After the action in the Octagon is over, the UFC 131 fighters will meet the media at the UFC 131 post-fight press conference, and we’ll have the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.
The winners of the Knockout of the Night, Submission of the Night and Fight of the Night bonuses will be announced, and UFC President Dana White will offer his thoughts.
The UFC 131 post-fight press conference will begin about half an hour after the main event ends, and the video is below.
Sam Stout celebrates his win with coach Shawn Tompkins at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Krzystof Soszynksi moves forward against Mike Massenzio at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
After the action in the Octagon is over, the UFC 131 fighters will meet the media at the UFC 131 post-fight press conference, and we’ll have the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.
The winners of the Knockout of the Night, Submission of the Night and Fight of the Night bonuses will be announced, and UFC President Dana White will offer his thoughts.
The UFC 131 post-fight press conference will begin about half an hour after the main event ends, and the video is below.
Sam Stout celebrates his win with coach Shawn Tompkins at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Krzystof Soszynksi moves forward against Mike Massenzio at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
There seems to be a growing trend of fighters getting dazzled by the bright lights of Hollywood, and thus far it hasn’t exactly been a wonderful experience for fight fans. In this interview with MMA H.E.A.T.’s Karyn Bryant, Jon Jones talks about his recent meeting with top execs at Warner Brothers to discuss potential movie roles.
There are two main reasons that one might be opposed to films starring MMA fighters. First off, by and large, they suck. Until very recently, fighters were relegated to roles in ‘C’ and ‘D’ list films, basically anything that was the third or fourth straight-to-video sequel to a hit from twenty years ago or a straight-to-video knockoff of a hit from twenty years ago. But even if the movie is a summer blockbuster, we’re stuck with reason two: these films will interfere with fights. Filming a movie takes a lot of time, and timing is everything in the fight game. If Hollywood takes a shining to Jones, it’s terrific for him and it would undoubtedly raise some mainstream awareness for our sport, but as a greedy fan I don’t want to see important fights delayed any longer than they absolutely must be.
Dana’s thoughts on thespian Jones and a small taste of his acting chops after the jump.
There seems to be a growing trend of fighters getting dazzled by the bright lights of Hollywood, and thus far it hasn’t exactly been a wonderful experience for fight fans. In this interview with MMA H.E.A.T.’s Karyn Bryant, Jon Jones talks about his recent meeting with top execs at Warner Brothers to discuss potential movie roles.
There are two main reasons that one might be opposed to films starring MMA fighters. First off, by and large, they suck. Until very recently, fighters were relegated to roles in ‘C’ and ‘D’ list films, basically anything that was the third or fourth straight-to-video sequel to a hit from twenty years ago or a straight-to-video knockoff of a hit from twenty years ago. But even if the movie is a summer blockbuster, we’re stuck with reason two: these films will interfere with fights. Filming a movie takes a lot of time, and timing is everything in the fight game. If Hollywood takes a shining to Jones, it’s terrific for him and it would undoubtedly raise some mainstream awareness for our sport, but as a greedy fan I don’t want to see important fights delayed any longer than they absolutely must be.
The good news? Dana White says Bones can’t act. According to the Baldfather, he had to step in for Jones and deliver his line–”Here we go!”–when the Light Heavyweight Champ choked on the set of their recent Bud Light commercial. Not exactly a supportive thing to say about your champ when he’s trying to start up an acting career, unless…say, you don’t think Dana’s opposed to that, do you?
As for Jones’s stage presence, you make the call. Will he be quitting his day job anytime soon?
As reported by MMAWeekly.com, UFC president and company figurehead Dana White announced Thursday that all freshly inked main event bouts from this day forward will be five rounds, not the traditional three. Here’s a snippet of his quote from MMAW…
As reported by MMAWeekly.com, UFC president and company figurehead Dana White announced Thursday that all freshly inked main event bouts from this day forward will be five rounds, not the traditional three. Here’s a snippet of his quote from MMAWeekly.com:
“From this day forward, as we speak right here, right now today, every fight that is a main event that is not a title fight will be a five-round fight,” said White. “For Spike and everything else.”
Let me start off by saying: I was in full support of something being done to avoid main event draws. There is nothing worse for fans, who are shelling out hard earned cash to watch the pay-per-view, than having the two biggest draws on the card fight to a draw. (I’ll let you decide if the pun was intended).
Part of the fun of being a fight fan—or just a sports fan in general—is getting immersed in all the pre-fight hype leading up to an event. For diehards, weeks prior to fight nights are excoriating reminders of what it must be like for junkies during the dry times.
Not to mention, combine all the pre-fight interviews, video blogs, articles, Countdown specials on Spike, the occasional Georges St-Pierre Primetime, pressers and weigh-ins; by the time the final bell rings, every type of fight fan is craving for that climatic conclusion, the closing chapter to the main event.
Needless to say, when that closure is compromised by some indecisive judging and neither fighters’ hand is raise after the scores are spewed out of Bruce Buffer’s pie-hole, my inner Joe is sprinting around in my head like a zombie from 28 Days Later while I have to calmly starve my wallet by ordering another overpriced beer.
Point being, nobody wants draws in main events. There is a place and time for the inconclusive decision in MMA; it should be utilized during times where two guys never really had an advantage over the other. A good draw is acceptable, but when it occurs during the last fight—even during an incredible one like Edgar vs. Maynard 2—fans wake up the next day with a sour taste in their mouths.
On those mornings, I can barely find the energy to download such a hot mess, knowing the gratifying ending was omitted, devaluing all the time and energy spend on the internet leading up to the event. So, that last statement is both sad and pathetic, but equal parts true. You can sympathize with me even those there are far worse tragedies in the world, right?
Edgar vs. Maynard was bearable, almost acceptable, because it still stands as one of the best fights of the year, five months later. But after Penn vs. Fitch went to a draw, something had to be done.
That fight needed, at the most, an extra round, not two.
Good intentions and effort aside, extending all headliners to five rounds is not the best solution the UFC think-tank could have mustered up.
Even though regulation allows for an additional 10 minutes for fighters to duke it out after three rounds, it doesn’t mean it has to be that way—more is not always better, just ask Meg Ryan’s upper lip or the Octomom’s uterus. While you’re at it, ask the Octomom’s lips too.
Firstly, having your key fighters do battle for an extra two rounds will increase the likelihood of injury and general wear-and-tear on the body, which in turn will give match maker Joe Silva an aneurysm. The UFC already has a hard enough time replacing guys at the last minute to preserve a card’s momentum to keep casual fans intrigued—the cash cow of the equation.
As long as none of my readers have amnesia, please refer to two weekends ago at UFC 130 and think about tomorrow at UFC 131. Top guys had to relinquish prime slots on main cards due to injury and the alternate matchups that were improvised, as a result, made the event less appealing. Shaking up main events like a game of Boggle is risking business if the end product has less impact or meaning as the fight it was meant to replace.
Plus some fights are so static during the first three rounds, there’s no reason why fans would want to watch another two. Since UFC 131 was already referenced: Who was dying for 10 more minutes of Rampage not finishing Hamill?
Furthermore, the verdict is not quite out on whether or not these extra rounds will facilitate more finishes. That debate requires a certain level of empirical evidence and a fight mathematician—we’ve got neither here.
You’re stuck with me, but what I will do is link you to an article by Josh Nason, who diligently interjected previously recorded statistics on the percentage of finishes during non-title and title fights.
Basically, over the last year or so, there have been more finishes during three-round non-title fights than five-round championship bouts.
To put that into perspective, we’ve seen fighters who excel in the pressure cooker during those final minutes in the final round with their backs up against a wall. With two more rounds to consider, those types of fighters lose the urgency to make things happen.
On the flipside, there are guys who have made a successful living by grinding away the clock, dominating their will (usually through wrestling) in order to out point their opponents. What will two extra rounds do for that kind of competitor? I’m guessing more of the same.
The only advantage of a 25-minute lay-and-pray clinic over a 15-minute one is getting to see those beautiful little numbers take extra laps around the Octagon. But even then, there’s the internet. We’re watching for the fights.
Plan and simple: mandating five rounds for non-title headliners is a game changer for fighters, not only to the action in the Octagon, but also to all the extra preparation that has to happen in the gym. For example, guys will have to work on their cardio that much harder to survive longer fights, making training camps longer and possibly lessen the amount of bouts a fighter can take in a given year.
A lot of points of contention are up for debate at the moment until we see how it actually pans out, but rest assured, it is a historic shift in UFC policy that will likely alter the landscape of MMA as a whole.
I’ve always been a proponent for logically progressive change, whether in sports, politics or in society. Many calculated gambles thrive or die on a trial and error basis, hands-on test for those involved. This may be no different; time will tell the tale.
All I can say and have been saying for a solution is this: Why not the sudden victory round instead? It does wonders in avoiding draws for The Ultimate Fighter. Then again, that’s a whole other article for a whole other day. I’m sure your eyes are just as tired as mine.
It was announced on Thursday by Dana White that all UFC main events, even those that are not for titles, will be five round affairs. The idea of making main even fights five rounds has been a hot topic recently, especially in bouts to determine title s…
It was announced on Thursday by Dana White that all UFC main events, even those that are not for titles, will be five round affairs. The idea of making main even fights five rounds has been a hot topic recently, especially in bouts to determine title shots. The main motivating factor for making contendership fights five rounds was to make sure that a lot of the judging mishaps that have taken place will be alleviated with the addition of two more rounds.
I for one am not a fan of five-round contests that are not for championships. I believe that there’s something special about five-round fights, and if all main events were to become five rounds then the potential exists for championship fights to lose some of their luster. I also believe that a three-round fight when a title shot is on the line makes the fight a lot more exciting, and the fighters know that they have to perform because they don’t have much room for error.
I can understand the UFC’s decision to implement five-round fights for bouts that have a title shot on the line, but the idea of making all main events five rounders—including Spike TV and Versus cards—is somewhat baffling. A lot of the main events for those cards may be interesting fights and even some of the main events for PPV’s are interesting, but at the same time hold no real relevance in their respective weight classes. I can live with five-rounders for title shots, but at the same time Dana White has shown on multiple occasions that he does whatever he wants; he has even taken away title shots from people that were supposed to be given to them on the condition of them winning their fight. If five-round fights are to be instituted, then title shots should be guaranteed.
I know people’s positions on this are split, but let me know what you guys think. Should all main events be five rounds? Should five-rounders be used only for title fights? Should five rounds be used in title fights as well as number one contender fights?
It’s the heavyweight bout you thought you’d never see, but it’s finally going down!Junior “Cigano” Dos Santos returns after a three-round war against Roy “Big Country” Nelson, and he has his sights set on Cain Velasquez and the UFC heavyweight title ar…
It’s the heavyweight bout you thought you’d never see, but it’s finally going down!
Junior “Cigano” Dos Santos returns after a three-round war against Roy “Big Country” Nelson, and he has his sights set on Cain Velasquez and the UFC heavyweight title around the waist of the AKA behemoth.
Months ago, Brock Lesnar was thought to be the man in Junior’s way of facing Velasquez, but a second bout with diverticulitis has forced Lesnar out, bumping Shane Carwin back into the driver’s seat and back in line for a crack at the belt…
…that is unless Dos Santos will have anything to say about it.
Co-headlining this monumental card from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada is a featherweight bout between fast-rising Black House phenom Diego Nunes and now-our-division veteran of the Octagon and TUF 1 alumnus Kenny Florian in a bout that has the potential to be one of the greatest MMA showcases of all time.
It’s all right here, it’s UFC 131, and as always, the Bleacher Report family syndicate has your back on the latest coverage, news, and up-to-the-date analysis of what could be the best fight card of this summer!
After conducting a meeting with Roy Nelson, the two sides seem to be a standstill and haven’t come to a decision regarding Nelson’s future within the UFC. FightersOnly.co.uk reports that one of the topics the two sides discussed was Nelson’s weigh…
After conducting a meeting with Roy Nelson, the two sides seem to be a standstill and haven’t come to a decision regarding Nelson’s future within the UFC.
FightersOnly.co.uk reports that one of the topics the two sides discussed was Nelson’s weight issues. Simply put, White insisted Nelson lose his infamous belly. However, the rotund heavyweight thinks otherwise.
“I said, ‘The fat thing was funny for a minute. It’s not funny anymore’,” White said.
Nelson has picked up back-to back losses in his last two of three bouts, losing to Junior dos Santos and Frank Mir. Following his bout with Mir at UFC 130, White wasn’t pleased in either competitor’s performance and he planned on further discussing that matter with Nelson last week.
“It is hard to talk to a guy that has performed at the level he has with that weight. He felt like he had one bad fight and everybody jumped on him,” he said.
It was expected for either Nelson or Mir, that the winner would receive a step up in competition and be close to a title shot. But after his last two performances, it doesn’t look appear that Nelson will be competing for a title shot anytime soon, as the UFC boss is concerned with Nelson’s personal health which could be detrimental to his career.
“When you get into these big fights with guys that mean something and you don’t win, maybe you need to change something up,” he said.