom, a third consecutive loss would do major damage to his relevance in the sport. While I can’t see a loss to Aldo costing Edgar his job with the UFC, for a fighter as proud and talented as Edgar has proven to be, it would put him in limbo.
Over the next two-and-a-half months, all of the lingering questions will be answered, and it’s quite possible that those answers will come in exciting fashion. If this proves to be the case, 2013 will be the year the featherweight division finally gets its due.
(“Perfect, Rory, now we can finally finish our conversation about Huey Lewis and the News that you are always going on about.”)
Rory MacDonald has the kind of lifeless, black eyes that would make Dr. Sam Loomis shiver at night. For an example of this, see his post-fight call-out of Carlos Condit at UFC on FOX 5, in which he delivered a speech so precise and monotone that it begged audiences to ask whether or not he had practiced it over and over and over again on the collection of flesh-covered marionettes he keeps locked in that one room in his house with a deadbolt on the door.
Obviously shaken up by MacDonald’s speech was that of Dana White, who, fearing he would end up as a bald cap on one of those marionettes, caved into Rory’s demands faster than the French in insert war of your choice here. So just five days out from his dominant win over B.J. Penn, MacDonald has already been booked to rematch the ironically-nicknamed “Natural Born Killer” in Condit at UFC 158 in Montreal. The man responsible for both MacDonald’s only professional loss and the shrine of hair and blood samples that looms over the Canadian’s fireplace, Condit is fresh off a title-losing bid to Georges St. Pierre at UFC 154. Condit and MacDonald first met at UFC 115, where despite stealing the first two rounds, “Ares” found himself eating elbow sammiches for the majority of the third until referee Kevin Dornan called a stop to the bout with just seven seconds remaining. It is no coincidence that Kevin Dornan has been missing ever since.
And speaking of people getting exactly what they wanted, it looks like GSP will likely be defending his title against rival Nick Diaz at the same event, although according to Dana White, the “deal isn’t done yet.” Diaz’s manager, Cesar Gracie, confirmed that the former Strikeforce welterweight champion has been offered the bout, but if you ask us, we’d recommend that you save your excitement for the moment these two are actually staring at each other from across the cage. Celebrating before that is simply setting yourself up for disappointment.
In other fight booking news…
(“Perfect, Rory, now we can finally finish our conversation about Huey Lewis and the News that you are always going on about.”)
Rory MacDonald has the kind of lifeless, black eyes that would make Dr. Sam Loomis shiver at night. For an example of this, see his post-fight call-out of Carlos Condit at UFC on FOX 5, in which he delivered a speech so precise and monotone that it begged audiences to ask whether or not he had practiced it over and over and over again on the collection of flesh-covered marionettes he keeps locked in that one room in his house with a deadbolt on the door.
Obviously shaken up by MacDonald’s speech was that of Dana White, who, fearing he would end up as a bald cap on one of those marionettes, caved into Rory’s demands faster than the French in insert war of your choice here. So just five days out from his dominant win over B.J. Penn, MacDonald has already been booked to rematch the ironically-nicknamed “Natural Born Killer” in Condit at UFC 158 in Montreal. The man responsible for both MacDonald’s only professional loss and the shrine of hair and blood samples that looms over the Canadian’s fireplace, Condit is fresh off a title-losing bid to Georges St. Pierre at UFC 154. Condit and MacDonald first met at UFC 115, where despite stealing the first two rounds, “Ares” found himself eating elbow sammiches for the majority of the third until referee Kevin Dornan called a stop to the bout with just seven seconds remaining. It is no coincidence that Kevin Dornan has been missing ever since.
And speaking of people getting exactly what they wanted, it looks like GSP will likely be defending his title against rival Nick Diaz at the same event, although according to Dana White, the “deal isn’t done yet.” Diaz’s manager, Cesar Gracie, confirmed that the former Strikeforce welterweight champion has been offered the bout, but if you ask us, we’d recommend that you save your excitement for the moment these two are actually staring at each other from across the cage. Celebrating before that is simply setting yourself up for disappointment.
In other fight booking news…
Also fresh off a dominant victory at UFC on FOX 5, it appears that Russian-German kickboxing badass Dennis Siver has been booked in the co-main event of UFC on FUEL 7 against fellow surging featherweight Cub Swanson. Since making the drop from lightweight, Siver has put on a pair of brilliant performances against Diego Nunes and Nam Phan, whereas Swanson has scored three straight (T)KO victories in his past three contests. A credit is due to the UFC’s matchmaking department for this one; Siver and Swanson are two of the division’s more consistently entertaining fighters and a win for either man would launch them into the upper-echelon of the division. Expect at least one end of the night bonus to go to either one of these gentlemen, if not both.
And because I’m a huge Siver fan, I’ve added a video of one of my favorite Siver performances that didn’t end with a spinning back kick to the liver below. The fight took place at UFC 122 and saw Siver take on TUF 9′s Andre Winner in a lightweight fight that was moved to co-main event status on short notice. An indication of what we’re in store for at UFC on FUEL 7? Let’s hope so.
UFC on FUEL 7 goes down from the Wembley Arena in London, England on February 17th.
A matchup of these two top featherweights is becoming a very interesting commodity. It is bound to happen sooner or later to help determine who the next top contender will be for the featherweight belt.Both Chan Sung Jung and Cub Swanson have been on f…
A matchup of these two top featherweights is becoming a very interesting commodity. It is bound to happen sooner or later to help determine who the next top contender will be for the featherweight belt.
Both Chan Sung Jung and Cub Swanson have been on fire lately, and this only makes their potential fight even more exciting.
Both of these men are near the top of the division and are eager to prove they have what it takes to move into title contention.
Here is how a fight between these two would break down.