UFC 136 Fight Card: 5 Fights That Will End in a Knockout

With UFC 136 right around the corner, UFC fans across the globe have begun counting down the hours for what has the potential to be one of the best fight cards of the entire year.UFC 136 will take place in Houston on October 8th in front of a sold-out …

With UFC 136 right around the corner, UFC fans across the globe have begun counting down the hours for what has the potential to be one of the best fight cards of the entire year.

UFC 136 will take place in Houston on October 8th in front of a sold-out Toyota Center.

The entire fight card consists of four main card fights and seven preliminary bouts.

The main card is headlined around lightweight champion Frankie Edgar, who will attempt to defend his title against No. 1 contender Gray Maynard.

Also putting his title up for grabs is Jose Aldo, who will take on Kenny Florian in a featherweight championship bout.

What makes this card even more exciting is the high possibility of knockouts that could take place throughout the evening.

The following slides discuss five fights that will end in a knockout at UFC 136.

Let’s take a look.

Begin Slideshow

Gambling Addiction Enabler: UFC 136 Edition


(Stock-trader vs. Wall Street protester — who ya got? Photo via MMA Mania)

Want to make some real money this weekend? Then come over to my place on Saturday afternoon and be prepared to clean some toilets. Want to make some hypothetical, for-entertainment-purposes-only money this weekend? Then check out the latest UFC 136 betting lines (via BestFightOdds) and read our gambling advice after the jump.

PPV Main Card
Frankie Edgar (-125) vs. Gray Maynard (+120)
Jose Aldo (-320) vs. Kenny Florian (+301)
Chael Sonnen (-255) vs. Brian Stann (+227)
Nam Phan (-210) vs. Leonard Garcia (+208)
Melvin Guillard (-312) vs. Joe Lauzon (+310)

Spike TV Prelims
Demian Maia (-275) vs. Jorge Santiago (+245)
Anthony Pettis (-277) vs. Jeremy Stephens (+250)

Facebook Prelims
Joey Beltran (+190) vs. Stipe Miocic (-210)
Tiequan Zhang (-120) vs. Darren Elkins (+115)
Aaron Simpson (-313) vs. Eric Schafer (+300)
Steve Cantwell (-135) vs. Mike Massenzio (+130)

We’ll begin…at the beginning:


(Stock-trader vs. Wall Street protester — who ya got? Photo via MMA Mania)

Want to make some real money this weekend? Then come over to my place on Saturday afternoon and be prepared to clean some toilets. Want to make some hypothetical, for-entertainment-purposes-only money this weekend? Then check out the latest UFC 136 betting lines (via BestFightOdds) and read our gambling advice after the jump.

PPV Main Card
Frankie Edgar (-125) vs. Gray Maynard (+120)
Jose Aldo (-320) vs. Kenny Florian (+301)
Chael Sonnen (-255) vs. Brian Stann (+227)
Nam Phan (-210) vs. Leonard Garcia (+208)
Melvin Guillard (-312) vs. Joe Lauzon (+310)

Spike TV Prelims
Demian Maia (-275) vs. Jorge Santiago (+245)
Anthony Pettis (-277) vs. Jeremy Stephens (+250)

Facebook Prelims
Joey Beltran (+190) vs. Stipe Miocic (-210)
Tiequan Zhang (-120) vs. Darren Elkins (+115)
Aaron Simpson (-313) vs. Eric Schafer (+300)
Steve Cantwell (-135) vs. Mike Massenzio (+130)

We’ll begin…at the beginning:

The Main Event: It’s a line that should really be dead even. But if somebody’s going to be a favorite here, should it really be Frankie Edgar? After all, he couldn’t beat Gray Maynard in either of their two previous meetings. As a slight underdog, Maynard is worth a small investment.

The Other Good ‘Dogs: A lot of them look good, actually. Chael Sonnen is coming off 14 months of controversy and inactivity, so his -255 feels a little inflated, especially against someone as focused and dangerous as Brian Stann. We all know that Leonard Garcia is bulletproof with judges, so if he can swing and grunt his way to the last bell — and not get finished by Phan — he could always end up stealing another one and doubling your money. And if Demian Maia insists on pretending he’s a striker, he’s asking to get laid out by Jorge Santiago.

The Smart Straight-Bet: Blowouts are the name of the game this weekend, with eight of the 11 matchups sitting at 2-to-1 odds or greater. You won’t get rich betting on the stiff favorites, so take a look at Tiequan Zhang at a modest -120 over Darren Elkins. Both guys are just 1-0 at featherweight, but Zhang’s aggressive grappling attack will give the American a heap of problems.

Stay Away From: Joe Lauzon. Yeah, yeah, everybody loves J-Lau, and his skill set is the perfect one to give Guillard trouble. At +310, why not put money on the grappler’s chance, right? Answer: Because Melvin is far too powerful, and he’s a little savvier about avoiding submissions these days. Guillard’s got this one, probably by KO. The same warning applies for Kenny Florian — tripling your cash on the seasoned challenger might be seductive, but you’ll likely be pissing that money away.

Official CagePotato Parlay: Aldo + Guillard + Pettis + Zhang. $20 returns a $57.18 profit. Not risky enough? Okay, $1,000 returns a $2,858 profit. Now we’re talkin’.

Ed Soares Talks Jones vs. Machida, Anderson Silva’s Shoulder and More

Filed under: , , ,

HOUSTON — MMA Fighting spoke to manager Ed Soares about Thursday’s announcement that his client Lyoto Machida would meet Jon Jones for the UFC light heavyweight title at UFC 140 in December. Soares also talked about what’s next for Anderson Silva, whether Jose Aldo would be moving up to 155 pounds and why Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira decided to return in December.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under: , , ,

HOUSTON — MMA Fighting spoke to manager Ed Soares about Thursday’s announcement that his client Lyoto Machida would meet Jon Jones for the UFC light heavyweight title at UFC 140 in December. Soares also talked about what’s next for Anderson Silva, whether Jose Aldo would be moving up to 155 pounds and why Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira decided to return in December.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Kenny Florian Hopes Third Time Is The Charm In Elusive Championship Hunt

Filed under: UFC, NewsHOUSTON — For Kenny Florian, the third time better be the charm.

The respected UFC veteran has twice before fought for a UFC title, but come up short each time. Saturday might be the 35-year-old’s last chance at a major champio…

Filed under: ,

Kenny FlorianHOUSTON — For Kenny Florian, the third time better be the charm.

The respected UFC veteran has twice before fought for a UFC title, but come up short each time. Saturday might be the 35-year-old’s last chance at a major championship.

For Florian, the opportunity comes just one fight into the move to the UFC’s featherweight division. In his 145-pound debut, Florian earned a decision over Diego Nunes, but it wasn’t a vintage performance, leading many to wonder if he can bring the goods to beat the great Jose Aldo.

Florian says that moving down was a good decision at a bad time. At the moment he decided to try his hand at featherweight, he was coming off a knee injury that had him sidelined, and he weighed around 180 pounds, his heaviest weight in years.

Getting those 35 pounds off to make the featherweight limit proved to be what he termed the “toughest thing I’ve ever done in my life, for sure.”

With only four months between that fight and this weekend’s UFC 136, Florian monitored his weight much closer, getting no higher than 168 pounds. On Thursday, one day before weigh-ins, he told MMA Fighting he was at 154.

So the weight issue is no issue.

That makes Saturday all about performance. In Aldo, Florian faces a well-rounded opponent with fast hands, excellent power and underrated grappling.

Except for the fact that Aldo is liberal with his use of kicks, he’s fairly similar to the man that Florian last faced for the title, BJ Penn.

The Penn loss proved to be a turning point for Florian. Prior to that, he spent most of his time training with his coaching staff and a series of partners, many of whom had never fought professionally.

Soon after, he began to supplement the training at his own Boston area gym with trip to Montreal to train with Firas Zahabi. That opened up a new world of training partners, from UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre to wunderkind Rory MacDonald. Under the “iron sharpens iron” philosophy, Florian believes that improved preparation will have him at his best for Aldo.

“I just think I’m doing it at the right time, where I have all the things I should have had all along during my career,” he said.” I have the best coaches, the best training partners. I think I found a good groove, a good way to train.”

Yet Florian will have to find a way to put that hard work into action on Saturday. After his UFC 118 loss to Gray Maynard, a No. 1 contenders fight that precipitated his drop to featherweight, UFC president Dana White characterized Florian’s performance in less than flattering terms. In fact, he threw out a phrase that most fighters would consider offensive.

“I think Kenny is just one of those guys who chokes in big fights,” White said then.

Not surprisingly, Florian strongly disagrees, citing his wins Roger Huerta and Joe Stevenson prior to earning his title shot against Penn, along with wins over Clay Guida and Takanori Gomi.

But White yields a big megaphone. When he says something, it usually sticks. So Florian won’t just be fighting for a belt, he’ll be fighting to try and change that perception of him.

“For the fans, and for the all the haters, the people who do say I choke in the big fights, it would be validation as well, but more than anything else, I want to go in there and beat a great opponent in Aldo,” he said.

If he can’t do it, his future will be murky. Three championship losses in two divisions may limit his options. Does he try to rebound at 145? Move back up to lightweight? Is retirement a possibility? White, at least, is on record as saying it could be Florian’s last title fight. So Florian has to make it count.

MMA will always be in his life in some way, shape or form, but UFC 136 may be his last chance to pan for gold.

“It’s a dream of mine since I committed to be a professional fighter,” he said. “That’s what everyone wants and what they should want. I’d still be the same fighter, still be the same guy. It would be some validation, really for everyone else, I guess. I know I’m a good fighter. I’ve done all the work. I’ve prepared hard. That’s the most important thing.”

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Win a Copy of ‘UFC Encyclopedia’ in Our UFC 136 Fight-Picking Contest!

UFC 136 poster Edgar Maynard Florian Aldo UFC Encyclopedia book cover Gerbasi

Zuffa Editorial Director Thomas Gerbasi has just given us a stack of his upcoming book UFC Encyclopedia, a slick and meticulously detailed reference guide to the promotion’s 18-year history — perfect for your coffee table or the crapper. And we want to give away three copies to the savviest fight-pickers in the Potato Nation.

This Saturday, UFC 136: Edgar vs. Maynard III goes down at the Toyota Center in Houston, featuring the conclusion (we hope) of MMA’s grittiest lightweight rivalry, Jose Aldo‘s latest title featherweight defense against Kenny Florian, and Chael Sonnen‘s love-fest with Brian Stann. Submit your predictions for these three fights in the comments section below, including the winner’s name, the method of victory, and the time/round of stoppage, if any. Your entry should be in this format:

UFC 136 poster Edgar Maynard Florian Aldo UFC Encyclopedia book cover Gerbasi

Zuffa Editorial Director Thomas Gerbasi has just given us a stack of his upcoming book UFC Encyclopedia, a slick and meticulously detailed reference guide to the promotion’s 18-year history — perfect for your coffee table or the crapper. And we want to give away three copies to the savviest fight-pickers in the Potato Nation.

This Saturday, UFC 136: Edgar vs. Maynard III goes down at the Toyota Center in Houston, featuring the conclusion (we hope) of MMA’s grittiest lightweight rivalry, Jose Aldo‘s latest title featherweight defense against Kenny Florian, and Chael Sonnen‘s love-fest with Brian Stann. Submit your predictions for these three fights in the comments section below, including the winner’s name, the method of victory, and the time/round of stoppage, if any. Your entry should be in this format:

– Gray Maynard def. Frankie via split decision (48-47, 47-48, 48-47)
– Jose Aldo def. Kenny Florian via TKO, 4:10 of round 4
– Chael Sonnen def. Brian Stann via submission (brabo choke), 0:13 of round 1

Please include the judges’ scores if you think a fight will end in a decision, in case we need them for a tie-breaker. The three most accurate predictions win a copy of the book. Entries must be in by Saturday at noon ET, and we’ll announce the winner on Monday. One entry per person, please. Any other questions, let us know in the comments section. Good luck.

Buy UFC Encyclopedia for $29.76 on Amazon

UFC 136 Fight Card: Why You Should Give a Damn

It’s been 14 months since UFC lightweight champion Frankie Edgar made the first successful defense of his belt against B.J. Penn. Since then, we’ve had a whopping one title fight in arguably the UFC’s most competitive division.Fight o…

It’s been 14 months since UFC lightweight champion Frankie Edgar made the first successful defense of his belt against B.J. Penn.

Since then, we’ve had a whopping one title fight in arguably the UFC’s most competitive division.

Fight of the Year candidacy aside, January’s draw between Edgar and top contender Gray Maynard put the 155-pound ranks in a bit of a logjam.

Ten months later, Maynard and Edgar will settle the score in a bout that should be captivating the minds of fight fans far more than it likely is.

It’s a fitting description for the UFC 136 card as a whole, an offering that rivals any lineup the UFC has rolled out in recent memory.

Full of great fights with notable ramifications on their respective divisions, I couldn’t think of a better way to spend my weekend than to drive four hours south to the Toyota Center.

And that’s what I’ll be doing. As such, I’ve figured out why I should give a damn about this weekend’s card.

The better question, though, is why should you?

Begin Slideshow