Since making the decision to drop down a weight class at the end of 2013, Daniel Cormier has been aiming at the light heavyweight throne. And he’s wasted no time in establishing himself as a major player in the 205-pound fold.
While his first two show…
Since making the decision to drop down a weight class at the end of 2013, Daniel Cormier has been aiming at the light heavyweight throne. And he’s wasted no time in establishing himself as a major player in the 205-pound fold.
While his first two showings under the UFC banner came as a heavyweight, the Louisiana native changed courses at the end of 2013—determined to begin this year’s campaign in the competitive waters of the 205-pound division. The AKA staple made his divisional debut back at UFC 170 back in February, and two fights and four months later, he’s hovering within distance of a title shot in the UFC’s “crown jewel” division.
Yet while the former Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix winner has built solid momentum toward a championship opportunity, an unresolved situation in the realm of title contention served to make him the “odd man out” at the top of the light heavyweight mountain. With champion Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson putting on one of the year’s best scraps in 2013 at UFC 165 last September, a potential rematch between the pound-for-pound phenom and “The Mauler” quickly became a highly anticipated affair.
Both would go on to face and defeat another opponent in the interim, but their respective victories in those showings only served to stoke the buzz on their forthcoming rematch. That said, it was during this stretch that Cormier burst onto the scene and, in the process, carved out his place among the elite in the 205-pound division.
Where Jones vs. Gustafsson II had the spotlight and focus, suddenly, Cormier stepping in against the 27-year-old star started to gain traction of its own when the light heavyweight champion went public with his wishes to face the former Oklahoma State University wrestling standout rather than the rangy Swedish striker. Nevertheless, all the “call outs” eventually fell silent, as Jones agreed to face Gustafsson later this year on September 27, with the location yet to be determined.
With the rematch official, the attention turned to Cormier and whether or not he would decide to wait for his title shot to materialize or jump back into the fray to take another fight. It appears the surging contender will travel an entirely different path.
On Wednesday’s edition of UFC Tonight, Ariel Helwani reported Cormier would opt for knee surgery to repair a damaged lateral collateral ligament (LCL) in July. According to Helwani, the injury was initially suffered in preparation for his bout with Dan Henderson at UFC 173 back in May, but the undefeated wrestling standout decided to press ahead and step in with the former two-divisional Pride champion anyway. The end result was one of his most impressive showings to date, as he manhandled the MMA legend en route to a third-round submission finish.
The victory over “Hendo” thrust him into the heated mix at 205 pounds, but due to the situation at hand, there was no clear road to the title, and he decided to focus on getting his knee repaired. On that note, Helwani also reported Cormier says he is confident he’ll be ready to face the winner of Jones vs. Gustafsson II when the opportunity presents itself.
Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.
UFC light heavyweight Patrick Cummins got starched by top contender Daniel Cormier at UFC 170 in February, but he still thinks he has the tools to take out DC if they ever meet again.
As a matter of fact, Durkin, a former barista, believes he wou…
UFC light heavyweight Patrick Cummins got starched by top contender Daniel Cormier at UFC 170 in February, but he still thinks he has the tools to take out DC if they ever meet again.
As a matter of fact, Durkin, a former barista, believes he would beat Cormier 90 percent of the time, according to a recent interview with Submission Radio.
The biggest thing I learned is just to keep my focus. No matter how the fight’s going, you have to stay in the zone or stay in the moment, because as soon as you break your concentration, that’s when you’re giving your opponent an opportunity to capitalize. …I truly believe any time I step into the cage with Daniel, I’ll be able to beat him. And I think, you know, maybe nine times out of 10 I can beat him right. I’m just happy that I got that one loss—that one time that I could possibly lose to him—I got it out of the way.
The former Penn State University wrestler is 5-1 as a professional mixed martial artist, with all of his victories coming via a finish.
However, outside of Cormier, he hasn’t fought anyone noteworthy (to the point where his past opponents don’t even have Wikipedia pages).
Cummins last competed at UFC Fight Night 42 this past Saturday, scoring a Round 2 TKO over Roger Narvaez. It was his first bout since the loss to Cormier.
He will see a step up in competition when he faces veteran Kyle Kingsbury at UFC on Fox 12 in July.
As far as Cormier, a former Olympic level wrestler, is concerned, he is currently 15-0 inside the cage, having dealt with very little opposition up to this point.
The Strikeforce heavyweight grand prix winner has beaten plenty of quality competition along the way, too, including the likes of Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva, Josh Barnett, Frank Mir and his latest victim, Dan Henderson.
Cormier has recently expressed his intent to sit on the sidelines and wait for a title shot against the winner of Jon Jones vs. Alexander Gustafsson II, set for UFC 178 in September, per MMA Fighting.
Despite a lopsided beatdown that lasted just 79 seconds, is there any shot Cummins would perform better in a rematch with the American Kickboxing Academy standout?
John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.
LAS VEGAS — It is 6:11 p.m. on Thursday, June 5. Over on Sahara, UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones strolls into the offices of his promoter for a meeting with UFC President Dana White and CEO Lorenzo Fertitta. His immediate future wil…
LAS VEGAS — It is 6:11 p.m. on Thursday, June 5. Over on Sahara, UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones strolls into the offices of his promoter for a meeting with UFC President Dana White and CEO Lorenzo Fertitta. His immediate future will be decided: The promotion wants him to face Alexander Gustafsson in a rematch, but Jones has publicly stated his preference for instead facing Daniel Cormier.
Eleven miles away, Cormier sits on a couch in his 12th-floor high-rise condo. Out the window is the desert part of Las Vegas, with the hazy mountains few ever talk about because you can’t gamble in them. The UFC has rented this place for Cormier to use while he is in Las Vegas helping American Kickboxing Academy teammate Cain Velasquez film the latest international season of The Ultimate Fighter. Cormier and AKA coach JavyMendes share a meager apartment; Velasquez has the suite two floors above. Cormier does not need much space, anyway; he is only in Las Vegas four days a week, while the city is Velasquez’s permanent residence for the next five weeks.
Right now, though, Cormier is nervously checking Twitter on his phone. Like everyone else in the mixed martial arts world, he is awaiting news from Jones’ meeting with the UFC brass across town. He is unsure if Jones will bow to the UFC’s demands; the champion is one of the few athletes in the sport with the gravitas to stand his ground until he gets what he wants. But the UFC really wants him to fight Gustafsson, and Cormier is preparing himself for the inevitable bad news coming his way.
It is not all bad news, of course. Cormier is injured. He can begin training in four weeks. Right now, his wrestling and jiu-jitsu are essentially eliminated from his arsenal. But even an LCL injury won’t stop Cormier from accepting an August fight with Jones, if that’s what the UFC wants.
“If they offer it to me, I’m not turning it down,” he says.
*****
A few weeks ago, Cormier stepped into the Octagon to face mixed martial arts legend Dan Henderson. When the fight was under discussion, Cormier mentioned to me that he did not want to fight Henderson. He had too much respect for him, both as an accomplished wrestler and for what he’d done in the sport. But Cormier is also a company man, and said he would accept the fight if the UFC asked him.
The UFC did ask, and Cormier did accept. He went into their UFC 173 bout a massive favorite over the aging veteran, but that did not stop Cormier from giving his all. Some onlookers felt Cormier might have been taking it easy on Henderson; that was not the case.
“It would have been disrespectful to Dan for me to not go 100 percent,” Cormier says. “Dan did a real good job of not letting me get my distance. I’m not like Mark Munoz; I don’t know if I can generate that much power from short distance. So Dan did a good job of keeping me close and preventing me from generating big power.”
Still, Cormier made it look easy against a man who has bested some of the greatest fighters the sport has ever seen. By the end of the second round, Cormier knew Henderson had nothing left to offer. He was broken. Henderson dejectedly sat on the stool in his corner, half-heartedly listening as his corner tried to fire him up. When he stood back up to prepare for Round 3, Henderson leaned over and put his hands on his knees.
“He was tired. The camera didn’t catch it because they were showing a commercial for Chris Weidman, but he had his hands on his knees,” Cormier says. “He was tired.”
Cormier dealt out more punishment in the final frame, and admits that he was looking at referee Herb Dean to see if Dean would step in and spare Henderson from any more unneeded punishment. Henderson was covering up, but only just.
“I have such high regard for Dan, and I don’t want to be disrespectful,” Cormier says. “But I’m hitting him on his head, on the sides of his head. What is intelligent defense?”
Cormier finally took Henderson’s back and choked him out. He rose to his feet and sat down on his corner stool. His mind began racing. He knew he had less than a minute before he would be announced the winner, and then Joe Rogan would put a microphone in his face. He wanted to make the most of that moment, because you rarely get the kind of exposure that the post-fight interview provides. He wanted to say something that would have an impact on both the fans watching at home and the powers that be.
Suddenly, Cormier knew what he wanted to say. He would make a wrestling tournament reference. Not everyone watching the interview would understand it, but Jones would, and that was all that mattered.
“I knew Jon would get the reference, because he was a good wrestler,” Cormier said. “Ask Mo Lawal or (former Oklahoma wrestler) Danny Rubenstein about that. Everyone knows there is a toughest guy in your bracket. He’s the guy who always shows up. We all know what that’s like. You wait until they post the tournament bracket, and you’re just wondering if you’re going to be facing him in the finals or the semifinals.
“I am that guy for Jon Jones.”
*****
In a few hours, Cormier will find out that Jones’ meeting with the UFC brass concluded with Jones agreeing to face Gustafsson in a rematch. Cormier went to Lagasse’s Stadium at the gorgeous Palazzo to watch Game 1 of the NBA Finals; upon hearing the news, he immediately orders a brownie. Dessert for dinner.
It is not all bad news. Cormier‘s knee is not 100 percent, of course, and though he would fight Jones if the UFC asked him to, he’s actually relieved that he’ll be able to rest it and prepare properly for his eventual title fight. He can’t grapple or wrestle for four weeks, and may still opt for a minor surgical procedure to repair the damage. But he’ll get the rest he needs.
Cormier isn’t mad. He, like many other mixed martial arts fans, truly believes Jones should not be allowed to pick his fights.
“Jon is like Floyd Mayweather. He’s done so much that he’s earned the right. But Mayweather doesn’t have mandatory title challengers. He just picks the fights that are going to make him the most money. The title doesn’t matter to Floyd,” he says. “But it matters to Jon, and he should not be able to pick his challengers. If the belt meant nothing to him, then he can pick them. Because he is the best. But it doesn’t work like that in MMA. The UFC has to be able to pick the challengers that make the most sense.”
Cormier believes that his eventual title challenge against Jones will make more money than the Gustafsson rematch. He considers Jones to be an undefeated fighter; like many, he doesn’t care about Jones’ disqualification loss to Matt Hamill. To Cormier, Jones is 21-0, and the eventual title fight will feature two undefeated fighters.
But Cormier also believes Jones has another way to make money: by becoming the biggest “heel,” or bad guy, the sport has ever seen. A few days earlier, Jones posted an Instagram video mocking fans who believed he was ducking a rematch with Gustafsson. Jones, his lips curled in a believable sneer, told viewers that it was his career, not theirs.
Jones deleted the video within minutes, but tech-savvy followers were able to capture it and post it on YouTube. The video spread like wildfire.
“I think it was genius. He should own those videos instead of deleting them. This one, and the one where he’s kicking Phil Davis when he was down,” Cormier says. “People will either watch because they love him, or they’ll watch because they want to see him lose. But they will watch. Jon can be that guy, if he’d just own them.
“And the thing is, in those moments….you see Jon. That’s him. He’s high and mighty. If he owns it, he can make so much money against anyone. Mayweather pulled 1 million pay-per-view buys against Robert Guerrero. You know what I mean? He can pull that against anybody. Jon could be the same way.
“When I get older and I’m looking back, I will be disappointed if Jon never owns it. I will be disappointed for all of the money he will have left on the table.”
The drama surrounding Jon Jones’ next title defense adds a new wrinkle seemingly every day. This time it’s Daniel Cormier doing his part to oblige Jones’ request for a showdown in the Octagon.
Speaking on UFC Tonight, Cormier said he’d be willing to de…
The drama surrounding Jon Jones‘ next title defense adds a new wrinkle seemingly every day. This time it’s Daniel Cormier doing his part to oblige Jones’ request for a showdown in the Octagon.
Speaking on UFC Tonight, Cormier said he’d be willing to delay surgery on his injured knee if it meant getting a UFC title shot.
This comes on the heels of UFC president Dana White saying that Jones had yet to agree to a rematch with Alexander Gustafsson because the champ wants to fight Cormier. The former Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix winner believes Jones wants to face him because he wants nothing to do with Gustafsson.
“He had to reach so deep into his soul to win that last fight, I truly believe he doesn’t want to fight Alex again,” Cormier told Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports. “Alex took him somewhere he’d never been before and he doesn’t want to go there ever again.”
The talk among many MMA fans is that Jones is trying to duck Gustafsson, something the champ emphatically denied.
White has attempted to put Jones in check, claiming Gustafsson is the No. 1 contender. Obviously the champ doesn’t see it that way, as Jones is rolling with the “I already beat him” defense.
That’s despite their UFC 165 clash being one of the closest fights in UFC history. Many fans had Gustafsson winning, and Jones looked like anything but a winner of a fight.
Instead of getting an immediate rematch, as is the custom with so many close title fights these days, Gustafsson had to settle for JimiManuwa at UFC Fight Night 37. Jones, meanwhile, successfully defended his UFC light heavyweight title against Glover Teixeira at UFC 172 in dominant fashion.
Cormier‘s response gives Jones more leverage in his negotiations with the UFC, as if he needed more. Jones wants to fight Cormier, and Cormier wants to fight Jones. The only problem is that the UFC fans, the people who pay to watch Jones fight, want to see him rematch with Gustafsson.
(I like his little laugh at the end. Solid heel-move.)
Just as we friggin’ predicted, UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones shot a quick Instagram video responding to all the jackass fans who have accused him of “ducking” Alexander Gustafsson, simply because he’d rather fight Daniel Cormier in his next belt defense. And then, just like last time, he quickly took the video down. (Luckily, BleacherReport spotted this existing copy on YouTube.)
Basically, Jones feels that his request to fight an undefeated former Olympic wrestler and Strikeforce champion doesn’t exactly make him a coward, and hey, it’s his career anyway so STFU. All good points. And honestly, going after the fans is a pretty good idea as well if Bones is really trying to build himself up as a villain figure. As our own Matt Saccaroput it, “Jon Jones should be posting dozens more hate videos directed at fans, not deleting them.”
Your thoughts? Any idea why Jon looks so squinty?
(I like his little laugh at the end. Solid heel-move.)
Just as we friggin’ predicted, UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones shot a quick Instagram video responding to all the jackass fans who have accused him of “ducking” Alexander Gustafsson, simply because he’d rather fight Daniel Cormier in his next belt defense. And then, just like last time, he quickly took the video down. (Luckily, BleacherReport spotted this existing copy on YouTube.)
Basically, Jones feels that his request to fight an undefeated former Olympic wrestler and Strikeforce champion doesn’t exactly make him a coward, and hey, it’s his career anyway so STFU. All good points. And honestly, going after the fans is a pretty good idea as well if Bones is really trying to build himself up as a villain figure. As our own Matt Saccaroput it, “Jon Jones should be posting dozens more hate videos directed at fans, not deleting them.”