Lyoto Machida is excited to get back into the Octagon. Very excited. After serving an 18-month USADA suspension for using banned substance DHEA, Machida will finally return to the Octagon when he faces Derek Brunson in the main event of this weekend’s (Sat., October 28, 2017) UFC Fight Night 119 from Ginásio do Ibirapuera in Sao […]
Lyoto Machida is excited to get back into the Octagon. Very excited.
After serving an 18-month USADA suspension for using banned substance DHEA, Machida will finally return to the Octagon when he faces Derek Brunson in the main event of this weekend’s (Sat., October 28, 2017) UFC Fight Night 119 from Ginásio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
The former light heavyweight champion is looking to reinsert himself into the middleweight title picture against the veteran Brunson. The two met up at today’s UFC Sao Paulo media day, and afterward, Machida unleashed a scream that may have simply been a release of all the pent-up aggression he’s been building over the last year-and-a-half.
Check it out courtesy of MMAFighting.com right here:
Daniel Cormier, the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion, will take on duties of calling UFC Fight Night 119 this Saturday night alongside John Gooden from Brazil. The card features Lyoto Machida, a former holder of the title Cormier currently wears, taking on Derek Brunson in a middleweight showdown live on FOX Sports 1. The bout […]
Daniel Cormier, the reigning UFC light heavyweight champion, will take on duties of calling UFC Fight Night 119 this Saturday night alongside John Gooden from Brazil. The card features Lyoto Machida, a former holder of the title Cormier currently wears, taking on Derek Brunson in a middleweight showdown live on FOX Sports 1. The bout […]
As UFC fight night 119 draws closer, all eyes are on Lyoto Machida and Derek Brown who will take on each other in what is being touted as the highlight of the night. UFC 119 will take place in Brazil and coincidentally it also features some amazing Brazilian talent. This event is being termed the […]
As UFC fight night 119 draws closer, all eyes are on Lyoto Machida and Derek Brown who will take on each other in what is being touted as the highlight of the night. UFC 119 will take place in Brazil and coincidentally it also features some amazing Brazilian talent. This event is being termed the return of The Dragon as Machida will be coming back from after a rather long absence to take on Derek Brunson who is gaining quite a bit of traction and momentum in the highly competitive middleweight division.
Other fighters who will be featuring on the night and are worth mentioning are Demian Maia, Jim Miller and John Lineker. It is certainly going to be an entertaining fight night with a lot to look forward to.
Coming back to Lyoto Machida vs. Derek Brunson, Brunson will be fighting on Machida’s home soil as Machida makes a comeback and will be looking for nothing less than a win. Machida’s fighting is mostly influenced by Karate and he has a rather unique striking style which has proven to be difficult to deal with for most, if not all, of his prior opponents. However, the question everyone is asking is whether Machida will be able to hit the floor running since he has been out of action since June 2015 after having failed a drug test. It will be highly surprising if he isn’t at least a little rusty coming back. Brunson will not make things easy for Machida.
Brunson is more of a wrestler type of fighter who will be looking to get into close quarters. Machida however is agile and will not be easy to grab onto and take down. In terms of a prediction, despite the fact that Machida has been out for over two years, we cannot see him losing this one.
Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida is back on Saturday, returning to the Octagon after an 18-month absence stemming from a failed drug test.
But for how much longer can he soldier on?
Machida isn’t the UFC’s karate kid anymore. The guy…
Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida is back on Saturday, returning to the Octagon after an 18-month absence stemming from a failed drug test.
But for how much longer can he soldier on?
Machida isn’t the UFC’s karate kid anymore. The guy whose elusive, pinpoint striking will go down as the forefather to a generation of unorthodox sluggers such as Conor McGregor and Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson is suddenly 39 years old.
Machida approaches this weekend’s middleweight main event against Derek Brunson at UFC Fight Night 119 in Sao Paolo, Brazil, mired in his second 1-3 skid since 2010. Once you consider his recent year-and-a-half-long suspension for testing positive for a banned substance in an over-the-counter dietary supplement, this fight shapes up as a must-win.
That is, if The Dragon wants to stave off the notion he’s on a downward slope toward retirement.
For his part, Machida insists his recent doping ban—perhaps an example of how the UFC’s well-meaning drug-testing protocol can occasionally go too far—has actually done wonders for him. He said it allowed him to refresh, to switch up some of his training and, he hopes, add some longevity to the back end of his career.
“I needed this time away from it all,” Machida said recently, per the Daily Star‘s Kevin Francis. “In all honesty, if I had continued the way I was going, I would probably have been retired.”
It was Machida who arguably first made karate cool in the UFC, making his Octagon debut in 2007 having already become something of a legend in MMA chat rooms and on message boards. He’d gone 8-0 fighting in Japan and Brazil, defeating once and future UFC stars Stephan Bonnar, Rich Franklin and BJ Penn.
When his performance contact with manager and Japanese pro wrestling legend Antonio Inoki expired, Machida made the jump to America—first to the failed WFA and then the UFC. His early Octagon appearances proved he was worthy of the internet hype, as he went 8-0 and captured the 205-pound title with an emphatic second-round knockout of Rashad Evans at UFC 98.
But perhaps that fast start sent our expectations soaring unreasonably high. During the victory celebration following the Evans KO, the UFC declared it the dawn of the Machida Era. Unfortunately, that era would be very short-lived when Machida lost the title to Mauricio Rua almost a year later.
Afterward, Machida would remain a formidable presence in the Octagon, but he would never recapture the fearsome consistency of that early UFC run.
While his hunt-and-peck karate style could sometimes be devastating, it could also recede into listlessness. After just such a decision loss to Phil Davis in 2013, Machida dropped to middleweight and has gone a middling 3-3 since.
Those losses, however, were nothing to sneeze at, coming against 185-pound stalwarts Chris Weidman, Luke Rockhold and Yoel Romero.
To hear Machida himself tell it, these roller-coaster last few years were a physical and emotional grind for him. He hopes it’s another thing that the downtime of his recent suspension has helped him fix.
“I think there was something wrong in my mind,” he said, via Francis. “I just kept doing the same thing but I was expecting different results. I saw [the suspension] as a moment that I needed to step away a bit. I needed this hiatus to grow, too. I took some time for myself.”
It is here that Machida’s perhaps fading career meets up with Brunson, in a bout where the former light heavyweight titlist still has a lot to prove.
Brunson has been a good, but not great middleweight contender since coming to the UFC from Strikeforce in 2012. All told, he’s put up an impressive-looking 8-3 record, but he’s lost all of his highest-profile bouts—to Romero, current interim champion Robert Whittaker and Anderson Silva.
Perhaps it’s that most recent loss to Silva that makes Brunson seem like an appealing opponent for Machida at this stage. After having a January 2015 victory over Nick Diaz overturned because of his own positive steroid test, Silva came into the Brunson fight officially winless since 2012.
Their fight was close, but Silva eventually secured a unanimous-decision win. In the aftermath, his reputation isn’t fully rehabilitated, but the future looks much brighter for him. Silva could even snag a lucrative upcoming fight with Georges St-Pierre or a rematch with Michael Bisping, depending on how things shake out between those two at UFC 217.
It could be that Machida is hoping for a similar turnaround.
Brunson is a quality fighter but also the sort of guy the old Machida would take care of pretty easily. The 33-year-old American has good wrestling skills and powerful striking, but he occasionally becomes overly aggressive and leaves himself open for counters.
If Machida’s still got it, Brunson’s style should be one he can exploit. An inability to do that, on the other hand, might raise some troubling questions.
Overall, Machida’s style has been heavily reliant on athleticism. He needs to be able to move around the Octagon in order to make it work. He needs to have the quickness to avoid his opponent’s punches, as well as the reflexes and precision to land his own.
Frankly, it’s a style that may not age well, and a loss or even a particularly close fight against Brunson might be read as a sign he’s nearing the finish line of his notable—and notably strange—career.
Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida returns to the Octagon for the first time since serving a suspension, as he welcomes Derek Brunson to Brazil at UFC Fight Night 119. The event takes place from the Ginasio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo and airs live on FOX Sports 1. Machida was handed a n […]
Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida returns to the Octagon for the first time since serving a suspension, as he welcomes Derek Brunson to Brazil at UFC Fight Night 119. The event takes place from the Ginasio do Ibirapuera in Sao Paulo and airs live on FOX Sports 1. Machida was handed a n […]
In an effort to clean up the sport, today’s new and enhanced MMA landscape where the UFC has partnered with USADA to implement a world-class anti-doping regimen, drug test failures for performance-enhancing drugs have become much more commonplace and public in fighting than ever before. Perhaps it was to be expected as the sport continues […]
In an effort to clean up the sport, today’s new and enhanced MMA landscape where the UFC has partnered with USADA to implement a world-class anti-doping regimen, drug test failures for performance-enhancing drugs have become much more commonplace and public in fighting than ever before.
Perhaps it was to be expected as the sport continues to struggle with the program more than two years since its inception, but some high-profile failures have wrecked what would have otherwise been huge events, and some would even argue that the UFC’s partnership with USADA is actually doing more harm than good for the promotion.
That’s ridiculous, of course, as preventing a highly trained athlete from beating another athlete while under the benefit of PEDs is obviously a very good thing – yet there are signs that USADA’s timing and overall implementation could use some smoothing out of their own. Those details are another discussion for another time, however. With big UFC PPVs being ruined by drug test failures seemingly a regular occurrence these days, it brings to light how drug testing has affected events and even fighters’ careers both in the past and present.
We took a look back at the 10 most devastating drug test failures in MMA history, and the results found show just how impactful they have been on the still-young sport. Check them out:
Cris Cyborg – Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal:
The drug test that UFC women’s featherweight champ Cristiane ‘Cyborg’ Justino failed for stanozolol after her thunderous 16-second TKO of Hiroko Yamanaka in December 2011 is arguably the most impactful on this list as it’s caused Cyborg to be followed by a reputation as a steroid user, and probably always will.
She was suspended for one year, stripped of her Strikeforce women’s featherweight belt, and her win over Yamanaka was changed to a no-contest. The failure was one of the main reasons (along with weight) why former UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey wouldn’t fight Cyborg, and that topic was again brought up when original UFC 145-pound champion Germaine de Randamie refused to defend the belt against Cyborg, even if it could certainly be argued there were several other factors in play there.
It appeared Cyborg was headed into a disappointing squandering of her talent when she was popped for a USADA violation last year, but she was able to clear her name of that violation by claiming a prescribed substance she used during her foolish cuts down to 140 pounds for the UFC in 2016. For what it’s worth, she’s apparently complied with all of the rigorous requirements of the UFC’s anti-doping program with USADA (despite rumors otherwise), but her career will always be shrouded by her singular failure in Strikeforce.