Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History

While mixed martial arts (MMA) should be appreciated for its beautiful intricacies and rare nuances, nobody can deny the power of an almighty head kick knockout. Vastly different than the always abundant regular knockout, head kick finishes incorporate slightly more skill and technique. From level-changing to sheer timing, landing shin to skull is one tough

The post Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History appeared first on LowKick MMA.

While mixed martial arts (MMA) should be appreciated for its beautiful intricacies and rare nuances, nobody can deny the power of an almighty head kick knockout.

Vastly different than the always abundant regular knockout, head kick finishes incorporate slightly more skill and technique. From level-changing to sheer timing, landing shin to skull is one tough cookie to bake inside of the cage.

But with a promotion like the UFC carefully pinning elite-caliber athletes against one another for over 22 years, fans have had the privilege of witnessing such perfection manifest on more than one occasion. Some are remembered for their inescapable bone-crunching sound, others for their rapid detachment of unsuspecting chins.

Based on the level of difficulty, historical importance, and downright barbarism displayed by these true marksmen, here are the six best head kick knockouts in UFC history.

The post Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History

While mixed martial arts (MMA) should be appreciated for its beautiful intricacies and rare nuances, nobody can deny the power of an almighty head kick knockout. Vastly different than the always abundant regular knockout, head kick finishes incorporate slightly more skill and technique. From level-changing to sheer timing, landing shin to skull is one tough

The post Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History appeared first on LowKick MMA.

While mixed martial arts (MMA) should be appreciated for its beautiful intricacies and rare nuances, nobody can deny the power of an almighty head kick knockout.

Vastly different than the always abundant regular knockout, head kick finishes incorporate slightly more skill and technique. From level-changing to sheer timing, landing shin to skull is one tough cookie to bake inside of the cage.

But with a promotion like the UFC carefully pinning elite-caliber athletes against one another for over 22 years, fans have had the privilege of witnessing such perfection manifest on more than one occasion. Some are remembered for their inescapable bone-crunching sound, others for their rapid detachment of unsuspecting chins.

Based on the level of difficulty, historical importance, and downright barbarism displayed by these true marksmen, here are the six best head kick knockouts in UFC history.

The post Boom Goes The Dynamite! Top Six Head Kick Knockouts In UFC History appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Remembering Greatness: Best UFC Lightweight Fights of All Time

As arguably the most talent-rich habitat in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, the UFC’s lightweight division is consistently churning out world-class killers. From reinvented champions to undefeated Russian crushers, the 155-pound roster is chock-full of savage suitors. And considering the weight class attracts the likes of the featherweight and welterweight divisions, it’s become a popular

The post Remembering Greatness: Best UFC Lightweight Fights of All Time appeared first on LowKick MMA.

As arguably the most talent-rich habitat in mixed martial arts (MMA) today, the UFC’s lightweight division is consistently churning out world-class killers.

From reinvented champions to undefeated Russian crushers, the 155-pound roster is chock-full of savage suitors. And considering the weight class attracts the likes of the featherweight and welterweight divisions, it’s become a popular landing spot for aspiring title contenders of all shapes and sizes.

But with lightweight bouts such as Rafael dos Anjos vs. Conor McGregor and Anthony Pettis vs. Eddie Alvarez looming on the horizon, we’re reminded of past divisional tilts that have helped raise the weight class to unparalleled prominence.

In accordance with the blood, sweat, and tears put forth by past lightweights, here are the five best fights in division history.

The post Remembering Greatness: Best UFC Lightweight Fights of All Time appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC on FOX 16 Highlights/Results: Dillashaw Puts the Stamp on Barao, Tate Earns Another Shot at Rousey + More

(via UFC on FOX)

It’s hard to a remember a more meteoric rise to absolute dominance than that of TJ Dillashaw, the TUF 14 runner up who will almost certainly find himself in those ever-coveted “pound-for-pound” talks following his brilliant performance against Renan Barao at UFC on FOX 16 last Saturday.

To think that, a little over a year ago, Dillashaw was being given no chance against the former “pound-for-pound” king when they first clashed in the cage is almost absurd given his pair of performances against Barao. And in the rematch, Dillashaw was arguably even more impressive, eating almost everything his Brazilian rival could throw at him while returning fire with a fury. Dillashaw’s footwork was incredible, his combinations video game-esque, and his accuracy reminiscent of early Anderson Silva. How Barao was able to withstand the final flurry that came in the 4th round was a credit to his chin, his heart, and the abnormally slow hand of Herb Dean.

Elsewhere on the FOX 16 card, Miesha Tate overcame an early onslaught, Edson Barboza and Paul Felder threw spinning sh*t, and Joe Lauzon auditioned for his post-fight career as a referee, so check out all the highlights after the jump.

The post UFC on FOX 16 Highlights/Results: Dillashaw Puts the Stamp on Barao, Tate Earns Another Shot at Rousey + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via UFC on FOX)

It’s hard to a remember a more meteoric rise to absolute dominance than that of TJ Dillashaw, the TUF 14 runner up who will almost certainly find himself in those ever-coveted “pound-for-pound” talks following his brilliant performance against Renan Barao at UFC on FOX 16 last Saturday.

To think that, a little over a year ago, Dillashaw was being given no chance against the former “pound-for-pound” king when they first clashed in the cage is almost absurd given his pair of performances against Barao. And in the rematch, Dillashaw was arguably even more impressive, eating almost everything his Brazilian rival could throw at him while returning fire with a fury. Dillashaw’s footwork was incredible, his combinations video game-esque, and his accuracy reminiscent of early Anderson Silva. How Barao was able to withstand the final flurry that came in the 4th round was a credit to his chin, his heart, and the abnormally slow hand of Herb Dean.

Elsewhere on the FOX 16 card, Miesha Tate overcame an early onslaught, Edson Barboza and Paul Felder threw spinning sh*t, and Joe Lauzon auditioned for his post-fight career as a referee, so check out all the highlights after the jump.

Miesha Tate may be a notoriously slow starter, but God damn if she doesn’t have resilience in spades. Against Jessica Eye, “Cupcake” appeared to be fighting on a time delay early, eating a hellacious series of right hands and offering next to nothing in return. But then, late in the round, Miesha seemed to decide on a dime that she was capable of doing something other than taking her opponents down. Tate landed a MONSTER right hand that floored Eye and set the tone for the rest of the fight, which Tate dominated both in the standup and grappling departments.

With the victory, Tate has once again earned the opportunity to be thrashed by Ronda Rousey at some point in the future, so, uh, yeah for that.

In the co-co main event of the evening, Edson Barboza and Paul Felder engaged in one of the most technical displays of spinning sh*t ever documented. Though Barboza’s speed advantage and hellacious shot to Felder’s testicles in the first round would ultimately lead him to victory, the fight undoubtedly earned both guys a heap of new fans.

In one of the more interesting moments of UFC on FOX 16, Joe Lauzon kicked off the main card by taking Takanori Gomi down, pounding him out, then doing Herb Dean’s job for him and calling off the fight mid-ass kicking. The resulting memes have been kind to J-Lau.

Oh right, and in judging news, no one still knows what the f*ck they’re doing.

Main card
T.J. Dillashaw def. Renan Barao via fourth-round TKO
Miesha Tate def. Jessica Eye via unanimous decision
Edson Barboza def. Paul Felder via unanimous decision
Joe Lauzon def. Takanori Gomi via first-round TKO

Undercard
Tom Lawlor def. Gian Villante via second-round KO
Jim Miller def. Danny Castillo via split decision
Ben Saunders def. Kenny Robertson via split decision
Bryan Caraway def. Eddie Wineland via unanimous decision
James Krause def. Daron Cruickshank via submission (rear-naked choke)
Andrew Holbrook def. Ramsey Nijem via split decision
Elizabeth Phillips def. Jessamyn Duke via unanimous decision
Zak Cummings def. Dominique Steele via first-round TKO (0:43)

The post UFC on FOX 16 Highlights/Results: Dillashaw Puts the Stamp on Barao, Tate Earns Another Shot at Rousey + More appeared first on Cagepotato.

Fight Night 61 Highlights/Results: Mir Obliterates Bigfoot, Matt Dwyer’s Superman Punch KO, + More

While not that enticing on paper, Fight Night 61 actually delivered some highly entertaining moments over the course of its five-hour run time, which is more than you could say for the Oscars! #BoomRoasted #NailedIt #WhatsInTheBox

In the main event of the evening, four-fight-losing-streak GOAT Frank Mir looked like he wasn’t even riding a four fight losing streak when he quickly dropped Bigfoot Silva with a left hook and OBLITERATED the Brazilian with some follow-up elbows. The win was a much needed one for the former champion, to say the very least, and one that capped off a night in which ten straight underdogs walked away with a victory. Which, again, is more than you could say for the Oscars. #BirdmanRules #F*ckEddieRedmayne

Highlights from Mir vs. Silva are above, but join us after the jump to check out the rest of the evening’s highlights, including the co-main event scrap between Michael Johnson and Edson Barboza, Matt Dwyer’s superman punch KO, and Smilin’ Sam Alvey going HAM on Cezar Ferreira.

While not that enticing on paper, Fight Night 61 actually delivered some highly entertaining moments over the course of its five-hour run time, which is more than you could say for the Oscars! #BoomRoasted #NailedIt #WhatsInTheBox

In the main event of the evening, four-fight-losing-streak GOAT Frank Mir looked like he wasn’t even riding a four fight losing streak when he quickly dropped Bigfoot Silva with a left hook and OBLITERATED the Brazilian with some follow-up elbows. The win was a much needed one for the former champion, to say the very least, and one that capped off a night in which ten straight underdogs walked away with a victory. Which, again, is more than you could say for the Oscars. #BirdmanRules #F*ckEddieRedmayne

Highlights from Mir vs. Silva are above, but join us after the jump to check out the rest of the evening’s highlights, including the co-main event scrap between Michael Johnson and Edson Barboza, Matt Dwyer’s superman punch KO, and Smilin’ Sam Alvey going HAM on Cezar Ferreira.

Johnson vs. Barboza Highlights

Mike De La Torre vs. Tiago Trator

Alvey vs. Ferreira

Dwyer vs. Patolino

Complete Fight Night 61 Results

Main card
Frank Mir def. Bigfoot Silva via first-round KO (1:40)
Michael Johnson def. Edson Barboza via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27 x2)
Sam Alvey def. Cezar Ferreira via first-round KO (3:34)
Adriano Martins def. Rustam Khabilov via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
Frankie Saenz def. Iuri Alcantara via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28)
Santiago Ponzinibbio def. Sean Strickland via unanimous decision (30-27 x3)

Undercard
Marion Reneau def. Jessica Andrade via submission (triangle choke) (1st, 1:54)
Matt Dwyer def. William Macario via first-round KO (3:14)
Mike de la Torre def. Tiago Trator via first-round TKO (2:59)
Douglas Silva de Andrade def. Cody Gibson via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 29-28)
Ivan Jorge def. Josh Shockley via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

Edson Barboza vs. Michael Johnson Added to UFC Fight Night 61 in Porto Alegre

(Barboza doing some of that spinnin’ stuff during his last fight against Bobby Green.)

The UFC announced yesterday that a fight between highly regarded lightweight contenders Edson Barboza and Michael Johnson will serve as the co-main event of UFC Fight Night 61, which goes down Sunday, February 22nd at Gigantinho Gymnasium in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The event apparently will be headlined by Rashad Evans vs. Glover Teixeira, and it is expected to air on FOX Sports 1.

Barboza has been victorious in his last two Octagon appearances, scoring a first-round TKO of Evan Dunham in July and out-pointing Bobby Green at UFC Fight Night 57 last month. Johnson has won three straight against Joe Lauzon, Gleison Tibau, and Melvin Guillared, but hasn’t competed since March due to injury.

The current lineup for UFC Fight Night 61: Evans vs. Teixeira is…


(Barboza doing some of that spinnin’ stuff during his last fight against Bobby Green.)

The UFC announced yesterday that a fight between highly regarded lightweight contenders Edson Barboza and Michael Johnson will serve as the co-main event of UFC Fight Night 61, which goes down Sunday, February 22nd at Gigantinho Gymnasium in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The event apparently will be headlined by Rashad Evans vs. Glover Teixeira, and it is expected to air on FOX Sports 1.

Barboza has been victorious in his last two Octagon appearances, scoring a first-round TKO of Evan Dunham in July and out-pointing Bobby Green at UFC Fight Night 57 last month. Johnson has won three straight against Joe Lauzon, Gleison Tibau, and Melvin Guillared, but hasn’t competed since March due to injury.

The current lineup for UFC Fight Night 61: Evans vs. Teixeira is…

Rashad Evans vs. Glover Teixeira
Edson Barboza vs. Michael Johnson
Sam Alvey vs. Cezar Ferreira
Rustam Khabilov vs. Adriano Martins
Matt Dwyer vs. William Macario
Santiago Ponzinibbio vs. Sean Strickland
Ivan Jorge vs. Josh Shockley
Wendell Oliveira vs. T.J. Waldburger