UFC to Return to Denver for UFC 150, Headlined by Rematch Between Ben Henderson and Frankie Edgar

In 1993, the UFC made history by holding its first event at the old McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, Colorado. Now, the UFC will celebrate its 150th numbered event (Technically not, but play along) with a return to The Mile-High City on August 11. Tickets for the event, which takes place at The Pepsi Center, will go on sale June 15.

Headlining the event will be a lightweight title fight between champion Benson Henderson and Frankie Edgar, who lost the title to Henderson by unanimous decision at UFC 144. It’s an odd time to announce this fight, as Dana White has been adamant about having Frankie Edgar drop to featherweight. Not to mention that just days ago, Edgar seemed to be teasing a fight with Jose Aldo.

But in a way, an immediate rematch for Edgar only seems fair, considering that Edgar had to give out two immediate rematches while he was the lightweight champion.

In 1993, the UFC made history by holding its first event at the old McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, Colorado. Now, the UFC will celebrate its 150th numbered event (Technically not, but play along) with a return to The Mile-High City on August 11. Tickets for the event, which takes place at The Pepsi Center, will go on sale June 15.

Headlining the event will be a lightweight title fight between champion Benson Henderson and Frankie Edgar, who lost the title to Henderson by unanimous decision at UFC 144. It’s an odd time to announce this fight, as Dana White has been adamant about having Frankie Edgar drop to featherweight. Not to mention that just days ago, Edgar seemed to be teasing a fight with Jose Aldo.

But in a way, an immediate rematch for Edgar only seems fair, considering that Edgar had to give out two immediate rematches while he was the lightweight champion.

Currently, there are two other fights announced for this card. There’s a lightweight bout between Thiago Tavares vs. Dennis Hallman and a depressing middleweight bout between Luiz Cane and Yushin Okami. Expect the latter to be a loser leaves town fight; Cane has lost three of his last four fights, and Okami has looked more gun-shy by the minute since losing to Anderson Silva at UFC 134. Okami has most recently fallen to Tim Boetsch at UFC 144.

The UFC was most recently in Denver for UFC 135 last September, where Jon Jones made quick work of former light-heavyweight champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, and numerous heavyweights demonstrated what high altitudes do to a fighter’s stamina. We imagine that there won’t be too many heavyweight bouts this time around.

We’ll keep you posted as more details become available.

UFC 134 Results: Luiz Cane vs. Stanislav Nedkov

Luiz Cane was building a reputation as one of the most fearsome strikers and promising light heavyweights that the sport had seen in a while.After fighting UFC newcomer Stanislav Nedkov at UFC 134, however, Cane has now suffered three TKO defeats in fo…

Luiz Cane was building a reputation as one of the most fearsome strikers and promising light heavyweights that the sport had seen in a while.

After fighting UFC newcomer Stanislav Nedkov at UFC 134, however, Cane has now suffered three TKO defeats in four fights.

Starting off, Cane looking sharp. He was backing his Bulgarian opponent down, landing solid strikes and looking to close in on a finish.

Nedkov remained dangerous. One of his powerful counterstrikes clipped Cane’s temple, sending him reeling backwards. Cane tried to regain his wits, but Nedkov followed him with a barrage of unanswered strikes.

The upset came at 4:20 into the very first round.

The relatively unknown Stanislav Nedkov is now a name that will attract some interest in his next matchup, while Luiz Cane falls into a very precarious situation.

Does he get released and try to rebuild his confidence in smaller shows or can he turn things around with another chance in the big leagues?

At 29 and 30 years of age, it is far too soon to draw sweeping conclusions about the trajectory of the rest of their careers, but fans can certainly be happy that they came to fight and put on a hell of a show.

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UFC 134 Fight Card: What This Fight Means to Stanislav Nedkov of Bulgaria

Undefeated light-heavyweight Stanislav “Staki” Nedkov (11-0), of the Scorpion Bulgarian Bushido Federation, signed a contract with the UFC last year in June, but something always happened that kept him out of the Octagon until now.He was du…

Undefeated light-heavyweight Stanislav “Staki” Nedkov (11-0), of the Scorpion Bulgarian Bushido Federation, signed a contract with the UFC last year in June, but something always happened that kept him out of the Octagon until now.

He was due to make his UFC debut against Rodney Wallace on August 7 2010, at UFC 117, but he was injured during training and was replaced by Phil Davis.

Next, Nedkov signed up to fight Steve Cantwell on October 16 2010, at UFC 120. However, less than two days before the event, Cantwell sustained a knee injury during a pre-fight training session. Short of time to find a replacement opponent for Nedkov, the bout was called off.

Now, cross your fingers and hope that the jinx is broken, tomorrow Nedkov finally makes his UFC debut versus Brazilian Luiz Cane (11-3) in UFC 134, right in his opponent’s home country.

What are the implications of tomorrow’s fight for Nedkov and all of us MMA fans?

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