UFC 132 Bantamweight Championship Breakdown: Dominick Cruz vs. Urijah Faber

Filed under: UFCWith all the talk about Tito Ortiz’s last chance in the octagon, another veteran of the sport is under a similar kind of pressure. Like Ortiz, fellow Californian Urijah Faber is facing a must-win situation. It’s not as dire as that of O…

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Dominick Cruz, Urijah Faber at UFC 132With all the talk about Tito Ortiz‘s last chance in the octagon, another veteran of the sport is under a similar kind of pressure. Like Ortiz, fellow Californian Urijah Faber is facing a must-win situation. It’s not as dire as that of Ortiz, who needs a victory just to keep his job, but it’s nearly as important. At 32 years old, Faber may be facing his last legitimate shot to win a major world championship.

That may sound like hyperbole given the fact that Faber (25-4) is still considered one of the best lower-weight division fighters in the world, but look at it from this perspective: heading into UFC 132, Faber has lost three consecutive championship fights. A loss to Dominick Cruz would have him 0-4 going for the gold in two different weight classes. There’s only so many times you can sell the public on a contender when he keeps losing the big one. As good as he is, Faber is already dangerously close to that characterization. Just three fights after dropping down a division to challenge for a belt in a new weight class, he has reached the point where he has to win.

Amazingly, prior to his recent stretch of title fight problems, Faber was practically unbeatable. Before losing the belt, he was 21-1 with a 13-fight win streak. But he’s just 4-3 in his last seven bouts. The fight with Cruz is a rematch of their March 2007 fight, which Faber won in an easy first-round submission.

That loss remains the only defeat of Cruz’s career. Now 17-1, the San Diego-based fighter has won eight straight, including two title defenses, one coming against Faber’s teammate Joseph Benavidez.

The win over Benavidez was the closest fight Cruz has had since he lost to Faber, winning in a tight split-decision. Interestingly, Benavidez and Faber are teammates and train together every day, making it likely that Faber took several lessons from that fight.

Benavidez’s game plan that night had several patterns that we can assume Faber may choose to implement. The thing about Cruz is that you know he is going to come to you. He is one of the most energetic fighters in the division and while his accuracy is below average (just 27 percent, according to FightMetric), he tends to overwhelm opponents with sheer volume along with defensive excellence. He strikes but when you fire back, he’s usually nowhere to be found.

Benavidez countered that by choosing to engage him on the inside. Because Cruz’s side-to-side footwork makes him an elusive target, Benavidez often sat back and let Cruz come to him before lunging forward with head-hunting shots. He also moved forward whenever Cruz kicked, stepping into power strikes of his own. In essence, Benavidez showed that he didn’t have much respect for Cruz’s power because he had to step into the fire to fire his own offense. The plan resulted in some success, because while Cruz outlander Benavidez 103-46 according to FightMetric stats, the judges saw it much closer.

Faber is likely to have a similar game plan. Most fighters are not going to try to match Cruz’s activity, which some of them see as movement for the sake of movement rather than accomplishing anything. For Cruz, though, it’s about tempo and spacing. While Faber is 32, he is probably one of the few who can keep pace with the 25-year-old Cruz if he so desired. He probably won’t go punch for punch with the champion, however. Faber has big belief in his standup and is likely to let Cruz take the lead while sitting back and unloading whenever Cruz wades in a little too close.

The problem with this type of strategy is it tends to be all-or-nothing. When one fighter is constantly moving forward and leading exchanges, judges tend to see the fight in his favor. It is almost reliant upon the counterfighter to finish. In higher weight classes, finishing rates are higher so fighters have a better chance to successfully employ this type of tactic and close out the show. Once you get down to the bantamweight level though, finishing rates go down drastically, making it a riskier strategy. After all, if you’re taking three to get one, even if that one is really good, the judges have still seen you getting hit two more times than your opponent.

Still, it’s the strategy I expect to see Faber employ, countering with straight right hands off kicks and whenever Cruz steps inside. Faber may also try to play the bully and grind Cruz against the cage a bit, but Cruz usually works himself out of those situations. The other spot of danger for Cruz is in going for takedowns. According to Compustrike, he’s been successful on 21 of 25 takedowns (84 percent) over his last six fights. But Faber has got a wicked guillotine. In fact, it’s the move that caught Cruz and forced him to tap in their first fight. Benavidez hunted for it against Cruz as well. But the champion is much better schooled now than he was at that point in his career four years ago, and Faber will have a much more difficult time catching him.

Faber has ways to win. He has enough power to hurt Cruz and possibly finish him on the ground. But Cruz has always shown a great chin and he’s not particularly easy to hit. He lands about twice as often as his opponents hit him, FightMetric says. He’s also extremely motivated, wanting to erase the memories of his only loss. The Cruz trend will continue Saturday. His volume and versatility will sway the judges. Flash some fancy footwork with his varied standup, sprinkle in a few takedowns, and stay away from any big damage and the fight is his to win on points. Cruz via decision.

 

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MMA Top 10 Bantamweights: Mighty Mouse Makes a Move

Filed under: UFC, Rankings, BantamweightsDemetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson is the next big thing in the bantamweight division in mixed martial arts. Or maybe the next little thing.

Johnson is small even by bantamweight standards (if the UFC ever adds …

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Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson is the next big thing in the bantamweight division in mixed martial arts. Or maybe the next little thing.

Johnson is small even by bantamweight standards (if the UFC ever adds a 125-pound flyweight class, he’ll probably join it), but he showed once again in his UFC 130 victory over Miguel Torres that he has strong enough wrestling that he can take down bigger opponents, keep them down, and grind out decisions. And Johnson is so quick moving in and out that he has managed to avoid the “boring” label that’s too often fastened to fighters who rely on their wrestling like that.

There’s no telling how far the 24-year-old Johnson can go, but he’s already come a long way: See just how high he is on the bantamweight board below.

(Number in parentheses is the fighter’s rank in the last bantamweight list.)

1. Dominick Cruz (1): The champion is now less than a month away from his long-awaited rematch with Urijah Faber at UFC 132. In that fight, Faber retained the WEC featherweight title and handed Cruz the only loss of his career. This time Cruz is the champion, and the favorite.

2. Urijah Faber (2): Faber beat Cruz handily last time, but the big question is whether he’s as good a fighter now as he was then. The 32-year-old Faber has looked like he’s slowing down in the last couple of years, while the 25-year-old Cruz is still improving. It’s a tough fight to call.

3. Joseph Benavidez (3): His fight with Eddie Wineland in August in Milwaukee will be a good challenge for Benavidez, who is 14-2 in his MMA career, with both losses coming by decision against Cruz.

4. Brian Bowles (4): The Cruz-Faber main event isn’t the only big bantamweight fight at UFC 132: Bowles fights Takeya Mizugaki on the undercard. A Bowles win could set him up for the next shot at the Cruz-Faber winner.

5. Demetrious Johnson (NR): The UFC really ought to give Johnson a pay raise. Earning $6,000 to show and a $6,000 bonus for winning just isn’t enough for a fighter who’s in the Top 5 of his weight class. Johnson isn’t a big draw now, but he looks like a future title contender, and a long-term contract extension would seem to make sense for both the UFC and Johnson.

6. Scott Jorgensen (6): Jorgensen showed off some very impressive ground and pound against Ken Stone at the Ultimate Fighter Finale, with a brutal right hand to Stone’s chin from inside Stone’s guard, knocking him cold. Jorgensen was outclassed by Cruz when they fought for the bantamweight title in December, and I wouldn’t give him much of a chance in a rematch, but he’s a threat to anyone else in the division.

7. Miguel Torres (5): It’s tough to see the way Torres has fallen: He’s lost three of his last five after starting his career 37-1. Torres still has plenty of good fights left in him, but it’s probably not realistic to think he’ll ever get the bantamweight title back.

8. Brad Pickett (NR): Pickett was supposed to fight Torres at UFC 130, but an injury forced him out of the fight and Johnson took his spot. Pickett beat Johnson in April of 2010, and you could make an argument that he deserves to be ranked higher than Johnson because of that, but I have Johnson ahead of Pickett based on how much Johnson looks like he’s improved in the last 14 months.

9. Eddie Wineland (8): Wineland lost to Faber in March but gave him a much tougher fight than most people expected, and now he’s got a big fight with Benavidez in August. Wineland has been around a long time (he was the first WEC featherweight champion), and sometimes that makes people forget that he’s only 26 years old and is still getting better.

10. Renan Barão (9): Barao’s unanimous decision victory over Cole Escovedo at UFC 130 runs his incredible streak to 26 straight wins (with one no contest mixed in). It’s time to see how Barao does against Top 10 competition.

 

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Case of Deja Vu for Brian Bowles in Win Over Damacio Page

Filed under: UFCLOUISVILLE, Ky. – If it had happened in a movie, the details surrounding the finish would’ve been so far-fetched no one would believe it.

After a layoff of nearly one year to the day, Brian Bowles returned to work Thursday night for a…

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Brian BowlesLOUISVILLE, Ky. – If it had happened in a movie, the details surrounding the finish would’ve been so far-fetched no one would believe it.

After a layoff of nearly one year to the day, Brian Bowles returned to work Thursday night for a rematch that even he found to be a bit strange when offered to him. After all, his first fight with Damacio Page, some two and a half years prior, had ended with guillotine submission win for Bowles at 3:30 of the first round.

What more did Bowles need to prove against Page? That he could submit him with a guillotine again? Done. But with the same end time in the first? No. Too crazy to be believable. Except that’s what Bowles did at UFC on Versus 3. Not a bad way to make a UFC debut.

“When I heard (the time) at the end I thought, ‘Man, that sounds familiar,’ ” Bowles said after the win. “It’s a little ironic. I didn’t really catch on until in the back, everyone was telling me it was the same exact time, same submission, same everything – a little weird.”

Damacio Page Looking to Avenge Old Loss to Brian Bowles at UFC on Versus 3

Filed under: UFCLOUISVILLE, Ky. – There are fights that scream out “Rematch!” Edgar-Maynard … Sonnen-Silva … Penn-Fitch … Bowles-Page?

In the pantheon of MMA fights begging to get a reboot, Brian Bowles vs. Damacio Page likely was not at the to…

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Damacio Page participates at the UFC on Versus 3 workouts.LOUISVILLE, Ky. – There are fights that scream out “Rematch!” Edgar-Maynard … Sonnen-Silva … Penn-Fitch … Bowles-Page?

In the pantheon of MMA fights begging to get a reboot, Brian Bowles vs. Damacio Page likely was not at the top of many lists. But Thursday, at UFC on Versus 3, the two bantamweights will get back together to rehash a bout they had 31 months ago, a fight won by Bowles with a relatively trouble-free first-round submission.

But with Bowles coming back after a year-long layoff, and Page having a long layoff of his own recently, Page said the rematch makes perfect sense.

Brian Bowles Anxious for UFC Debut After ‘Awful’ Layoff

Filed under: UFC, NewsLOUISVILLE, Ky. – What sounds like a dream to dream to plenty of people – being forced out of work and onto the couch due to injuries – was driving Brian Bowles nuts.

“It was awful,” Bowles said Tuesday. “Not only was I not figh…

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Brian BowlesLOUISVILLE, Ky. – What sounds like a dream to dream to plenty of people – being forced out of work and onto the couch due to injuries – was driving Brian Bowles nuts.

“It was awful,” Bowles said Tuesday. “Not only was I not fighting – some of the time, I wasn’t training. All you’ve got is a lot of time to sit around and think about what you could be doing and watching (other fighters) on TV, watching them have success. And in my mind, I’m thinking I could beat those people that are having success. It’s a little depressing, but (I just) had to know that I’m going to be back and I’ll do well.”

Bowles (8-1, 5-1 WEC), the former WEC bantamweight champion, finally gets back to work Thursday at UFC on Versus 3 in a rematch against Damacio Page – his first fight since losing his 135-pound title to Dominick Cruz at WEC 47 a year ago.

WEC 53 Bonuses Go to Pettis, Henderson, Wineland, Roller

Filed under: UFC, WEC, NewsGLENDALE, ARIZ. – The WEC handed out bonus awards for the final time Thursday night at WEC 53 at Jobing.com Arena outside of Phoenix.

Hosting its final event before merging into fellow Zuffa promotion UFC, the WEC gave out …

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GLENDALE, ARIZ. – The WEC handed out bonus awards for the final time Thursday night at WEC 53 at Jobing.com Arena outside of Phoenix.

Hosting its final event before merging into fellow Zuffa promotion UFC, the WEC gave out its customary $10,000 bonus awards to four fighters following the event. And all four came from the event’s preliminary card, which saw five of seven fights end with first-round knockouts or submissions.

WEC co-founder and general manager Reed Harris announced at the post-fight press conference that the bonus awards went to Eddie Wineland, Shane Roller, Anthony Pettis and Ben Henderson.