What Is the UFC’s Plan for Former Bantamweight Champion Renan Barao?

Just six months ago, Renan Barao was on top of the world. 
He wasn’t just the UFC’s bantamweight champion; he was one of the pound-for-pound best fighters on the planet. Dana White even went as far as to place him above Jon Jones on the pound-for-…

Just six months ago, Renan Barao was on top of the world. 

He wasn’t just the UFC’s bantamweight champion; he was one of the pound-for-pound best fighters on the planet. Dana White even went as far as to place him above Jon Jones on the pound-for-pound list. Crazy, I know.

But after a dominant five-round performance against Urijah Faber, a submission victory against Michael McDonald, a “stop you in your tracks” spinning backheel kick to the face against Eddie Wineland and a first-round (albeit, a controversial one) TKO in his rematch against Faber, you can’t really blame the UFC president for trying to sell Barao to the people—he was the king and kings should be treated a certain way.

He said at the UFC Fight Night 40 media scrum:

I’m a big Renan Barao fan. What don’t you love about Renan Barao? He finishes and he wrecks people. I still go back and forth with the ‘Jon Jones, Renan Barao‘ thing. I still, without a doubt, think Renan Barao is the No. 2-ranked (pound-for-pound fighter). After Jones’ last performance, he looked so damn good. And he just buzz-sawed through all the big names at 205. Even before that I was calling Barao the No. 1 pound-for-pound (fighter), but he is without a doubt the No. 2 pound-for-pound guy in the world. He goes in there, and no matter who he faces, he goes in there to finish them. I love guys that go in to annihilate people, and that’s what he does.

But that was then, and this is now. 

Six months later and here we are: Five months removed from T.J. Dillashaw‘s crowning moment against Barao and just two months removed from Barao‘s weight-cutting debacle in his attempt to regain his former glory. 

Barao managed to lose his title and pound-for-pound ranking after UFC 173. Even without stepping into the Octagon at UFC 177, he managed to lose two more things: His paycheck and White’s support. 

“I see it as, first of all, you got enough money to get a real nutritionist to go in there and watch what you’re eating,” White said. “The guy’s gotta go in there and do it the right way or don’t cut weight, move up to 45. Don’t cut weight. It’s part of the sport, things are going to happen. Sucks when it does but it happens. … He won’t get a title fight after this.”

And true to his word White stayed: The former champ isn’t getting another shot at the belt in his first fight back. With Dominick Cruz’s comeback from injury and Raphael Assuncao‘s seven-fight winning streak alive and well, Barao‘s spot amongst the line of title contenders is blurred. 

Instead of a title shot against the champion, Barao gets pegged to fight the UFC’s No. 15 bantamweight Mitch Gagnon.

The UFC’s No. 15 bantamweight. 

It’s one thing to punish a guy like Barao by asking him to fight a top contender like, say, Assuncao before he’s allowed to think about the crown again. It’s a completely different thing to have him square off against a guy who just made it into the top 15 10 days ago.

Sure, Gagnon‘s four-fight winning streak has been impressive. With 11 of his 12 wins coming by way of submission (nine of which came in the first round, mind you), he’s easily one of the best jiu-jitsu practitioners in the division.

But what’s the UFC to do with Barao if and when he gets past the surging submission artist?

Maybe they hope that No. 14 Joe Soto or No. 13 Erik Perez are available to compete in April. Or maybe, just maybe, they’ll start treating this guy like the former champion and top pound-for-pound fighter that he is by giving him an opponent that has any sort of semblance to the sort of competition he was obliterating in fights past. 

Who knows, really. Maybe I’ve got it all wrong. Maybe this is UFC’s ploy to ensure Barao gets back into a title fight with Dillashaw while keeping him unscathed but ever-impressive against another “top contender.” Maybe they’re banking on the idea that Dillashaw‘s dominance carries over into a title fight with Cruz before they can start marketing for the reboot to the rematch that should have been. 

But if there’s one thing we learned from Barao‘s experience, it’s that Jon Jones should be extra cautious in defending his title against Daniel Cormier in January or he might have to end up fighting Fabio Maldonado in his ensuing bout. 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.

 

 

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George St. Pierre and the Point-Based Fighting Style

As former UFC welterweight champion George St. Pierre stepped away from fighting in November 2013, he took his efficient, point-based fighting style with him. This was St. Pierre’s choosing, however; UFC brass has been handing out walking papers …

As former UFC welterweight champion George St. Pierre stepped away from fighting in November 2013, he took his efficient, point-based fighting style with him. This was St. Pierre’s choosing, however; UFC brass has been handing out walking papers for years now.

Dana White has never held back his thoughts, and has publicly criticized the fight world’s less entertaining names. White has been quick to judge those like Jon Fitch and Ben Askren, who are traditional wrestlers. Fitch, prior to his release, went 1-2-1 in the organization, spearheading White’s arguments. White’s comments are ill-advised though; the UFC still needs guys like Fitch.

Both Fitch and Askren have fought for world championships and are highly recognizable welterweights. The pair are money makers for their organizations, ONE FC and WSOF. A former collegiate wrestler at Perdue, Fitch possesses a very uninspiring game plan. An overwhelming number of his fights, 17 to be exact, have gone to a decision.

Still, when Fitch was on top of his game, there was no one beating him. He, rather handedly, won his first eight fights in the UFC, defeating the likes of Josh Burkman, Thiago Alves and Diego Sanchez on the way to a St. Pierre title shot. Fitch, whom was supposed to give St. Pierre a challenge on the ground, fell short but kept on winning. 

Wrestling isn’t an exciting style of fighting but the best know how to stifle it. Some of the most prominent fighters in the UFC like, featherweight champion Jose Aldo and Lyoto Machida, avoid the majority of takedowns coming their way. It would help a fighter to become adept at different disciplines but if you win at such a rate that Fitch has, 14-3-1 under the UFC, then why fix it?

Someone with the consistency and high-level ground game as Fitch should garner more respect. Sure, he fell off and suffered difficult losses, but losing to a future Hall of Famer in B.J. Penn and future welterweight champion Johny Hendricks is nothing to hang your head about. The UFC puts a premium on fighters who go to war and leave it all in the octagon but real battles are won in the trenches. For every Randy Couture, there’s a Chuck Liddell and for every Cain Velasquez, there’s a Junior Dos Santos.

We’re in an era in mixed martial arts where words hold more weight than a punch or a takedown, just ask Nick Diaz or Chael Sonnen. Those two men revolutionized the post-fight interview. Each has been rewarded a title shot in the past simply because a microphone was put before them. According to Bleacher Report’s Chad Dundas, UFC 158 St. Pierre vs. Diaz did an estimated 950,000 pay-per-view buys.

For argument’s sake, let’s compare that number to St. Pierre’s title defense against Fitch. The pair’s main event took place at UFC 87 in August 2008. The French Canadian dispatched his challenger with ease and the PPV did an estimated 625,000 buys, which at the time was one of the higher grossing shows the UFC produced. White’s promotion has grown exponentially since 2008 on the backs of St. Pierre, Brock Lesnar, Jon Jones and Anderson Silva.

Now, let’s take a look at the gate totals for both UFC 87 and UFC 158. The latter drew an attendance of 20,145, while the former tallied 15,082. A drastic difference yes, but due to the entirely different landscapes of the UFC at those moments, efforts to compare the numbers would seem futile.

Typically, the UFC has fared better in grudge matches (i.e: St.Pierre vs. Diaz). Adding a little fuel to the fire will always make a fight interesting. So while fighters like Diaz continue to lose and still fight, fighters like Fitch are shown the door as it hits them on the way out.

The saga between Fitch and White began way back in—you guessed it—2008. It began when the American Kickboxing Academy fighter was released by the promotion after he refused to sign over his name and likeness rights for use in the UFC Undisputed video game.

“It was a surprise, but not really. I’ve always felt there was some kind of issue between the UFC and me; I never understood what it was,” Fitch told Inside MMA.

Then, after he was released in February 2013, White remarked to MMA Junkie that “This is a sport, just like any other. It’s just like the MLB, NFL and NBA.” He made no mention of a rift between him and Fitch, later justifying the decision as business-related.

“I can tell you this, Jon Fitch isn’t cheap,” said White, adding. “He was ranked number one and now he is nine.”

According to White, Fitch was paid over $400,000 in discretionary and performance bonuses outside of his UFC contract. Fitch responded to his former boss in a video detailing exactly how much money he made in his 18-fight UFC career. According to Fitch, he made just over $1,300,000, including bonuses, but that was before he paid $200,000 to management and his gym. Bleacher Report’s Damon Martin put Fitch’s testimony into perspective.

“While Fitch didn’t discuss this at the time, he also has to pay taxes on that amount of money, which would also reach well over $200,000 based on his original pay of $1,020,000 over 18 fights,” said Martin. “Fitch would also have paid taxes anytime he fought internationally, like his bout against Erick Silva at UFC 153 in Brazil.”

Cost-cutting moves have happened before in the UFC, as they do in all professional sports. Perhaps, most recently and notably, former welterweight title challenger Jake Shields, who coincidentally challenged Fitch to a fight after his latest win, was cut after he lost to Hector Lombard. White eluded that the decision was a cost-cutting measure but, as the case was with Fitch, he said to Yahoo! Sports Kevin Iole  “Mixed martial arts is a young man’s game. I like Jake Shields a lot but he’s never going to be the guy.”

Wait a second, how do you justify cutting a guy who went 3-1-(1) in the UFC, and only made $120,000 in his fight with Lombard, according to White? Unacceptable. Shields may possess an extremely linear skill set, and nothing that resembles a boxing pedigree, but he deserves better. This is a man who has only lost to St. Pierre and Jake Ellenberger, and previously beat Dan Henderson.

White put it best, sports are a business and that’s what people tend to forget. Just as people crucified LeBron James when he left Cleveland, just as Johnny Damon was booed for leaving Boston, the public will hurl as many obscenities as they can think of at your general direction when they sense betrayal. Most outsiders won’t ever understand what it takes to run an organization, let alone the mind state of a superstar athlete trying to do the best thing for their careers.

What we tend to forget is that there is no loyalty in sports. Any general manager or president is always looking for a better version of you. The athlete is a mere peg in a system to just make the rich, richer. That’s why Kobe Bryant argues that owners are the ones who make off with the most cash.

“It’s very easy to look at the elite players around the league and talk about the amount of money that they get paid,” Bryant told ESPN LA’s Baxter Holmes. “But we don’t look at what the owners get paid and how much revenue they generate off the backs of these players.”

But why cut some of the best fighters who helped you take the UFC around the globe Mr. White? Don’t you remember how Shields helped you set attendance records at UFC 129? You kept Dan Hardy around long after he lost to St. Pierre. White is just too busy giving the fans what they want. 

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The Top Ten Times Dana White Buried His Own Fighters


(Warning: The Danascowl has appeared. Brace for impact. / Photo via Getty)

By Mike Fagan

They say pimping ain’t easy, and that’s probably true for promoting too. (There’s a whole host of other uncomfortable comparisons to be made between the two professions as well.) Pimping is probably a lot harder when you constantly denigrate your talent. “Yeah, Mary? She makes a weird squealing noise when you bang her. But hey, it’s your money.” Yet, that’s exactly what UFC president Dana White does. Here are the top ten instances of Dana White burying his own fighters.

Honorable Mention: Antonio Silva

The UFC buried him. Literally.

10. (Tie) Kenny Florian and Nate Marquardt

Kenny Florian and Nate Marquardt are two very different people. Where Florian is a suave, dark-haired Massachusetts lifer, Marquardt is a ginger mountain man who made sure to list himself first and foremost as a Christian on his Twitter bio. They have one thing in common though: Dana White called them both chokers.

Nate Marquardt lost a close fight to Yushin Okami at UFC 122. Okami was 9-2 in the UFC heading into the fight, and would go on to fight Anderson Silva for the title in his next appearance. That didn’t stop Dana White from calling Marquardt a choker and blasting the Greg Jackson-led corner (more on him in a bit!) for telling Marquardt he was leading on points.

As for Florian, White said he didn’t want to “take anything away from Gray Maynard” and wasn’t “bad-mouthing” or “trying to disrespect” Florian after UFC 118. But that’s exactly what he did when he said Florian “chokes in big fights” before reducing his performance to standing and staring at Maynard. Florian’s five UFC losses came to Diego Sanchez, Sean Sherk, B.J. Penn, Maynard, and Jose Aldo — all champions or title challengers. Maybe, just maybe, the overachieving Florian just wasn’t on their level?

9. Jose Aldo


(Warning: The Danascowl has appeared. Brace for impact. / Photo via Getty)

By Mike Fagan

They say pimping ain’t easy, and that’s probably true for promoting too. (There’s a whole host of other uncomfortable comparisons to be made between the two professions as well.) Pimping is probably a lot harder when you constantly denigrate your talent. “Yeah, Mary? She makes a weird squealing noise when you bang her. But hey, it’s your money.” Yet, that’s exactly what UFC president Dana White does. Here are the top ten instances of Dana White burying his own fighters.

Honorable Mention: Antonio Silva

The UFC buried him. Literally.

10. (Tie) Kenny Florian and Nate Marquardt

Kenny Florian and Nate Marquardt are two very different people. Where Florian is a suave, dark-haired Massachusetts lifer, Marquardt is a ginger mountain man who made sure to list himself first and foremost as a Christian on his Twitter bio. They have one thing in common though: Dana White called them both chokers.

Nate Marquardt lost a close fight to Yushin Okami at UFC 122. Okami was 9-2 in the UFC heading into the fight, and would go on to fight Anderson Silva for the title in his next appearance. That didn’t stop Dana White from calling Marquardt a choker and blasting the Greg Jackson-led corner (more on him in a bit!) for telling Marquardt he was leading on points.

As for Florian, White said he didn’t want to “take anything away from Gray Maynard” and wasn’t “bad-mouthing” or “trying to disrespect” Florian after UFC 118. But that’s exactly what he did when he said Florian “chokes in big fights” before reducing his performance to standing and staring at Maynard. Florian’s five UFC losses came to Diego Sanchez, Sean Sherk, B.J. Penn, Maynard, and Jose Aldo — all champions or title challengers. Maybe, just maybe, the overachieving Florian just wasn’t on their level?

9. Jose Aldo

Jose Aldo is undefeated in 14 fights under the Zuffa banner. He’s lost a single fight in his career, submitting to a rear-naked choke in his eighth pro bout less than two years after his debut. He’s been very good for a very long time. Yet, Dana White couldn’t help himself after Aldo took a wide decision over Ricardo Lamas at UFC 169:

“The thing about Jose Aldo that drives me crazy is the kid has all the talent in the world. He’s explosive, fast. He can do anything but he just lays back and doesn’t let anything go. 

“When you talk about being the pound-for-pound best in the world, you can’t go five rounds with guys that it looks like you can defeat them in the second round. That’s what Aldo has a habit of doing.”

Jose Aldo fights Chad Mendes in two weeks at UFC 179. This is what happened the last time Aldo met Mendes.

8. Josh Koscheck

Josh Koscheck, for all intents and purposes, is a UFC lifer. After two fights outside the UFC, Koscheck joined the inaugural Ultimate Fighter cast and made his real deal UFC debut in April 2005. He’s fought every single one of his next 23 pro fights in the UFC, amassing a 15-8 record inside the Octagon against the top fighters at 170 pounds.

How does Dana White reward this kind of loyalty?

“It’s not like me and Koscheck are buddies…I think Koscheck is as much of a dick as anyone else does. We have no beef. It’s — he’s not a team player.”

Yeah, the guy who fought Thiago Alves and Anthony Johnson on short notice (and, later, Matt Hughes) is not a team player.

7. Alistair Overeem

On the UFC 169 undercard, Alistair Overeem met former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir. Overeem outstruck Mir 139 to 5 en route to a unanimous decision. (A decision that saw zero 10-8 rounds handed out because we can’t have nice things in MMA.) Dana White gave Overeem a thumbs down and called it a “crappy performance.” Whatever you say, Commodus. 

6. Nate Diaz

Unhappy with the terms of his contract, Nate Diaz held out most of 2014. I mean, hey, it worked out famously for his brother, who wound up with a three-fight extension and a fight against Anderson Silva. Nate quietly ended his holdout a few weeks ago, and what did he receive? No new contract, and Dana White labeling him as someone who “doesn’t move the needle.” So, the UFC matched him up with some schlub and put him on the Fight Pass prelims, right? Oh, no no, my friend. Nate Diaz, prohibitor of needle moving, gets a top-five opponent in Rafael dos Anjos in a featured bout on Big Fox. 

5. Jon Fitch

Let’s be honest: Jon Fitch doesn’t have the best reputation among fans. Between 2005 and 2010, the only thing more secure than Fitch’s spot near the top of the welterweight rankings was the inevitable fan backlash about his “boring” style every time he fought. But, you know, it’s probably in a promoter’s best interest not to feed that perception. Yet, here’s Dana White ahead of UFC 141 in 2011:

“You hear the same thing from everybody about Jon Fitch: ‘If I want to get to sleep and I can’t get to sleep at night, I’ll put in a Jon Fitch fight.’ … [F]ind one person that will tell you they love a Jon Fitch fight, it’s the most exciting thing they’ve ever seen and they just get so excited for it.”

And we were surprised this guy cut Fitch after he went 1-2 in his next three fights.

Continue to the next page for Dana’s four greatest fighter burials!

Here’s What a UFC Magic the Gathering Set Looks Like

You didn’t hear about Dana White’s latest announcement: An MMA-related Magic the Gathering set?

Well,there’s a reason you didn’t hear about it: It didn’t happen. Thankfully, one of our favorite past times is figuring out what products should needlessly be merged with our MMA obsession. A few days ago, we arrived at Magic the Gathering (MTG for short). We played the addictive card game back in high school. We wondered what a set of MTG that spans the entire MMA world might look like. The below cards–featuring the likes of Dana White, Conor McGregor, Greg Jackson, as well as several “MMA memes”–are the result of our mental meandering.

A few notes: We haven’t played Magic in about 10 years so some of the gameplay semantics might not be totally accurate. Also, some of the abilities are for the purposes of chiding MMA as only irreverent CagePotato can. All real photos in the cards come from Getty Images, save for the photo of “Minowaman” Ikuhisa Minowa, which comes from Sherdog. Another card’s image comes from a YouTube screen capture (you’ll know which one).

With that, here are the cards. We hope you enjoy them:

You didn’t hear about Dana White’s latest announcement: An MMA-related Magic the Gathering set?

Well, there’s a reason you didn’t hear about it: It didn’t happen.

Nae bother, one of our favorite past times is figuring out what products should needlessly be merged with our MMA obsession. A few days ago, we arrived at Magic the Gathering (MTG for short). We played the addictive card game back in high school. We wondered what a set of MTG that spans the entire MMA world might look like. The below cards–featuring the likes of Dana White, Conor McGregor, Greg Jackson, as well as several “MMA memes”–are the result of our mental meandering.

A few notes: We haven’t played Magic in about 10 years so some of the gameplay semantics might not be totally accurate. Also, some of the abilities are for the purposes of chiding MMA as only irreverent CagePotato can. Nearly all “real” photos in the cards come from Getty Images, save for the photo of “Minowaman” Ikuhisa Minowa, which comes from Sherdog.

With that, here are the cards. We hope you enjoy them:

Even MORE cards await on page 2. Have at it!

John Lineker Ready to Be Next Flyweight Title Challenger Should He Get by McCall

In recent weeks the Ultimate Fighting Championship has been quick to announce No.1 contenders for their stable of champions. Rory MacDonald is poised to face the winner of the bout between Johny Hendricks and Robbie Lawler at UFC 181 (via ESPN), w…

In recent weeks the Ultimate Fighting Championship has been quick to announce No.1 contenders for their stable of champions. Rory MacDonald is poised to face the winner of the bout between Johny Hendricks and Robbie Lawler at UFC 181 (via ESPN), while Conor McGregor seems to be the next in line for a shot at the featherweight title against the man carrying the belt after UFC 179 (via MMA Fighting). This should excite John Lineker as he prepares to face Ian McCall in a few weeks. Another big win and “Hands of Stone” may find himself tapped as the No. 1 contender to the UFC flyweight title.

Demetrious Johnson is reigning like a true king over the 125-pound division. His win over Chris Cariaso at UFC 178 gave him his fifth title defense in less than two years. While “Mighty Mouse” seems to be improving each time he steps into the Octagon, he has shown a weakness against men who can catch him with a hard shot. John Dodson was able to drop the champion in their title bout at UFC on Fox 6. Since then, Johnson has been a dynamo when he steps into the cage.

Enter John Lineker. The Brazilian native has shown an ability to land with power at any moment. At 24 years of age he’s a very experienced fighter with 12 of his 24 wins coming via knockout. His last victory against Alptekin Ozkilic was perhaps his most impressive when he finished his opponent with nine seconds left in the fight.

Back in 2013 UFC President Dana White even went on record to say that Lineker was in line for a title shot if he could get his weight issues in order.

“He’s so good that if he had made weight on the three times he’s missed, he’d probably have a title shot right now,” White said in a piece by Matthew Roth of MMA Mania

With his recent win it seems that he has grabbed control of that struggle. His reward is a fight that has been dubbed a title eliminator against McCall (via MMA Mania). “Uncle Creepy” has already faced Johnson twice so a victory for Lineker would give the organization a chance to promote a new challenger for a dominant champion.

As mentioned, Lineker has shown the ability to present a question to Johnson that he’s struggled with in the past. If John has learned how to better pace himself in a fight and lands a big shot, the UFC may end the night with a new flyweight champion. When Dodson had the champion hurt, he was unable to capitalize and struggled to keep the pace through the remaining rounds. Johnson will have the advantage when it comes to five-round experience but, that will not keep him completely safe from Lineker‘s power.

The weight issues that threatened John Lineker‘s run at flyweight seem to be behind him. When he steps into the cage opposite of Ian McCall at UFC Fight Night: Rua versus Manuwa on November 8, he will be fighting for an opportunity to face Demetrious Johnson for his title. A position that seemed so far out of his reach just a year ago is now within the grasps of the fighter known as “Hands of Stone.”

 

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Wanderlei Silva: There’s No Way UFC Fighters Should Earn $4K, $8K for a Fight

Former Pride champion and UFC fighter Wanderlei Silva believes that while he was compensated fairly by the world’s premier mixed martial arts organization, up-and-coming competitors deserve fatter checks for their efforts. 
“The Axe Murderer” told…

Former Pride champion and UFC fighter Wanderlei Silva believes that while he was compensated fairly by the world’s premier mixed martial arts organization, up-and-coming competitors deserve fatter checks for their efforts. 

“The Axe Murderer” told Submission Radio earlier on Tuesday that while his personal relationship with UFC president Dana White is fine, that isn’t going to make him stop calling for better fighter pay. 

With me, no, no problems. He was talking about the money that I make. I never said (that I wasn’t paid enough). The money for me, okay it’s good. Not like it’s in the NFL, but it’s okay. I’m not talking about my money. I’m talking about the money for the younger guys. The guys who are coming from nothing and expect to fight for 4,000 bucks. I don’t know, this is not fair. You’re going to hurt yourself, put your life on the way for 4,000 or 8,000 bucks. This is not fair.

The Brazilian brawler’s comments come at an opportune time, as Forbes has named the UFC the No. 10 Most Valuable Sports Brand in 2014, with the organization being worth approximately $440 million this year. 

Silva, who formally retired right before the Nevada State Athletic Commission issued him a lifetime ban for avoiding a pre-fight drug test, per Damon Martin, earned a hefty $300,000 paycheck for his knockout over Brian Stann at UFC on Fuel 8 last March, according to MMA Manifesto.  

The website reports that Silva was paid $200,000 to show, then two separate $50,000 bonuses for both “Fight of the Night” and “Knockout of the Night” honors. 

On the other end of the spectrum, featherweight Mizuto Hirota was reportedly paid just $6,000 for a close decision loss to Rani Yahya on the same card. 

White has explained on many occasions that the company’s pay structure is fair and allows moderately active athletes to make a comfortable living, per MMA Junkie.

Is Silva correct in stating that the time is now to start coming up with a better way to compensate fighters who step inside the Octagon? 

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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