Filed under: UFC, NewsThe Ultimate Fighter season 14 finale is set after Wednesday night’s episode determined the divisional championship pairings to take place at The Pearl at the Palms in Las Vegas on Saturday.
The Ultimate Fighter season 14 finale is set after Wednesday night’s episode determined the divisional championship pairings to take place at The Pearl at the Palms in Las Vegas on Saturday.
In the bantamweight class, John Dodson advanced to the final and will face TJ Dillashaw, while Diego Brandao navigated his way through the featherweight brackets to meet Dennis Bermudez.
Those were two of the eight pairings announced by the UFC following completion of the series.
Dodson faced heat from his Team Miller group all season long for leaking inside information to the opposition, and fellow semifinalist Johnny Bedford vowed revenge, but Dodson had the last laugh with a spectacular second-round KO.
He’ll face Dillashaw in the finals. Dillashaw had previously defeated Dustin Pague to advance.
Brandao notched his third straight first-round knockout victory in advancing to the final, where he’ll be matched up against Dennis Bermudez. Interestingly, Bermudez also finished all three of his TUF fights thus far, two by TKO and one by submission.
Also taking place on the main card, televised on Spike, is a bantamweight bout pitting the colorful Louis Gaudinot and Johnny Bedford. All three of those bouts, along with a lightweight fight with veteran Yves Edwards against season 13 winner Tony Ferguson will support the main event bout between coaches Michael Bisping and Jason “Mayhem” Miller. The full card is below.
Main Card
Michael Bisping vs. Jason “Mayhem” Miller
Diego Brandao vs. Dennis Bermudez
John Dodson vs. T.J. Dillashaw
Yves Edwards vs. Tony Ferguson
Louis Gaudinot vs. Johnny Bedford
Preliminary Card
Stephan Bass vs. Marcus Brimage
John Albert vs. Dustin Pague
Roland Delorme vs. Josh Ferguson
Steven Siler vs. Josh Clopton Bryan Caraway vs. Dustin Neace
Filed under: UFCWill Jason “Mayhem” Miller earn his first UFC victory, or will Michael Bisping give Mayhem the beating he’s been promising? Will Diego Brandao continue to look like a wrecking machine, or will Dennis Bermudez win the featherweight final…
Will Jason “Mayhem” Miller earn his first UFC victory, or will Michael Bisping give Mayhem the beating he’s been promising? Will Diego Brandao continue to look like a wrecking machine, or will Dennis Bermudez win the featherweight final? And who takes the Ultimate Fighter bantamweight tournament, T.J. Dillashaw or John Dodson? We try to answer those questions as we look at the Ultimate Fighter Finale below.
What: The Ultimate Fighter 14 Finale
When: Saturday, the Spike televised card begins at 8 PM ET.
Where: Palms Resort Casino, Las Vegas
Predictions on the four televised fights below.
Michael Bisping vs. Jason Miller Miller, the Bully Beatdown host and former Strikeforce and Dream fighter, finally returns to the cage after more than a year away following his victory over Kazushi Sakuraba at Dream 16. A big question facing Miller is whether he’ll come in sharp and in shape, or whether ring rust is an issue.
A victory would put Bisping on a four-fight winning streak, and he has said he thinks he’s in the hunt for a middleweight title shot if he gets that fourth win in a row. Realistically, that’s not going to happen: Even if he beats Mayhem, he’d need at least one more win before the UFC would give him a shot at Anderson Silva.
But a win would solidify Bisping’s place in the middleweight Top 10, and I think this is Bisping’s fight. I don’t see him finishing Mayhem, but I do think his wrestling and his boxing are good enough that he should control the fight standing or on the ground, and he’ll win a decision. Pick: Bisping
Dennis Bermudez vs. Diego Brandao If there’s anyone from this season of The Ultimate Fighter who has the potential to become a breakout star it’s Brandao, who has looked absolutely terrorizing in winning all of his fights this season. Brandao has said Wanderlei Silva is his favorite fighter, and he looks a lot like a young Axe Murderer: Brandao doesn’t waste any time in going on the attack and looking for a knockout.
Can Bermudez avoid being Brandao’s latest victim? I don’t think so. It’s true that Bermudez has a background as a college wrestler, and if Brandao has a weakness it’s his wrestling. But I don’t think Bermudez is going to be able to withstand the barrage of strikes that Brandao is sure to go after him with. I like Brandao to win by TKO. Pick: Brandao
T.J. Dillashaw vs. John Dodson In the bantamweight final, we have a couple of good wrestlers who train with a couple of good camps: Dillashaw is part of Team Alpha Male, and Dodson is part of Team Greg Jackson. I think both of these guys have more sophisticated, complete games than we usually see from Ultimate Fighter contestants.
The advantage Dillashaw has is his height, reach, size and strength: He’s a good-sized bantamweight, while Dodson is a small 135-pounder and would be fighting at 125 pounds if the UFC had a flyweight class. If Dillashaw can exploit his reach advantage standing up and out-muscle Dodson from the top position if the fight goes to the ground, Dillashaw can win.
But I think Dodson’s experience edge is big here: He’s been fighting professionally since 2004 and has an 11-5 record. Dillashaw only started fighting in 2010 and has a 4-0 record. Dodson is going to be a lot more confident and at ease in the biggest fight of both their careers, and I think Dodson will execute his game plan well and win a decision. Pick: Dodson
Tony Ferguson vs. Yves Edwards Ferguson won the last season of The Ultimate Fighter and then looked outstanding in his first fight after that, brutalizing Aaron Riley at UFC 135. The 35-year-old Edwards, who has fought all over the place in a 15-year career, is 41-17-1 and is a step up in competition for Ferguson. This is not an easy fight for Ferguson at all.
But it’s a fight that I think Ferguson should win, because his punching power will test the somewhat suspect chin of Edwards. In fact, I like Ferguson to win this fight in spectacular fashion and add a highlight reel knockout to his growing resume. Pick: Ferguson
Filed under: UFCSeason 14 of The Ultimate Fighter is in the books, with the two fights on Saturday night’s Ultimate Fighter Finale determining this season’s winners.
In the featherweight Finale, Diego Brandao will face Dennis Bermudez. In the bantamwe…
Season 14 of The Ultimate Fighter is in the books, with the two fights on Saturday night’s Ultimate Fighter Finale determining this season’s winners.
In the featherweight Finale, Diego Brandao will face Dennis Bermudez. In the bantamweight Finale, T.J. Dillashaw will face John Dodson. (The main event at the Ultimate Fighter Finale will be Michael Bisping vs. Jason “Mayhem” Miller in the fight between the coaches.)
How did Brandao, Bermudez, Dillashaw and Dodson get to the Finale? The full Ultimate Fighter Season 14 results are below.
Episode 10 John Dodson beat Johnny Bedford by second-round TKO (punches)
Diego Brandao beat Bryan Caraway by first-round TKO (punches)
Episode 9 T.J Dillashaw beat Dustin Pague by unanimous decision
Episode 8 Dennis Bermudez beat Akira Corassani by first-round submission (guillotine choke)
Episode 7 TJ Dillashaw beat Roland Delorme by second-round submission (rear-naked choke)
Episode 6 John Dodson beat John Albert by unanimous decision
Diego Brandao beat Steven Siler by first-round knockout (punches)
Episode 5 Akira Corassani beat Dustin Neace by majority decision
Episode 4 Dennis Bermudez beat Stephan Bass by second-round TKO (punches)
Dustin Pague beat Louis Gaudinot by second-round submission (rear-naked choke)
Episode 3 Johnny Bedford beat Josh Ferguson by unanimous decision
Episode 2 Bryan Caraway beat Marcus Brimage by second-round submission (rear-naked choke)
Episode 1 Josh Ferguson beat Casey Dyer by first-round knockout (punches)
Diego Brandao beat Jesse Newell by first-round knockout (punches)
John Dodson beat Brandon Merkt by first-round TKO (punches)
Dennis Bermudez beat Jimmie Rivera by second-round TKO (punches)
Roland Delorme beat B.J. Ferguson by first-round submission (triangle choke)
Marcus Brimage beat Bryson Wailehua-Hansen by second-round TKO (punches)
Johnny Bedford beat Carson Beebe by first-round submission (guillotine choke)
Dustin Pague beat Tateki Matsuda by majority decision
Louis Gaudinot beat Paul McVeigh by third-round TKO (punches)
Bryan Caraway beat Eric Mariott by unanimous decision
Dustin Neace beat Josh Clopton by unanimous decision
TJ Dillashaw beat Matt Jaggers by first-round TKO (punches)
Steven Siler beat Micah Miller by third-round submission (guillotine)
John Albert beat Orville Smith by first-round submission (rear naked choke)
Stephan Bass beat Karsten Lenjoint by second-round submission (triangle choke)
Akira Corassani beat Brian Pearman by first-round knockout(punches)
Filed under: UFCThe Ultimate Fighter 4 finale fight card features Jason “Mayhem” Miller vs. Michael Bisping in a coach vs. coach matchup at the Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.
Mayhem (24-7) returns to the UFC after six-plus years fighti…
The Ultimate Fighter 4 finale fight card features Jason “Mayhem” Miller vs. Michael Bisping in a coach vs. coach matchup at the Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.
Mayhem (24-7) returns to the UFC after six-plus years fighting outside of the UFC in promotions such as Strikeforce, DREAM and Icon Sport. Mayhem hasn’t fought this year, but won both his fights last year against Kazushi Sakuraba and Tim Stout. Bisping (21-3) is riding a three-fight win streak and last defeated Jorge Rivera at UFC 127 in February.
In addition to Mayhem-Bisping, the finale will also host this season’s finals of the bantamweight and featherweight tournaments.
The current fight card is below. Current Fight Card
Michael Bisping vs. Jason “Mayhem” Miller
Featherweight Tournament Final
Bantamweight Tournament Final
Tony Ferguson vs. Yves Edwards
One look at Jason “Mayhem” Miller and you can tell he was probably never the prom type. Just picturing him doing something as normal as pinning a corsage on a date or squeezing into a rented tux seems wrong, like imagining a dog eating with a knife and fork.
That’s why it shouldn’t surprise many fight fans to learn that while his high school classmates were attending the senior prom in April of 1998, a 17-year-old Mayhem was fighting a man named Al “Superman” Dill for $300 cash in Virginia Beach, Va.
His girlfriend at the time? She was in the audience watching, Miller says. And she didn’t even mind missing the prom since, as he puts it, “We were weirdo kids. We weren’t going to the prom, anyway.”
For Miller, this night had been years in the making. He’d wanted to be a fighter ever since he knew it was a real thing people did without going to jail. Maybe he’d seen too many Van Damme movies as a kid, he admits, or maybe he just enjoyed unarmed combat a little too much. So much, in fact, that it got him kicked out of his first high school.
“I was kind of just an idiot kid,” he says. “If somebody was trying to mess with me I would step up and fight them, and with very little provocation. Like, okay, let’s go.”
After Miller was expelled for fighting, his family had to move 40 miles to a new school district just so he could finish high school, something he now realizes he might owe his family an apology for. At the time though, it might have been the best thing for him. He discovered high school wrestling, which only stoked his desire to learn other martial arts.
“I would go to karate schools and try to fight the guys. Looking back I see how stupid I was. But I really thought that all the karate people, the goal was to be a fighter, to be able to fight people. And I didn’t care so much if that was their goal, because my goal was to test my skills against theirs. I didn’t get that nobody wanted to do that; they just wanted to have a karate school and make some money.”
It turned out that local karate instructors did not want to fight some gangly, wild-eyed teenager who came in off the streets, asking them to “put on the little bootie things and kick me.” The people in the judo classes inside a local gymnastics academy were slightly more accommodating, but only to a point and only for a little while.
“The problem was, at the judo school all I wanted to do spar. I kept breaking all the dorks noses and stuff. They were trying to do this traditional martial arts stuff, and I was trying to tear everyone’s heads off. I thought, we have to treat this like a fight, because that’s what it is. It’s a fight.”
Even though Miller was paying his membership dues, eventually the instructor decided it was better for business to lose one crazy student rather than a bunch of normal ones.
“He pulled me aside and said, ‘Jason, I know you want to be an ultimate fighter, so there’s a gym right down the street, like a block away. Go there.’ I was like, what? Why didn’t you tell me this before?!”
Miller went that very night, now that he was no longer welcome at judo. The gym was closed, but as he cupped his hands around his face and peered through the glass he saw walls covered in pictures of Frank Shamrock and Royce Gracie, cutouts from magazines and early MMA promotional materials. Right away he knew he’d found a home.
“I started going there every day, and I would not leave,” he says. “The summer before that, I spent all my time on skateboarding, something I was terrible at. Then the next summer I spent learning how to fight, which I was pretty good at. It was a crazy time in my life.”
The gym, Miller says, turned out to be “a tax write-off for some veterinarian,” but it had what he needed, which was mostly a matter of attitude and a little skill here and there. He got boxing lessons at the hands of a man known only as “Boo-Boo,” though the sparring sessions were so punishing he had to wear a chest protector just to survive them. There was another man who had learned what submissions he could from the ‘Gracie Jiu-Jitsu in Action’ VHS tapes. A “fat dude who was in the Army” stopped by from time to time. A real dream team of trainers and sparring partners, in other words.
Miller soaked up everything he could, but he knew that in order to take it to the next level he needed a real fight against a real opponent. This is how he ended up in the ring with “Superman” Dill on prom night.
“He was a grown man, and I was a little boy. I was 17 years old,” he says, though that wasn’t what worried him the most. Dill not only showed up wearing a gi, which right there suggested some level of jiu-jitsu sophistication that was unknown to Miller, but he also had a colored belt around his waist.
“To me, it seemed like he was almost magical. I think he had a blue belt or a purple belt, and I was like, oh no. I was a little concerned. There was no blue belts or purple belts in my neighborhood. Nobody knew that stuff. It wasn’t until months later when I went to a Gracie school and was tapping out blue belts and purple belts that I realized, oh wait, that doesn’t actually matter that much.”
Once the fight got started, the gi and the belt soon became the least of his concerns. Miller might have been a skinny kid with “a blonde afro,” but Dill had put a little more time and thought into his appearance that night.
“I realized when I threw a punch at his head that he had a Superman logo painted on the back of his head. At first I thought he was bleeding, but then I realized I had paint all over me. It was just like, what the hell? Paint?! You come in here with paint on you?”
The fight went the full eight minutes, during which time Miller mostly relied on his high school wrestling skills, taking Dill down, punching him every now and then, but mostly “holding on for dear life.”
When it was over, he raised his own hand, was pronounced the winner, and enjoyed a few brief moments of joy and relief. Later, while relaxing in his free hotel room with the girlfriend who seemed not at all impressed with the idea of professional fighting in general, Miller finally had a chance to reflect on what had happened.
“It was the same thing as today when I win a fight. I just thought about all the things I could have done better. I thought it was boring, I didn’t do any of my moves. I was nervous and I played it safe. It didn’t feel right. I told myself I’d never win a boring fight again. I’d take risks and try stuff, whatever happened.”
The difference between Miller and most 17-year-olds was, even then, he knew this was the start of something. The sport may have been in its nascent stages in the U.S., but he knew without a doubt that he had a future in it.
“I knew that there was a long career in this for me, and I also knew that mixed martial arts was going to be a huge sport eventually. My dad was telling me I was an idiot, and at the time he made a lot of sense. If you’re not in the sport, you can’t see how things are taking shape. He told me to go to computer school. I told him, ‘Kiss my [expletive], I’m going to be a fighter.’ And he said, ‘Well, you’re an idiot. Get out of my house.'”
Miller did, eventually, though not by choice at first. He eventually worked his way to California, where he lived in his van in the gym parking lot and began the long process of becoming the fighter he is today. The girlfriend who skipped out on the prom to watch his professional debut? She lives in San Francisco now, he says, and is still not particularly impressed with anything he’s accomplished.
“She always thought fighting was just this stupid thing I was doing. She just loved me for my Justin Timberlake curls. She didn’t care what I was doing.”
One look at Jason “Mayhem” Miller and you can tell he was probably never the prom type. Just picturing him doing something as normal as pinning a corsage on a date or squeezing into a rented tux seems wrong, like imagining a dog eating with a knife and fork.
That’s why it shouldn’t surprise many fight fans to learn that while his high school classmates were attending the senior prom in April of 1998, a 17-year-old Mayhem was fighting a man named Al “Superman” Dill for $300 cash in Virginia Beach, Va.
His girlfriend at the time? She was in the audience watching, Miller says. And she didn’t even mind missing the prom since, as he puts it, “We were weirdo kids. We weren’t going to the prom, anyway.”
For Miller, this night had been years in the making. He’d wanted to be a fighter ever since he knew it was a real thing people did without going to jail. Maybe he’d seen too many Van Damme movies as a kid, he admits, or maybe he just enjoyed unarmed combat a little too much. So much, in fact, that it got him kicked out of his first high school.
“I was kind of just an idiot kid,” he says. “If somebody was trying to mess with me I would step up and fight them, and with very little provocation. Like, okay, let’s go.”
After Miller was expelled for fighting, his family had to move 40 miles to a new school district just so he could finish high school, something he now realizes he might owe his family an apology for. At the time though, it might have been the best thing for him. He discovered high school wrestling, which only stoked his desire to learn other martial arts.
“I would go to karate schools and try to fight the guys. Looking back I see how stupid I was. But I really thought that all the karate people, the goal was to be a fighter, to be able to fight people. And I didn’t care so much if that was their goal, because my goal was to test my skills against theirs. I didn’t get that nobody wanted to do that; they just wanted to have a karate school and make some money.”
It turned out that local karate instructors did not want to fight some gangly, wild-eyed teenager who came in off the streets, asking them to “put on the little bootie things and kick me.” The people in the judo classes inside a local gymnastics academy were slightly more accommodating, but only to a point and only for a little while.
“The problem was, at the judo school all I wanted to do spar. I kept breaking all the dorks noses and stuff. They were trying to do this traditional martial arts stuff, and I was trying to tear everyone’s heads off. I thought, we have to treat this like a fight, because that’s what it is. It’s a fight.”
Even though Miller was paying his membership dues, eventually the instructor decided it was better for business to lose one crazy student rather than a bunch of normal ones.
“He pulled me aside and said, ‘Jason, I know you want to be an ultimate fighter, so there’s a gym right down the street, like a block away. Go there.’ I was like, what? Why didn’t you tell me this before?!”
Miller went that very night, now that he was no longer welcome at judo. The gym was closed, but as he cupped his hands around his face and peered through the glass he saw walls covered in pictures of Frank Shamrock and Royce Gracie, cutouts from magazines and early MMA promotional materials. Right away he knew he’d found a home.
“I started going there every day, and I would not leave,” he says. “The summer before that, I spent all my time on skateboarding, something I was terrible at. Then the next summer I spent learning how to fight, which I was pretty good at. It was a crazy time in my life.”
The gym, Miller says, turned out to be “a tax write-off for some veterinarian,” but it had what he needed, which was mostly a matter of attitude and a little skill here and there. He got boxing lessons at the hands of a man known only as “Boo-Boo,” though the sparring sessions were so punishing he had to wear a chest protector just to survive them. There was another man who had learned what submissions he could from the ‘Gracie Jiu-Jitsu in Action’ VHS tapes. A “fat dude who was in the Army” stopped by from time to time. A real dream team of trainers and sparring partners, in other words.
Miller soaked up everything he could, but he knew that in order to take it to the next level he needed a real fight against a real opponent. This is how he ended up in the ring with “Superman” Dill on prom night.
“He was a grown man, and I was a little boy. I was 17 years old,” he says, though that wasn’t what worried him the most. Dill not only showed up wearing a gi, which right there suggested some level of jiu-jitsu sophistication that was unknown to Miller, but he also had a colored belt around his waist.
“To me, it seemed like he was almost magical. I think he had a blue belt or a purple belt, and I was like, oh no. I was a little concerned. There was no blue belts or purple belts in my neighborhood. Nobody knew that stuff. It wasn’t until months later when I went to a Gracie school and was tapping out blue belts and purple belts that I realized, oh wait, that doesn’t actually matter that much.”
Once the fight got started, the gi and the belt soon became the least of his concerns. Miller might have been a skinny kid with “a blonde afro,” but Dill had put a little more time and thought into his appearance that night.
“I realized when I threw a punch at his head that he had a Superman logo painted on the back of his head. At first I thought he was bleeding, but then I realized I had paint all over me. It was just like, what the hell? Paint?! You come in here with paint on you?”
The fight went the full eight minutes, during which time Miller mostly relied on his high school wrestling skills, taking Dill down, punching him every now and then, but mostly “holding on for dear life.”
When it was over, he raised his own hand, was pronounced the winner, and enjoyed a few brief moments of joy and relief. Later, while relaxing in his free hotel room with the girlfriend who seemed not at all impressed with the idea of professional fighting in general, Miller finally had a chance to reflect on what had happened.
“It was the same thing as today when I win a fight. I just thought about all the things I could have done better. I thought it was boring, I didn’t do any of my moves. I was nervous and I played it safe. It didn’t feel right. I told myself I’d never win a boring fight again. I’d take risks and try stuff, whatever happened.”
The difference between Miller and most 17-year-olds was, even then, he knew this was the start of something. The sport may have been in its nascent stages in the U.S., but he knew without a doubt that he had a future in it.
“I knew that there was a long career in this for me, and I also knew that mixed martial arts was going to be a huge sport eventually. My dad was telling me I was an idiot, and at the time he made a lot of sense. If you’re not in the sport, you can’t see how things are taking shape. He told me to go to computer school. I told him, ‘Kiss my [expletive], I’m going to be a fighter.’ And he said, ‘Well, you’re an idiot. Get out of my house.'”
Miller did, eventually, though not by choice at first. He eventually worked his way to California, where he lived in his van in the gym parking lot and began the long process of becoming the fighter he is today. The girlfriend who skipped out on the prom to watch his professional debut? She lives in San Francisco now, he says, and is still not particularly impressed with anything he’s accomplished.
“She always thought fighting was just this stupid thing I was doing. She just loved me for my Justin Timberlake curls. She didn’t care what I was doing.”
Michael Bisping was interviewed by Bobby Cavian from MMANYTT last week after the premiere of The Ultimate Fighter 14 and the slightly tipsy UFC middleweight, although *slightly* less abrasive than usual, was pretty much the exact type of guy his opposing coach, Jason “Mayhem” Miller would have taught a lesson to on Bully Beatdown.
From calling Cavian “a Swedish Hobbit” and insulting his attire to pushing him around and slapping him in the face, Bisping seemed to take pages out of “Rampage” and Forrest Griffin’s playbook for the Q&A session. He better hope he doesn’t meet up with Dan Henderson on the MTV show if Mayhem shows up at his door with Cavian to throw down the gauntlet.
(Video courtesy of YouTube/bobbycavian)
Michael Bisping was interviewed by Bobby Cavian from MMANYTT last week after the premiere of The Ultimate Fighter 14 and the slightly tipsy UFC middleweight, although *slightly* less abrasive than usual, was pretty much the exact type of guy his opposing coach, Jason “Mayhem” Miller would have taught a lesson to on Bully Beatdown.
From calling Cavian “a Swedish Hobbit” and insulting his attire to pushing him around and slapping him in the face, Bisping seemed to take pages out of “Rampage” and Forrest Griffin’s playbook for the Q&A session. He better hope he doesn’t meet up with Dan Henderson on the MTV show if Mayhem shows up at his door with Cavian to throw down the gauntlet.
“The Count” actually made it more than halfway through the interview without bragging about himself, which is quite an accomplishment for a megalomaniac like him. Like clockwork though, as soon as he was asked a question about “Mayhem” coming in from Strikeforce and stealing his so-called UFC thunder, he says that there’s no way he’s going to let “the codger” take what he’s “worked hard to achieve.”
We’ll now go to Chael Sonnen’s Twitter to speak to these claims:
Some unintentional comedy came out of the interview with Bisping’s revelation that he was voted “The UK’s Coolest Guy of 2008″ behind Liam Gallagher. We can think of a few different adjectives than “coolest” that better suit the name of the award, which, by the way was bestowed upon him by the little known Zoo Magazine.
His insinuation that he and Miller actually throw down during this season of TUF better not be bullocks.