Daniel Cormier and the 5 Best Olympic Wrestlers Who Moved to MMA

Wrestling is known as one of the original Olympic sports and a pillar to mixed martial arts. Many athletes with a strong base in wrestling have been successful in the world of MMA.
With standout wrestler Daniel Cormier in the main event of UF…

Wrestling is known as one of the original Olympic sports and a pillar to mixed martial arts. Many athletes with a strong base in wrestling have been successful in the world of MMA.

With standout wrestler Daniel Cormier in the main event of UFC 182 against Jon Jones on Saturday, here is a look at five individuals who attained great success when competing on the Olympic mats. Some are past names, and others are present competitors. These individuals deserve consideration as some of the best Olympic wrestlers to transition into mixed martial arts.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 182: Full Fight Card and Predictions for Jones vs. Cormier

There have been many pay-per-views this year for the UFC, but few have as much mainstream appeal as Saturday’s UFC 182 event headlined by the Light Heavyweight Championship fight between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier.
Jones and Cormier have a simi…

There have been many pay-per-views this year for the UFC, but few have as much mainstream appeal as Saturday’s UFC 182 event headlined by the Light Heavyweight Championship fight between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier.

Jones and Cormier have a similar background and were friends for many years. After Cormier dropped weight and made it clear he was coming after Jones and the light heavyweight title, the friendship ended and the rivalry began.

For months, these two men have torn each other down publicly and now have the chance to prove their points in the Octagon.

Here is the full UFC 182 fight card, the predicted winner for every fight and a quick preview of the main event.

 

Quick Preview of Jones vs. Cormier

The UFC has saved the best for last in 2014. The battle between Jones and Cormier has been brewing for months. Jones was originally supposed to fight Alexander Gustafsson at UFC 178, but he pulled out with an injury and was replaced by Cormier.

Shortly after Cormier was awarded the fight, Jones was forced to pull out with an injury as well.

The fight was rescheduled for Saturday in the UFC 182 main event, but the two men have talked trash since the original fight was made. With over four months of material to build from in video packages, including a brawl at a press conference, hardcore and casual MMA fans alike are intrigued by this potential Fight of the Year candidate.

To show the true animosity between the two men, the trash-talking has even spilled over into the Friday weigh-ins, when Jones fold Fox’s America’s Pregame (h/t MMAJunkie.com) that he’d be ready to fight at the scales if necessary. When Cormier heard those comments, he responded to MMAJunkie.com:

I think you have to (keep your emotions in check). What’s the point of fighting on Friday when we’ve got to wait 24 hours to fight on Saturday? Right now, it’s about staying the course and being professional. It will be good to see him in that state.

As Jon says, we take it how it goes. It’s a matter of, ‘How are we going to do this?’ I would prefer to wait until Saturday, but if we had to fight on Friday, it would be OK, I guess.

Even UFC President Dana White can’t hide his excitement:

As great as the pre-hype for the fight has been, fans are even more excited to finally see the two former friends-turned-enemies step inside the Octagon. Both men have a wrestling background, but Cormier’s wrestling experience is far more impressive.

Add in the fact that Cormier has dropped a considerable amount of excessive fat to move down to the light heavyweight division, and he will be faster than ever while still possessing the same amount of power. Jones didn’t win 11 straight fights without knowing how to avoid his opponents’ biggest strengths, but Cormier knows Jones inside and out.

The two fighters are evenly matched in the Octagon and are intellectual equals. The difference in this fight will be the power Cormier possesses. As a former heavyweight star, Cormier has an incredible amount of strength and force behind his punches, and that will be a serious issue for Jones throughout the bout.

If Cormier catches Jones with one of his huge punches, there is little doubt the champion will find himself in serious trouble. After successfully defending the belt seven times, the end of this championship reign appears to be at hand.

Predicted Winner: Cormier via fourth-round TKO.

 

Stats via UFC.com.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jones vs. Cormier Preview: Don’t Sleep on DC’s Striking

Saturday night is the night we have all been waiting for—Jon Jones defends the UFC light heavyweight championship against Daniel Cormier.
Cormier is an elite-level wrestler, and that skill is seen as his path to victory this weekend. He has to ge…

Saturday night is the night we have all been waiting for—Jon Jones defends the UFC light heavyweight championship against Daniel Cormier.

Cormier is an elite-level wrestler, and that skill is seen as his path to victory this weekend. He has to get inside, use his wrestling and beat up Jones on the canvas. While that is his best path to capturing gold at UFC 182, no one should be sleeping on what he can do with his hands.

The former Olympian is in his fifth year as a pro. He has had a long time to develop his striking at AKA, one of the premier camps for MMA fighters to hone their striking skills. He got to show off his power in the heavyweight division with several knockouts. His knockout of Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva is what put him on the map as a top-tier heavyweight.

The concern with Jones is how well he can manage distance. Jones will not want Cormier in close because of his wrestling disadvantage, but this also plays to his advantage in striking, as he will have a substantial reach advantage. Cormier has a 72.5-inch reach, while Jones’ reach comes in at 84.5.

Jones has been touched before. His striking defense is not impenetrable. According to official UFC statistics provided by FightMetric, Jones only has 66 percent in the area of striking defense. He has been hit by plodding strikers like Glover Teixeira and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson—just at a lower rate than Cormier.

The champion’s striking accuracy is just over the halfway mark at 54 percent. Jones’ significant strikes landed per minute is only marginally better than Cormier. The challenger has an underrated boxing game, and has big power in his hands. If he can land a few on Jones, it could be a quick night.

Cormier‘s main striking success comes from in close, and has been achieved against slower heavyweights. That has to be noted. It will not be nearly as easy against Jones. It is just worth noting that he is not entirely out of his depth.

AKA prepares their fighters extraordinarily well. We have seen Cain Velasquez blossom from a collegiate wrestler into a fighter who out-struck Junior dos Santos with ease in their last two meetings. His hands looked outstanding. Cormier is likely on that same path.

All of the stats and video show that Cormier is a solid striker who continues to get better standing, but this is MMA. The effect of his wrestling on Jones will only assist his success on foot.

The more he can get the champion’s back against the fence, the more success he can have with dirty boxing, an area where Cormier has proven to excel. It will also help him fight at distance as Jones focuses on defending takedowns.

Jones is without question the more diverse striker in this matchup, but there is no reason to completely whitewash Cormier‘s chances on foot. He has good boxing technique, excellent power and possesses the ability to slip and counter effectively.

If Cormier goes in to stand and exchange with Jones, he will lose. If Jones can manage the distance effectively, he will retain. But Cormier has the ability to hold his own standing, and that will give him chances to either end this fight with one shot, or to capitalize on openings Jones leaves to turn this fight into a grappling affair.

No one should completely overlook Cormier‘s chances on foot. That is where the fight starts each round, and he will be prepared for Jones’ physical gifts. Saturday will be a very interesting day to see what the game plan is for Cormier on foot.

Is he at a disadvantage standing? Absolutely. Is he completely outclassed in that aspect? That video and those statistics say you may be surprised on Saturday night.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier Could Be Greatest Matchup in MMA History

These are the times we should all hold dear.
Six months from now, if things go south again and 2015 turns into a repeat of this year’s drudgery, MMA fans will look back in awe at Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier.
The extended lead-up to Saturday night’s UF…

These are the times we should all hold dear.

Six months from now, if things go south again and 2015 turns into a repeat of this year’s drudgery, MMA fans will look back in awe at Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier.

The extended lead-up to Saturday night’s UFC 182 main event has been pure pleasure, with Jones and Cormier establishing themselves as one of the greatest pairings in our sport’s short history.

At this point, their actual fight will merely be the icing on the cake.

Until it’s over, we won’t know for sure if we can consider their rivalry the best ever though it’s certainly already in the running.

MMA has perhaps never seen a matchup that can compete with Jones-Cormier in all categories—including sheer stakes, prestige, competitiveness and actual, honest-to-goodness dislike. If the bout itself can even halfway live up to the hype, we’re talking about a clash for the ages.

In many ways, Jones vs. Cormier is a throwback to the light heavyweight division’s glory days. Their names don’t feel at all out of place in the same sentence with all-time UFC greats Chuck Liddell, Randy Couture and Tito Ortiz or iconic Pride standouts like Wanderlei Silva, Dan Henderson or Shogun Rua.

This feud has come close to matching the genuine bitterness of Ortiz’s trilogy with Ken Shamrock, which spanned 2002-06.

The two men now feel as intertwined in each other’s career paths as Georges St-Pierre and B.J. Penn did during their pair of fights in 2006 and 2009.

The on-stage brawl Jones and Cormier started at a media event in August bested anything Chael Sonnen and Anderson Silva did for actual fireworks back in 2010.

When they meet in the cage on Saturday, it’ll feel as significant as Fedor Emelianenko finally getting together with Mirko “CroCop” Filipovic in 2005. It’ll seem as big a moment for the fight company as Eddie Alvarez vs. Michael Chandler was for Bellator in 2011. At least on paper, it could be as evenly matched as this year’s epic welterweight title bouts between Robbie Lawler and Johny Hendricks.

In fact, depending on exactly how things shake out this weekend, Jones-Cormier has a chance to surpass them all.

Jones has already established himself as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world and the greatest 205-pounder of all time. Back in 2011, he saved the vaunted light heavyweight division from the listlessness created by Liddell‘s decline and—with one notable exception against Alexander Gustafsson in Sept. 2013—has seemed all but untouchable.

He’s the odds-on favorite to go down as the best ever at any weight by the time his career is over. Yet all that doesn’t even tell the whole story.

Jones is a unique figure in the history of MMA. His signature complement of size, athleticism, creativity and occasional mean-spiritedness is unmatched even by the Emelianenkos, Anderson Silvas and St-Pierres of the world.

He’s so talented, he’s known to beat his opponents at their own game, attacking them where they are strongest in order to prove himself better there. When he takes on the former captain of the U.S. Olympic wrestling team, he says it’ll be no different, as he told MMA Fighting’s Shaun Al-Shatti last week:

I will try to wrestle Daniel Cormier. I definitely plan on making him work extremely hard for any takedowns he’s going for, and I’m definitely going to be looking for takedowns myself. I’m more than capable of taking him down, and I believe in my top game. So I’ll definitely look to attack Daniel at his strengths, and weaknesses.

Jones was such an athletic revelation when he first broke into the big time back in 2008 that some fans flatly didn’t buy his humble, “nice guy” act. They charged him with being fake. When Jones opened up and showed the world a bit more of his true self, they called him arrogant.

He’s the sort of guy who could easily play either the hero or the villain in the greatest MMA story ever told. Depending on how you feel about him, he’s ever more detestable or likable simply because nobody’s really been able to beat him.

Now comes an undefeated challenger to test everything we think we know about Jones and every conclusion we’ve already jumped to about his legacy.

Cormier was 13-0 at heavyweight from 2009-13, and were he not close friends with reigning UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez, he likely would’ve stayed there. Instead, Cormier dropped to light heavyweight early in 2014 and through two fights at 205 pounds has proved the weight cut doesn’t deprive him of any of the fearsome skills that made him a force in his previous division.

He figures to be the stiffest test of Jones’ career and was so confident about his chances, he let it be known he planned to fight the champion with an injured knee when their bout was first scheduled in July. When Jones himself dropped out with a knee injury a month later, Cormier couldn’t help but note the differences in their approaches.

“It can be a blessing,” he told Mike Hill of Fox Sports 1’s America’s Pregame (h/t UFC.com’s Thomas Gerbasi) at the time, “but I would be outside of myself to not say that I went into this fight knowing that my knee was pretty jacked up and I was gonna fight through it to get a title. I don’t think (Jones) is ducking me. … Sometimes, you gotta just tough it out and go in there and fight.”

When they finally do that this weekend, Cormier will have to overcome Jones’ significant size and reach advantages, but his previous experience at heavyweight makes that nothing new. It’s hard to think back on him beating up Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva and Roy Nelson or body-slamming Josh Barnett without figuring he’ll be a handful for Jones, too.

Nobody knows for sure how it’s going to play out—if they say they do, don’t trust them—and that just adds an extra layer to an already stellar fight.

This event likely won’t crush any pay-per-view buyrate records. It stands to be a nice little seller for the UFC, but it won’t match the huge numbers put up by guys like Brock Lesnar and St-Pierre during the prime of their careers. That says more about the slumping state of the sport at large than the greatness of this matchup, however.

If you spent much of 2014 waiting for something to cheer for, or if you were part of the throng who drifted away from this sport during the last few years, now is the time to go all in once again.

Even if it’s for one night only.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jon Jones Not Impressed by Daniel Cormier’s Victory over Old Man Dan Henderson

Jon Jones was not impressed by your performance against Dan Henderson, Mr. Daniel Cormier. 
At UFC 173 in May of 2014, Cormier solidified himself as the No. 1 contender to Jones’ strap by decimating Hendo via third-round submission. After repeated…

Jon Jones was not impressed by your performance against Dan Henderson, Mr. Daniel Cormier

At UFC 173 in May of 2014, Cormier solidified himself as the No. 1 contender to Jones’ strap by decimating Hendo via third-round submission. After repeatedly tossing Henderson to the mat like a child (no, seriously) throughout the fight, Cormier cranked the intensity and strangled his foe into unconsciousness with a rear-naked choke.

The win was dominant. It was hard to watch, even. It was a one-sided beatdown the likes of which we rarely see between two legitimate professional fighters. 

And it was thoroughly unimpressive, if you ask the division’s king. 

On a recent episode of UFC Presents, Bad Blood: Jones vs. Cormier, Jones talked about Cormier‘s showdown with Henderson, saying that if DC expects to waltz to the title with similar ease at UFC 182 on Jan. 3, he’s in for a rude awakening (transcription via MMAfighting.com’s David St. Martin). 

“Your last fight was against Dan Henderson,” Jones told Cormier on the show. “You beat a guy that’s 50 years old and now you step in against a 27-year-old who’s going to come in there at 227 pounds healthy, young and athletic. If he thinks he’s getting in there against a Dan Henderson, or if that’s giving him any type of sense of security where he thinks he’s just going to rule the light heavyweight division, he’s sadly mistaken.”

Jones, however, did not stop there. He continued to lay it on Cormier and the former Pride champion Henderson, upping the trash-talk to the tune of one decade. 

“He (Cormier) beat Dan Henderson, who’s like a 60-year old, and started talking trash to me on the mic right away,” Jones aid. “I’m going to give him what he’s wanted and that’s an opportunity to get his butt whooped by me.”

While Cormier was the last Strikeforce heavyweight champion before the organization folded, he has yet to fight for the title inside the UFC Octagon. He was a top contender at heavyweight, winning his first two UFC appearances against Frank Mir and Roy Nelson via decision, but he dropped to light heavyweight to continue his quest for gold.

There, Cormier rattled off two more wins, this time finishing his opponents with relative ease. Patrick Cummins was first up at UFC 171. Cormier obliterated him via first-round TKO. Henderson was next.

Jones, meanwhile, took over the light heavyweight class at UFC 128 in March of 2011 and hasn’t looked back.

Seven title defenses, four over former UFC champions, made him the most dominant 205-pounder of all time—and he’s still only 27 years old.  

With these resumes and so much back-and-forth verbal (and physical) abuse from both Cormier and Jones, UFC 182 is one of the most anticipated fight cards since UFC 168, where UFC middleweight legend Anderson Silva rematched 185-pound champ Chris Weidman in an attempt to recapture his belt. 

Who do you think will walk away with the light heavyweight strap? Will Jones reign supreme once more, or is Cormier the man to finally end his stay atop the division? 

Sound off below, and we’ll discuss this titanic 205-pound matchup. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Watch the Full “Bad Blood: Jones vs. Cormier” UFC 182 Hype Video Right Here

(Props: UFC on YouTube)

Though the UFC has already given us its “Hey Pussy Are You Still There” PPV promo, a UFC 182 extended trailer, and a Jones vs. Cormier “Countdown” segment, here’s one more video package about the mutual distaste between light-heavyweight champ Jon Jones and his upcoming challenger Daniel Cormier. They are beating this horse to death, homey.

Narrated by CNN personality/BJJ aficionado Anthony Bourdain, the half-hour “Bad Blood: Jones vs. Cormier” special aired recently on FOX Sports 1, and begins with a quick retrospective of some of the UFC’s other great rivalries. The Shamrock/Tito “living death” moment shows up within the first 10 seconds, which I appreciated. But also, we’ve got BJ Penn explaining to Georges St-Pierre that he wants to kill him — “and I’m not joking about this” — and clips of Brock Lesnar and Rampage Jackson acting rather unprofessional. The implication is, Jon Jones may have threatened Daniel Cormier with actual death, but look, sometimes these things happen in MMA.

Anyway, it’s worth a look if you have any patience left for Jones/Cormier pre-fight hype. There aren’t too many surprises here, but we do get an interesting look at Cormier’s training relationship with Khadzhimurat Gatsalov, the phenom Russian wrestler who defeated Cormier at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Plus: Some never-before-heard insults (“How much you weigh right now, fat fuck?”).

It also makes me wonder: If Jones and Cormier never brawled on stage, and never cursed each other out during that SportsCenter interview, how would the UFC promote this fight? Would it be enough that the two greatest light-heavyweights in the world were facing each other on January 3rd? How badly do we need bad blood?


(Props: UFC on YouTube)

Though the UFC has already given us its “Hey Pussy Are You Still There” PPV promo, a UFC 182 extended trailer, and a Jones vs. Cormier “Countdown” segment, here’s one more video package about the mutual distaste between light-heavyweight champ Jon Jones and his upcoming challenger Daniel Cormier. They are beating this horse to death, homey.

Narrated by CNN personality/BJJ aficionado Anthony Bourdain, the half-hour “Bad Blood: Jones vs. Cormier” special aired recently on FOX Sports 1, and begins with a quick retrospective of some of the UFC’s other great rivalries. The Shamrock/Tito “living death” moment shows up within the first 10 seconds, which I appreciated. But also, we’ve got BJ Penn explaining to Georges St-Pierre that he wants to kill him — “and I’m not joking about this” — and clips of Brock Lesnar and Rampage Jackson acting rather unprofessional. The implication is, Jon Jones may have threatened Daniel Cormier with actual death, but look, sometimes these things happen in MMA.

Anyway, it’s worth a look if you have any patience left for Jones/Cormier pre-fight hype. There aren’t too many surprises here, but we do get an interesting look at Cormier’s training relationship with Khadzhimurat Gatsalov, the phenom Russian wrestler who defeated Cormier at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Plus: Some never-before-heard insults (“How much you weigh right now, fat fuck?”).

It also makes me wonder: If Jones and Cormier never brawled on stage, and never cursed each other out during that SportsCenter interview, how would the UFC promote this fight? Would it be enough that the two greatest light-heavyweights in the world were facing each other on January 3rd? How badly do we need bad blood?