UFC on FX 4 Aftermath: Up is Down, Black is White, Fans Cheer Gray Maynard

By George Shunick


Our thoughts exactly. Props: MMAMania

Gray Maynard has never been the most popular UFC fighter. Maybe it’s because it’s almost impossible to picture him as an underdog; he’s an enormous lightweight who lives up his “Bully” moniker. (His choice of entrance music probably doesn’t do him any favors, either.) He’s always Goliath, and in our society we’re conditioned to root for David. That attitude was epitomized in Frankie Edgar’s back-to-back comebacks against him, with the crowd firmly in favor of the smaller fighter who seemed to rely on his will and technique, while Maynard relied on his size and power. As long as Maynard’s achievements were contextualized within that narrative, he would always be the villain.

Clay Guida won the first two rounds of their main event last night by constantly remaining out of Maynard’s reach, dictating the pace, occasionally landing jabs, and landing a solid head kick in the latter half of the second round. The action had been sparse throughout, but it seemed understandable; Guida obviously didn’t want to engage Maynard head on at first, he’d tire him out and then wear him down. Well, that didn’t happen. For the majority of the third round, Guida squandered whatever momentum he may have built by circling, dancing, and circling some more. It was UFC 112 Anderson Silva on meth. By the end of the round, Maynard was flailing with power punches, frustrated by Guida’s unwillingness to engage.

Midway through the fourth round, Maynard had enough. With Guida still circling and refusing to engage, Maynard finally grabbed a hold of him, landed some knees and then proceeding to embody the audience’s frustrations by dropping his hands and bellowing epithets, daring Guida to just stop running and hit him. Guida proceeded to oblige him, only to have Maynard walk through a hard overhand right, stuff a takedown and almost secure an arm-in guillotine in an unprecedented display of attitude and badassery that it actually caused fans to cheer him. Round 5 was unfortunately more of the same, which is to say, not much at all.

By George Shunick


Our thoughts exactly. Props: MMAMania

Gray Maynard has never been the most popular UFC fighter. Maybe it’s because it’s almost impossible to picture him as an underdog; he’s an enormous lightweight who lives up his “Bully” moniker. (His choice of entrance music probably doesn’t do him any favors, either.) He’s always Goliath, and in our society we’re conditioned to root for David. That attitude was epitomized in Frankie Edgar’s back-to-back comebacks against him, with the crowd firmly in favor of the smaller fighter who seemed to rely on his will and technique, while Maynard relied on his size and power. As long as Maynard’s achievements were contextualized within that narrative, he would always be the villain.

Clay Guida won the first two rounds of their main event last night by constantly remaining out of Maynard’s reach, dictating the pace, occasionally landing jabs, and landing a solid head kick in the latter half of the second round. The action had been sparse throughout, but it seemed understandable; Guida obviously didn’t want to engage Maynard head on at first, he’d tire him out and then wear him down. Well, that didn’t happen. For the majority of the third round, Guida squandered whatever momentum he may have built by circling, dancing, and circling some more. It was UFC 112 Anderson Silva on meth. By the end of the round, Maynard was flailing with power punches, frustrated by Guida’s unwillingness to engage.

Midway through the fourth round, Maynard had enough. With Guida still circling and refusing to engage, Maynard finally grabbed a hold of him, landed some knees and then proceeding to embody the audience’s frustrations by dropping his hands and bellowing epithets, daring Guida to just stop running and hit him. Guida proceeded to oblige him, only to have Maynard walk through a hard overhand right, stuff a takedown and almost secure an arm-in guillotine in an unprecedented display of attitude and badassery that it actually caused fans to cheer him. Round 5 was unfortunately more of the same, which is to say, not much at all.

At the end of the fight, Maynard was awarded a split-decision, with two 48-47’s and one 47-48. I don’t have a problem with the decision, though I can understand why some might; the fight was difficult to score just because so little happened during it. But that’s not what this night should be remembered for; this is the night that Gray Maynard broke the narrative paradigm that has plagued him throughout his UFC career. By expressing the frustration that so many of us felt, Maynard wasn’t a bully anymore; last night, he was one of us.

Well, and the night that Clay Guida single-handedly destroyed his reputation as a fan-favorite. Hey, I’m trying for the glass half-full approach here, people. Moving on…

Disappointing main event aside, this was a pretty good card. Sam Stout and Spencer Fisher lived up to expectations, in what was – I imagine – either the most difficult or the easiest fight to live blog of the night. (It depends if you try to actually give a play by play, or simply copy and paste “They engage. Both land shots,” over and over.) Although Fisher seemed to get the better of the standup exchanges ever so slightly, Stout sealed his victories by nailing takedowns in each round, securing the unanimous decision in their trilogy fight.

Just as interesting was the ground war waged between young gun T.J. Waldburger and battle-tested, immaculately manscaped Brian Ebersole. Waldburger got off to a fast start, dropping Ebersole with a straight left, and almost finishing him on the ground with a D’Arce choke. Despite his face turning the color of Prince’s garments of choice, Ebersole survived. In the next round, Ebersole escaped from an omoplata, an arm bar, and two triangle chokes. Despite Waldburger’s active guard, Ebersole took the round on the strength of his ground and pound, turning it on in the final seconds. The deciding round saw Ebersole secure a takedown, escape yet another triangle, and deliver shoulder strikes and elbows until the bell rang. It was enough for Ebersole to take a unanimous decision, 29-28 across the board. With this momentum, Ebersole plans to set up a higher profile fight at 170 in an attempt to… wait, no, apparently he’s going to try to cut to 155. Huh?

Cub Swanson and Ross Pearson was another highly entertaining fight, in which Swanson really got to show off just what was in his arsenal. Although Pearson was clearly the larger and stronger of the two, Swanson’s speed and ingenuity allowed him to get the better of the exchanges. At one point in the first round, Swanson threw a capoeira kick that would impress Anthony Pettis, which Pearson didn’t even flinch from, with Swanson following with upkicks from his back. The end came as Pearson pushed forward, Swanson landed two jabs, pivoted to his left and unleashed a counter left hook that sent Pearson crashing into the fence at 4:14 of the second round. Bring on Do Bronx, please.

The prelims were generally solid, but the highlight had to be Ricardo Lamas’ upset of Hatsu Hioki. Hioki had passed on a title fight with Jose Aldo because he believed he wasn’t ready to face him, and took the fight with Lamas as a tune up to that title shot. Well, it proved to be the right decision, because there was no way Hioki was ready for a title shot. After winning the first round and losing a competitive second round, Hioki was utterly ineffective in the third. It’s not so much that Lamas dominated him, although he did almost submit him with a number of guillotines, so much as Hioki just didn’t do anything in the final round. His standup looked atrocious, and his cardio looked almost as bad.

Fight of the Night went to Fisher-Stout, KO went to Swanson, and Sub went to Dan Miller for his third-round guillotine win over Ricardo Funch.

UFC on FX 4 Prelims Results: What We Learned from Hatsu Hioki vs. Ricardo Lamas

Hatsu Hioki entered the night just as he had entered the UFC, the consensus No. 1 challenger to Jose Aldo’s UFC featherweight title. Hioki actually refused a title shot and was put in a no-win situation against the tough Ricardo Lamas during the UFC on…

Hatsu Hioki entered the night just as he had entered the UFC, the consensus No. 1 challenger to Jose Aldo’s UFC featherweight title. Hioki actually refused a title shot and was put in a no-win situation against the tough Ricardo Lamas during the UFC on FX 4 prelims.

Hioki needed an impressive showing to validate his place at the top of the featherweight division’s title challengers, but the end result was anything of the sort. The Japanese star was controlled for much of the fight despite landing a handful of takedowns.

Lamas played the role of spoiler very well as he knew there was nothing to lose in this matchup that ended with winning by a unanimous 29-28 decision.

 

What We Will Remember About This Fight

Fans will likely remember the series of grappling exchanges between the two men that produced some great displays of talent. Hioki was able to secure some takedowns and ended two rounds in top position but was simply outworked by Lamas.

 

What We Learned about Hatsu Hioki

Is this another example of international hype overrating a guy? Hioki was brought in to give Aldo a fresh face to challenge and had earned two UFC victories prior to the event tonight. His first showing was very shaky but his bout at UFC 144 was a takedown clinic.

Hioki just saw a number of guys leap over him in the featherweight rankings and will definitely have a tough road ahead of him.

 

What We Learned About Ricardo Lamas

Despite the fact that Hioki was widely expected to dominate Lamas, the Chicago-based fighter showed a lot of mental toughness and was game for the challenge. The Japanese star certainly had his moments in the fight but Lamas proved he wanted to win this fight more than Hioki.

Although Lamas was able to fend off a number of takedowns from Hioki, he can’t allow his opponent to finish the round in top position. We’ve seen judges reward crazy decisions for simple facts just like that.

 

What’s Next For Hatsu Hioki

Not saying no to Dana White has to top the list. Instead of getting an UFC title shot, Hioki will likely find himself on a few more preliminary bouts or, at best, on the main card of a non-PPV show. Hioki openly admitted he wasn’t ready, but he was playing a dangerous game and lost.

 

What’s Next for Ricardo Lamas

Lamas showed up to ruin Hioki’s party and did so in impressive fashion. After three straight impressive outings, I believe it’s time for Lamas to face some more top-tier talent. He should vault up the rankings and face another top-five guy.

A bout with “The Korean Zombie” sure would be a blast to watch.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Hatsu Hioki Should’ve Taken the Title Shot at Jose Aldo During UFC on FX 4

After turning down a title fight at UFC with featherweight champion Jose Aldo earlier in 2012, Hatsu Hioki has now officially thrown that title fight away. The main event of the preliminary fights in Atlantic City featured an important featherweight …

After turning down a title fight at UFC with featherweight champion Jose Aldo earlier in 2012, Hatsu Hioki has now officially thrown that title fight away.

The main event of the preliminary fights in Atlantic City featured an important featherweight bout between the Japanese star, Hioki, and Ricardo Lamas. Hioki, a -175 favorite going into the fight, was expected by most to walk away with what would have been the third UFC win of his career.

Unfortunately for him and his fans, it was Lamas’ aggression that the judges seemed to favor as they opted to give the unanimous decision to the American by a score of 29-28.

Hioki had previously been considered the No. 2 featherweight in the world by most sources. UFC President Dana White has offered him a title fight, but Hioki turned it down due to his own belief that he was not quite ready to fight for the title.

Apparently he was right.

Nevertheless, Hioki should have taken the title fight anyway. If he didn’t think he was ready to fight Aldo before, did he really think that a win over a fighter who was barely in the top 25 was going to get him to that level?

The career of an MMA fighter is a short one and the decision to turn down a title fight is something that doesn’t often happen. This is because most fighters understand that if they don’t take the opportunity when it presents itself, it may never come again. In the case of Hioki, following this loss, it certainly won’t come anytime soon.

At 28 years old, Hioki likely only has a few more years of performing at his physical peak before his body begins to deteriorate on him with age… and that’s assuming he does not suffer an injury during that timeframe.

Because of the lack of real competition at 145 pounds, Hioki will now see his ranking fall significantly after a rather disappointing performance.  Don’t count him out of getting a title fight eventually, but he’s going to have to improve his overall game significantly and string together some wins if he wants to get in that conversation again. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ricardo Lamas Feels There’s Nothing That Hioki Brings That Scares Me

There has been a recent rash of injuries that have been affecting the UFC lately. It seems like every day we are hearing a fighter have to bow out of a fight due to injury. You can throw Ricardo Lamas into that category.Lamas (11-2 MMA, 2-0 UFC) return…

There has been a recent rash of injuries that have been affecting the UFC lately. It seems like every day we are hearing a fighter have to bow out of a fight due to injury. You can throw Ricardo Lamas into that category.

Lamas (11-2 MMA, 2-0 UFC) returns to the octagon for the first time since November as he will square off tonight against Hatsu Hioki (26-4 MMA, 2-0 UFC) at UFC on FX 4 in Atlantic City in a key featherweight bout.

Lamas was scheduled to face Dustin Poirier at UFC 143, but had to bow out due to undisclosed injury and now is 100 percent and ready to go.

“I accepted the (Poirier) fight and I would have been starting a couple weeks late,” Lamas told Bleacher Report. “By the time I hit the ground running, started training really hard and I pulled a muscle, I tore a muscle kind of bad. I didn’t rest it and I was sparring one day and I ended up tearing it. That’s why I had to pull out of the fight there. I wish I could have fought. I really hated pulling out because that was the first time I had to do that. But it is what it is. I had to take care of myself.”

Hioki is known for his world class grappling and out of 26 wins, 12 of them are by submission. Lamas though states nothing about Hioki scares him in the slightest.

“I know he’s a great grappler, he’s tough on top, he’s tough on his back,” Lamas states. “But I have six, seven black belts I train with every single day. I train with Daniel Delgrade who’s a no-gi world champion everyday. There’s nothing that he brings to the table that’s gonna scare me.”

With featherweight champion Jose Aldo unable to defend his title against Eric Koch next month at UFC 149 due to injury, the bout is scrapped until later this year. People still feel this bout tonight could be a number one contender’s fight, but Lamas is only looking straight ahead.

“I’m just viewing it as a fight,” Lamas states. “That’s how I’m treating it. I’m not thinking past it. I’m not thinking about where it’s gonna put me in line for a title shot. I’m not looking past Hatsu Hioki for one second. I’m giving him the respect that he deserves. I’m not gonna look past him at all.”

UFC on FX 4 takes place from Revel Atlantic City in Atlantic City, NJ. The Lamas vs Hioki fight is on the preliminary portion of the card, which you can watch on Fuel TV.

 

You can listen to the entire Ricardo Lamas here.

 

You can also follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FX 4: Does Hatsu Hioki Deserve a Shot at Jose Aldo with a Win?

By almost all accounts, Hatsu Hioki is the number 2 featherweight in the world.Sure, he didn’t look great in his UFC debut against George Roop back at UFC 137. Hioki earned a split decision, but many onlookers—and I’ll include myself in that grou…

By almost all accounts, Hatsu Hioki is the number 2 featherweight in the world.

Sure, he didn’t look great in his UFC debut against George Roop back at UFC 137. Hioki earned a split decision, but many onlookers—and I’ll include myself in that group—believe Roop did enough to win the fight.

Before the Roop fight, many considered Hioki a shoo-in as the next opponent for Jose Aldo, but that went out the window after his dreadful performance.

He rebounded against Bart Palaszewski at UFC 144, looking much more like the Hioki who made a name for himself fighting in Shooto and Sengoku. Palaszewski is a tough opponent for anyone, and Hioki nearly dominated him from bell to bell. It appeared that he was once again in the driver’s seat for a title shot against Aldo.

Hioki was indeed offered a shot at the Brazilian, but curiously turned it down. He felt he wasn’t ready just yet and wanted another bout or two before taking on one of the world’s best fighters. 

His next opportunity in the Octagon comes Friday night, when he takes on Ricardo Lamas on the Fuel TV-aired preliminary portion of UFC on FX: Maynard vs. Guida.

The question I’m attempting to answer today is this: Does Hioki deserve a featherweight title shot if he’s able to beat Lamas?

It’s an easy answer. Hioki was the most deserving featherweight contender before he stepped foot in the UFC last year to face George Roop. Since November of 2007, Hioki has strung together a 14-1-1 record, often against some of the better featherweights Japan had to offer.

He owns victories over the legendary Rumina Sato, Masanori Kanehara, Ronnie Mann and Marlon Sandro. A win over Lamas would give him three wins in the UFC.

The UFC’s featherweight division is almost devoid of true contenders for the belt. We know Koch will get his shot when Aldo heals up and is ready to return. Chan Sung Jung is in the mix. Charles Oliveira is slowly making his own case as a contender. But none of them have been able to put together the kind of record that Hioki has over the past six years. 

The only downside to a Hioki title challenge is that, for the most part, he’s a virtual unknown to UFC fans. But there are no true main-event superstars in the division. Aldo is the best-known commodity around, but he hasn’t proven himself to be a pay-per-view draw. Jung is popular among UFC fans but has never come close a UFC pay-per-view main event.

Sometimes, the rules of sport must outweigh the entertainment aspect of mixed martial arts. Hioki may not be the most popular guy on the roster, and he likely won’t attract many PPV buyers when he challenges for the belt.

But there is no question that he’s the most deserving candidate. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FX 4: Which Fighter Has the Most to Lose?

As with every UFC event, there’s a handful of fighters fans could pick from as having the most to lose. The UFC on FX 4 card is no different in that a number of fighters are taking big risks.Gray Maynard is attempting to look for another title shot, Du…

As with every UFC event, there’s a handful of fighters fans could pick from as having the most to lose. The UFC on FX 4 card is no different in that a number of fighters are taking big risks.

Gray Maynard is attempting to look for another title shot, Dustin Pague is stepping in on short notice and Hatsu Hioki is relegated to a preliminary card.

Normally when I’ve wrote these sort of pieces before, I usually pick one fighter from the card who stands to lose the most. However, this time, I’m going to cheat a little.

But there’s no need to complain as you, the reader, get a little extra for your time as I’ve chosen two fighters who equally stand to lose the most on the UFC on FX 4 event. Of all the fighters competing on the card, these two men, by far, stand to lose the most should they see their opponent’s hand raised.

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