Unforgettable: Kenny Florian Discusses His Greatest Opponents


(“I’ve never been knocked out in a fight and I’ve never been knocked out in training. But I’ve never been hurt the way that [Penn] hurt me.” / Photo via Las Vegas Sun)

By Matt Kaplan

Two weeks ago, Kenny Florian, the man who finished fights, announced that he is finished fighting.

Florian cited a November 2011 back injury and eventual numbness and tingling in his limbs as the impetus for closing the chapter of his life that’s been defined by five UFC Fight Night appearances, four weight classes, three UFC championship fights, two vicious elbows, and — lest we forget — one samurai costume.

As an undersized middleweight, Florian first appeared on our radars as the TUF 1 runner-up to Diego Sanchez in 2005, and after two victories at welterweight, Florian transformed his body and game, and established himself as one of the best lightweights in the world. Florian then made a brief run at featherweight in 2011, defeating Diego Nunes and losing to champion Jose Aldo, before announcing his retirement at the age of 36.

In a recent conversation with CagePotato.com — and in loving tribute to Ring Magazine’s “The Best I’ve Faced” feature — Ken-Flo looked back on his MMA career and remembered the opponents who stood out across a number of categories…

Fastest on his feet: I’d say Jose Aldo. He was the quickest. His explosiveness in general, his footwork, and his ability to move definitely are impressive.

Toughest chin: I remember hitting Sam Stout with hard shots. I hit him on the ground with a big bomb that connected real well, right on his chin, and he just ate it. And from seeing the rest of his fights, I see why. He’s got a real good chin.


(“I’ve never been knocked out in a fight and I’ve never been knocked out in training. But I’ve never been hurt the way that [Penn] hurt me.” / Photo via Las Vegas Sun)

By Matt Kaplan

Two weeks ago, Kenny Florian, the man who finished fights, announced that he is finished fighting.

Florian cited a November 2011 back injury and eventual numbness and tingling in his limbs as the impetus for closing the chapter of his life that’s been defined by five UFC Fight Night appearances, four weight classes, three UFC championship fights, two vicious elbows, and — lest we forget — one samurai costume.

As an undersized middleweight, Florian first appeared on our radars as the TUF 1 runner-up to Diego Sanchez in 2005, and after two victories at welterweight, Florian transformed his body and game, and established himself as one of the best lightweights in the world. Florian then made a brief run at featherweight in 2011, defeating Diego Nunes and losing to champion Jose Aldo, before announcing his retirement at the age of 36.

In a recent conversation with CagePotato.com — and in loving tribute to Ring Magazine’s “The Best I’ve Faced” feature — Ken-Flo looked back on his MMA career and remembered the opponents who stood out across a number of categories…

Fastest on his feet: I’d say Jose Aldo. He was the quickest. His explosiveness in general, his footwork, and his ability to move definitely are impressive.

Toughest chin: I remember hitting Sam Stout with hard shots. I hit him on the ground with a big bomb that connected real well, right on his chin, and he just ate it. And from seeing the rest of his fights, I see why. He’s got a real good chin.

Hardest to hit: Let’s see. From the outside, it’s probably BJ Penn. Excellent head movement.

Heaviest hands: BJ Penn, by far. I’ve never been knocked out in a fight and I’ve never been knocked out in training. But I’ve never been hurt the way that he hurt me. He hit me harder than anyone I fought or sparred or trained with.

Best wrestler: Gray Maynard. When he was in on my leg, I felt like he was the strongest. And I was doing a decent amount of wrestling when we fought.

Most intelligent: I guess with overall MMA intelligence and skills, Jose Aldo is probably overall the most intelligent. He didn’t allow himself to get caught off guard, you know?

Most powerful: Gray Maynard. He’s the only guy who afterward I said, “Wow, that guy’s really strong.”

Most threatening ground game: BJ Penn. I don’t know about submission-wise — and he caught me in a submission — but offensively, technically, the way he attacks, especially from the top, that’s his bread and butter. It’s real good.

Most surprising opponent: Gray Maynard, for sure. That was one of the fights where I thought he would strike a little bit more with me. I felt like I’d be able to keep him on the outside and stop his wrestling attempts when he would try because, before that fight, he did use his wrestling later [in the fight] against guys like Nate Diaz, but it was crazy to me that he was going out there and really wasn’t using his wrestling so much. I was working a lot on my wrestling at the time and thought it would be enough, but the way he was executing it — he would get the takedown at the end of the round and get each round and control — was just a very smart game plan.

Sweetest victory: This is always hard to come up with. It was pretty cool being able to fight Takanori Gomi and win like I did, dominating a guy I looked up to for so long for his striking and for his knockout power. To go out there and strike with him for the 12 or 13 minutes of that match and outstrike him was cool. That one sticks out.

Most bitter loss: The Diego Sanchez fight, just because it was one of those fights where maybe he would have won anyway because he had a lot of experience over me, but I didn’t even get a chance to compete. I’ve talked about this before: I just choked. The only fight I’ve ever choked in was the Diego Sanchez fight. I was just not ready for that mentally, and by the time he was mounted on me, I was bleeding all over myself and was, like, “Alright, Kenny, let’s get out of here. Let’s do this.” I felt that I didn’t even get a chance to really compete or show my skills.

Best overall fighter: The person who matched up the best to me was the toughest challenge, and in my career, that was BJ Penn. Going into the fight, I felt like he would be the toughest match-up based on where my skills were at and where his skills were at. And he was the toughest.

UFC on FX 4: Gray Maynard vs. Clay Guida Head-to-Toe Breakdown

The likely main event for June’s UFC on FX 4 looks to be a battle of perennial top contenders as lightweights Gray Maynard and Clay Guida are set to clash inside the Octagon.Maynard hasn’t fought since being knocked out by then-champion Frankie Ed…

The likely main event for June’s UFC on FX 4 looks to be a battle of perennial top contenders as lightweights Gray Maynard and Clay Guida are set to clash inside the Octagon.

Maynard hasn’t fought since being knocked out by then-champion Frankie Edgar last October and he has his sights set on getting back into title contention. Guida finds himself in a similar situation as he looks to bounce back from a unanimous decision loss to current champ Benson Henderson at UFC on FOX 1, a loss that cost him a shot at the lightweight crown.

With both fighters hungry for a date with the champion and possessing similar skill sets, it will be interesting to see how this bout pans out. Here is the head-to-toe breakdown of this surefire war. 

Begin Slideshow

Gray Maynard Talks Potential Frankie Edgar Rematch, Facing Clay Guida

Gray Maynard finds himself in a strange place in the UFC’s lightweight division.The 2011 year was a banner one for Maynard. He challenged for the lightweight championship in two classic battles with former champion Frankie Edgar. But the results of tho…

Gray Maynard finds himself in a strange place in the UFC’s lightweight division.

The 2011 year was a banner one for Maynard. He challenged for the lightweight championship in two classic battles with former champion Frankie Edgar. But the results of those two fights—a draw in the first bout and a loss by TKO in the second—virtually ensure that Maynard will need to string together some impressive wins in order to get back in title contention.

The fact that Benson Henderson is now the champion will greatly help Maynard. As long as Edgar held that belt, Maynard likely wasn’t getting another crack at gold. Edgar will get a rematch with Henderson this summer, and Maynard told Heavy.com’s Duane Finley that he wants to settle the score with Edgar once and for all:

“The title has always been the goal. I would love to have the belt and somewhere along the line, get another fight with Edgar. We are 1-1-1 and we need to settle it once and for all. It has to happen eventually, and after that fight we can both be done. We can walk away knowing it’s over and that we gave MMA fans some great fights to look back on.”

But first, Maynard has a big June fight coming up with Clay Guida, in the main event of UFC on FX 4 in Atlantic City. Maynard was strongly considered as an opponent for Strikeforce champion Gilbert Melendez, but the UFC changed their minds.

Guida represents a chance for Maynard to make a big statement against a tough competitor who presents many of the same challenges that “The Bully” does for his own opponents:

“Since it has been out there, I’ve pretty much been gearing up for him for a while now. Guida has good takedowns, but I feel that is my area and what he lacks as a true athlete he makes up for in heart and toughness. Clay is well known for his cardio, but he also likes to mix it up and throw hands. He has a good chin, great heart and it’s a fun fight.

A Maynard win over Guida likely won’t earn him an immediate title shot. But it’ll put him back “in the mix,” as Dana White is so very fond of saying, and that’s right where Maynard wants to be.

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UFC Lightweight "Soap Opera" Will Be Interesting to Watch in 2012

The last time the UFC traveled to Atlantic City, NJ, was June 4, 2005. The promotion will return to the Jersey-shore city on June 22, when they present UFC on FX 4, from the as yet-to-be-opened Revel Casino. Headlining that event will be lightweight co…

The last time the UFC traveled to Atlantic City, NJ, was June 4, 2005. The promotion will return to the Jersey-shore city on June 22, when they present UFC on FX 4, from the as yet-to-be-opened Revel Casino. Headlining that event will be lightweight competitors Gray Maynard and Clay Guida.

Both fighters are coming off losses in their last bouts. Guida fell to now-UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson, while Maynard was knocked out by the man that Henderson defeated for that crown, Frankie Edgar. The 155-pound weight division is arguably the deepest in the UFC, and two consecutive losses, no matter who the opponent is, could result in a long climb back up the contender ladder. 

Making this fight even more important is the fact that Nate Diaz and Jim Miller, two of the other top competitors at 155, will fight in the main event at UFC on FOX 3, which will take place on May 5. Add former WEC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis into the mix and you see that there is strong competition at the top of the lightweight division.

That top-contender logjam will have some time to sort itself out, as the next title fight will be a rematch between Henderson and Edgar, a fight that is tentative for some time this summer.

So, with five fighters looking to face the winner of that Henderson-Edgar rematch, one can see how important an impressive victory is. That fact is not lost on Maynard, who, before losing to Edgar, fought the champion to a draw in a title fight at UFC 125. Speaking to Heavy.com about the UFC lightweight division, the man nicknamed “The Bully” had this to say:

“The lightweight division is like a drama. It is like a good soap opera that draws you in because it’s not built up off bulls**t hype. There is no fake build-up where guys are talking a bunch of s**t in order to get fan’s attention. It’s all in the actual fights people are seeing, and it is the most competitive weight class in the UFC, hands down. The skill and heart displayed in our division is without comparison. We go out there, put it all on the line and get after it from bell to bell.”

The UFC lightweight soap opera will play out over the three aforementioned fights in the next several months. As far as Pettis, he will undergo shoulder surgery shortly, but that does not mean he is out of the mix, as he was rumored to be the man Henderson would be defending his title against before Edgar was rewarded a rematch.

With five fighters all vying for a shot at the winner of that rematch, it will be very interesting to see who stands at the front of the pack when UFC matchmaker Joe Silva looks to book the next UFC lightweight title fight.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Hettes vs. Siler Added to UFC on FX 4 June 22


(“I ain’t Leonard Garcia, pal.”)

Another New Jersey native has been added to the UFC’s upcoming FX 4 card set for this summer in Atlantic City.

Jimy Hettes (10-0), the undefeated 24-year-old featherweight phenom who impressed us all in his first two UFC bouts, trouncing TUF veterans Alex Caceres and Nam Phan, will join fellow New Jerseyans Dan Miller, Nick Catone and Rich Attonito on the June 22 card.


(“I ain’t Leonard Garcia, pal.”)

Another New Jersey native has been added to the UFC’s upcoming FX 4 card set for this summer in Atlantic City.

Jimy Hettes (10-0), the undefeated 24-year-old featherweight phenom who impressed us all in his first two UFC bouts, trouncing TUF veterans Alex Caceres and Nam Phan, will join fellow New Jerseyans Dan Miller, Nick Catone and Rich Attonito on the June 22 card.

According to MMAWeekly, “The Kid” will take on TUF 14 washout Steven Siler (20-9, who is also undefeated in the Octagon.

Siler, who defeated Josh Clopton at the TUF 14 Finale in December, raised eyebrows earlier this month when he beat UFC vet Cole Miller by unanimous decision at UFC on FX 2.

UFC on FX 4 boasts a main event lightweight bout between Gray Maynard and Clay Guida, as well as a main card middleweight scrap between Catone and Chris Camozzi and four welterweight fights featuring Brian Ebersole versus TJ Waldburger, Rick Story versus Attonito, Miller vs. Ricardo Funch, and Matthew Riddle versus Luis Ramos.

UFC on FX 4
Friday, June 22, 2012
Revel Casino
Atlantic City, NJ

Gray Maynard vs. Clay Guida
Brian Ebersole vs. TJ Waldburger
Rick Story vs. Rich Attonito
Dan Miller vs. Ricardo Funch
Nick Catone vs. Chris Camozzi
Matthew Riddle vs. Luis Ramos
Jim Hettes vs. Steven Siler

UFC on FX 4’s Maynard vs. Guida Bout Doesn’t Make a Whole Lot of Sense

Yesterday’s announcement that lightweights Gray Maynard and Clay Guida will meet in the main event of UFC on FX 4 wasn’t a surprise.The bout had been rumored for months. It was going to happen, so it was just a matter of figuring out where to slot the …

Yesterday’s announcement that lightweights Gray Maynard and Clay Guida will meet in the main event of UFC on FX 4 wasn’t a surprise.

The bout had been rumored for months. It was going to happen, so it was just a matter of figuring out where to slot the fight on a busy slate of summer events. And it pairs two lightweights who are still near the top of the division, despite losing in both championship and contender fights over the last 12 months. 

I get it. But that doesn’t mean I have to like it, and I’ll tell you why.

Guida is the most popular fighter in the lightweight division. More than the current champion Benson Henderson and more than Frankie Edgar, Guida has a rabid following that desperately wants to see him succeed. They want to see him in title fights.

Maynard is pretty much the opposite at this point. He never endeared himself to fans even while putting on two incredibly exciting fights with Frankie Edgar in 2011, and I’d wager that only two percent of UFC fans, at the very most, would care to see him get another title shot at Henderson.

Maynard actually has a ton of personality. He’s an interesting dude when you get him away from the cage.

Talk to him about riding his mountain bike on the cliffs out in Red Rock Canyon in Las Vegas, and his eyes will light up. He’ll talk to you for hours. It’s only when talking about fighting that he tends to clam up, and that has impacted his marketability with fans.

I like Guida, both as a person and as a fighter. I think he’s great, and it’s easy to see why the fans love him. But there’s no way he’s beating Maynard here. Guida is a skilled fighter, but he’s not on Maynard’s level when it comes to striking or wrestling.

The UFC is sacrificing a marketable, ready-made UFC title contender for one who won’t garner any interest from the fans for a third title shot. Joe Lauzon would have been a much more suitable opponent for Guida.

He’s coming off a loss and he presents less of a threat to Guida in the cage. The fact that Guida and Lauzon have never fought each other, despite spending years together in the UFC, makes the bout even more interesting.

I’m all for treating MMA as a pure sport, but sometimes you have to make the right decision for business purposes. 

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