UFC 196 Highlights/Results: Conor McGregor and Holly Holm Suffer Shocking Defeats


(“While the world did gaze with deep amaze, At those fearless men but few, Who bore the fight that freedom’s light, Might shine through the foggy dew…” via Getty)

In 1993, the Gracie family brought in fighters of various fighting disciplines from all around the world — kickboxers, wrestlers, street brawlers, and even a sumo for good measure — with the goal of proving that Jiu Jitsu was the one style that could conquer them all. Twenty three years later, it appears that their theory still holds water.

In a night of absolutely thrilling fights, the aura of invincibility surrounding Conor McGregor — and to a lesser degree, Holly Holm — was shattered by the grappling attack of Nate Diaz and Miesha Tate, respectively. While there are many lessons to take away from the shocking events that unfolded at UFC 196 (and we’ll get into a few below), it is the one that we’ve been hearing for the past two decades that was perhaps the most resounding.

Jiu Jitsu conquers all.

Head after the jump for the full results & highlights from UFC 196. 

The post UFC 196 Highlights/Results: Conor McGregor and Holly Holm Suffer Shocking Defeats appeared first on Cagepotato.


(“While the world did gaze with deep amaze, At those fearless men but few, Who bore the fight that freedom’s light, Might shine through the foggy dew…” via Getty)

In 1993, the Gracie family brought in fighters of various fighting disciplines from all around the world — kickboxers, wrestlers, street brawlers, and even a sumo for good measure — with the goal of proving that Jiu Jitsu was the one style that could conquer them all. Twenty three years later, it appears that their theory still holds water.

In a night of absolutely thrilling fights, the aura of invincibility surrounding Conor McGregor — and to a lesser degree, Holly Holm — was shattered by the grappling attack of Nate Diaz and Miesha Tate, respectively. While there are many lessons to take away from the shocking events that unfolded at UFC 196 (and we’ll get into a few below), it is the one that we’ve been hearing for the past two decades that was perhaps the most resounding.

Jiu Jitsu conquers all.

Head after the jump for the full results & highlights from UFC 196. 

If we’ve learned one other thing about MMA in these 23 years, it’s that no one is unbeatable. Heading into yet another last-minute replacement bout with Nate Diaz, it seemed as if Conor McGregor might just be reaching beyond his grasp by attempting to jump up *two* weight classes to take on Diaz. McGregor’s prediction of an early KO seemed well-founded when looking over his record (and completely ignoring Diaz’s), but when Diaz ate his shots and kept pressing forward — like the Diaz brothers have done time and time again — the Irishman eventually crumbled.

Things started off well for McGregor, though, with the Notorious one tagging Diaz early and often with his…well…notorious left hand and cutting Diaz open early. The problem was that, like Anderson Silva before him, McGregor became almost entirely reliant on his power to try put away a notoriously (that’s the last time I’ll use that word, I promise) tough fighter. Rather than butchering the body with constant, varied combinations like he had in previous contests, McGregor went headhunting, and largely came up short when forced to deal with Diaz’s reach and size advantage.

And then, midway through the second round, Diaz found his riddum. Perhaps it was the sudden jump up in weight that became too much for McGregor’s body to handle (as Joe Lauzon suggested it would), or perhaps it was Diaz’s notoriously insane pace, but McGregor got tired, and then, he got rocked. His arms heavy, his chin tested like it had never been before, McGregor became the “panic wrestler” of his own nightmares, and all but sealed his fate the moment he decided to engage in a grappling contest with a Gracie Jiu Jitsu black belt.

As anyone who has been able to separate McGregor’s pre-fight antics from his genuine personality could have predicted, the featherweight champion has taken his loss like a truly humble, honest human being. “Never ever shy away from challenges. Never run from adversity. Face yourself head on,” wrote McGregor on Instagram, a bit of advice that someone like Ronda Rousey could stand to hear.

Of course, this sport is comprised of nothing if not fickle fans…and even more fickle fighters, as it turns out. Jose Aldo and Rafael Dos Anjos have both taken to Twitter to bash McGregor for his performance, with the former calling him a “pussy” with “soap hands” despite, you know, this being a thing that happened. So while it looks like a trip back to 145 and a fight with Frankie Edgar might be next for McGregor, let’s all give the man his due credit for being the only current UFC champion truly willing to fight anyone, anytime. And while we’re at it, let’s give Diaz his due respect for being a goddamn badass powered by an almost unbreakable will.

Speaking of unbreakable will, Miesha Tate, ladies and gentleman. Until Saturday, the former title challenger was easily most known for her pair of one-sided defeats to Ronda Rousey, which really undersells what “Cupcake” has been able to accomplish in her career. Whether it’s submitting Marloes Coenen for the Strikeforce title, out wrestling olympic medalist Sara McMann, or what she was able to accomplish against Holm, Tate is just one of those fighters who simply can’t be counted out. The evolution of her game has been nothing short of remarkable to witness over the years, and her will to win has arguably been even more impressive.

Headed into the fifth round against Holm in a back-and-forth fight that had seen her nearly finish the champ in a dominant second round, then get picked apart on the feet in the third and fourth, Tate’s corner had her convinced that she needed a finish to win. While not entirely true, it was a perfect example of honest cornering being a key to victory. After a tie-up against the cage, Tate locked in a iron-clad rear-naked choke that sent Holm into panic mode. Holm attempted to throw Tate off in the scramble, but it all comes back to that unbreakable will. Tate held on, Holm went out, and suddenly, finally, Tate’s dream of becoming a champion had been realized.

Of course, it wouldn’t be a truly great moment without the UFC undercutting it in the stupidest way possible: by booking a third fight between Tate and Ronda Rousey.

Look, we’re not going to act like Rousey vs. Tate 3 isn’t something fans will be interested in, because that would be ludicrous. However, one can’t help but feel disappointed by how quickly the former champ has gone from someone who would literally walk out on interviews if you asked her about fighting to a someone suddenly ready to “get back to work,” all because the person who embarrassed her is no longer the champion. To borrow a phrase from Jon Snowden, it is quite possibly “the least martial thing ever.” And the UFC is rewarding her for it. Outstanding.

Check out the full list of UFC 196 results below.

Main card
Nate Diaz def. Conor McGregor via submission (RNC) (2nd, 4:12)
Miesha Tate def. Holly Holm via submission (RNC) (R5, 3:30)
Ilir Latifi def. Gian Villante via unanimous decision
Corey Anderson def. Tom Lawlor via unanimous decision
Amanda Nunes def. Valentina Shevchenko via unanimous decision

Undercard
Siyar Bahadurzada def. Brandon Thatch via sub (arm triangle) (3rd, 4:11)
Nordine Taleb def. Erick Silva via second-round KO (1:34)
Vitor Miranda def. Marcelo Guimaraes via second-round TKO (1:09)
Darren Elkins def. Chas Skelly via unanimous decision
Diego Sanchez def. Jim Miller via unanimous decision
Jason Saggo def. Justin Salas via first-round TKO (4:31)
Teruto Ishihara def. Julian Erosa via second-round KO (0:34)

The post UFC 196 Highlights/Results: Conor McGregor and Holly Holm Suffer Shocking Defeats appeared first on Cagepotato.

Holly Holm: “My Heart Hurts” Following Miesha Tate Defeat

tate-holm-choke

Holly Holm admits that she is heartbroken following her first MMA loss.

Holm dropped the UFC female bantamweight title Saturday night to Miesha Tate, suffering a submission defeat in the fifth round of a bout she was likely to win.

The former multi-time boxing champion talked with FOX Sports 1 after the contest.

“I’ve got to go back to the drawing board and get better,” she said, during a post-fight interview on FOX Sports 1. “I’ve got to keep improving. I thought I had rounds 1, 3, 4 and 5. I made a big mistake and let my guard down.

I know the biggest mistake: I wasn’t fighting the hands and shouldn’t have let her get under me. I knew that going into the fight. I’m fine. My heart hurts. I just want to get back in there and get it back.”

For Holm, the defeat also cost her a rematch with Ronda Rousey that was expected to set records in terms of pay-per-view buys and money brought in.

tate-holm-choke

Holly Holm admits that she is heartbroken following her first MMA loss.

Holm dropped the UFC female bantamweight title Saturday night to Miesha Tate, suffering a submission defeat in the fifth round of a bout she was likely to win.

The former multi-time boxing champion talked with FOX Sports 1 after the contest.

“I’ve got to go back to the drawing board and get better,” she said, during a post-fight interview on FOX Sports 1. “I’ve got to keep improving. I thought I had rounds 1, 3, 4 and 5. I made a big mistake and let my guard down.

I know the biggest mistake: I wasn’t fighting the hands and shouldn’t have let her get under me. I knew that going into the fight. I’m fine. My heart hurts. I just want to get back in there and get it back.”

For Holm, the defeat also cost her a rematch with Ronda Rousey that was expected to set records in terms of pay-per-view buys and money brought in.

Miesha Tate & Holly Holm Top List Of Reebok Sponsorship Payouts For UFC 196

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SItDvOeTB0s

Holly Holm will receive the biggest payout from Reebok for Saturday’s UFC 196. Holm will receive $40,000 from the official UFC outfitter, while Miesha Tate, who beat Holm for the Women’s Bantamweight Title…

001-miesha-tate-cover-3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SItDvOeTB0s

Holly Holm will receive the biggest payout from Reebok for Saturday’s UFC 196. Holm will receive $40,000 from the official UFC outfitter, while Miesha Tate, who beat Holm for the Women’s Bantamweight Title, will receive $30,000.

The main event of the show saw Nate Diaz defeating Conor McGregor via choke in the second round. Diaz will be paid $20,000 by Reebok, while McGregor will take home $5,000 in sponsorship payouts.

Here’s the full list of Reebok sponsorship payouts to the fighters of UFC 196:

  • Nate Diaz: $20,000 def. Conor McGregor: $5,000
  • Miesha Tate: $30,000 def. Holly Holm: $40,000
  • Ilir Latifi: $5,000 def. Gian Villante: $10,000
  • Corey Anderson: $5,000 def. Tom Lawlor: $10,000
  • Amanda Nunes: $5,000 def. Valentina Shevchenko: $2,500
  • Siyar Bahadurzada: $2,500 def. Brandon Thatch: $2,500
  • Nordine Taleb: $2,500 def. Erick Silva: $10,000
  • Vitor Miranda: $2,500 def. Marcelo Guimaraes: $2,500
  • Darren Elkins: $10,000 def. Chas Skelly: $5,000
  • Diego Sanchez: $20,000 def. Jim Miller: $20,000
  • Jason Saggo: $2,500 def. Justin Salas: $5,000
  • Teruto Ishihara: $2,500 def. Julian Erosa: $2,500

You can see the full list of fighter salaries paid by the UFC for Saturday’s event here.

Miesha Tate & Holly Holm Top List Of Reebok Sponsorship Payouts For UFC 196

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SItDvOeTB0s

Holly Holm will receive the biggest payout from Reebok for Saturday’s UFC 196. Holm will receive $40,000 from the official UFC outfitter, while Miesha Tate, who beat Holm for the Women’s Bantamweight Title…

001-miesha-tate-cover-3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SItDvOeTB0s

Holly Holm will receive the biggest payout from Reebok for Saturday’s UFC 196. Holm will receive $40,000 from the official UFC outfitter, while Miesha Tate, who beat Holm for the Women’s Bantamweight Title, will receive $30,000.

The main event of the show saw Nate Diaz defeating Conor McGregor via choke in the second round. Diaz will be paid $20,000 by Reebok, while McGregor will take home $5,000 in sponsorship payouts.

Here’s the full list of Reebok sponsorship payouts to the fighters of UFC 196:

  • Nate Diaz: $20,000 def. Conor McGregor: $5,000
  • Miesha Tate: $30,000 def. Holly Holm: $40,000
  • Ilir Latifi: $5,000 def. Gian Villante: $10,000
  • Corey Anderson: $5,000 def. Tom Lawlor: $10,000
  • Amanda Nunes: $5,000 def. Valentina Shevchenko: $2,500
  • Siyar Bahadurzada: $2,500 def. Brandon Thatch: $2,500
  • Nordine Taleb: $2,500 def. Erick Silva: $10,000
  • Vitor Miranda: $2,500 def. Marcelo Guimaraes: $2,500
  • Darren Elkins: $10,000 def. Chas Skelly: $5,000
  • Diego Sanchez: $20,000 def. Jim Miller: $20,000
  • Jason Saggo: $2,500 def. Justin Salas: $5,000
  • Teruto Ishihara: $2,500 def. Julian Erosa: $2,500

You can see the full list of fighter salaries paid by the UFC for Saturday’s event here.

Ronda Rousey Gets Next Title Shot Against Miesha Tate

As seen at UFC 196, Miesha Tate survived the onslaught that Holly Holm was dishing out and came back to score a late fight rear-naked choke victory to become the new UFC women’s bantamweight champion. The question that everyone is asking, what does the UFC do next? Holm vs. Tate 2? or Tate vs. Ronda

The post Ronda Rousey Gets Next Title Shot Against Miesha Tate appeared first on LowKick MMA.

As seen at UFC 196, Miesha Tate survived the onslaught that Holly Holm was dishing out and came back to score a late fight rear-naked choke victory to become the new UFC women’s bantamweight champion. The question that everyone is asking, what does the UFC do next? Holm vs. Tate 2? or Tate vs. Ronda Rousey again or Rousey vs. Holm 2?

UFC president Dana White joined SportsCenter on Saturday night and revealed the big news. Tate’s first bantamweight title defense will come against Rousey.

“I think that Ronda now will fight Miesha Tate for the title. That’s what’s going to happen,” White said. “That’s what I said before this fight even happened. Whoever wins tonight will fight Ronda for the title.”

White said on the UFC 196 post-fight show that he was the one who told Rousey that Tate beat Holm at UFC 196 to become the new champion.

“I text Ronda, and she said, ‘What happened?’” White said. “I said, ‘Miesha just choked her unconscious.’ She said, ‘Looks like I gotta get back to work.’”

Rousey has beaten Tate twice. Rousey beat Tate in March of 2012 by first-round armbar to become the Strikeforce women’s bantamweight champion and then in December of 2013 at UFC 168; Rousey submitted Tate with an armbar in the third round to retain her UFC Women’s bantamweight championship.

For those hoping that the fight will take place at UFC 200, it isn’t happening. Rousey will be busy taping movies during that time and not only did she, but the UFC has talked about her returning to the octagon in November.

The post Ronda Rousey Gets Next Title Shot Against Miesha Tate appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Miesha Tate vs. Holly Holm Full Fight Video Highlights

Miesha Tate showed started off a two-fight streak of shocking upset finishes when she submitted former champion Holly Holm in the co-main event of tonight’s (Sat., March 5, 2016) UFC 196 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. Following four straight wins to earn her shot at the new champion, who famously won

The post Miesha Tate vs. Holly Holm Full Fight Video Highlights appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Miesha Tate showed started off a two-fight streak of shocking upset finishes when she submitted former champion Holly Holm in the co-main event of tonight’s (Sat., March 5, 2016) UFC 196 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Following four straight wins to earn her shot at the new champion, who famously won the belt by knocking out longtime former champ Ronda Rousey at last November’s UFC 193, Tate probably found herself behind on the scorecards heading into the fifth round.

But ‘Cupcake’ capitalized to win the prize she wanted most, jumping onto Holm’s back to lock on a tight rear naked choke to force Holm to go unconscious for the title belt. Watch the full fight video highlights of Tate’s emphatic win via UFC on FOX right here:

The post Miesha Tate vs. Holly Holm Full Fight Video Highlights appeared first on LowKick MMA.