(“How much will you gimme fo this crown? What about if I throw in the gloves?.” PicProps: Sherdog)
TATAME recently caught up with Muhammed ‘King Mo’ Lawal while he was in Belem, Brazil helping former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida prepare for his upcoming UFC 140 championship bout with Jon Jones and according to the former Strikeforce 205-pound champ, he still has at least one fight scheduled under the SF banner.
If he could choose his opponent for the card, he says it would be the man who handed him his sole loss.
“I wanna fight [Rafael ‘Feijao’ Cavalcante] again because now I’m healthier. Before, when I fought him I had no meniscus, I had no stability on my knees. I fought him, I was winning, he caught me with a knee, and then that’s it, and elbows. But now, I’m ready,” Mo says. “[I’d fight him] he same. Because now I’m not injured, I can use both legs. Last time, only one leg. This time, two legs.Hopefully [I’m fighting him in January]. I heard he’s hurt, but we’ll see.”
As far as his future with Strikeforce goes, Lawal says he isn’t wasting time thinking about all of the “what ifs,” because as he puts it, whatever happens is going to happen and worrying won’t do anything to change it.
(“How much will you gimme fo this crown? What about if I throw in the gloves?.” PicProps: Sherdog)
TATAME recently caught up with Muhammed ‘King Mo’ Lawal while he was in Belem, Brazil helping former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida prepare for his upcoming UFC 140 championship bout with Jon Jones and according to the former Strikeforce 205-pound champ, he still has at least one fight scheduled under the SF banner.
If he could choose his opponent for the card, he says it would be the man who handed him his sole loss.
“I wanna fight [Rafael ‘Feijao’ Cavalcante] again because now I’m healthier. Before, when I fought him I had no meniscus, I had no stability on my knees. I fought him, I was winning, he caught me with a knee, and then that’s it, and elbows. But now, I’m ready,” Mo says. “[I’d fight him] he same. Because now I’m not injured, I can use both legs. Last time, only one leg. This time, two legs.Hopefully [I’m fighting him in January]. I heard he’s hurt, but we’ll see.”
As far as his future with Strikeforce goes, Lawal says he isn’t wasting time thinking about all of the “what ifs,” because as he puts it, whatever happens is going to happen and worrying won’t do anything to change it.
“I don’t know [whats going to happen]. It’s confusing because no one knows what’s going on. I don’t know what is going on, so I’m just gonna say I just wanna fight,” he explains. “Give me fights and I don’t worry about this.”
There are rumors that Strikeforce is very close to coming to terms with Showtime, but they haven’t been confirmed. Judging by the fact that Forza — the Fertitta-owned parent company of Strikeforce — has signed new contracts as recently as this week, it looks like the promotion is planning to stick around for at least a few more months. The organization’s moratorium could come soon after the heavyweight grand prix wraps up whenever finalist Daniel Cormier’s broken hand heals up enough for him to face Josh Barnett to close out the tournament.
Filed under: StrikeforceSAN JOSE, Calif. — The first kid begins to cry less than an hour into practice. Everyone can see it coming. That trembling lower lip, that frustrated stomp of the feet. When the tears finally start, twisting his face into a lit…
SAN JOSE, Calif. — The first kid begins to cry less than an hour into practice. Everyone can see it coming. That trembling lower lip, that frustrated stomp of the feet. When the tears finally start, twisting his face into a little ball of anguish, no one seems particularly surprised.
“No crying today,” says his coach, Daniel Cormier. Is there even a hint of sympathy in his voice? There is not. Neither is there anger nor impatience. There is only a sense that this is what we are doing because this is what must be done, and crying never won a single wrestling match.
The kid, who is maybe ten or eleven years old, does his best to stay strong. He sniffs hard, trying to suck all the tears and snot and shame back into his face, but there’s little time to compose himself. Already Cormier is signaling for his next tormentor to step to the center of the mat and resume the storm of takedowns that has brought him to this point. The kid can’t take much more of this. The kid is losing it.
“No crying,” Cormier reminds him before turning his attention to the new opponent who’s just joined the fray, fresh and eager. “Now,” he says to the new boy, motioning him toward his blubbering, red-faced teammate, “Break him!”
And where are the parents? The parents are there. They’re leaning over the back wall of what was once a racquetball court, watching their boys learn to play rough. They knew what they were signing their kids up for. This isn’t Little League. It’s not one of those youth soccer leagues, all orange wedges at halftime and equal playing time for everyone. This is Tuesday night youth wrestling practice at the American Kickboxing Academy’s sprawling two-story gym in the South Bay, and Cormier at the helm, it’s serious business.
This particular drill — one kid in the middle, with fresh opponents cycling in every minute until he can barely stand — is not so much about improving technique as it is about learning how to take your ass-whipping like a man. And who better to teach it than Cormier, a former U.S. Olympic wrestling team captain and current top-ten ranked, undefeated MMA fighter, who sees no apparent contradiction between imploring one kid to keep it together and, in the very next breath, instructing the other to take him apart?
“Okay, okay,” he says once the exhausted crying kid has been planted on his back yet again. “Let him up. Let him up, but stay on him.”
This is one part of the drill all the boys have down by now. As they climb off their foe and watch him stagger to his feet, they shove him away with all the gusto of kids finally getting to do something that’s forbidden everywhere else in their lives. No pushing? In the lunch line at school, maybe. Not here. Here they shove. Here they grab him by the head and fling him around. His fatigue has rendered him almost completely helpless, and they’re loving it.
Until it’s their turn, anyway. And everybody’s turn is coming, as Cormier reminds them when they’re fighting back tears of frustration and exhaustion near the end of the round. Revenge is just around the corner. All you have to do is hold on and wait. All you have to do is not break, even as your 250-pound wrestling coach is standing there, shouting at the other kid to break you.
“That was a huge step forward,” Cormier tells me later, once the exhausted, sweat-soaked ten-year-olds have limped out of the room and into their parents’ waiting minivans outside. “Just getting them not to cry, that’s a huge step.”
The way Cormier sees it, that’s as much a part of what he’s doing with the kids’ wrestling practices as anything else. The techniques they can learn anywhere. But learning the peculiar joy that wrestlers take in breaking an opponent and refusing to be broken themselves? That’s something that the 32-year-old Cormier may be uniquely qualified to teach them.
*****
The temptation in stories like these is to look for the ‘Rosebud’ moment, some defining experience that will explain everything that comes after. More often than not, there isn’t one. For most people, there are several. One piles up on top of another and another and another.
Take Thanksgiving Day, 1986. Cormier is a seven year-old kid growing up in Lafayette, Louisiana, when his father, long since split from Cormier’s mother, is shot and killed by the father of his second wife.
You can almost imagine the way this story goes. Thanksgiving dinner with the in-laws, an argument ensues, things get out of hand. Then bang. You’ve got a tragedy in your living room.
“And the guy walked free,” Cormier says, relating the story now like it happened to somebody else. “I’m sure she was thinking, well, I’ve already lost my husband. I don’t want to lose my father too. Plus, it was his house. You know, self-defense.”
On paper, that seems like the kind of event that would immediately change everything about your life. But really, Cormier says, it was his older brother, who was 19 at the time, who took the brunt of that one, at least for the time being.
“I think I was young enough that I didn’t really know enough to really understand what happened. Then I got older and realized, hey, my dad got murdered. But I was lucky. My parents were divorced, and my stepdad had been there for me since I was about three. He was my father, really. My dad was my dad, but he was my father. He raised me to be the man that I am today.”
As a kid, Cormier was a gifted athlete. Football, basketball — he even won the regional version of the pass, dribble, and shoot competition when he was nine. It was shortly after that when he first discovered wrestling, the sport that would change his life. Back then, however, it was just one of several sports that he excelled at. Not only was Cormier a three-time state champion wrestler in high school, but he was also a standout linebacker on his high school football team. And in Louisiana, football was a religion.
“Our team was terrible, though,” Cormier says. “We’d fight all the time. We were like the Bad News Bears.”
The problem wasn’t so much a lack of talent as a lack of discipline, according to Cormier. Their coach would call one defense and the guys on the defensive line would decide to play another. Everyone led and no one followed.
“I think that left a sour taste in my mouth about football. It was like, man, I have to depend on all these other dudes? Forget this. I’ve never done another team sport after that.”
In wrestling, he didn’t have that problem. He might have been dependent on his teammates in training, but when he walked out on the mats to compete, he was the only one he had to trust. That suited him, and he would end up turning down scholarship offers for football in order to pursue wrestling at Colby Junior College in Kansas.
Soon the awards and the medals began to pile up. He went from a high school state champion to a junior college national champion to an All-American at Oklahoma State. It was more or less a given that he’d wrestle for the U.S. on the international stage, and everything seemed to be going according to plan.
But just as he was gearing up to make the Olympic freestyle squad for the 2004 Athens games, tragedy found its way into his life again. On June 14, 2003, Cormier’s three-month old daughter, Kaedyn, was killed in a car accident after an 18-wheeler slammed into the back of a friend’s car. Kaedyn was strapped into a car seat inside, but it couldn’t save her life during the violent collision that left two others injured.
Cormier was 23 years old at the time. He’d only just gotten a taste of fatherhood, but he loved it. He thought about all the times he’d tried to soothe his crying infant daughter by driving her around the neighborhood, trying to locate a song on the radio that would act as a fitting lullaby. He finally settled on Heather Headley’s R&B ballad, “I Wish I Wasn’t.”
“I don’t know why, maybe the lady’s voice was soothing, but she loved it,” he says. “I’d put it on, drive her around Stillwater, [Oklahoma,] and she’d stop crying, go to sleep.”
After the accident that killed his daughter, Cormier had no choice but to pull it together and get back on the mat. USA Wrestling arranged a special wrestle-off for its world team trials in order to let Cormier grieve. He won it and earned his first spot on the big stage, and again his wrestling career seemed to be the one dependable constant in his life, even as he continued to struggle with the loss of his daughter.
“When she died, I thought, this is the worst thing that can possibly happen,” he says. “Then, the Olympics.”
*****
The people who know Cormier know exactly what he means when he refers to ‘The Olympics.’ Even though he was on two U.S. Olympic wrestling teams, and even though his fourth-place finish in the 2004 games seemed like a heartbreaker at the time, it was nothing compared to 2008 in Beijing.
The important thing to know about what happened in Beijing, Cormier will tell you even now, is that he made the weight. Somehow this gets lost in the telling and re-telling of it, so much so that it still gets brought up by teammates who want to needle him over his diet or physique.
But the fact is that when it came time to step on the scales in Beijing, Cormier made the 211-pound limit. It was what came after that derailed his Olympic dreams.
“I made the weight, and afterwards my body just went insane,” he says. “I was vomiting, cramping. I couldn’t walk. I didn’t know what the hell was going on.”
Cormier collapsed and was taken to the makeshift hospital inside the Olympic village, where doctors put him on IVs all night to treat him for what appeared to be kidney failure. As they explained, it was likely the result of cutting weight the wrong way for so many years, and he was simply unlucky enough to have it catch up with him at the worst possible time. Of course, that explanation didn’t sit well with Cormier.
“I took [the IVs] out and said, ‘I’m going to wrestle.’ It was about eight o’clock. The competition started at nine or ten. The lady from the [United States Olympic Committee] said, ‘Listen, they are not going to let you wrestle. You’ve been on IVs all night. What do you think you’re doing?’ I was all broken up. I was crying. I was a mess. My mom was sitting there crying. My ex[-wife] was crying. Everybody was crying. Everybody was freaking out, because I was just going insane.”
As U.S. wrestling coach Kevin Jackson remembers it, the devastation struck them all at once as they watched Cormier come to grips with the situation.
“I was in the room when they told him he would not be able to wrestle, and the emotions that hit him were overwhelming,” Jackson says. “You know, I teared up. It’s the Olympic Games. Those opportunities don’t come along very often, and he’d had two.”
As Jackson saw it, Cormier had had “a very good chance to wrestle for a gold medal” that year, and now he wouldn’t even make it onto the mat. It was a disappointment not just for Cormier, but for the entire U.S. wrestling community, which wasn’t entirely sympathetic when he returned home.
“It didn’t seem like I got the most support from everybody,” says Cormier. “The USA wrestling people were really mad at me. Kevin Jackson stood by me. He was kind of the only one. He actually lost his job behind all that.”
Jackson resigned his position as head coach after the 2008 games, he says, and the Cormier situation was only part of the reason for it.
“The people he was closest to, who he thought loved and supported him the most, they turned their back on him a little bit,” Jackson says. “They didn’t look at how it affected him; they looked at how it affected them and their program.”
The way they saw it, Cormier had torpedoed their medal hopes with an irresponsible weight-cut.
As Jackson puts it: “The doctor said that eventually it would have happened, and unfortunately it happened at the worst time. It was a consequence of not only losing weight the wrong way, but doing so when he was aware of the right way to do it. That’s the only place I really fault Daniel in this whole situation. He was a professional athlete, an Olympic athlete being paid to wrestle, and he was responsible for being at his best, and this was a part of that. I had been communicating with him about that since 2006, talking about…different things we needed to do, weight-wise. Unfortunately, it came back to haunt us.”
Once he got home, Cormier fell into a deep depression. A few weeks earlier he’d been an Olympic hopeful — one of his country’s best wrestlers. Now the nation’s wrestling apparatus wanted nothing to do with him, and his life suddenly seemed empty and devoid of purpose.
“I felt so alone. It was just me and my family. I had so many breakdowns. My ex would be at work and she’d call me and I’d be crying, so she’d rush home to make sure I didn’t do anything to myself. It was that bad. I just walked around like a zombie. I was taking sleeping pills, pain pills. I just wanted anything to take the pain away. I felt like I’d let everybody down.”
Even now, all you have to do is mention the Olympics to Cormier and you can watch his face fall. At dinner in a hotel a couple nights before his Strikeforce bout against Antonio Silva, AKA teammate Luke Rockhold brought it up to make a point about the futility of Cormier even considering a potential bout at light heavyweight, and that was all it took to get Cormier practically jumping out of his chair.
“It sticks with me to this day,” he says. “I think about it all the time. I mean, the Olympics? I can’t not think about it. And the guys, we can make fun of each other all the time, but when they bring that up it just kills me. It drains me.”
Cormier tried to lead a regular life after that. He had a job selling advertising space at a TV station in Oklahoma. He hated it, because “I felt like a telemarketer,” but it was something. He coached on the side. He thought he would do what every other wrestler did, which was hang around and wait his turn to get a head coaching spot for some college team.
He even tried playing in an adult softball league, just to satisfy the competitive urges. It was no good. Again he was dependent on other people.
“I was dying,” he says. “I was drinking every night after work. I didn’t even leave for lunch anymore. I just stayed in my office and slept.”
Meanwhile, his old wrestling buddy Mo Lawal was in his ear about this MMA stuff, all the money that an elite wrestler could make at it once he learned the basics of the other arts.
“It was crazy. Mo had so much money. He was sending me money. He’s like my little brother, and he’s sending me money. He was fighting every month, and they paid him $48,000 a fight in Japan when he was first starting out.”
Better still, Lawal was getting to compete. He wasn’t dying slowly in an office somewhere. He wasn’t depressed every day, dreading the alarm clock going off the next morning. Dreading tomorrow, next week, next year. Whatever was doing that for him, Cormier had to get a piece. Something had to change.
“You go through so many things, and it’s like one cloudy day after another,” he says. “You think, eventually the sun’s got to shine. A better day has to come. Who deserves to just get beat down into the ground, one bad thing after another?”
*****
You see Cormier these days, and it’s hard to imagine a happier, more well-adjusted person. Not only is he an undefeated heavyweight on the verge of what should be the biggest fight of his career against Josh Barnett in the Strikeforce Grand Prix finals, he’s also AKA’s go-to man when it comes to MMA-specific wrestling — a role he relishes.
Ask AKA head coach Javier Mendez what Cormier changed about the team’s wrestling program, and he’ll tell you: “Everything.”
And though on any given day the training room at AKA includes famous pro fighters who were themselves standout college wrestlers, they all answer to coach Cormier during wrestling practice.
As he takes them through warm-ups just a few days after teammate Cain Velasquez lost his UFC heavyweight title, he’s quick to let everyone know that he’s watching them.
“Why are you walking?” he demands of one teammate who’s strolling from one drill to the next. He might as well be talking to one of his ten-year-olds, but the man isn’t about to argue with Cormier. It goes on like this all afternoon.
Why is Josh Koscheck not doing push-ups with the rest of the team? Why is Todd Duffee taking his time about starting the next round? And Gray Maynard, you can’t really be tired already, can you?
If you’re on the mats at AKA, you’re subject to Cormier’s critical eye. And if you have the misfortune to be close to his weight class, as one unfortunate sparring partner is, you’re about to find out how much he enjoys breaking people even in training.
At first, the guy’s a game opponent. They vie for takedowns and control in the clinch, and he holds his own against Cormier. He even comes close to getting a takedown of his own, which is a sight so rare everyone looks up and stops what they’re doing, as if the London Philharmonic just hit a bad note.
Then the grind starts to get to him. One round after another, this unceasing assault, and you can see it in the way he slowly shuffles over to Cormier to start a new round.
“Stop wasting time,” Cormier shouts before slamming him to the mat. There’s still several minutes on the clock, but this guy is done. He can barely get on his feet long enough to get taken down again, and by the end of practice he’s flat on his back, looking up at Cormier, who’s barely breathing hard.
“I love that,” he says later. “That’s something your wrestling coaches put in you, and you learn that there’s nothing more satisfying than a guy laying on the mat, just done. I’m tired, but when I see him like that, I get a second wind.”
Second winds are coming in many forms for Cormier these days. His MMA career couldn’t be going better, even as he rehabs a broken hand and spends a lot of days sparring with one good hand, “getting blasted” as he learns to make do with a jab and some kicks. He and his girlfriend had a son in February, and he’s now old enough to walk to the door to meet his father when he returns home from practice.
They’ve got another on the way — “Irish twins,” he says with a grin — and even the pain and fear that lingered after his daughter’s death has begun to dissipate, though it hasn’t been easy. When he first drove his son home from the hospital, he says, it hit him harder than he expected.
“I was [expletive] terrified. I didn’t want to go anywhere with him in the car. My girl was in the backseat with him, but I was just so scared. I was driving slow in the rain, people passing me. But guess what song comes on the radio?”
Heather Headley’s “I Wish I Wasn’t,” of course. The same one that used to put his daughter to sleep. The one you almost never hear on the radio in 2011.
“It seemed like it was my daughter saying, ‘It’s going to be okay. I’m going to watch over my little brother.’ That’s when I was like, I think I’m going to do alright by this one. I think it’s going to be okay this time. I’m catching my break.”
And maybe that’s what you learn after all those years in suffocating wrestling rooms, one long grind after another. Besides the double-legs and the duck unders, maybe you really learn the value of simply refusing to be broken. You find out that even when you’re in a terrible position with no clear way out, all you have to do is not give up. You take it. You try and give some back. You keep pushing and you don’t quit, and before you know it you’re on top. You’re winning. The clouds are gone and the sun is shining and the living and the dead are waving you on, telling you to keep going, keep going.
Filed under: UFC, Rankings, HeavyweightsJunior Dos Santos has had a rather amazing UFC career. Signed to make his debut against Fabricio Werdum at UFC 90, Dos Santos was such a big underdog that some people suggested he was only brought to the UFC beca…
Junior Dos Santos has had a rather amazing UFC career. Signed to make his debut against Fabricio Werdum at UFC 90, Dos Santos was such a big underdog that some people suggested he was only brought to the UFC because it would give Werdum an easy win on his way to a heavyweight title shot. Instead, Dos Santos knocked Werdum out in the first round, beginning a UFC run that would lead to him taking the heavyweight belt from Cain Velasquez on Saturday night.
There’s nothing the least bit fancy about what Dos Santos does: He just hits the other guy really, really hard. Dos Santos is 8-0 in the UFC, and he finished six of his opponents with punches, while winning the other two fights by lopsided unanimous decision, battering those two opponents with punches for 15 minutes each. And yet even though everyone who steps into the Octagon with Dos Santos knows what’s coming, no one can do anything about it.
So there’s little doubt that Dos Santos is at the top of our heavyweight rankings. For the rest of the rankings, see below.
Top 10 heavyweights in mixed martial arts (Editor’s note: The individual fighter’s ranking the last time we did heavyweights are in parentheses.)
1. Junior Dos Santos (2): The biggest question for the UFC’s bottom line is how many of the new viewers who tuned in to see the fight on Saturday night are now Dos Santos fans who will pay to watch him again. Dos Santos isn’t a proven pay-per-view draw yet, but he’s an appealing and likable fighter who has just reached by far his biggest audience yet.
2. Cain Velasquez (1): I firmly believe that Velasquez will be back. Velasquez has too much talent and too much work ethic not to be fighting for the heavyweight title again some day in the future.
3. Alistair Overeem (3): I think Overeem would represent the most interesting possible opponent for Dos Santos. Overeem is the one fighter in the heavyweight division who might actually be a better striker than Dos Santos, and if Overeem can beat Brock Lesnar on December 30, then some time in 2012 we’ll see Overeem and Dos Santos go at it.
4. Brock Lesnar (4): Lesnar was articulate and engaging in his commentary role on the UFC on Fox broadcast, and seeing him again was a reminder of just how important a star he’s become to the UFC. His fight with Overeem will likely be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view draw of 2011, and if he wins that fight his bout with Dos Santos would likely be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view draw of 2012.
5. Fabricio Werdum (5): In the last four years Werdum’s only losses have been to Dos Santos and Overeem, while he’s had impressive victories over Gabriel Gonzaga, Brandon Vera, Mike Kyle, Antonio Silva and Fedor Emelianenko. Werdum fights high-level opponents and usually comes out on top, and I’m excited about the prospects of seeing him back in the UFC soon.
6. Daniel Cormier (6): The 9-0 Cormier has hardly even been tested so far in his MMA career, including a dominant first-round knockout victory over Antonio Silva in September. He’s set to face Josh Barnett in the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix final, and if he wins that fight, the logical next step would be a shot at the UFC heavyweight title.
7. Shane Carwin (7): Carwin has lost back-to-back fights to Lesnar and Dos Santos, and his bad back is expected to keep him out for several more months, so he may drop in the heavyweight rankings soon.
8. Frank Mir (8): Mir has won two in a row since being knocked out by Carwin a year and a half ago, and in December he’ll try to make it three straight wins with a rematch against Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. If Mir wins that one, he’d make a lot of sense as the next opponent for Velasquez.
9. Josh Barnett (9): Although UFC President Dana White has badmouthed Barnett many times, there’s little doubt that he’ll be welcomed back to the UFC if he beats Cormier to win the Strikeforce tournament.
10. Antonio Silva (10): Bigfoot’s future is a bit murky because the future is murky for everyone who’s still on the Strikeforce side of the Zuffa roster. But in the UFC there are a lot of very interesting fights for Silva. A UFC debut against the loser over the Overeem-Lesnar bout would be a huge heavyweight fight to make in 2012.
Filed under: UFC, UFC on FOXAsk the people who know what it’s like to have Cain Velasquez in their faces on a regular basis, and they’ll tell you that there’s a big difference between thinking you can handle the UFC heavyweight champion’s non-stop pres…
Ask the people who know what it’s like to have Cain Velasquez in their faces on a regular basis, and they’ll tell you that there’s a big difference between thinking you can handle the UFC heavyweight champion’s non-stop pressure and actually experiencing it.
“There’s no doing it until you actually do it,” said sparring partner and former Olympic wrestling team captain Daniel Cormier. “It’s just no room to breathe. You could be winning, but he’s just in your face constantly and it wears on you, man.”
To hear Velasquez’s teammates at the American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose tell it, simply surviving sparring sessions with the high-energy heavyweight is tough enough. That’s why those who are familiar with Velasquez’s pace say it could be the difference-maker in the UFC on FOX bout with Junior dos Santos — especially if the fight makes it to the later rounds.
Regardless of what effect it might have on the fight, at least dos Santos knows what an important variable it could be. He said on Thursday that, in his opinion, “the best of Cain Velasquez for sure is cardio.”
“He’s got amazing stamina for this division, and for sure he’s like those unstoppable guys,” said dos Santos. “That’s going to be my challenge, is to stop him.”
But then, dos Santos hasn’t exactly had a ton of experience against fighters like Velasquez. He’s only gone the distance twice in his career, and both those opponents — first Roy Nelson and then Shane Carwin — slowed down considerably after dos Santos battered them with strikes early on.
“When you can step back and shake your arms out, it helps in terms of your cardio,” said Cormier. “When Junior was fighting Shane, he could dictate the pace and if he felt tired he could take a little break, but Cain won’t ever let him do it. If he steps back, Cain will come forward.”
As Velasquez told reporters, he’s looking for “a long, grueling fight.” If it’s long and action-packed, the UFC probably wouldn’t mind it either. The longer the fight goes, the more chance there is for fans to pass the word along via Twitter or other social networking outlets, lifting ratings as the bout wears on.
But for Velasquez, who credited his opponent with having “good cardio, especially for a heavyweight,” it’s more about turning the fight into the kind of grind that has historically favored the wrestler’s skill set over the boxer’s.
“I think with anybody else I’ve competed against, I don’t think anybody’s been able to match my cardio,” Velasquez said.
He won’t get any argument from Cormier, who’s gone against some of the best in the world in one of the most demanding cardiovascular sports out there.
“I’m in good shape, I fight at a high pace myself, and nobody wears me out,” he said. “But when we train, I get tired. I’m like, what the hell? I know I’m in shape. But it’s something about the intensity of having him always in your face.”
In a fight that’s scheduled for five rounds, even though very few people expect it to last that long, it’s that lasting intensity that could make all the difference. If, that is, both of them are still conscious to hear the words, ‘Round two.’
Filed under: UFC, UFC on FOXLOS ANGELES — UFC president Dana White has made no secret of what he’s hoping to see when Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos climb in the cage for the first UFC on FOX fight this Saturday night.
LOS ANGELES — UFC president Dana White has made no secret of what he’s hoping to see when Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos climb in the cage for the first UFC on FOX fight this Saturday night.
“You see what these two fight like and you can pretty guarantee the way this fight is going to go,” White said at Wednesday’s press conference. “I can tell you what’s not going to happen. It’s not going to be boring, there’s not going to be any stalemating, and this fight’s going to be an absolute war.”
In other words, a cross between Griffin-Bonnar I and Hagler-Hearns might be acceptable. Anything less and it will feel like a disappointment.
But projecting such enormous expectations onto the fight could have unforeseen consequences, especially if the fighters feel an obligation to deliver a certain kind of fight in order to please their boss and make a good impression on the network TV audience.
Some segment of the viewing public might like to see the fight become a wild brawl, but that seems like an outcome that would benefit the precision striker dos Santos much more than the former All-American wrestler Velasquez. It’s not hard to imagine the champ leaving his game plan in the locker room in an attempt to deliver what White has promised, and if he does he could be looking at a fight that doesn’t necessarily play to his strengths.
If Velasquez’s camp is worried about the effect of the pressure of their fighter, however, they won’t admit it. But that doesn’t mean they recognize the danger.
“If they go out there and go crazy, it probably will be to [dos Santos’] advantage, because I think Cain has more skills than he does,” said AKA teammate and sparring partner Daniel Cormier. “…But Cain could fight the strategy that’s been laid out for him on cruise control. That’s the best thing about being at AKA, is we emphasize strategy and how we’re going to fight and our game plan and we follow it every day of the week in training. It’s not like you’re going to spar however you want. You spar according to the game plan that [head trainer Javier Mendez] sets out in front of us. You don’t abandon it.”
Undoubtedly Velasquez will benefit from having the experience of his trainers and teammates behind him, but at the same time, has any of them ever been in a fight of this magnitude? Are they fully prepared for what it might do to their fighter’s mind to have White promising a war whether Velasquez’s game plan calls for it or not?
According to Mendez, the team isn’t relying on Velasquez’s ability to block out the hype so much as his ability to deliver on it without changing anything about his fighting style.
“Cain’s going to come in and if Junior can be mauled right away, I’m sure Cain will maul him right away,” said Mendez. “But Cain’s never put on a boring fight because he’s constant action, he doesn’t stall, doesn’t hold. He’s a chain-type fighter. He’s always looking to do the most damage and get you out of there as fast as possible, so I can guarantee you this fight will be the most exciting fight in the heavyweight division. There’s no way this fight will be boring. I’d bet my life on it.”
Still, it’s an awful lot to ask for from any fighter, particularly one who’s been out of action for a little over a year. Velasquez suffered a torn rotator cuff in victory over Brock Lesnar to claim the title last October, and had surgery to repair the injured shoulder in January.
The road back wasn’t an easy one for the champ, who slipped out of fighting shape when he couldn’t train like he’d become accustomed to.
“He got big,” chuckled Cormier. “I don’t know how heavy he got, but he got big. I used to give him a hard time, calling him Mark Hunt. He didn’t like that very much.”
According to Mendez, it took about a month of gradually getting Velasquez back into good condition before they could begin the real work.
“In the beginning it was hard,” Mendez said. “I was having him just do footwork stuff and he was so out of shape, he got tired just doing footwork. He had a callous on the bottom of his foot and he ripped it so I had to have him stop. It went from that to where he is now, which is pretty amazing.”
But even as Velasquez and dos Santos both swear that they’ve barely noticed the added pressure for this fight, those around them certainly have.
“It’s bigger,” said Cormier. “It means a lot more. But I think those guys are trained to ignore it, and that’s good. When you’re in the fight, whether it’s on FOX or on Spike or in a damn garage somewhere, you have to focus on the fight. That’s really all that matters. But for everyone else around, we know it’s bigger. You can feel that it means so much for the sport. If they go out and lay an egg, it’s not going to be good.”
Even Mendez, who initially insisted that it felt like any other fight, had to stop himself and admit, “well, you know, actually I’m probably lying about that.”
There’s no use in denying it: this is a different kind of fight. If Velasquez and dos Santos didn’t know it already, they found out when they showed up to the presser and White started making promises and guarantees on their behalf.
“Give me my entire roster of guys, make every one of them healthy, and this is still the fight I’d pick,” said White. “This is the fight that I picked to put on network television, and it is important, and I picked this fight for a reason.”
With the bar set that high, it would be easy to get a reckless while trying to reach it.
AKA co-founder Javier Mendez explained to Yahoo! Sport’s Dave Meltzer recently that he doesn’t have an opinion on his fighters fighting each other and that he doesn’t get involved in the decision making process when it comes to fights being offered to two of his guys like they have been by UFC president Dana White to Koscheck and Fitch.
“My standpoint is it is up to the fighters,” said Mendez. “I back both my fighters with whatever decision they make. If they both agree and the organizations want it, then it will happen and it’s nothing personal.
And Mendez isn’t the only one at the California gym who doesn’t bat away any suggestion of an inter-team showdown. Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix finalist Daniel Cormier has expressed an interest in facing UFC heavyweight champ and main training partner, UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez if the money is right and if it doesnt harm their friendship.
AKA co-founder Javier Mendez explained to Yahoo! Sport’s Dave Meltzer recently that he doesn’t have an opinion on his fighters fighting each other and that he doesn’t get involved in the decision making process when it comes to fights being offered to two of his guys like they have been by UFC president Dana White to Koscheck and Fitch.
“My standpoint is it is up to the fighters,” said Mendez. “I back both my fighters with whatever decision they make. If they both agree and the organizations want it, then it will happen and it’s nothing personal.
And Mendez isn’t the only one at the California gym who doesn’t bat away any suggestion of an inter-team showdown. Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix finalist Daniel Cormier has expressed an interest in facing UFC heavyweight champ and main training partner, UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez if the money is right and if it doesnt harm their friendship.
“He’s a friend,” said Cormier. “I’ve trained him for all of his recent fights. I cornered him. We face each other every day in sparring.It’ll be a very difficult fight for us to do. It will have to be worth it to us financially. We share the same coaches and the same management team. We’d have to address this as a group, with [manager] Bob Cook, Javier.”
Mendez says that if both fighters decide that there will be no hard feelings between them, then he would be okay with the heavyweight tilt going down as well if it’s offered.
“We’ll have to set up separate camps and take care of them as best we can. Daniel [Cormier] has talked about it before. Whatever Daniel wants, I’ll back 100 percent. If Cain says, ‘No,’ guess what I’m going to do? I’ll be behind Cain.”
Although he says he would fight Velasquez, Cormier says that he would much rather find a better solution for his career aspiration of one day wearing UFC gold.
“I don’t want to be just a good fighter. I want to be the best in the world. I could be in line for a championship, but if it came down to us, I’d much rather go to 205,” Cormier explains. “That would eliminate a lot of things. We have a great thing going at AKA — to avoid a lot of negatives, to avoid people having to choose sides, I’d rather move to 205, maybe beat someone and then face Jon Jones. I’d have to have that fight instead of Cain.”
Cain mentioned last month that he’d lock horns with Cormier as well, so if he gets past dos Santos and Cormier can beat Barnett, then Joe Silva could very well have his first heavyweight title defense of 2012 already in the bag.