We’ve all seen it happen before.In team sports, a huge favorite will ahead of their next opponent toward a more elite matchup in the future. The favorite ends up coming out flat and getting upset by the underdog.Could Chael Sonnen be heading towards th…
We’ve all seen it happen before.
In team sports, a huge favorite will ahead of their next opponent toward a more elite matchup in the future. The favorite ends up coming out flat and getting upset by the underdog.
Could Chael Sonnen be heading towards the same fate?
Let’s face it, Sonnen is a huge favorite over Forrest Griffin. The Vegas line doesn’t show him as the massive favorite I am going to make him out to be, but anybody who saw Griffin/Ortiz III knows Griffin’s best days are far behind him.
It would be irresponsible to believe Sonnen isn’t smart enough to take Griffin seriously. If I have learned anything over the years from the way Sonnen acts, it is that everything he does is calculated. It would be reassuring, however, to see him focus some of his public energy towards his upcoming fight.
Sonnen and Griffin will fight at UFC 155 on December 29. Yet we are still reading and writing about Jon Jones rejecting a fight against Chael Sonnen in an effort to save UFC 151. Sonnen hasn’t said much about his fight against Griffin, and he doesn’t appear to be letting go of his intentions of talking himself into a title fight with Jon Jones.
Sonnen needs to focus on Griffin because the validity of everything he says will begin to diminish should he lose this fight. Fans have soaked up the media circus Sonnen creates with his outlandish and comical statements. But what good are those statements if he goes on to lose three out of his last five fights?
A loss to Griffin will also force the UFC to throw Sonnen towards the rear of title contention for any weight class. Fans are already confused as to how he could have potentially been given a title shot against Jones.
It brings back memories of people being up in arms about Brock Lesnar getting the title fight against Randy Couture.
When Sonnen and Griffin fight, I can’t lose. I have enjoyed watching both fight over the years. I would hate to see Sonnen’s career fade away. I believe his creative way of presenting himself provides a huge value for the UFC.
But, if he wants to continue his relevancy in the sport, he needs to spend more time calling out Griffin and less time dwelling on a fight opportunity with Jones that never transpired.
Joe Chacon is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and a Staff Writer for Operation Sports. You can follow him on Twitter @JoeChacon.
Jesse Katz has been a fan of martial arts for a long time. These days, when someone says they’re a fan of martial arts, you can probably assume that they’re talking about the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and you’d be right in most cases. The UF…
Jesse Katz has been a fan of martial arts for a long time.
These days, when someone says they’re a fan of martial arts, you can probably assume that they’re talking about the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and you’d be right in most cases. The UFC is the largest martial arts brand in the world, and they’re the ones doing the most to spread the good word of jiu-jitsu, kickboxing, karate and wrestling to the masses.
But Katz was a fan long before there was much of a UFC, and certainly long before Forrest Griffin and Stephan Bonnar waged a classic fight that would help launch the UFC into the mainstream and, as luck would have it, eventually lead to a signature line for Roots of Fight, the clothing company Katz founded earlier this year.
But we’ll get into that part of the story a little bit later.
Katz created Roots of Fight because he wanted to tell interesting stories about the history of martial arts. There were dozens—perhaps even hundreds—of prominent T-shirt companies flooding the market with all manner of skulls, angels wings, swords and crosses.
The formula for creating an MMA-themed shirt was fairly predictable: Take a fighter’s name, splash it across the top and then fill the rest of the shirt with tribal designs or armor or whatever else you think might represent cool dudes who fight for living. They weren’t pretty, but they were a license to print cash.
Katz wanted no part of that racket.
“I saw that there was a hole in this industry, where there just wasn’t anybody talking about the history of the sport,” Katz said. “I felt that I could do this mix of storytelling and apparel in an environment where there was nobody digging into it.”
Katz worked on the concept for Roots of Fight for over two years before finally launching the company early in 2012. “These are the early days,” Katz offers when I ask him what the formative days of his company were like. “We just launched this on January 17, so it’s only six months old.”
Katz’s products are unlike anything else on the market. For starters, they’re built on a foundation of clean and great design. They’re something you can wear in public without the fear of being pigeonholed as a violence-loving, beer-swilling bro.
But they’re also a great conversation starter, because they’re not just a collection of random images, clip art and known memes associated with mixed martial arts. They’re a jumping-off point into the history of fighting, not a celebration of the culture surrounding the UFC. That’s an important distinction.
“I think what separates us—and what we strive for in order to separate ourselves—is that we lead with story. We lead with having a point of interest. Every shirt that we make is part of a bigger story. Every component of what we do as a business is related to something that is rooted in an authentic moment or time or achievement of one of these icons, or the story of an icon,” Katz said. “This new sport of MMA moves very fast, and we didn’t see anybody else telling the history of it.
“So for us, we lead with this story explaining the rich history of all of these arts from around the world and how they’ve morphed into each other and evolved to culminate in what is today’s MMA. It just happens to lend itself really well to telling stories on T-shirts and carrying forward those stories.”
Katz’s first task for Roots of Fight was the creation of bloodlines. He matched up regions with disciplines: Israel with Krav Maga, France with savate, judo with Japan and so forth. He then anchored each of those bloodlines with an icon of the sport, to give each art its own gravity and to make a point: that these martial arts have a much bigger history than what you see on Saturday night inside the Octagon.
“Bruce Lee, Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson. These guys are global icons. They’re not just combat sports figures. They’ve been able to transcend their sport, to reach people in every corner of the globe,” Katz said.
Tyson’s role in the Roots of Fight story is quite interesting. In his early years—and perhaps even the middle ones—Tyson wasn’t the easiest man in the world to work with. But that’s all changed in recent years, as Tyson has blossomed into a media and film darling, a Broadway attraction and a man far removed from the angry young warrior he was during his heyday.
Katz said that working with Tyson on his Roots of Fight line could not have been an easier experience. They were introduced to Tyson and his wife Kiki through a mutual friend, and Katz said the entire process could not have been simpler.
“We were introduced to them through a mutual friend. We had one conversation with Kiki,” Katz said. “And literally from talking to her on a Tuesday, we flew down the next day and ended up spending the day at their house with them and their children and family, and we had a phenomenal experience. They were extremely welcoming and supportive and warm. And they really liked the project.
There’s a heavy weight that comes with this. We’ve had the good fortune of having all of these icons entrust us with their legacies, with telling their stories in a way that is respectful and authentic. It’s quite a responsibility.”
Tyson said that he’s ultimately pleased with how Katz and his company handled his image.
“We wanted to do some kind of university style and varsity style of outfits. Basically something to represent the year I unified the titles,” Tyson recently told Complex. “It’s a real cool company and when they presented the idea I just thought it was awesome.
“They did shirts for Ali, Bruce Lee and a number of other fighters. There’s just a conglomerate of connections that they’ve been associated with. I’m just proud to be involved with him.”
All of the early Roots T-shirt lines focused on the legendary figures Tyson mentioned above, but the next story they’re telling is one that might be a bit more familiar to UFC fans: the legendary battle between Griffin and Bonnar from the first Ultimate Fighter finale on April 9, 2005.
Katz was introduced to the UFC by mutual friends Alex and Shannon Lee. Katz met with the company, showed them what he was working on and said the UFC was excited by what they’d seen. Katz was approached by the promotion about creating some exclusive content for the digital version of UFC Magazine.
“They wanted us to tell some stories about their past. So we collaborated and came up with this idea of something that fits with Roots of Fight, which is all about telling the history, and something that fit into their contemporary marketing plans. We arrived at this series telling stories of UFC legends. We went down and shot Randy Couture, Forrest and Urijah Faber, and just had some great pieces with them and some great storytelling.
“This was the pivotal fight for the company. It’s largely regarded—not just by people inside the company but also by people outside of it—as the fight that made the UFC and propelled them into the successful business they are today.”
Partnering with the UFC is a huge business opportunity for anyone operating in the mixed martial arts world, and Roots of Fight is no different.
“We’re very excited by it. I’m proud to be associated with the UFC. We’re telling the story of all of the individual arts and their history and their icons,” Katz said. “But really, this is not just the largest stage for this sport, but it also has practitioners that have become the best at all of these individual arts. It’s getting unbelievable practitioners in each style that are now competing in the UFC.
“And so it’s a perfect fit for us, both marketing-wise and story-wise. We like to talk about the icons of the sport and of the individual arts, but these are the stars of today and the icons of tomorrow. It’s an unreal partnership.”
Say what you want about how Griffin has looked in the octagon as of late (Seriously, do it. Here are a few adjective suggestions: sluggish, apathetic, hairy, manic-depressive), but even we couldn’t have seen this coming. When it was announced a few days ago that Sonnen would making his return to 205 lbs at UFC 155 against FoGriff after being tarred and feathered coming up short in his rematch with Anderson Silva, we expected that he would open as a small favorite with the former Light Heavyweight champ, if not even. Despite Griffin’s aforementioned lack of firepower lately, especially considering he was riding the TRT train for his last bout, Forrest is pretty massive for a light heavyweight, and you know, already beat Sonnen once before. There is also the fact that Sonnen’s last fight in the UFC at light heavyweight ended in submission (you know which one), and that Griffin managed to catch him with that exact same submission in their first, etc…
In either case, we were dead wrong.
Currently, BestFightOdds has Sonnen listed at an even -300 over Griffin, which must be based entirely on their respective performances against Anderson Silva, with Sonnen lasting roughly six and a half rounds and Griffin lasting roughly three and a half minutes. But those were a long three and a half minutes, you guys, like watching the puppy you got for Christmas fall through the ice in your Grandma’s pond and drown in slow motion…on that very same Christmas.
Needless to say, if this blatant disrespect doesn’t light a fire under Griffin’s ass, nothing will. We feel like we’ve typed that a lot lately.
Is that line as bad as we’re making it out to be? Join us after the jump for a good old fashioned head-to-head breakdown to see if our outrage is justified.
(Just bide your time, Chael, he’s gonna walk right into that kneebar any second now.)
Say what you want about how Griffin has looked in the octagon as of late (Seriously, do it. Here are a few adjective suggestions: sluggish, apathetic, hairy, manic-depressive), but even we couldn’t have seen this coming. When it was announced a few days ago that Sonnen would making his return to 205 lbs at UFC 155 against FoGriff after being tarred and feathered coming up short in his rematch with Anderson Silva, we expected that he would open as a small favorite with the former Light Heavyweight champ, if not even. Despite Griffin’s aforementioned lack of firepower lately, especially considering he was riding the TRT train for his last bout, Forrest is pretty massive for a light heavyweight, and you know, already beat Sonnen once before. There is also the fact that Sonnen’s last fight in the UFC at light heavyweight ended in submission (you know which one), and that Griffin managed to catch him with that exact same submission in their first, etc…
In either case, we were dead wrong.
Currently, BestFightOdds has Sonnen listed at an even -300 over Griffin, which must be based entirely on their respective performances against Anderson Silva, with Sonnen lasting roughly six and a half rounds and Griffin lasting roughly three and a half minutes. But those were a long three and a half minutes, you guys, like watching the puppy you got for Christmas fall through the ice in your Grandma’s pond and drown in slow motion…on that very same Christmas.
Needless to say, if this blatant disrespect doesn’t light a fire under Griffin’s ass, nothing will. We feel like we’ve typed that a lot lately.
Is that line as bad as we’re making it out to be? Join us after the jump for a good old fashioned head-to-head breakdown to see if our outrage is justified.
AGE
Griffin: 33 (but a nearing retirement 33)
Sonnen: 35
Advantage: Somehow Sonnen
SIZE
Griffin: 6’3″, 77 inch reach, walks around at 240 lbs
Sonnen: 6’1″, 74 inch reach, walked around at 205lbs 24 hours before fights at middleweight
Advantage: Griffin by an entire Wendy’s menu
LAST TWO FIGHTS RESULTED IN
Griffin: 1st round KO loss to Mauricio Rua, razor-thin SD win over Tito Ortiz
Sonnen: Razor-thin UD win over Michael Bisping, 2nd round TKO loss to Anderson Silva
Advantage: Sonnen, we guess
REMATCH RECORD
Griffin: 3-1
Sonnen: 3-3
Advantage: Griffin
FINISHING RATIO
Griffin: 52.6% (10 finishes in 19 victories)
Sonnen: 40.7% (11 finishes in 27 victories)
Advantage: Griffin
Disadvantage: The fans
SALARY
Griffin: $125,000 to show
Sonnen: $50,000 to show
Advantage: Griffin
CAREER ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Griffin: Won inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter in arguably the greatest MMA fight of all time. Defeated Quinton Jackson when he was still relevant to become UFC Light Heavyweight Champion. Four time “Fight of the Night” winner and two time “Submission of the Night Winner”.
Sonnen: NCAA Division 1 All American. Defeated Paulo Filho at the exact moment he became irrelevant to unofficially win WEC Light Heavyweight Championship. Two time “Fight of the Night” winner. Headlined the highest live gate for a UFC event in the promotion’s history.
Advantage: Griffin, via accomplishments in the form of a belt
BOOK TITLES
Griffin: Be Ready When The Shit Goes Down: A Survival Guide to the Apocalypse and Got Fight?: 50 Zen Principles of Hand-to-Face Combat
Sonnen: The Voice of Reason: A VIP Pass to Enlightenment
Advantage: Sonnen via arrogance
WHO WORE TRT BETTER AT UFC 148
Griffin: Looked sloppy and spent by the third round, then decided to storm out of the cage shortly thereafter despite the fact that he had won
Sonnen: Managed to dominate Silva in the first round, then committed the biggest mental error of his career in the second
Advantage: Sonnen
ARREST RECORD
Griffin: None to our knowledge
Sonnen: Pled guilty to money laundering (don’t you dare call it mortgage fraud!!) and received two years probation and a $10,000 fine.
Advantage: Griffin
TWITTER PERSONA
Griffin: Rape advocate
Sonnen: Master Troller
Advantage: Sonnen
PREDICTION: Based on these completely valid, scientifically proven points, Griffin will keep Sonnen at a distance with his jab and defend just enough take downs to eek out a Split Decision victory.
Former middleweight title challenger Chael Sonnen announced on UFC Tonight last night that he would be moving up to light heavyweight and his first opponent will be Forrest Griffin.Chael Sonnen was ranked by many as the No. 2 middleweight for nearly tw…
Former middleweight title challenger Chael Sonnen announced on UFC Tonight last night that he would be moving up to light heavyweight and his first opponent will be Forrest Griffin.
Chael Sonnen was ranked by many as the No. 2 middleweight for nearly two years now and is 5-2 in his last seven fights, with his only losses coming at the hands of middleweight champion Anderson Silva.
Griffin is coming off a win against Tito Ortiz at UFC 148 and is 3-3 in his last six bouts. So does this matchup makes sense?
I believe it does.
Although Forrest Griffin’s win against Tito Ortiz wasn’t spectacular, it was still a much-needed win for the former champion. The top of the division is already mainly booked, with the champion Jon Jones meeting No. 1 contender Dan Henderson in a couple weeks, Lyoto Machida waiting for the winner of that fight and Shogun Rua and Alexander Gustafsson just announced as likely candidates for the next title challenger.
That takes out the top five guys in the division. Chael Sonnen arriving in a new division coming off a loss isn’t a top-five light heavyweight, so the decision to match him with a 6-10 fighter is a great decision.
Not to mention the fact that Griffin actually holds a win over Sonnen way back in 2003, so there is even a little story to build the fight on.
Both men are likely looking at their final chance to purse one final run at a championship, so while this fight most likely won’t propel either man to a title shot, it’ll definitely get either Sonnen or Griffin closer and back into contention at 205.
Spending most of the last 30 months as the No. 2-ranked middleweight in the world, Chael Sonnen has officially made the move to light-heavyweight. His return to 205 pounds will take place on the UFC’s year-end show on December 29 against Ultimate Fight…
Spending most of the last 30 months as the No. 2-ranked middleweight in the world, Chael Sonnen has officially made the move to light-heavyweight. His return to 205 pounds will take place on the UFC’s year-end show on December 29 against Ultimate Fighter winner Forrest Griffin.
Now that Sonnen has made the move, we have to think about where he will rank among the elite fighters who already swim in light-heavyweight waters. How will Sonnen’s victories compare to those of fighters like Lyoto Machida or Dan Henderson, who have found sustained success in the division for years?
First, we need to look at the strengths and weaknesses of Sonnen, and how those attributes will be affected in a new weight class. Then, we’ll take a glance at the level of competition that Sonnen faced at middleweight. Finally, we need to find a fair place to rank Sonnen among his new peers.
Since returning to the UFC, Sonnen has won five of his eight bouts by utilizing a takedown-centric game plan that has rendered many opponents helpless. But how will Chael’s wrestling be impacted by fighting in a new weight class?
Optimally, Chael should be competing at 185 pounds, but he will be facing other fighters who are fighting in their proper division. Does Sonnen lose the strength advantage that has helped him work opponents to the canvas? Can he take down the large light-heavyweight wrestlers like Phil Davis, Ryan Bader, Rashad Evans or Jon Jones?
Size has played a big factor in the career of both Chael and his UFC opponents. Of Sonnen’s wins, his latest two have come over former light-heavyweights who are better suited for competition at 185 pounds. Another two were decision wins over combatants who have since dropped to welterweight, and his first loss came to current welterweight Demian Maia.
So where does Chael rank? It’s safe to say that Sonnen does not have victories on par with that of the division’s top five. That is a group of elite former champions who could all enter the Hall of Fame one day.
What about the bottom half of the top 10? The Oregonian’s takedowns would be neutralized against solid wrestlers like Bader and Davis, who possess a size advantage, although he would likely fare well against a striker like Alexander Gustafsson.
It’s a toss-up to predict Sonnen vs. Lil Nog, as Nogueira would be susceptible to the takedown, but he has the standup advantage and a solid chance to secure a submission.
Chael’s UFC 155 bout with Forrest Griffin gives him an opportunity to avenge a 2003 loss. It will tell us a lot about where he belongs in his new division, although Griffin has been on the decline for some time now.
For the sake of argument, I’m willing to make it public that I plan to rank Sonnen eighth on my ballot for the official B/R MMA light-heavyweight rankings. Where do you think he fits?
With his middleweight title hopes crushed once again by Anderson Silva, Chael Sonnen has decided to return to his original home at light-heavyweight, where he’ll face off against Forrest Griffin on December 29th. Sonnen broke the news himself on yesterday’s edition of UFC Tonight. Watch the clip above to see Sonnen heap praise on Forrest as a future Hall of Famer and pioneer in the industry, before inevitably trashing 205-pound champion Jon Jones. (“I could take Jon Jones’s away belt the same as I could take his candy on Halloween, alright? He’s a little punk kid, I’d snatch it away all I want.”) The weight-class may be different, but the song remains the same.
As Chael mentioned during the UFC Tonight segment, he and Forrest actually fought once before, in the first round of an eight-man IFC tournament in September 2003 that was eventually won by Babalu. Check out the video of Forrest Griffin vs. Chael Sonnen 1 after the jump. We’re not going to tell you how it ends, but prepare to be not surprised whatsoever.
With his middleweight title hopes crushed once again by Anderson Silva, Chael Sonnen has decided to return to his original home at light-heavyweight, where he’ll face off against Forrest Griffin on December 29th. Sonnen broke the news himself on yesterday’s edition of UFC Tonight. Watch the clip above to see Sonnen heap praise on Forrest as a future Hall of Famer and pioneer in the industry, before inevitably trashing 205-pound champion Jon Jones. (“I could take Jon Jones’s away belt the same as I could take his candy on Halloween, alright? He’s a little punk kid, I’d snatch it away all I want.”) The weight-class may be different, but the song remains the same.
As Chael mentioned during the UFC Tonight segment, he and Forrest actually fought once before, in the first round of an eight-man IFC tournament in September 2003 that was eventually won by Babalu. Check out the video of Forrest Griffin vs. Chael Sonnen 1 after the jump. We’re not going to tell you how it ends, but prepare to be not surprised whatsoever.
(Props: fedemma91. Skip to the 3:10 mark for the finish.)