UFC Fight Night 29: Maia vs. Shields — Live Results and Commentary


(“Alright homey, let’s give these fans what they paid for — 25 minutes of evenly-matched grappling stalemates.” / Photo via Getty)

Let’s be honest, Demian Maia vs. Jake Shields may turn out to be the most piss-break worthy UFC main event since Mousasi vs. Latifi. Luckily, the supporting card for tonight’s UFC Fight Night 29 card is loaded with the kind of action-packed Brazil vs. The World matchups that the local fans go nuts for, including Thiago Silva’s absolute-must-win fight against Matt Hamill, and the freaky welterweight debut of Rousimar Palhares (who was not looking too good at the weigh-ins, by the way). Plus: Breast cancer awareness advocate Erick Silva faces off against Dong Hyun Kim, Fabio Maldonado slugs it out with Joey Beltran, and Brazilian Arianny enters our lives once again.

Handling the play-by-play for the FOX Sports 1 main card is Seth Falvo, who will be stacking live results and his own deep thoughts after the jump beginning at 7 p.m. ET. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please toss your own thoughts into the comments section.


(“Alright homey, let’s give these fans what they paid for — 25 minutes of evenly-matched grappling stalemates.” / Photo via Getty)

Let’s be honest, Demian Maia vs. Jake Shields may turn out to be the most piss-break worthy UFC main event since Mousasi vs. Latifi. Luckily, the supporting card for tonight’s UFC Fight Night 29 card is loaded with the kind of action-packed Brazil vs. The World matchups that the local fans go nuts for, including Thiago Silva’s absolute-must-win fight against Matt Hamill, and the freaky welterweight debut of Rousimar Palhares (who was not looking too good at the weigh-ins, by the way). Plus: Breast cancer awareness advocate Erick Silva faces off against Dong Hyun Kim, Fabio Maldonado slugs it out with Joey Beltran, and Brazilian Arianny enters our lives once again.

Handling the play-by-play for the FOX Sports 1 main card is Seth Falvo, who will be stacking live results and his own deep thoughts after the jump beginning at 7 p.m. ET. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please toss your own thoughts into the comments section.

Preliminary card results
Igor Araujo def. Ildemar Alcantara by unanimous decision
Yan Cabral def. David Mitchell by unanimous decision
Chris Cariaso def. Iliarde Santos by TKO, 4:31 Round Two
Alan Patrick def. Garett Whiteley by TKO, 3:45 Round One

Please stand by…

Good evening everyone – pleasure for me to be bringing you live results. I hope you didn’t buy into that “deep thoughts” nonsense that Ben tried to sell you on. Honestly, if I make it through this with only one semi-related GIF, only one obscure professional wrestling reference, and only five hundred typos, I’ll consider this liveblog a smashing success.

AND WE ARE LIVE!!!

I happen to be watching the fights this evening from the classiest place imaginable. Well, classiest place that will allow me to furiously tap at a keyboard and swear at a television, that is (I’m at a suburban Buffalo Wild Wings outside of New Orleans. Judge me, bro). KenFlo’s hair looks magnificent, there’s an Ultimate Fighter preview on tv, and all is right in the world. Alright, let’s do this:

Raphael Assuncao vs. T.J. Dillashaw

Round One: Nice leg kick from Raphael to start us of. Dillashaw is swinging for the fences early, but not really connecting. They’re feeling each other out, throwing leg kicks that occasionally land. Dillashaw with a nice takedown, but Assuncao is soon back to his feet. Head kick from Dillashaw gets caught by Assuncao, but Dillashaw escapes. There’s a scramble, and Dillashaw not has Assuncao’s back! He’s working for a standing rear-naked choke, and Assuncao is now on the mat. He’s got room to breathe though. Dillashaw gives up on the choke attempt, and Assuncao manages to escape. They’re back on their feet now. Dillashaw attempts a front kick as the round comes to an end.

Round Two: They touch gloves, and Assuncao immediately throws a leg kick. Another one lands for Assuncao. He now attempts a head kick, but it misses. Dillashaw now does the same thing. Dillashaw throws a body kick, and Assuncao catches it, landing a nice straight. Dillashaw lands another takedown, pinning Assuncao against the cage. They’re back to their feet, and Dillashaw throws another head kick. Assuncao trips, then attempts a takedown that is stuffed by Dillashaw. Once again, Dillashaw has Assuncao’s back, but Assuncao escapes and we’re back to the feet. Lots of blood now, but I can’t tell who is bleeding.

Um, is this a mid-round commercial break? Dafuq?

Round Three: We’re back, and both guys are feeling each other out with the occasional leg kick.  So far, I got Dillashaw winning both rounds…you know, in case you care to trust the guy who just got confused by a commercial break. Assuncao catches another kick, and works for another takedown that Dillashaw stuffs immediately. Dillashaw appears to be cut above his right eye. Two minutes left in this one. Assuncao is landing some nice counter strikes, but unless he gets the KO, I think it’ll be too little too late. One minute left now, and Assuncao misses with a kick. Assuncao now has Dillashaw clinched up against the cage, but Dillashaw escapes. This fight comes to an end, and I have Dillashaw taking it, 29-28. Let’s see if the refs agree…

Only one does. Raphael Assuncao def. T.J. Dillashaw by split decision.

Rousimar Palhares vs. Mike Pierce

Round One:Pierce immediately rushes Palhares, and immediately regrets his decision by nearly getting caught in a heel hook. He escapes, and proceeds to get caught in a heel hook that actually ends the fight.

Official Result: Rousimar Palhares def. Mike Pierce via submission (heel hook), 0:31 of Round One. Bold prediction [/sarcasm]: This will be the submission of the night.

We’ve now got Chael Sonnen and Brian Stann doing their best to convince us that Thiago Silva vs. Matt Hamill will be worth watching. That’s neat, I guess…

That segment is wisely followed up by a UFC 166 preview.

Fabio Maldonado vs. Joey Beltran

Round One: They touch gloves, and Beltran is throwing combinations early and often. He now has Fabio clinched against the cage, and…ouch, that’s gotta hurt. Is it me, or is Maldonado like, reaaalllllyyyy prone to nut shots? Okay, we’re back. Beltran is throwing, but Maldonado is doing a good job avoiding his punches. They clinch against the cage again, and Beltran looks for a standing guillotine. Maldonado with a few nice body shots, and Beltran is now incorporating a wall-and-stall heavy offense, with a few knees and elbows sprinkled in . Beltran swings for the fences, but Maldonado avoids his haymakers. He can’t escape from the cage though. Beltran lands a nice straight right, and Fabio seems dazed. The round ends with Maldonado taunting Beltran, who I think was busy enough to take the round.

Round Two: Maldonado begins the round with a double thumbs-up. I approve. Beltran is throwing some heavy strikes, but Maldonado is doing a nice job avoiding and countering. Beltran rushes Maldonado against the cage, and both men are now letting their hands go. Beltran clinches Maldonado against the cage, and lands a really nice knee. Yamasaki separates them, as Maldonado appears to have dropped his mouth guard. Beltran attempts to get Fabio back against the cage, but Maldonado gets away. This fight now has both men clinching in the center of the cage, throwing body shots. They separate, with Beltran blitzing Maldonado in an attempt to get his back against the cage, as this round comes to an end. Good fight.

Round Three: We’ve got more combinations, more Beltran clinching against the cage, a foul (this time Beltran is on the business end), blood, more clinching, some nice knees from Beltran, and these two hug it out at the end of the fight. What can I say, I decided to be efficient this round.

Fabio Maldonado def. Joey Beltran via split decision.

Thiago Silva vs. Matt Hamill

I do not feel good about this…

Round One: Hamill has officially lasted longer than Mike Pierce did…so, you know, there’s that. Leg kick Hamill. And another, that Silva counters with a huge right hand. Leg kick Silva. Hamill with a nice body shot there. Two minutes left in the round, with Silva missing with a vicious haymaker. Hamill is doing a good job avoiding Silva’s heavier shopts, but Silva has had success with leg kicks throughout the round. Much closer first round than I was anticipating.

Round Two: Hamill catches Silva early, but Silva recovers. Hamill is keeping his hands dangerously low, as Silva is still catching Hamill with leg kicks. Some awkward, slow combinations from Hamill…that Silva barely misses. My this fight is sad. Silva now has Hamill’s back and is throwing punches, but Hamill escapes. The fight returns to a slow, sloppy kickboxing match, until Hamill takes Silva’s back against the cage. Hamill now has Silva on the ground, but can’t finish the fight before this round mercifully comes to an end.

Round Three: You know what? Screw liveblogging this fight. Play us off, wrestler GIF.

Thiago Silva def. Matt Hamill via unanimous decision.

Erick Silva vs. Dong-Hyun Kim

Whoa, technical difficulties here! Don’t get too excited though, because I’m back. Anyways, Kim’s grinding style works well in neutralizing Silva for most of the fight, and then Kim connects with a HUGE overhand right left, knocking Silva out cold. Awesome victory for Kim!

Dong-Hyun Kim def. Erick Silva via KO, 3:01 Round Two

Main event time!

Demian Maia vs. Jake Shields

Round One: No glove touch here, as Shields opens up with some leg kicks. Maia shoots for a takedown, and now has Shields against the cage looking for the takedown. He eventually gets it, and is in Shields’ guard. Maia looks to transition, but Shields’ butterfly guard is strong, and is controlling Maia’s hips well. Shields gets to his feet, and works for a takedown of his own now. Maia reverses, and lands another takedown. Shields gets up, but gives Maia his back in the process. Shields escapes, and gets Maia down. Maia has shields in his half guard, and gains full guard as Shields attempts to pass to side control. Shields attempts to pass guard, but Maia isn’t having it. Shields throws a few punches now, as Maia is now throwing punches from the bottom. The round ends with Shields in Maia’s guard.

Round Two: Shields opens the round with a few kicks, and then shoots for a takedown. Maia stuffs it, and looks for a takedown of his own now. Shields counters that takedown, and is in Maia’s half guard against the cage. Maia has full guard now. Shields is working for elbows, as Maia looks for a way back to his feet. Shields is back in Maia’s half guard, as Maia looks for a triangle. Shields avoids it, as Maia uses the butterfly guard to try to get a little space. Shields is content to control space – not exactly a bad strategy when you’re grappling against a guy like Maia. To Maia’s credit, he’s been looking for submissions and passes for the entire round, as this one comes to an end.

Round Three: Shields with another leg kick, and throws a head kick as well. Maia with a straight left, and misses with another one. Body shot Maia. Big left from Maia, as Shields decides he’s done pretending to be a kickboxer and shoots for a takedown. Maia reverses it, and now has Shields against the cage. Shields counters the takedown nicely, and now they’re back on the feet. Maia rocks Shields, and has Shields’ back. He gets the takedown, and has Shields’ back. AWESOME reversal from Shields, and he’s in Maia’s guard. Both guys are punching each other from Maia’s guard, as Shields now passes to Maia’s half-guiard. Maia throwing some ineffective punches from the bottom, as Shields begins to throw a few hammerfists. Shields throws a few elbows, as this round comes to an end.

Round Four: They feel each other out, and Shields rushes in for a double-leg takedown. Shields has Maia against the cage, but Maia reverses, and throws a knee against the cage. Shields reverses position now, and the ref has seen enough. He separates them, and Shields immediately shoots for a single leg. He’s unable to get it, and looks frustrated. He shoots for another, and Maia stuffs it. Maia is in Shields’ guard, with just under two minutes to go. Maia with some body shots, and we’ve got yet another stand-up. Eh, I’ve seen more than enough sloppy kickboxing from Silva/Hamill, but it’s not the worst stand-up I’ve seen. Maia gets the better of the exchanges as this round comes to an end. Both guys look exhausted.

Round Five: It’s been a close fight, as Shields is working his jab early and often to start things off. Maia is throwing some heavy shots, but he’s coming up short with most of them. Shields shoots for a takedown, but Maia stuffs it. Shields with a kick. Shields shoots for another takedown, but Maia stays on his feet. Maia now has Shields against the cage, but Shields escapes, and we’re treated to more grapplers impersonating kickboxers. Delightful. Maia lands a nice left hand, and Shields lands a kick. Shields shoots for another takedown, but Maia sprawls. Shields has Maia against the cage, but Maia works for a standing kimura. The ref separates them with less than thirty seconds to go. Maia is swinging for the fences, but Shields manages to survive until the end of the fight.

Tough call on who won this one…

The official decision is in: Jake Shields def. Demian Maia via split decision.

Eh, my parlay paid off, so I’m pretty excited. Interesting night of fights. We’ll have plenty to discuss tomorrow.

 


There Will Be Bear Hugs: Erick Silva vs. Dong Hyun Kim in the Works for TBD October UFC Event

(Yup, that’s Kim and Sexyama appearing in the most intricately choreographed, not to mention dark, pop music video since “Thriller.” Koreans, man.)

After suffering his first career setback at the hands of Jon Fitch last year*, Brazilian up-and-comer Erick Silva — who has always reminded me of one of those impossibly good-looking antagonists from an 80’s fight movie, just sayin’ — bounced back into the win column with a first round SOTN-earning reverse triangle armbar of Jason High (who just cannot catch a f*cking break in the UFC) at UFC on FUEL 10 in June. According to SporTV Globo, Silva will now face notorious grapplefucker Dong Hyun Kim at one of the UFC’s October scheduled events. Hint: It’s probably the one in Brazil.

In his past two contests, Kim has clung to Paulo Thiago and Siyar Bahadurzada like a shower curtain in a slight breeze en route to a pair of UD victories, improving his UFC record to 8-2-1 NC with exactly 1 stoppage victory. So let’s hope that Silva has drastically improved his takedown defense since the Fitch fight, or we’ll surely be in for another grip-n-trip clinic. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

*And by the transitive property of MMA Math, a 10-second submission to Josh Burkman as well.

J. Jones


(Yup, that’s Kim and Sexyama appearing in the most intricately choreographed, not to mention dark, pop music video since “Thriller.” Koreans, man.)

After suffering his first career setback at the hands of Jon Fitch last year*, Brazilian up-and-comer Erick Silva — who has always reminded me of one of those impossibly good-looking antagonists from an 80′s fight movie, just sayin’ — bounced back into the win column with a first round SOTN-earning reverse triangle armbar of Jason High (who just cannot catch a f*cking break in the UFC) at UFC on FUEL 10 in June. According to SporTV Globo, Silva will now face notorious grapplefucker Dong Hyun Kim at one of the UFC’s October scheduled events. Hint: It’s probably the one in Brazil.

In his past two contests, Kim has clung to Paulo Thiago and Siyar Bahadurzada like a shower curtain in a slight breeze en route to a pair of UD victories, improving his UFC record to 8-2-1 NC with exactly 1 stoppage victory. So let’s hope that Silva has drastically improved his takedown defense since the Fitch fight, or we’ll surely be in for another grip-n-trip clinic. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

*And by the transitive property of MMA Math, a 10-second submission to Josh Burkman as well.

J. Jones

UFC on Fuel 8 Results: What We Learned from Siyar Bahadurzada vs. Dong Hyun Kim

Siyar Bahadurzada and Dong Hyun Kim kicked off the main-card portion of UFC on Fuel TV 8 in less-than-dramatic fashion.  Going into the fight, many experts saw two likely outcomes: Bahadurzada would score the knockout, or Kim would grind out a dec…

Siyar Bahadurzada and Dong Hyun Kim kicked off the main-card portion of UFC on Fuel TV 8 in less-than-dramatic fashion. 

Going into the fight, many experts saw two likely outcomes: Bahadurzada would score the knockout, or Kim would grind out a decision. 

Unfortunately for the violence monger in all of us, we were treated to the latter result as Kim’s grappling prowess proved too much for the Afghan sensation to overcome. 

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

Real talk: This fight was pretty forgettable. If we’re lucky, Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones will break into our houses, flash that little memory eraser they have and we will forget each dreadful moment of non-action in this fight. 

Kim showcased a smothering top game, and he opened up in the final minutes of the fight with some inspired ground-and-pound. But for the most part, this was the textbook definition of a victory via “lay and pray.” 

 

What We Learned About Siyar Bahadurzada

Bahadurzada came into this fight riding an impressive seven-fight winning streak, and his knockout power was evident in his UFC debut as he starched veteran Paulo Thiago in less than one minute at UFC on Fuel TV 2. 

He could not recapture that former glory, though, and he showed some gaping holes in his ground game. 

Bahadurzada could not avoid the takedown, he could not mount any sort of offense from his back and he could not escape back to his feet once the fight hit the canvas. 

If he wants to take the next step in the big show, he has to take these aspects of the fight game seriously and come out better prepared to handle strong grapplers in the future. 

 

What We Learned About Dong Hyun Kim

Dong Hyun Kim did not show us anything new in this fight. 

We knew he was a strong grappler, and we knew he was not a finisher. Basically, this fight went exactly as one would expect if somebody told you ahead of time that Kim would win.  

 

What’s Next for Bahadurzada?

“The Great” tumbles a bit in the welterweight rankings with the loss, but his knockout power makes him a fearsome opponent for anybody at 170 pounds. 

Next up for him should be Erick Silva, a promising, explosive up-and-comer who was stifled by a strong grappler in Jon Fitch in his last outing. 

Let’s see which of these prospects is for real. 

 

What’s Next for Kim?

It wasn’t pretty, but Kim did exactly what he needed to do to climb the ever-lengthening welterweight ladder at UFC on Fuel TV 8. 

With matchups like Jake Ellenberger vs. Nate Marquardt and Carlos Condit vs. Johny Hendricks set for UFC 158 and a rumored matchup of Tarec Saffiedine vs. Demian Maia in the works, Kim’s quest for UFC gold is a bit clogged at the moment. 

I think a fight with Canadian standout Rory MacDonald (once he heals up, of course) could be fun, otherwise, the winner of Marquardt vs. Ellenberger makes the most immediate sense to me. 

For fans of MMA, heavy metal or general absurdity, Follow @HunterAHomistek

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UFC on FUEL TV 8: Is Siyar Bahadurzada a Future Title Contender?

Win or lose, don’t sleep on Siyar Bahadurzada when he competes. Though it may prove a bit early to tell right now, the man possesses the makings of a future legend, and if anyone possesses the qualities needed to contend for the UFC welterweight title …

Win or lose, don’t sleep on Siyar Bahadurzada when he competes. Though it may prove a bit early to tell right now, the man possesses the makings of a future legend, and if anyone possesses the qualities needed to contend for the UFC welterweight title it’s Bahadurzada.

The rise of many welterweights in itself scares the MMA world because of how quickly they elevate to title contention, but Bahadurzada‘s rise through the ranks scares in the manner of how it came more than it does in the sense of how quickly it happened.

Recall if you will the particulars of Bahadurzada‘s 21-4-1 record. Of the 21 wins, 11 of them come by a form of knockout, with four of those 11 wins coming by a straight-up knockout blow. Of course, we all remember how Bahadurzada patiently waited for his moment to strike against Paulo Thiago prior to knocking the Brazilian out cold.

However, the knockouts tell only part of the tale. Bahadurzada may go to the ground with Dong Hyun Kim tonight at UFC on Fuel TV 8, and if he does, he will have the opportunity to showcase what he can do on the ground, something few ever mention with Bahadurzada. Perhaps due to the results he achieves with his knockout power, people overlook that he owns six submission victories with five wins via a form of a submission hold.

In the past, Kim has shown that he can get taken down and controlled, and against a varied striking arsenal, he can find himself overwhelmed. As scary as Bahadurzada‘s knockout power proves in any fight, his more underrated aspects, which help him complete his game as a mixed martial artist, can bring a wild card to any one of his fights, where his opponents will surely prepare for a one-trick pony and wind up shocked as they succumb to defeat.

In a division dominated by welterweight kingpin Georges St-Pierre, a man long regarded as one of the sport’s most complete fighters, excelling in every aspect of the sport proves a great deal of significance. Bahadurzada knows he will need to show his stuff in all aspects of the sport, but his ability to rise to the occasion and perform in those areas, even if he holds no fondness for submissions or decisions, will pay dividends as he eventually finds himself in the UFC welterweight title scene.

Win or lose against the smothering judoka Kim, Bahadurzada will prove it before he ends his time in the UFC. If not, he will definitely go down swinging in his attempt to prove his skeptics wrong.

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Dong Hyun Kim vs. Siyar Bahadurzada: Head-to-Toe Breakdown

UFC on Fuel 8 in Japan is looking to be a great event so far, headlined by sluggers Brian Stann and Wanderlei Silva. That is not the only good fight, though. The card is already stacked.One of the fights to look forward to is between Afghani-born Siyar…

UFC on Fuel 8 in Japan is looking to be a great event so far, headlined by sluggers Brian Stann and Wanderlei Silva. That is not the only good fight, though. The card is already stacked.

One of the fights to look forward to is between Afghani-born Siyar Bahadurzada and South Korean grappler Dong Hyun Kim. It is a great style matchup that could catapult either man into the top 10.

Here is a head-to-toe breakdown of this anticipated showdown.

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Dong Hyun Kim Dismisses Bahadurzada’s Name Recognition, Bahadurzada Fires Back

You have to love the moxie of Dong Hyun Kim. After defeating Nate Diaz at UFC 125, he immediately took to the microphone and uttered the words, “My name is Stun Gun and I want GSP.”Yes, the call-out was one of those moments that drew a coll…

You have to love the moxie of Dong Hyun Kim. After defeating Nate Diaz at UFC 125, he immediately took to the microphone and uttered the words, “My name is Stun Gun and I want GSP.”

Yes, the call-out was one of those moments that drew a collective eye roll from those watching the card, but hey, go big or go home, right? 

The UFC didn’t seem to think that a win over a lightweight competing in the wrong division was enough to earn Kim a title shot so they threw him in the cage against Carlos Condit at UFC 132.

That fight didn’t turn out so well for Kim.

A flying knee and a flurry of strikes on the ground ended his night at the 2:58 mark of Round 1.

Since then, we haven’t heard a peep about Kim wanting anything to do with UFC welterweight kingpin GSP

Since the knockout loss to Condit, Kim has gone 2-1 in the UFC, defeating Sean Pierson and Paulo Thiago by decision while losing to Demian Maia via TKO. Granted the Maia loss was somewhat freaky, as a muscle spasm was the root cause of the defeat, but a loss is a loss.

The UFC has matched Kim up with Siyar Bahadurzada for his next bout, which will take place on the UFC on Fuel 8 card from Japan, and Kim is none too happy about the match up, telling Fighters Only:

I’m a bit disappointed I couldn’t find a tape of Siyar in a grueling, grappling-type fight. Because so many people think I will win easily I have to be extra careful not to underestimate him. I didn’t expect to be offered Siyar Bahadurzada. I wanted a fight with a more experienced fighter with name value.  

There’s a reason that Kim can’t find that tape on Bahadurzada and that reason is that he has knocked out his last five opponents (four in the first round), including his opponent in his UFC debut, Paulo Thiago. Yes, the same fighter that Kim defeated via unanimous decision. The difference being that Bahadurzada’s fight against Thiago lasted all of 48 seconds and left Thiago laying face down on the mat for the first knockout loss of his 19-fight, professional career.

If Kim wants to watch tape on what Bahadurzada plans on doing, he should probably check that one out, it won’t take long.

Bahadurzada has evidently gotten wind of Kim’s comments and he seems to feel that maybe, just maybe it’s not his lack of name recognition that has Kim balking at the fight, but fear:

Regardless of what either fighter thinks of the other’s name recognition or talents, this is an important fight for both men. Both Bahadurzada and Kim reside outside the Top 10 in the welterweight rankings, but most likely not too far out of that elite group, a dominant win here and their next fight should be against a Top-10 opponent.

Kim is wrong about the name recognition of Bahadurzada, his name does carry some weight, thanks to the knockout of Thiago, but he is correct about one thing, he cannot underestimate Bahadurzada.

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