Demetrious Johnson vs. John Dodson: Full Fight Technical Breakdown

When Demetrious Johnson and Ultimate Fighter winner John Dodson collided at UFC on Fox 6 Saturday night in the United Center in Chicago, the flyweight title was hanging in the balance. It was the first time that the newly established championship would…

When Demetrious Johnson and Ultimate Fighter winner John Dodson collided at UFC on Fox 6 Saturday night in the United Center in Chicago, the flyweight title was hanging in the balance. It was the first time that the newly established championship would be defended by the inaugural kingpin, and the action headlined an exciting evening of fights.

After five rounds of action, Johnson was awarded a unanimous decision victory, despite some scary moments caused by his opponent in the early goings.

The action began quickly with the two flyweights utilizing tremendous movement while trying to establish their range. Shooting in for quick one- or two-punch attacks, the two didn’t seem to have much success in doing damage.

Ninety seconds into the opening frame, Dodson countered Johnson’s attack with a two-punch combo that sent Johnson to his knees. Now that Johnson felt the power of his challenger, he knew what he was up against.

Shortly afterward, Johnson threw a head kick in hopes of returning the favor; however, Dodson was able to elevate Mighty Mouse after the failed attempt and slam him to the ground.

Much of the action centered around Johnson pushing forward while Dodson back-peddled, each man throwing strikes along the way. While Johnson was more active, it is Dodson whose strikes were more accurate and did the most damage.

Johnson looked to close the distance by throwing longer punches while charging forward. Slower opponents would be in a lot of danger from this attack, but Dodson was able to match the pace and avoid damage while landing counter shots of his own.

Round 1 continued to frustrate Johnson as Dodson brilliantly used his upper body strength to avoid being taken down. When Mighty Mouse shot in and gained control of the hips, Dodson found himself able to post one or both of his hands under and was able to scoot out of his opponent’s grasp.

The two men did some jockeying for position while clinched against the cage, while each man scored some short shots to score points before the first horn sounded.

When Round 2 began, the pace continued with Johnson pushing forward, but more respectful of his opponent’s punches. Early in the round, DJ used a single collar tie to back Dodson against the cage, before dropping down and securing a double leg.

Dodson found himself seated against the cage with Johnson holding on to his legs. With his back against the cage, Dodson posted one hand on the mat, while pushing off of Johnson’s back with his other. This allowed him to use his strength advantage to avoid DJ’s top game.

After returning to his feet, Dodson continued circling away from the lunging shots from Johnson.

About two minutes into the second round, Dodson had done a good job of timing Johnson’s attacks. The moment that he saw DJ move forward, the challenger unleashed a four-punch combination: a pair of hooks to the body, a right uppercut to the chin and a short left hook.

This was the most significant attack of the fight, as Johnson immediately dropped. 

Johnson wasn’t out, but a slow reaction time from Dodson was more than enough opportunity for Mighty Mouse to scoot backward and create some distance while recovering.

Shortly after, Dodson slipped a right hand from Johnson and then slipped a left before unleashing a left cross that put Mighty Mouse down for the third time in this fight.

Once again, Johnson was quick to his feet, although Dodson did try to charge in for the kill this time around. 

After feeling the power that The Magician has, Johnson shot in for another takedown, although is was unsuccessful. 

The two men shadowboxed a bit, as if they could not find their range, and Dodson countered another attack with a left hand that frustrated the champion.

At this point, Johnson began opening his combinations with a push kick or outside leg kick as a way to mix up the attack and hopefully give Dodson more trouble in countering. It proved somewhat effective, although it was a second round scored for Dodson, who sat ahead on the scorecards 20-18.

Round 3 opened with the fighters looking to deliver low kicks. Johnson fired out a quick sweeping kick, but Dodson caught it and threw a counterstrike to make him pay for it.

In hopes of getting the fight down, Johnson circled left and showed a double jab as a way to disguise his single-leg takedown, but Dodson wasn’t fooled. The Magician landed an interceptor knee to the upper chest of Mighty Mouse, but the champion held on to the knee in hopes of finishing the takedown.

Dodson escaped the attempt by spinning around and putting his knee down on the canvas, with Johnson kneeling next to him while wrapped onto the leg. Dodson used his hand to push off of Johnson’s neck before scooting away and freeing himself.

The escape saw Dodson hop away up against the fence and Johnson pursued a clinch. Unfortunately, a low knee caused a temporary break to the action. 

After the action resumed, Johnson began adding volume to his combinations in hopes that the final strikes would have more success than the early ones which were being avoided.

Mighty Mouse found some confidence in his hands after scoring a right hook, left hook combo—which he followed up with a front kick.

Johnson scored an important takedown with about 90 seconds left in the third frame. Unlike previous attempts, Johnson was able to keep top position and avoid Dodson powering his way back to his feet.

After 45 seconds of control, Dodson was able to escape, although Johnson landed a quick series of strikes to make him pay for it. It was a round that I likely would have scored for Dodson, although Johnson turned up the heat in the final 90 seconds to steal this one.

The score was 29-28 after three rounds, and John Dodson was breathing heavily between rounds. It was here that it became obvious that Demetrious Johnson’s condition was superior.

Round 4 saw Johnson score an early takedown, but Dodson quickly returned to his feet. Johnson had control of the head and neck and looked to throw knees.

Dodson got a hand down to make himself a “downed opponent,” although Johnson apparently didn’t see it before he unloaded an illegal knee.

After the apology, they get back into it, and Dodson quickly catches a low kick and fires a counterstrike to throw Johnson off balance. 

Two minutes into the fourth round and the total strike count is 104-to-71 in favor of the champion, according to on-screen statistics.

Mighty Mouse continued to have trouble securing his takedowns, but Johnson adopts a Muay Thai clinch and delivers a beautiful knee to the face. Once again, Dodson puts a hand on the canvas to prevent eating knees to the head.

In a brilliant move, Johnson began throwing knees to the shoulder and legs of Dodson whenever his hand was down. As soon as Dodson lifted his hand in hopes of improving position, Johnson redirected his attack and threw several knees to the face and head of Dodson.

Had Dodson spun out or dropped to the ground, he could have avoided taking those vicious knees. Instead, he attempted to throw a back elbow to his opponent’s midsection in hopes of getting the maneuver to end by force.

That game continued for most of the final 90 seconds of the round, and Johnson did tremendous damage with those knees.

Heading into the final round, the score sits at 38-38 and Johnson looks like he has a lot more gas in the tank than Dodson.

Wasting little time with striking, Johnson scores a takedown that sees The Magician sitting against the cage, in hopes of posting and returning to his feet. After being controlled a bit, Dodson was successful in getting up.

Dodson used pressure to back Johnson up against the cage and he looked to hold Mighty Mouse there. At this point, Johnson used the pressure to his advantage as he slightly jumped up and allowed Dodson to hold him in an elevated position against the cage.

From that position, Johnson grabbed the Muay Thai plum and delivered short elbows to Dodson’s head that caused the challenger to give up his position.

With three minutes left on the clock, Johnson recognizes his success with the clinch and hunted for it when the action moved to close quarters. 

Dodson began hunting for takedowns of his own in the final round in hopes of securing a third round on the scorecard. Halfway through the final round, he scored one, but Johnson was quick to return to his feet, and he remained the more aggressive fighter on the feet.

Less than 100 ticks on the clock and Johnson goes back to the clinch for some knees. Dodson tries to get away, and Johnson lands a series of uppercuts against the cage. 

With his face bleeding, Dodson is having a lot of trouble getting away from the high volume of power strikes that are coming his way. Johnson would land three more knees to the face before a pair of hooks found their home on John’s face.

Thirty seconds are left on the clock, and Dodson looks like he is simply trying to survive. Johnson refuses to release the Muay Thai clinch, and he continues to throw knees until the final horn sounds.

Two judges agree with the 48-47 score that I gave to Demetrious Johnson, while one saw it 49-46 in favor of the champion.

The undying cardiovascular conditioning of Mighty Mouse is ultimately what made the difference in this contest, and the utilization of the Muay Thai clinch did more damage than anything else in this five-round slugfest.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on Fox 6: Why ‘Mighty Mouse’ Could Be Champion for a Long Time

Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson made his dominance atop the 125-pound mountain abundantly clear at UFC on Fox 6. After dominating his opponent, John Dodson, in the championship rounds of their fight, Mighty Mouse scooted out of the Octagon with …

Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson made his dominance atop the 125-pound mountain abundantly clear at UFC on Fox 6

After dominating his opponent, John Dodson, in the championship rounds of their fight, Mighty Mouse scooted out of the Octagon with an impressive unanimous-decision victory. 

The champion faced moments of adversity in Rounds 1 and 2, but he took Dodson’s best shots and kept moving forward, a testament to his heart and competitive drive. 

After the victory, there is literally no legitimate contender that he has not already defeated in UFC action, and for that reason, he is primed for a lengthy stay atop the 125-pound division. 

The UFC is littered with dominant champions right now, and Mighty Mouse has given us every reason to believe he will continue this trend at 125 pounds. 

The first reason this will hold true is the fact that he obviously does not have human lungs. Nobody should be able to push the pace he does for the amount of time he does, but Mighty Mouse somehow does it. 

He’s quick, he’s explosive and he is dangerous from minute one to minute 25 in a fight—and that is an impossibly difficult task for his challengers to overcome thus far. 

A five-round fight works to his advantage, and that is all he will be seeing in the near future. 

Secondly, the flyweight division is too thin right now. 

The only reasonable challengers to Mighty Mouse’s championship strap are fighters he has already defeated. 

Joseph Benavidez and Ian McCall will square off at UFC 156 in a bout that will likely determine the next challenger. Outside of those two, one can point to John Dodson, who, despite failing to capture the title, showed that he can pose a threat to Mighty Mouse on the feet.

After that, one is hard-pressed to choose another top contender. Do you go with John Moraga, a fighter who is 2-0 in the UFC, with his best win coming at UFC 155 over Chris Cariaso

Maybe you can point to powerful grappler Darren Uyenoyama, a flyweight who is also 2-0, with his wins coming over Norifumi Yamamoto and Phil Harris. 

You are saying “who?” a lot—don’t lie to me or yourself. 

This point perfectly illustrates the lack of depth in the flyweight division, and it is the main reason Johnson will remain the champion.

He will be heavily favored in his bouts for the foreseeable future due to the fact that he has already defeated any worthy challenger—sound reasoning, no?  

Johnson is phenomenal, and he is only getting better. The flyweight division, however, is not getting deeper at a fast enough rate to make up for the skill disparity between the top four guys and the rest of the division, so we are unfortunately stuck in this pit of rematches until further notice. 

All this considered, Mighty Mouse looks to be every bit the longtime champion that we see in the UFC’s featherweight, welterweight, middleweight and light heavyweight divisions. 

With a skill set that is perfect for his division and no real challengers on the horizon, it would be foolish to expect anything less. 

For fans of MMA, heavy metal or general absurdity 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FOX 6: Johnson vs. Dodson — Main Card Results and Commentary


(Now there’s two guys you definitely wouldn’t want to trip over in a dark alley. / Photo via CombatLifestyle. For more photos from this set, click here.)

The UFC returns to FOX tonight, and the stakes are high: Can John Dodson become the fourth Ultimate Fighter winner to win a UFC championship? Will Rampage Jackson‘s final appearance in the UFC end in triumph or humiliation? Can Erik Koch regain his place as the #1 featherweight contender with a win over Ricardo Lamas, and will Anthony Pettis secure his own spot atop the lightweight contender ladder with a victory against Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone?

But hey, enough damn questions — it’s time for some answers. CagePotato liveblogger Aaron Mandel will be providing round-by-round results from the UFC on FOX 6: Johnson vs. Dodson main card after the jump, beginning at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and share your own feelings in the comments section.


(Now there’s two guys you definitely wouldn’t want to trip over in a dark alley. / Photo via CombatLifestyle. For more photos from this set, click here.)

The UFC returns to FOX tonight, and the stakes are high: Can John Dodson become the fourth Ultimate Fighter winner to win a UFC championship? Will Rampage Jackson‘s final appearance in the UFC end in triumph or humiliation? Can Erik Koch regain his place as the #1 featherweight contender with a win over Ricardo Lamas, and will Anthony Pettis secure his own spot atop the lightweight contender ladder with a victory against Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone?

But hey, enough damn questions — it’s time for some answers. CagePotato liveblogger Aaron Mandel will be providing round-by-round results from the UFC on FOX 6: Johnson vs. Dodson main card after the jump, beginning at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and share your own feelings in the comments section.

Good evening PotatoHeads, we’re a few minutes away from grappling robots which will signal the start of main card action on FOX.  Congrats to Alex for his marathon, six fight live blog cherry popping with the prelims.  We’ve got some great free fights tonight include a championship bout, a possible number one contender fight and some crowd pleasers.  Stay tuned!

And the broadcast is off to a weird start with lots of technical difficulties and sound mishaps, fortunately there is a Bud Light commercial to cut to, this is the best sport on earth, people! Goldberg back to save us with functioning microphones and his best friend ever, Joe Rogan and the broadcast intro has begun.

Koch has a pretty intense fake tan that apparently he was sponsored to get, Lamas is the hometown fighter.  Big John in charge of this one.

Erik Koch vs. Ricardo Lamas

Round 1- Fighters feelings each other out at the start in the center of the cage.  Lamas tries a huge windmill kick that misses.  Koch with a head kick of his own that is blocked.  Punches and kicks from Koch are dodged and blocked by Lamas as they continue to feel each other out.  Lamas shoots for a takedown and pins Koch to the cage.  Koch sprawling and defending the takedown well.  Lamas drags him down for a split second but Koch pops up and sprawls with his back against the cage again.  Lamas continuing to hold Koch against the cage, jockeying for position.  Koch continuing to defend in the clinch against the cage.  They separate and return to striking distance.  Lamas looking crafty with his kicks but they aren’t landing.  Lamas lands a combo and clinches Koch against the cage again.  Lamas gets a takedown but it doesn’t last more than five seconds, Koch is up and the round is over.  I’d give it to Lamas on octagon control, not a lot of damage either way so far.

Round 2- Koch opens with a left.  A few legs kicks from Lamas and now Koch puts Lamas against the cage.  Lamas slips on a leg kick, Koch pounces but Lamas scrambles and ends up on top in guard.  Lamas posturing and throwing down strikes.  Lamas stacking Koch and dropping bombs, Koch bleeding badly as Lamas keeps pounding and Big John calls the fight.

Ricardo Lamas defeats Erik Koch via TKO, Round 2

Koch was cut terribly from only a few elbows and Lamas makes a case for himself at the top of the featherweight division.  He thanks the hometown crowd and dedicates the win to his late grandparents.

Dana White gets on the mic with Rogan to hype Aldo vs. Edgar on PPV next week.  A lightweight barn burner looms as Cowboy Cerrone and Showtime Pettis get ready to meet in the cage.

Donald Cerrone vs. Anthony Pettis

Round 1- Pettis lands first with a big right.  They exchange in a flurry and Cerrone gets him back.  Cerrone lands with a knee as Pettis tries a cartwheel kick.  Pettis in with a right and out quickly and opening up with strikes, seeming a bit more comfortable striking early.  Pettis with some body kicks and a “Showtime knee” that seem to hurt Cerrone.  Pettis crushes Cerrone with a left kick to the body, Cerrone drops and it is over, brutal liver kick finish, somewhere Bas Rutten is smiling.

Anthony Pettis defeats Donald Cerrone via TKO (body kick), Round 1

Pettis gets the Milwaukee fans in attendance pumped and makes it clear he’s not afraid to fight anyone.  It turns out it’s his birthday and he asks for a title shot and a KOTN bonus from Uncle Dana as a present.

Next up we’ve got the potential UFC swan song of former light heavyweight champion Rampage Jackson who is taking on rising contender Glover Teixeira.  Can Rampage rediscover his old knockout power and slam-based grappling or is the hungrier Teixeira going to be too much for him?  Will Rampage get his wish for a stand-up battle?  We’ll have answers to these burning questions of our time in a few minutes.

Quinton Jackson vs. Glover Teixeira

Round 1- Damn, I’m pumped for this, don’t know why but I am!  Teixeira misses with an uppercut.  Rampage slugs back but it’s blocked.  Rampage moving his head well.  Glover shoots in and takes him down and has Rampage’s back with hooks in, yikes.  Glover is going for the arm triangle and switches back to the back mount.  Rampage is up and firing away!  Rampage ducks a strike and answers with a left hook, a glancing blow though.  Head kick from Glover doesn’t land flush.  Rampage with a combo of power strikes that Glover blocks.  Huge strikes from both fighters that just miss.  Rampage moving his head well and swaying out of the way.  Glover lands a hook and Rampage answers back, he is throwing the left hook.  Glover lands another hook and Rampage runs across the cage, maybe hurt a little.  Glover wobbles Rampage and stalks him toward the cage.  Rampage gets dropped as Glover pounces but can’t finish.  Rampage back up but on wobbly legs as the round ends. 10-9 for Teixeira.

Round 2- Rampage seems to have cleared the cobwebs as Glover shoots and takes Rampage down to start the round.  Glover in half guard as Rampage tries to hit a switch and fails.  Glover passes to side control and drops some big elbows.  Rampage back to his feet.  Rampage throws a few big uppercuts as Glover answers back with a hook.  The fighters briefly clinch and then back to striking distance.  Glover is having success with the left hook.  Body shot from Rampage.  Uppercuts from Glover as Rampage defends with head movement.  Rampage seems to be tiring.  Rampage shoots for a takedown (ha!) that fails.  Glover working some kicks.  Fighters exchange some taunts and swing at each other.  Big body shots from Glover as he keeps clubbing Rampage.  Another 10-9 round for Glover.

Round 3- Touch of the gloves to start the final round.  Glover lands another left hook and Rampage back with a stiff jab.  Rampage putting together some combos.  Teixeira shoots for a takedown and has it, pushing Rampage against the cage and working to mount from half guard.  Teixeira dropping elbows and searching for an arm triangle.  Rampage uses the cage to get up and they exchange again.  Rampage swinging wildly and falls into a clinch.  Glover with another left hook that finds its mark.  Two minutes to go and Glover seems fresher.  Teixeira gets a takedown with ease but Rampage pops back up.  Rampage looks gassed as he absorbs some body shots.  Rampage has his mouth wide open gasping for air as he throws wild strikes.  Another takedown for Teixeira as he mounts and rains down strikes as time expires.  Teixeira should take this one easily.

Glover Teixeira defeats Quinton Jackson via unanimous decision

Interesting, no interview for Glover or Rampage, maybe the UFC was worried about what Rampage would say.

And now it’s time for some gravity defying things done by 125 pound men.  Dodson’s walk in proves that he absolutely won’t be testing positive for ADD meds.  Johnson is an athletic little guy too, it’s hard to say who will have the advantage here, I can’t imagine either one gassing or slowing down, even if it goes the full 25 minutes.  Here we go!

Champ Demetrious Johnson vs. John Dodson 

Round 1- Let’s see if my touch typing skills can keep up with all of this action.  John McCarthy looks like he could eat either of these guys, he is the ref, by the way.  Dodson with a body kick to start and a left straight.  Johnson with a leg kick.  Overhand right from Johnson.  Kick from Johnson but Dodson meets him with a left and briefly drops Johnson.  Head kick from Johnson is caught and Dodson slams him down.  Johnson pops up and they return to striking.  Johnson is missing with a lot of strikes, Dodson is damn fast.  Body kick from Dodson and a big left to follow as Johnson rushed in.  Johnson looks for a takedown and slams Dodson down to the mat.  Dodson works back to the feet and they clinch on the cage with Dodson in control now.  Fighters separate and re-clinch as the round ends.  I have no idea who won that round, Johnson got a takedown but Dodson made him miss on the feet and briefly dropped Johnson.  This is why I’m a liveblogger and not a judge.

Round 2- Dodson with some strikes to open the round.  Johnson shoots for a takedown and they clinch on the cage.  Johnson get Dodson down against the cage but Dodson works back up and they separate.  Leg kick from Johnson and he’s controlling the center of the cage.  Good jab from Johnson but Dodson comes back with a left that drops Johnson again, he pops right back up.  Another left from Dodson floors Johnson but he gets up again, Johnson is hurt and shoots in but Dodson defends.  Dodson’s power advantage is evident at this point but can he keep it up?  Another shot knocks Johnson down but it may have been more of a slip.  Dodson is winning the striking exchanges and Johnson seems a bit fuzzed still.  Dodson catches a kick and cracks Johnson in the face.  Johnson seems to be recovering as the round ends, 10-9 Dodson in this one.

Round 3- Jumping karate kick from Dodson looks cool but doesn’t land.  Leg kicks from Johnson.  Dodson catches Johnson with a left and Johnson keeps kicking away at his legs.  Johnson shoots for a takedown and eats a knee as Dodson defends the takedown well.  Dodson takes a big knee to the groin and Rogan gleefully asks to see a replay.  Dodson is ready to go and they restart as Rogan rants about mother nature’s designing of the male body.  Flying knee by Dodson goes OVER Johnson’s head.  Straight left catches Johnson but he seems to be taking it well, obviously in excellent shape.  Leg kicks from both fighters as haymakers from Dodson miss.  Body kick from Dodson hurts Johnson.  Johnson eats a punch but gets a takedown.  Dodson with a loose butterfly guard and scoots to the wall to walk back to his feet.  Johnson keeps his down and throws him back to the center of the cage.  Johnson working some ground and pound to try to slow Dodson.  They are back to the feet with Johnson throwing knees and punches and putting Dodson against the cage again. 10-9 Johnson in this round.  It’s time for the championship rounds and Johnson seems the tiniest bit more fresh, we’ll see how the next rounds play out.

Round 4- Leg kicks from Dodson.  Johnson has not slowed at all while Dodson is looking to hit a home run.  Takedown by Johnson, but Dodson pops right back up.  Johnson knees Dodson while he is down and Big John stops the fight, checks out Dodson and asks him to look at him with his bad eye that got kneed.  ”Am I ugly?” McCarthy asks Dodson!  No point deduction and they restart.  Dodson is fired up and throwing with bad intentions but Johnson is relentless, shooting in again for a takedown and pushing the pace.  They are against the cage with Johnson working for a takedown.  Back to the center and Johnson pushes for another takedown.  Dodson is playing cat and mouse with his hand up and down as Johnson chooses to knee the body instead.  Johnson is like a robot kneeing Dodson over and over to the body and head from the clinch.  Dodson is cut and Johnson is taking over.  Big elbow from Johnson as they separate and Dodson seems to be wilting, Johnson is as fresh as he was at the start.  10-9 Johnson here but it might be two rounds each going into the fifth.

Round 5- This round could be the decider and they hug in the center of the cage to start.  Johnson gets a clinch again and takes Dodson down this time.  Johnson striking as Dodson works back to the feet.  Johnson has his back against the cage and climbs up on Dodson to rain strikes down!  Dodson initiates a clinch again as Rogan notes how incompetent the judges might be as he prepares for a controversial decision.  Dodson now working for a takedown but Johnson is defending well.  Dodson does get the takedown but Johnson is like a whack-a-mole and pops up yet again.  Johnson keeping up a furious pace on Dodson and he has Dodson hurt against the cage.  Johnson trying to unload but Dodson ties him up.  Thai plum for Johnson and he knees the face.  Dodson breaks away and smiles, honestly.  More knees from Johnson and Dodson is bleeding from the nose.  The fight ends with Johnson kneeing Dodson in the face and I think Johnson will take this on the judges scorecards due to his unbreakable cardio and strong performance in the later rounds.

Demetrious Johnson defeats John Dodson via unanimous decision

Mighty Mouse remains the only UFC Flyweight champ so far.  I predict that these guys will meet again, maybe many more times.  Johnson will win most of the time but I can see Dodson getting a (T)KO at some point down the road.  Great night of fights, two finishes, two exciting decisions.  Thanks for hanging out.

Demetrious Johnson vs John Dodson: Round by Round Recap and Analysis

The UFC flyweight title is on the line Saturday night at UFC on Fox 6. The fight will be nationally broadcast live and in living color from Chicago, Illinois.This is the first defense for champ Demetrious Johnson (16-2-1). In fact, it’s the first title…

The UFC flyweight title is on the line Saturday night at UFC on Fox 6. The fight will be nationally broadcast live and in living color from Chicago, Illinois.

This is the first defense for champ Demetrious Johnson (16-2-1). In fact, it’s the first title defense of any kind in the UFC’s 125-pound division. Challenger John Dodson (14-5) has mowed a path through the Octagon, going 3-0 including a spotless 2-0 mark as a flyweight.

Keep an eye on this slideshow for real-time, blow-by-blow recap and analysis for all five rounds (as needed) of this unprecedented title bout.

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Johnson vs. Dodson Fight Card: Three Fights You Don’t Want to Miss

When a card is as stacked as UFC on Fox 6, it is hard to pick just one must-see fight. Seeing a UFC title fight for free alone should get people interested in the fight card. But it also features a disgruntled former UFC light heavyweight cha…

When a card is as stacked as UFC on Fox 6, it is hard to pick just one must-see fight. 

Seeing a UFC title fight for free alone should get people interested in the fight card. 

But it also features a disgruntled former UFC light heavyweight champion in his final UFC fight, two potential title eliminator fights and a hyper former lightweight making his featherweight debut in his home state. 

If all goes well, this could be one of the best free cards the UFC has ever put on. 

Here are the three fights that you should not miss. 

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UFC on FOX 6: 5 Things to Watch for During Johnson vs Dodson Fight Card

UFC on Fox 6 is live tonight from Chicago, Ill. The stacked card is headlined by Demetrious Johnson defending his flyweight title for the first time against The Ultimate Fighter 14 winner John Dodson. Also featured on the care is Quinton “Ram…

UFC on Fox 6 is live tonight from Chicago, Ill. 

The stacked card is headlined by Demetrious Johnson defending his flyweight title for the first time against The Ultimate Fighter 14 winner John Dodson

Also featured on the care is Quinton “Rampage” Jackson in his last UFC fight against rising star Glover Teixeira. 

Lightweights Anthony Pettis and Donald Cerrone will also go at it in a match with strong title implications. 

Here is what to watch for in tonight’s fights. 

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