Derrick Lewis Smokes Gabriel Gonzaga In First Round Finish

Heavyweight prospect Derrick Lewis fought what may be the toughest test of his career when he battled former title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga in the co-main event of today’s (Sun., April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb, Croatia. The fight started with a big head kick from Lewis that partially landed,

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Heavyweight prospect Derrick Lewis fought what may be the toughest test of his career when he battled former title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga in the co-main event of today’s (Sun., April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb, Croatia.

The fight started with a big head kick from Lewis that partially landed, and he fended off the following takedown attempt from Gonzaga. Another takedown attempt was successful, however.

Gonzaga looked to smother Lewis on the mat in side control as he bled from his nose. He nearly mounted Lewis and then took his back, scoring some hard punches. Lewis got back up and landed an elbow and a knee to the midsection. Elbows and punches rained down from Lewis as Gonzaga attempted another takedown. The action slowed in the clinch as Gonzaga looked for a trip and the ref restarted the action.

Lewis unloaded a vicious combination that got the frightening swift finish.

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Derrick Lewis Smokes Gabriel Gonzaga In First Round Finish

Heavyweight prospect Derrick Lewis fought what may be the toughest test of his career when he battled former title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga in the co-main event of today’s (Sun., April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb, Croatia. The fight started with a big head kick from Lewis that partially landed,

The post Derrick Lewis Smokes Gabriel Gonzaga In First Round Finish appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Heavyweight prospect Derrick Lewis fought what may be the toughest test of his career when he battled former title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga in the co-main event of today’s (Sun., April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb, Croatia.

The fight started with a big head kick from Lewis that partially landed, and he fended off the following takedown attempt from Gonzaga. Another takedown attempt was successful, however.

Gonzaga looked to smother Lewis on the mat in side control as he bled from his nose. He nearly mounted Lewis and then took his back, scoring some hard punches. Lewis got back up and landed an elbow and a knee to the midsection. Elbows and punches rained down from Lewis as Gonzaga attempted another takedown. The action slowed in the clinch as Gonzaga looked for a trip and the ref restarted the action.

Lewis unloaded a vicious combination that got the frightening swift finish.

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UFC Fight Night 86 Predictions

Ben Rothwell vs. Junior dos Santos: Mike Drahota: It seems that it’s becoming increasingly clear that the UFC will do what they can to stop Ben Rothwell from getting a heavyweight title shot, as they’ve matched him up against another former champion despite four straight finishes over names like Josh Barnett and Alistair Overeem. While

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Ben Rothwell vs. Junior dos Santos:

Mike Drahota:

It seems that it’s becoming increasingly clear that the UFC will do what they can to stop Ben Rothwell from getting a heavyweight title shot, as they’ve matched him up against another former champion despite four straight finishes over names like Josh Barnett and Alistair Overeem. While dos Santos is past his prime days as one of the most powerful strikers in the UFC, I still think he has enough left in the gas tank to pull off the upset n Croatia, however. For all his recent success, Rothwell can be a bit slow and plodding standing, and he has been knocked out four times. That could play right into the boxing-centric strategy of ‘Cigano’ My pick is dos Santos via R1 knockout.

Rory Kernaghan:

Former UFC heavyweight champion Junior dos Santos looked flat in his latest bout with Alistair Overeem, whereas his UFC Zagreb opponent Ben Rothwell has looked a renewed man in his most recent outings. Where this fight is won is on the ground for Rothwell, and on the feet for ‘Cigano.’ Although ‘Big Ben’ has some jaw crunching power in his strikes, I just don’t see him landing on a technical boxer like dos Santos, even on his worst day. Will Rothwell go in for the takedown and look to dominate on the ground? He really should, but I’m not sure he’ll get the chance. This is purely a gut pick, but I’m going with JDS by first round KO.

Mike Henken:

Former champ dos Santos has obviously endured a tremendous amount of damage throughout his career, and is coming off of a brutal TKO loss. Rothwell, on the other hand, has been riding a hot streak as of late, scoring four consecutive victories all by way of stoppage. He’s shown solid power, as well as an elite level submission game. At the end of the day, with all things considered, I still rank ‘JDS’ amongst the best heavyweights in the world. Dos Santos by third round TKO.

Derrick Lewis vs. Gabriel Gonzaga:

Mike Drahota:

The co-main event for the UFC’s Croatian debut has the potential for some exciting action, and there’s little doubt that it will end quite some time before the final bell sounds. Lewis has won five of his seven fights in the Octagon by knockout, but he has been susceptible to knockouts himself (especially against high-level competition) as exhibited in his losses to Matt Mitrione and Shawn Jordan. Gonzaga, on the other hand, is a storied veteran who is in need of a win after losing three of his last four. Lewis came in incredibly heated at today’s weigh-ins, so we’ll see if that helps or hinders him. Still, my pick is Lewis via R1 TKO.

Rory Kernaghan:

Derrick Lewis is a hot prospect in the UFC heavyweight division, an interesting character with some seriously scary power too. Gabriel Gonzaga has been there and done it with the best of the 265-pounders, but has also shown to be when taking punches in the knockout-heavy division. Gonzaga could conceivably get a submission win if he can get it to the mat, but I don’t see him doing so without eating a few shots first. I’m predicting a second round TKO for the ‘Black Beast’ Derrick Lewis.

 

Mike Henken:

Gonzaga is a veteran of the fight game with a well-rounded skillset, but I feel as if he’s nearing the tail end of his career after losing three out of his last four bouts. Lewis, however, has won two straight and has shown deadly knockout power, power I suspect will be seeing in this bout. I expect the “Black Beast” to get it done early. Lewis by first round TKO.

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UFC Fight Night 86 Weigh-In Video & Results

The UFC is set to make their debut in Croatia with tomorrow’s (Sun. April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb. Today, all of the fighters participating in the card will step on the scale for the card’s official weigh-in. The event features a heavyweight headliner between surging veteran Ben

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The UFC is set to make their debut in Croatia with tomorrow’s (Sun. April 10, 2016) UFC Fight Night 86 from the Zagreb Arena in Zagreb.

Today, all of the fighters participating in the card will step on the scale for the card’s official weigh-in.

The event features a heavyweight headliner between surging veteran Ben Rothwell and former champion Junior dos Santos, while power slugger Derrick Lewis facing former title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga in the co-main.

Check out the full video of the weigh-ins at 11:30 a.m. EST below, followed by the full results shortly after:

Main card (FOX Sports 1, 2 p.m. EST):
Ben Rothwell (264) vs. Junior dos Santos (241)
Gabriel Gonzaga (262) vs. Derrick Lewis (264)
Francis Ngannou (252) vs. Curtis Blaydes (261)
Timothy Johnson (262) vs. Marcin Tybura (247)
Igor Pokrajac (205) vs. Jan Blachowicz (205)
Maryna Moroz (115) vs. Cristina Stanciu (116)

Undercard (FOX Sports 1, 12 p.m. EST):
Nicolas Dalby (171) vs. Zak Cummings (170)
Ian Entwistle (135) vs. Alejandro Perez (135)
Mairbek Taisumov (154) vs. Damir Hadzovic (155)
Filip Pejic (136) vs. Damian Stasiak (134)

Undercard (UFC Fight Pass, 10:30 a.m. EST):
Robert Whiteford (145) vs. Lucas Martins (145)
Jared Cannonier (241) vs. Cyril Asker (241)
Bojan Velickovic (183) vs. Alessio Di Chirico (185)

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The Worst Fight of 2015, Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Konstantin Erokhin, Somehow Just Got Worse


(via Getty)

In our recap of the best, worst, and most insane moments that MMA had to offer in 2015, we bestowed the Potato Award for “Worst Fight of the Year” to Gabriel Gonzaga and Konstantin Erokhin’s scrap (if you could call it that) at The Ultimate Fighter 22 Finale, writing:

For three endless, slogging rounds, Gonzaga and Erokhin circled, stared, circled, and stared at each other, seemingly too scared to engage while the 1,800 people in attendance showered (or perhaps sprinkled, considering how few of them there were) them with boos.

By the time the abysmal contest had wrapped up, the pair of heavyweights had combined for just 35 significant strikes in total, with Gonzaga’s 20 strikes (and 2 takedowns!) earning him the victory.

Truthfully, we cannot even begin to imagine how a fight could possibly be worse than the Gonzaga vs. Erokhin already was, but somehow, someway, recent developments have allowed us to downgrade it from “piss-poor” to “the absolute nadir of professional mixed martial arts.”

Details after the jump. 

The post The Worst Fight of 2015, Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Konstantin Erokhin, Somehow Just Got Worse appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via Getty)

In our recap of the best, worst, and most insane moments that MMA had to offer in 2015, we bestowed the Potato Award for “Worst Fight of the Year” to Gabriel Gonzaga and Konstantin Erokhin’s scrap (if you could call it that) at The Ultimate Fighter 22 Finale, writing:

For three endless, slogging rounds, Gonzaga and Erokhin circled, stared, circled, and stared at each other, seemingly too scared to engage while the 1,800 people in attendance showered (or perhaps sprinkled, considering how few of them there were) them with boos.

By the time the abysmal contest had wrapped up, the pair of heavyweights had combined for just 35 significant strikes in total, with Gonzaga’s 20 strikes (and 2 takedowns!) earning him the victory.

Truthfully, we cannot even begin to imagine how a fight could possibly be worse than the Gonzaga vs. Erokhin already was, but somehow, someway, recent developments have allowed us to downgrade it from “piss-poor” to “the absolute nadir of professional mixed martial arts.”

Details after the jump. 

That’s because Erokhin, as it turns out, was on performance enhancing drugs during the contest. To steal a line from BloodyElbow’s Zane Simon, “I suppose it makes you wonder what aspect of the performance was ‘enhanced.’” MMAFighting has the deets:

Now, Erokhin’s drug test from the TUF Finale has come back positive. Erokhin popped for the anabolic steroid drostanolone in a pre-fight, in-competition test, according to documents obtained by MMA Fighting through a public records request with the Nevada Athletic Commission. 

The Russian, who was removed from the UFC’s roster following the loss (his second straight since entering the promotion), will now be looking at a 9-month suspension from competition, at the minimum, as well as a fine that will almost surely negate whatever he received for the fight in the first place.

So in total, we have a terrible fight, a meaningless win, and another entry in our steroid bust timeline. What a shitshow.

The post The Worst Fight of 2015, Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Konstantin Erokhin, Somehow Just Got Worse appeared first on Cagepotato.

Heavy Hitters: Top 10 Knockout Strikers In UFC History

When the UFC debuted on a fateful November day in Denver back in 1993, the opportunity for martial artists to display their hand-to-hand combat skills like never before was created in a unique and, at the time, shocking style. Although MMA has thankfully underwent countless changes and improvements since that day, the time that has

The post Heavy Hitters: Top 10 Knockout Strikers In UFC History appeared first on LowKick MMA.

When the UFC debuted on a fateful November day in Denver back in 1993, the opportunity for martial artists to display their hand-to-hand combat skills like never before was created in a unique and, at the time, shocking style.

Although MMA has thankfully underwent countless changes and improvements since that day, the time that has passed has also obviously allowed a number of talented fighters to separate themselves from the pack in terms of their groundbreaking and effective skills inside the cage.

Every fighter gets the job done differently in the Octagon, but for the purpose of this piece, we’re going to focus on those who have piled up what the crowd usually wants to see, knockout finishes. Let’s give respect to the MMA legends that have racked up the most T/KOs in UFC history.

Here they are….

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