UFC 135: Results, News, Reaction for Jon Jones vs. Rampage Jackson

Jon Jones and Rampage Jackson are set to face off inside the Octagon on Saturday, September 24 to figure out whom the UFC light heavyweight title truly belongs to.  Currently the title resides with Jones, who captured it with a third round TKO vic…

Jon Jones and Rampage Jackson are set to face off inside the Octagon on Saturday, September 24 to figure out whom the UFC light heavyweight title truly belongs to.  Currently the title resides with Jones, who captured it with a third round TKO victory over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 128.  Jackson, on the other hand has stated that he will be heading to Denver’s Pepsi Center to take his belt back.

Jones’ ascent to the top of the UFC’s light heavyweight division has been stunning. Jones made his professional debut in 2008 and in less than three years found himself a UFC champion with a record of 13-1. Jones’ sole loss came via disqualification for landing illegal 12-to-6 elbows to Matt Hamill.

Rampage, had been fighting professionally since the 24-year old Jones was a 12 years old. In that time he has put together a record of 32-8, capturing both the UFC light heavyweight title as well as the PRIDE middleweight crown.

Also appearing on the UFC 135 fight card will be welterweights Josh Koscheck and Matt Hughes. Both fighters will be coming off long layoffs as well as devastating losses heading into Saturday. Hughes last set foot in the Octagon in November 2010, suffering a 21-second knockout loss to BJ Penn at UFC 123. Koscheck has not fought since dropping a unanimous decision to UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre at UFC 124. Koscheck suffered a broken orbital bone in that December 2010 scrap, the damage required surgery and a long period of rehab.

The full fight card for UFC 135:

Jon Jones vs. Quinton “Rampage” Jackson:

Josh Koscheck vs. Matt Hughes:

Travis Browne  vs. Rob Broughton:

Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi:

Ben Rothwell vs. Mark Hunt:

Tony Ferguson vs. Aaron Riley:

Tim Boetsch vs. Nick Ring:

James Te Huna vs. Ricardo Romero:

Takeya Mizugaki vs. Cole Escovedo:

Junior Assuncao vs. Eddie Yagin:

Check back often as Bleacher Report will have pre-fight, in-fight and post-fight coverage of UFC 135 right here.

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Fighter vs. Writer: UFC 135 Picks With Michael Bisping

Filed under: UFCFighter vs. Writer has been on a bit of a hiatus, which is what happens when you go from a country where you don’t speak the language and your cell phone doesn’t work to a Strikeforce event where the only fighters around are the ones on…

Filed under:

Fighter vs. Writer has been on a bit of a hiatus, which is what happens when you go from a country where you don’t speak the language and your cell phone doesn’t work to a Strikeforce event where the only fighters around are the ones on the card, but you don’t want to hear my excuses, do you?

All that matters is that we’re back this week with UFC middleweight and TUF 14 coach Michael Bisping, who graciously took time away from bickering with opposing coach ‘Mayhem’ Miller to go head to head with yours truly over the UFC 135 main card.

And so, without further delay…

Jon Jones vs. Quinton “Rampage” Jackson

Bisping: Jackson via TKO. “Jon Jones is unbelievable and an incredible athlete and an incredible champ. He’s forging a fantastic career and he’s got what it takes to be a legend one day. That said, he’s fighting Rampage and this is going to be the best Rampage you’ve seen in a long time.”
Fowlkes: Jones via TKO. With Jackson’s punching power, you can’t ever count him out. And yes, I think this is the most motivated and in-shape Rampage we’ve seen in a long while. But I still don’t think it’ll be enough. Jones is too quick, too long, and too dynamic. Jackson won’t get close enough to hurt him, and Jones will chop him down.

Matt Hughes vs. Josh Koscheck

Bisping:
Koscheck via decision. Matt Hughes has been a great champion in the past and a great ambassador for the sport, but he’s coming to the end of his career. He hasn’t looked too great lately. He hasn’t looked like the Matt Hughes of old, and it pains me to say that because he’s a Hall of Famer. But I’ve got to go with Koscheck being younger, faster, stronger — probably a better wrestler as well.”
Fowlkes: Koscheck via TKO. Honestly, I don’t see a single area where Hughes holds the advantage. Experience, maybe? But even there, Koscheck has enough that he’s not going to be beaten on sheer veteran savvy alone. I think he out-strikes, out-wrestles, and overpowers Hughes.

Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi

Bisping: Diaz via submission. “That’s a tough one. It could go a lot like the Nick Diaz-Gomi fight. I’ve got to go with Nate.”
Fowlkes: Diaz via submission. I’d feel better about it if I didn’t think Diaz was inclined to stand and trade, thus giving Gomi more of a chance than he needs to. Even so, I think it eventually winds up on the floor, where Diaz is superior.

Travis Browne vs. Rob Broughton

Bisping: Broughton via TKO. “He’s one of the toughest human beings walking this planet. He’s big, strong, and you wouldn’t know it from the look of him because he carries a little extra weight, but he’s a cardio machine. I see him wearing [Browne] down and finishing him in the later rounds.”
Fowlkes: Browne via TKO. Every Englishman I’ve talked to this week (and between Bisping and Telegraph writer Gareth Davies, I’ve talked to two) tells me what a tough guy Broughton is. I don’t doubt them, but Browne is just so big and so powerful. I think he’ll keep Broughton at a distance and smash him.

Mark Hunt vs. Ben Rothwell

Bisping: Hunt via KO. “I’m going with Mark Hunt because I know him. I don’t know too much about Ben Rothwell, but I know he’s had mixed results. I like Mark Hunt. I’m a big fan of his Pride days and K-1, so I’m rooting for him.”
Fowlkes: Rothwell via submission. If Bisping can pick based purely on personal feelings, then so can I. I got to know Rothwell when we were both working for the IFL, and he’s one of the truly good people in this business. If he’s smart, he gets Hunt to the ground and takes advantage of his weak submissions defense.

Bisping picks: Jackson, Koscheck, Diaz, Broughton, Hunt
Fowlkes picks: Jones, Koscheck, Diaz, Browne, Rothwell

 

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At UFC 135 the Iceman Curse Faces Its Greatest Test Yet: Jonny "Bones" Jones

What is the “Iceman Curse?” To truly answer that question, we need a short history of the most popular division in the sport.  In the world of mixed martial arts, we find a strange anomoly.  In any other combat sport, the most followed d…

What is the “Iceman Curse?” 

To truly answer that question, we need a short history of the most popular division in the sport.  

In the world of mixed martial arts, we find a strange anomoly.  In any other combat sport, the most followed division in the sport is always the heavyweight division.  But in mixed martial arts it’s the light heavyweight division that gets all the love.  

It’s not too surprising really.  The heavyweight division of the UFC has seemed to be cursed for most of its existence and the pool of fighters at heavyweight has always been dismally shallow.  Meanwhile, while the light heavyweight has consistently been one of the most talented and stable divisions in the sport.  

Frank Shamrock was the first light heavyweight champion and he tallied four successful title defenses before retiring as champion and still undefeated in the UFC.

The next champion, Tito Ortiz, one-ups Shamrock by tallying five successful title defenses before losing his title to Randy Couture.  

After a brief back and forth between Vitor Belfort and Randy Couture, Chuck Liddell was the next man to seize the title belt.  He would go on to successfully defend four times.  

Even in Pride FC, Wanderlei Silva—champion of Pride 205 lbs division—was the the most exciting and popular champion in their entire organization.  Wanderlei Silva absolutely dominated that division for most of it’s existence.  In an organization that was mostly focused on tournaments, Wanderlei Silva still managed to tally four successful title defenses.

The light heavyweight division’s key to success has always been the absolute dominance by one fighter over the most talent-rich division in the sport.  

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UFC 135 Fight Card: 4 Fighters with the Most To Lose on Saturday

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones will defend his title for the first time this Saturday, and his opponent, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, is not following the hype that is behind the 24-year-old.Jackson lost his title in 2008 to Forrest G…

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones will defend his title for the first time this Saturday, and his opponent, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, is not following the hype that is behind the 24-year-old.

Jackson lost his title in 2008 to Forrest Griffin and has been on a quest to regain the belt ever since. Since that fight, the Pride veteran has gone 4-1 with victories over Keith Jardine, Wanderlei Silva, Lyoto Machida and Matt Hamill.

In the co-main event, former UFC welterweight champion Matt Hughes will take on Josh Koscheck in a fight that could very well be the UFC Hall of Famer’s last fight. Both are coming off losses from fights in 2010 and haven’t fought since.

Other main-card bouts include Travis Browne vs. Rob Broughton, Takanori Gomi vs. Nate Diaz and Mark Hunt vs. Ben Rothwell.

With several big favorites going into the fights, these are the four fighters with the most to lose this weekend.

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Friday Afternoon Link Dump

(Video courtesy of YouTube/bisonkhan/CP Reader and retired fighter Dave Green)

– Five reasons why MMA is better than boxing right now (Complex)

– The Boardwalk Empire board game (ScreenJunkies)

– MMA Notebook: Dana White presser notes (NBC Sports)

– Damm signs with Bellator, expected to face Frausto-Gurgel in October in Canada (Tatame)

– 20 things every new UFC fans should know about MMA (BleacherReport)

– How to cozy up the man cave (MadeMan)

– Sgt. Slaughter plays bud guitar, defeats monster truck, is 1980s awesome (WithLeather)

– 11-year-old with MS bullied into committing suicide (TorontoSun)

– Jeff Monson asks Pat Miletich, “How can you not consider America a terror organization?” (FightOpinion)

– Simon Pegg continues to be awesome (FilmDrunk)

– Jon Jones vs. Rampage Jackson: Who has the statistical advantage at UFC 135? (MMAMania)

– Joe Warren and Alexis Vila headline Bellator’s Bantamweight tourney opening round (Clutch.MTV)

– Malcolm Brenner had  sexual relationship with a dolphin, then wrote a book about it (HolyTaco)

– DREAM 17 breakdown and predictions (MMAFighting)

– Guyism After Dark: Susie, Monika, or Filippa??? (Guyism)

– DNA from spit links fighter to rapes (9News)

– Supremacy MMA Video Game Review (The Fight Nerd)

 


(Video courtesy of YouTube/bisonkhan/CP Reader and retired fighter Dave Green)

– Five reasons why MMA is better than boxing right now (Complex)

– The Boardwalk Empire board game (ScreenJunkies)

– MMA Notebook: Dana White presser notes (NBC Sports)

– Damm signs with Bellator, expected to face Frausto-Gurgel in October in Canada (Tatame)

– 20 things every new UFC fans should know about MMA (BleacherReport)

– How to cozy up the man cave (MadeMan)

– Sgt. Slaughter plays bud guitar, defeats monster truck, is 1980s awesome (WithLeather)

– 11-year-old with MS bullied into committing suicide (TorontoSun)

– Jeff Monson asks Pat Miletich, “How can you not consider America a terror organization?” (FightOpinion)

– Simon Pegg continues to be awesome (FilmDrunk)

– Jon Jones vs. Rampage Jackson: Who has the statistical advantage at UFC 135? (MMAMania)

– Joe Warren and Alexis Vila headline Bellator’s Bantamweight tourney opening round (Clutch.MTV)

– Malcolm Brenner had  sexual relationship with a dolphin, then wrote a book about it (HolyTaco)

– DREAM 17 breakdown and predictions (MMAFighting)

– Guyism After Dark: Susie, Monika, or Filippa??? (Guyism)

– DNA from spit links fighter to rapes (9News)

– Supremacy MMA Video Game Review (The Fight Nerd)

 

UFC 135 Weigh-in Results & Exclusive Photo Gallery

Denver’s Wells Fargo Theater hosted the weigh-ins for UFC 135 which takes place Sept. 24 at the Pepsi Center.The event will feature 10 bouts headlined by a light heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones and challenger Quinton “Rampage” Jackso…

Denver’s Wells Fargo Theater hosted the weigh-ins for UFC 135 which takes place Sept. 24 at the Pepsi Center.

The event will feature 10 bouts headlined by a light heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones and challenger Quinton “Rampage” Jackson.

All 20 fighters made weight for their fights.  Check out the slideshow to view results and photos of each matchup.

All photos by Rob Tatum/Bleacher Report

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