UFC Releases Jon Fitch, Jacob Volkmann, Sends a Message to “Boring” Fighters

It’s not quite spring yet, but that hasn’t stopped the UFC from getting a head start on some spring cleaning. The organization made some of the most controversial cuts in the promotion’s history over the past few days.On Tuesday …

It’s not quite spring yet, but that hasn’t stopped the UFC from getting a head start on some spring cleaning. The organization made some of the most controversial cuts in the promotion’s history over the past few days.

On Tuesday afternoon, we learned that Jacob Volkmann had been cut by the UFC. At 6-2 in his previous eight fights, Volkmann’s release caught both fans and top analysts by surprise—even if his two losses have come over his past three fights.

But even given Volkmann’s status as one of the best in the division, the news of his release pales in comparison to Wednesday’s news that former welterweight No. 1 contender Jon Fitch had joined Volkmann on a list of 16 fighters who were also released.

Although quite a few of the pink slips on that list were expected to be there, the release of Fitch and even Volkmann is a bit of a shock. Over the course of their UFC careers, Fitch and Volkmann‘s combined records were a combined 20-7-1, with Fitch having been ranked in the top-5 of the welterweight division for the better part of the past five years. 

The release of these two upper-echelon fighters has to point to one thing—with an ever-growing roster that now includes women and flyweights, the UFC is no longer as willing to tolerate “boring” fighters.

Of course, the definition of a “boring” fighter is still very much up for discussion. Is it just the smothering wrestling style that both Fitch and Volkmann have used to succeed in the Octagon that would be considered boring? Or should fighters like Chris Leben, who used to be known for his exciting striking game but recently fell short in a relatively uneventful bout against Derek Brunson, be worried as well? 

At the end of the day, it appears to be a simple judgment call. And according to Volkmann himself, that judgment call may not be coming from who many expected it from.

Assuming that Volkmann is correct in the situation, UFC fighters now need to be even more keenly aware of what matchmaker Joe Silva is looking for when he’s putting fight cards together. 

Dan Hardy, who lost four straight bouts from 2010 – 2011, has remained employed by the company because his wild fighting style meant that most of his fights turned into a standup brawl, so long as his opponent obliged. Perhaps this is a style that more fighters need to make use of.

These releases seem pretty harsh on the surface, but hey—when your roster now includes athletes in nine different weight classes and your events typically only feature 10-12 fights, it’s only going to get tougher to stay employed. 

The message from the UFC, and specifically, Joe Silva appears to be pretty simple—fighters can either start finishing fights that are “entertaining,” never lose or start looking for a new job.

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Jon Fitch Released from the UFC Along with 15 Other Fighters

A growing roster of fighters being brought over from Strikeforce including the women’s division plus 14 competitors from The Ultimate Fighter who will all get at least one more fight in the Octagon have forced the UFC to make some major roster cuts, in…

A growing roster of fighters being brought over from Strikeforce including the women’s division plus 14 competitors from The Ultimate Fighter who will all get at least one more fight in the Octagon have forced the UFC to make some major roster cuts, including former welterweight title contender Jon Fitch.

Fitch was listed among 16 total fighters that the UFC released on Wednesday following the past couple of shows in 2013.

According to UFC president Dana White in a statement released to MMAFighting.com, Fitch was cut along with 15 other fighters coming off recent losses.  The full list is below:

Heavyweight: Mike Russow

Light heavyweight: Vladimir Matyushenko, Wagner Prado

Welterweight: Jon Fitch, Che Mills, Jay Hieron, Jorge Santiago, Simeon Thoresen, Mike Stumpf

Lightweight: Jacob Volkmann, Paul Sass, C.J. Keith, Terry Etim

Featherweight: Josh Grispi

Bantamweight: Motonobu Tezuka

Flyweight: Ulysses Gomez

While a few fighters didn’t expect to be on that list, no one ranks higher than current Top-10 welterweight Jon Fitch.  With a 14-3-1 record in the UFC, Fitch sat near the top of the 170-pound weight class for several years.

Fitch was unsuccessful in his one shot at UFC gold when he lost to champion Georges St-Pierre at UFC 87 in August 2008.  After that he reeled off five more wins before fighting to a draw with BJ Penn at UFC 127.

The American Kickboxing Academy fighter fell on harder times of late, going 1-2 over his last three fights, but the defeats came to top-ranked welterweight contender Johny Hendricks and current Top 10 fighter Demian Maia.

The release could have come for a number of reasons, but an expanding roster along with Fitch’s current pay stature could have played a big part in the UFC’s decision to release the former welterweight contender.

All of the fighters released on Wednesday were coming off losses, and per UFC contracts, the organization holds the right to cut anyone after a defeat. 

Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Robbie Lawler: The Improbable Spoiler from the Murderers’ Row at Welterweight

It doesn’t seem like all that long ago that Robbie Lawler was fighting for the first time in the UFC as a name to watch from the Miletich camp, blasting opponents off their feet. Lawler was the new kid on the block, a training part…

It doesn’t seem like all that long ago that Robbie Lawler was fighting for the first time in the UFC as a name to watch from the Miletich camp, blasting opponents off their feet. 

Lawler was the new kid on the block, a training partner to welterweight champion Matt Hughes, and it seemed logical that he would be the man to take the handoff from Hughes as the next great champion.

On Feb. 23 of this year, at UFC 157, Lawler will be stepping back into the Octagon for the first time since 2004, now an “old man” in the game, set against Josh Koscheck.

Talk about a rough welcome home.”

Still, Koscheck isn’t going to bring anything into the cage that Lawler hasn’t seen before; as dynamic as the sport and its fighters have become, a takedown is still a takedown and an overhand right is still an overhand right.

Given the names in the divisionKoscheck, Jon Fitch, Johny Hendricks, Martin Kampmann, Rory MacDonald, Carlos Conditit’s hard to imagine Lawler standing out, really.

But upon careful reconsideration, he does begin to stand out, if for no other reason that he’s a contradiction in so many terms: a youthful veteran, an established newcomer, a quiet fighter.

And he’s better now than he was the first go-round in the UFC.

Lawler has a serious test in front of him with Koscheck, but win or lose, odds are he’s going to get his feet back under him and find his equilibrium within the division, and when he does, he could rise up the ranks for a shot at Georges St. Pierre’s title.

None of this is to say that Lawler isn’t a beatable fighter, but at 30 years old, he’s still got a lot he brings to the party, including some serious physical power and explosiveness.

Anytime someone looks at the welterweight division they see it in parts as the murderers’ row it is, with GSP playing the part of capable warden, putting down any uprisings with a kind of no-risk mechanical efficiency that belies the depth of the division.

Lawler matches up well with nearly all of the top welterweights and he possesses the kind of power that could knock any of them out cold.

And having fought many of the past years as a legitimate middleweight, Lawler is going to be a very big, powerful man in the ring at 170.

On paper, Lawler is an improbable threat to the title; most of his losses seem to stem from being outworked on the mat and he’s been submitted five times.

But most of the men who submitted himJake Shields, Jason Miller, Ronaldo Souzaare among some of the best submission artists in the game; a threat he won’t be facing against GSP.

All of this conjecture is really based around central notion, being that a highly motivated and excited Lawler is capable of beating anyone in the division on any given nightespecially if they are foolish enough to stand and trade with him, like Melvin Manhoef was.

It’s been a long time since we’ve seen Lawler look like he was honestly enthused to be fighting, but sometimes coming home can bring back the memories of better days and rekindle the joy of riding hard and fighting harder.

If there is any place for aspirations, it’s the UFC, and for Lawler, stepping down into the welterweight division, sans all the fanfare he was afforded as a younger man in the Octagon, could be the perfect formula for an awakening.

After all, he’s in a prime position; no one is expecting much out of him and most, while acknowledging his presence, have him somewhere out of the corner of their eye, standing by the gate.

Given that this is a sport where nothing is given, Lawler has a real chance to take it all by force; much as it’s the punch you don’t see coming that knocks you out, it’s also the threat you don’t see honestly that runs you over.

But he’s going to have to be more than he has been in recent years and exactly what he was once upon a time, before he became disenchanted with life and reckless in the cage.

He’s going to need to be ruthless.  

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Pillow Hands: The 10 Weakest Punchers in MMA

If there is any curse in the world of combative sport, it’s that of being a fighter who cannot deliver force with any kind of note, especially via punches. Much like trying to carry water with a hole in the bottom of the bucket, scoring punches t…

If there is any curse in the world of combative sport, it’s that of being a fighter who cannot deliver force with any kind of note, especially via punches.

Much like trying to carry water with a hole in the bottom of the bucket, scoring punches that do little to no damage—no matter how cleanly they land—is a hard obstacle to overcome; such fighters can still score points, but once their opponent realizes they have nothing to fear from those fists, the fight can turn quickly.

After all, these men and women are in the hurt business, where it is far better to give than receive; if you have nothing to give, then you are going to receive, usually until your cup runneth over.

But there is also an unfounded stigma around such fighters; the notion is if a fighter has “pillow hands” or is “feather fisted,” they can never acquire the power to do serious damage if God hasn’t seen fit to give it to them at birth.

While some fighters can indeed train to confound said notion, it still takes a great deal in order to compete with the Fedor Emelianenkos, Benson Hendersons and Johnny Hendrickses of the game—men who can deliver devastating force so casually it almost seems unfair.

No one enters the fight game and achieves anything considerable without being of the mind that they are good enough and have the necessary desire to take such considerations as “fair” and “unfair” and render them moot.

Fighters have always been a breed apart from the rest of us, which is why we watch them ply their trade; as fans, ours are vicarious joys.

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UFC 156 Results: 5 Fights for Jon Fitch to Take Next

At UFC 156, perennial welterweight contender Jon Fitch suffered defeat for the second time in three contests. While Fitch’s loss to Demian Maia was much different from his previous loss—a 12-second knockout by Johny Hendricks—it was ju…

At UFC 156, perennial welterweight contender Jon Fitch suffered defeat for the second time in three contests. 

While Fitch’s loss to Demian Maia was much different from his previous loss—a 12-second knockout by Johny Hendricks—it was just as thorough. The Brazilian utterly dominating from bell to bell.

In spite of his recent struggles, Fitch remains one of the 170-pound division’s premier competitors, and he will be looking to reposition himself near the top of the heap by getting back on track next time out.

Here we’ll take a look at five potential opponents for Fitch as he tries to right the ship.

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UFC 156: Aldo vs. Edgar Aftermath — Parlay Destroyed


Photo via Getty Images

“I don’t think that was supposed to happen.”

That was the text I received this morning from a friend who is very much a casual MMA fan regarding last night’s UFC 156. Even though I assumed that my friend was talking about the end result of Bigfoot vs. Overeem, that statement could just as easily apply to almost any other fight on the card. We’re all familiar with the cliché that any fighter can beat anyone else on any night at this level, but we rarely see the underdogs win as frequently – and as convincingly – as they did last night. Simply put, it was an awful night for the guys who were supposed to win.

So let’s start off with the fight that went exactly as we all assumed it would: Jose Aldo defeated Frankie Edgar by a close, yet unanimous decision. Naturally, Edgar grew stronger as the fight went on. And naturally, the fight was close enough to justify an immediate rematch if one were to be booked (it probably won’t but who knows), because that’s just how Frankie Edgar fights work.

It’s impossible to be disappointed with Frankie Edgar’s effort in any given fight, and last night was no exception. Edgar provided Aldo with his stiffest challenge to date – after the champion returned from the longest layoff in his career, mind you – but Aldo was simply the better fighter.


Photo via Getty Images

“I don’t think that was supposed to happen.”

That was the text I received this morning from a friend who is very much a casual MMA fan regarding last night’s UFC 156. Even though I assumed that my friend was talking about the end result of Bigfoot vs. Overeem, that statement could just as easily apply to almost any other fight on the card. We’re all familiar with the cliché that any fighter can beat anyone else on any night at this level, but we rarely see the underdogs win as frequently – and as convincingly – as they did last night. Simply put, it was an awful night for the guys who were supposed to win.

So let’s start off with the fight that went exactly as we all assumed it would: Jose Aldo defeated Frankie Edgar by a close, yet unanimous decision. Naturally, Edgar grew stronger as the fight went on. And naturally, the fight was close enough to justify an immediate rematch if one were to be booked (it probably won’t but who knows), because that’s just how Frankie Edgar fights work.

It’s impossible to be disappointed with Frankie Edgar’s effort in any given fight, and last night was no exception. Edgar provided Aldo with his stiffest challenge to date – after the champion returned from the longest layoff in his career, mind you – but Aldo was simply the better fighter.

Aldo used his leg kicks, a stiff jab and great takedown defense to control the bout during the first two rounds. Despite Aldo winning the third round, Edgar began to build momentum that he would have on his side for the rest of the bout. The crowd came alive in the fourth round after a magnificent slam from the challenger, and Edgar took the fifth round with his combinations. In the end, it was too little too late, as the judges all saw the fight in favor of Jose Aldo.

As for what happens next? That’s just about anyone’s guess. Frankie Edgar isn’t sure if he wants to stay at featherweight or move back up to lightweight for his next fight (although his boss has made it pretty clear where he feels Edgar should be). Dana White mentioned in the post-event press conference that Anthony Pettis texted him asking for Jose Aldo, and I don’t think anyone would complain about that fight being booked. Well, anyone except for Ricardo Lamas and Chan Sung-Jung, who would like to remind everyone that they exist and fight at featherweight. We’ll keep you up to date as this sorts itself out.

Elsewhere on the card…

– Lil’ Nog upset Rashad Evans, taking home a unanimous decision victory. Jon Jones may have very well beaten the aggression out of Rashad, as he seemed content with letting Nogueira occasionally jab his way to the victory. Okay, maybe it wasn’t that bad, but it was certainly enough to squash the ongoing Rashad Evans vs. Anderson Silva discussions for the time being. The less we say about this fight, the better.

– Dead serious question: Are we keeping that awesome Manto t-shirt we were trying to give away, or did one of you degenerate gamblers play the odds and predict that Bigfoot would knock out Overeem in the third round simply because no one else predicted that?

On paper, Antonio Silva defeating Alistair Overeem may very well be the most underrated upset of all time. I write this because the gambling lines had Silva at +315 – which actually made him less of an underdog than Jamie Varner was when he deflated Edson Barboza’s hype – even though I can’t think of a single reason that anyone thought Antonio Silva might win this fight. At least Jamie Varner was fighting a promising, yet unproven prospect. Silva, meanwhile, was taking on a proven destroyer who was going to issue a Cormeir/Velasquez-esque beating on his way to a title shot.

I can’t think of one advantage anyone was giving Silva before the fight, except for the token “Well, he IS pretty big, I guess.” And for the first two rounds, that’s exactly how the fight went down. Overeem didn’t look like he was ever close to finishing Silva, but it was convincing enough to justify the hype he’s been riding. And then round three happened. Holy shit, did round three happen. You’d swear Silva’s plan all along was “Let Overeem think he an defeat you, then humiliate him.” It was equal parts this and this, basically.

So the big question now is, where exactly do we go from here? It sounds like Overeem will be fighting Junior Dos Santos, and Bigfoot Silva will be doing anything but fighting Velasquez for his next fight. I like both of these ideas. Although JDS is a big name in the division, he is also coming off of a rather humbling loss and needs a victory to stay at the top of the division. Expect fireworks from that one. Also, after the beating that Cain Velasquez put on Bigfoot Silva – and even the beating that Overeem put on him during the first two rounds – I’d like to see a little more out of Silva before talking about him as a title contender.

– It’s almost like Demian Maia read all that mean stuff we published about him as a middleweight, because he has been on an absolute tear since dropping to welterweight. Maia took Jon Fitch down at will last night, and had Fitch defending against ground and pound and submission attempts the entire fight. There’s no other way to say it: Maia managed to out-Fitch Jon Fitch and actually be entertaining while doing so. Let that sink in.

– Ian McCall is officially a bust signing. McCall was considered the top flyweight on Earth before the UFC implemented the weight class, and signed to be an immediate contender in the new division. McCall quickly found that it’s a lot easier to be number one when anyone who can beat you is in the UFC fighting at bantamweight, and once he was matched up against stiff competition, he’s proven to be a tough, yet very beatable opponent.

– If you bet $100 on a Bobby Green, Demian Maia, Antonio Silva and Lil’ Nog parlay, you would have been put in a mental institution before the fights last night. You would have been released just in time for the main event, $33,663 richer.

– Fight of the Night went to Jose Aldo vs. Frankie Edgar, Knockout of the Night went to Bigfoot Silva and Submission of the Night went to Bobby Green. All bonuses were worth $50k.

Full Results:

Main Card:

Jose Aldo defeats Frankie Edgar via Unanimous Decision
Antonio Rogerio Nogueira defeats Rashad Evans via Unanimous Decision
Antonio Silva defeats Alistair Overeem via TKO (Strikes), 0:25 Round Three
Demian Maia defeats Jon Fitch via Unanimous Decision
Joseph Benavidez defeats Ian McCall via Unanimous Decision

Preliminary Card:

Evan Dunham defeats Gleison Tibau via Split Decision
Tyron Woodley defeats Jay Hieron via KO (Strikes), 0:36 in Round One
Bobby Green defeats Jacob Volkmann via Submission (Rear-Naked Choke), 4:35 Round Three
Isaac Vallie-Flagg defeats Yves Edwards via Split Decision
Dustin Kimura defeats Chico Camus via Submission (Rear-Naked Choke), 1:50 Round Three
Francisco Rivera defeats Edwin Figueroa via TKO (Strikes), 4:20 Round Two

@SethFalvo