The Forward Roll: UFC 140 Edition

Filed under: UFCJon Jones is the most dominant force in MMA today. Yes, more dominant than Anderson Silva or Georges St-Pierre. That became strikingly obvious at UFC 140, when Jones choked Lyoto Machida unconscious in under two rounds.

Jones has abso…

Filed under:

Jon Jones is the most dominant force in MMA today. Yes, more dominant than Anderson Silva or Georges St-Pierre. That became strikingly obvious at UFC 140, when Jones choked Lyoto Machida unconscious in under two rounds.

Jones has absolutely crushed each of his last six opponents, finished every one of them. The last three of them were former UFC champions, a feat unprecedented.

His win over Machida wasn’t the most lopsided of his recent run, but that actually made it more valuable as an assessment tool for those of us in the analysis business. Though he was never in any real trouble against Machida in the first round, it was clear he was a bit confused about the proper approach. Meanwhile, Machida was masterfully timing his attacks off counters and clearly felt comfortable with closing the distance between them.

This was the same Machida we had seen in his best days, when he was knocking out Rashad Evans and Thiago Silva, and there was nothing to suggest that Jones could suddenly figure things out between rounds after two months of preparation had left him looking a bit lost.

But whatever advantage Machida had was completely erased between rounds.

Jones made a few slight adjustments, re-took the center of the cage and suddenly seemed to understand everything that was in front of him. Machida landed nothing of any consequence in the round, and Jones drilled him once, cut him open with a slicing elbow, dropped him with a left hand, and finally finished him with a standing guillotine.

Among UFC champs, Jones has the longest streak of consecutive finishes, one that even heavyweight champ Junior dos Santos can’t match. Because of it, he’s the most dominant force in MMA, at least for now.

On to playing fantasy matchmaker…

Jon Jones
“Bones” will get a well-deserved vacation after four lengthy camps in 2011. Meanwhile, the UFC will wait to see how January’s Rashad Evans vs. Phil Davis fight plays out. If Evans wins and comes out unscathed, the UFC will sync him up with Jones for a long-awaited fight that is guaranteed to do big business.
Prediction: Jones vs. Evans, with Memorial Day weekend of 2012 as the target date

Lyoto Machida
Machida is likely still wondering what went wrong after a strong opening round against Jones, but he’s hardly the only one who’s ever been left scratching his head at how it had all gone awry so quickly. Upon losing, Machida is in a similar position from the one he had before being paired with Jones, with the prospect of waiting since no obvious pairing for him exists right now. He’s faced a lot of the big names, already, and several of the other possibilities are locked into other fights.
Prediction: He faces Forrest Griffin

Frank Mir
For a second there, it seemed like Mir was going to be thrust into a replacement role against Brock Lesnar on short notice, but as long as Alistair Overeem passes his pre-fight drug screenings, he won’t be needed. It’s just as well. Mir would need more time to prep for Lesnar’s wrestling style, particularly when the fight would carry with it such major implications. If Cain Velasquez was ready to fight again soon, a Mir-Velasquez fight might make some sense, but he might need some more time off. And since the winner of Lesnar-Overeem will be moved into a title match with champ Junior dos Santos, options are limited.
Prediction: Mir faces the loser of the Lesnar-Overeem fight

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
“Big Nog” is a proud man, but you have to wonder if pride is worth a broken bone and time spent on the sidelines when you’re 35 years old and in the twilight of your career. It’s easy for me to second-guess Nogueira here, so perhaps he thought he had one last escape attempt in him just before his arm cracked. That said, he apparently lucked out as the doctor he recently saw advised him against surgery, saying it would heal on its own in around five months. Still, add in time for a training camp and you’re looking at a minimum of an 8-9 month layoff for him.
Prediction: Given the length of time away, it’s impossible to predict an opponent, but someone like Matt Mitrione or Roy Nelson might be a possibility.

Tito Ortiz
Tito Ortiz did a very smart thing before his fight with Antonio Rogerio Nogueira. He said he planned to retire in May 2002, 15 years from his first pro fight. That essentially meant that win or lose, he’d probably only fight once more after the Little Nog bout, which he lost by first-round TKO. It was smart because he basically publicly promised Dana White that they wouldn’t have to continue the very public debate about his possible retirement. In essence, White wouldn’t have to draw the line and be the bad guy since Ortiz drew it himself. That doesn’t change the fact that he’s 1-6-1 in his last eight fights, but it’s probably enough to get him one last fight before calling it quits.
Prediction: I won’t even guess the opponent, but the UFC gives him a winnable style matchup against a mid-level opponent.

Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
A couple weeks ago, after Mauricio “Shogun” Rua lost his fight with Dan Henderson, I predicted he would next fight Thiago Silva, but I completely whiffed on the possibility that he could line up a rematch of his 2005 bout with Little Nog, a bout which was one of the best bouts of that year. With both coming off wins, it’s now or never.
Prediction: He faces Rua

Chan Sung Jung
The “Korean Zombie” is the UFC‘s Mr. Excitement, win or lose, creating amazing moments. The latest was his record-tying, seven-second knockout of Mark Hominick, a former No. 1 contender Jung isn’t quite ready for the title picture yet, but he’s starting to creep into the conversation.
Prediction: He faces Ricardo Lamas

Igor Pokrajac
Pokrajac looked good against the durable Krzysztof Soszynski, needing just 35 seconds to finish him in a KO. The win made him 3-1 in his last four, so let’s match the hard-hitting Croatian up with another striker and see what kind of magic they make.
Prediction: He faces Brandon Vera.

 

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MMA: The 5 Biggest Pretenders in Each Weight Class

There are contenders and there are pretenders. Unfortunately, many fans have trouble telling the difference.When a fighter wins (even against poor competition) some fans hop on what’s called a “bandwagon” and talk that fighter up like he’s the next big…

There are contenders and there are pretenders. Unfortunately, many fans have trouble telling the difference.

When a fighter wins (even against poor competition) some fans hop on what’s called a “bandwagon” and talk that fighter up like he’s the next big thing.

Most of the time, these bandwagons are abandoned when the fighter loses and he becomes known as the next big thing that wasn’t (see: Brandon Vera).

So who are the biggest pretenders in each weight class in modern MMA? Read and find out!

Begin Slideshow

MMA Monday Headlines with the Leggy Kenda Perez

Alistair Overeem is an artful dodger at urine testing, receives Conditional License from NSAC. Dan Henderson may get title-shot over Phil Davis if Davis beats Rashad Evans. Big Nog may not require surgery after Kimura.

Alistair Overeem is an artful dodger at urine testing, receives Conditional License from NSAC.

Dan Henderson may get title-shot over Phil Davis if Davis beats Rashad Evans.

Big Nog may not require surgery after Kimura arm break by Frank Mir at UFC 140.

Fedor Emelianenko to fight Satoshi Ishii in DREAM on NYE in Japan.

Ian McCall will face Demetrious Johnson in first round of UFC Flyweight Tournament.

TUF 14: Bisping vs. Miller makes $453, 000 at the gate with 1909 in attendance.

Get your UFC Japan tickets on sale now for February 26th event.

UFC 140 Aftermath: Mir, Jones and Brutal Finishes That Defied the Norm

It is the aftermath of UFC 140 in Toronto and living in the city, the buzz is surely on the brutal finishes of the fights from the card on Saturday night.All the coverage and talk of  Frank Mir breaking Nogueira’s arm, along with local reports of …

It is the aftermath of UFC 140 in Toronto and living in the city, the buzz is surely on the brutal finishes of the fights from the card on Saturday night.

All the coverage and talk of  Frank Mir breaking Nogueira’s arm, along with local reports of how all the Maple Leafs and hockey players in attendance thought it was quite a brutal sport, has left me throwing caution to the wind.

The finishes, and some of the fights we saw this weekend fall directly into the five-90-five percent rule, and it must be explained before any judgement is passed by the uneducated MMA fan. 

Five percent of all fights will end in some sort of shocking, brutal or even gruesome fashion, 90 percent will end in exciting, even thrilling but normal finishes and the other five percent will end in boring and uneventful fashion.

Usually, the shocking and brutal finishes are spread and sort out among the many different fight cards in a year or period of time. In my opinion, a case could be made that we saw three fights that had finishes in the first five percent.

Frank Mir’s brutal kimura on “Big Nog” is definitely one, Jones’s somewhat brutal-looking choke and how he landed plastered face-down was another.

It could be argued that Chan Sung Jung’s knockout seven seconds in qualifies in there, too.

Mir’s destruction of Nogueira’s arm is comparable to the worst injury in any other sport suffered under the rules, like a broken neck on a clean hit in football, a broken leg on a knee-on-knee hit in hockey or a broken arm from a collision at home plate.

You can’t judge the sport on the most brutal of its incidents. They happen but they are rare. Just like Machida getting choked out on his feet and dropped or Hominick getting knocked out in seven seconds.

The only difference in these incidents is what makes MMA even safer than some of the other sports mentioned.

Both Nogueira and Machida could have stopped these incidents on the spot by swallowing their pride and tapping out to the opponent—a choice not available in mid-action in most sports.

But both men chose not to tap, and both men suffered very cold and real consequences.

 

Dwight Wakabayashi is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report MMA and correspondent for MMACanada.net.

Catch him on Facebook and Twitter at wakafightermma.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 140 Results: Is the Old Frank Mir Back?

Frank Mir was at one point the heavyweight version of Jon Jones. He was a young fighter just coming into his mid-20s and had just snapped Tim Sylvia’s arm to win the heavyweight title back in 2004.Then he ended up getting into a horrible motorcycle acc…

Frank Mir was at one point the heavyweight version of Jon Jones. He was a young fighter just coming into his mid-20s and had just snapped Tim Sylvia’s arm to win the heavyweight title back in 2004.

Then he ended up getting into a horrible motorcycle accident that year and had to vacate his belt. It was a terrible thing that happened, but Mir had the ability to bounce back and reclaim the title like he once had.

When he finally returned in 2006 after being gone for two years, fans didn’t see a man who had that on his mind. Instead, they saw an out-of-shape Mir who was doing his best Roy Nelson impression.

He didn’t seem like the brilliant Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu fighter who had won the company’s title prior.

Instead of punctuating his return to the UFC, he lost to Marcio Cruz, a fighter who lost his next two fights in the UFC and was cut, by TKO.

Even after getting a win over Dan Christison which went the distance, Mir still seemed to not have found the fire that had once motivated him. It led him to losing to then heavyweight contender Brandon Vera, who was also able to beat him by TKO.

Mir’s career might have ended there, but he fought back, getting a win over Antoni Hardonk and then reigniting fans’ interest in him with a submission victory over Brock Lesnar.

Through it all, though, Mir didn’t have the same cocky attitude that had agitated some fans and won him others. It was the inherent confidence that had made him top dog in the UFC’s largest weight class and it was missing.

After his first victory over Nogueira, he even admitted that he didn’t think that he was going to win the fight coming in. That should have been a warning sign for those close to Mir that he hadn’t recovered from the motorcycle accident and that he still harbored demons.Instead he fought on, losing a rematch to Brock Lesnar and a fight with Shane Carwin. Mir believed that bulking up would help him against Carwin and instead it cost him the fight. After finally slimming down, he started picking up victories again.

After beating Cro Cop and Nelson, Mir finally had recovered what he lost back in 2004.

He was able to believe in himself again and he used that belief to make a rematch with Nogueira, who blamed a staph infection for his 2008 loss against Mir.

Mir refused to believe that this was true and took another fight against Nogueira to prove that not only was he capable of beating the great fighter, but that he could do it again.

It was a complete 180 from the fighter who had been shocked to beat the talented Brazilian the first time.

And it was what Mir needed.

Now as a possible rematch with Lesnar looms, the question is: Can Mir prove that he is the fighter of old or will he prove that he still has the same old mentality?

 

Be sure to stay tuned to Bleacher Report for all things UFC 140. B/R is your home for complete coverage of the December 10 fight card, including results and post-fight analysis.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 140 Results: Is the Old Frank Mir Back?

Frank Mir was at one point the heavyweight version of Jon Jones. He was a young fighter just coming into his mid-20s and had just snapped Tim Sylvia’s arm to win the heavyweight title back in 2004.Then he ended up getting into a horrible motorcycle acc…

Frank Mir was at one point the heavyweight version of Jon Jones. He was a young fighter just coming into his mid-20s and had just snapped Tim Sylvia’s arm to win the heavyweight title back in 2004.

Then he ended up getting into a horrible motorcycle accident that year and had to vacate his belt. It was a terrible thing that happened, but Mir had the ability to bounce back and reclaim the title like he once had.

When he finally returned in 2006 after being gone for two years, fans didn’t see a man who had that on his mind. Instead, they saw an out-of-shape Mir who was doing his best Roy Nelson impression.

He didn’t seem like the brilliant Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu fighter who had won the company’s title prior.

Instead of punctuating his return to the UFC, he lost to Marcio Cruz, a fighter who lost his next two fights in the UFC and was cut, by TKO.

Even after getting a win over Dan Christison which went the distance, Mir still seemed to not have found the fire that had once motivated him. It led him to losing to then heavyweight contender Brandon Vera, who was also able to beat him by TKO.

Mir’s career might have ended there, but he fought back, getting a win over Antoni Hardonk and then reigniting fans’ interest in him with a submission victory over Brock Lesnar.

Through it all, though, Mir didn’t have the same cocky attitude that had agitated some fans and won him others. It was the inherent confidence that had made him top dog in the UFC’s largest weight class and it was missing.

After his first victory over Nogueira, he even admitted that he didn’t think that he was going to win the fight coming in. That should have been a warning sign for those close to Mir that he hadn’t recovered from the motorcycle accident and that he still harbored demons.Instead he fought on, losing a rematch to Brock Lesnar and a fight with Shane Carwin. Mir believed that bulking up would help him against Carwin and instead it cost him the fight. After finally slimming down, he started picking up victories again.

After beating Cro Cop and Nelson, Mir finally had recovered what he lost back in 2004.

He was able to believe in himself again and he used that belief to make a rematch with Nogueira, who blamed a staph infection for his 2008 loss against Mir.

Mir refused to believe that this was true and took another fight against Nogueira to prove that not only was he capable of beating the great fighter, but that he could do it again.

It was a complete 180 from the fighter who had been shocked to beat the talented Brazilian the first time.

And it was what Mir needed.

Now as a possible rematch with Lesnar looms, the question is: Can Mir prove that he is the fighter of old or will he prove that he still has the same old mentality?

 

Be sure to stay tuned to Bleacher Report for all things UFC 140. B/R is your home for complete coverage of the December 10 fight card, including results and post-fight analysis.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com