UFC Fight Night 36 fight weekend is here, and it all kicked off with the official weigh-ins.
All fighters made weight.
Lyoto Machida and Gegard Mousasi looked in excellent shape, as did the co-main event fighters Jacare Souza & Francis Carmont.
Max…
UFC Fight Night 36 fight weekend is here, and it all kicked off with the official weigh-ins.
All fighters made weight.
Lyoto Machida and Gegard Mousasi looked in excellent shape, as did the co-main event fighters Jacare Souza & Francis Carmont.
Maximo Blanco missed weight during the initial weigh-ins, but he was given an hour to get down to the limit of 146 pounds. Blanco exceeded this, and managed to weigh-in at 145 pounds.
UFC Fight Night 36 hits tomorrow, and Bleacher Report will have complete coverage of all the action.
UFC Fight Night 36 Weigh-In Results
Lyoto Machida (185) vs. Gegard Mousasi (186)
Ronaldo Souza (185) vs. Francis Carmont (185)
Erick Silva (170) vs. Takenori Sato (170)
Viscardi Andrade (170) vs. Nicholas Musoke (170)
Charles Oliveira (143) vs. Andy Ogle (146)
Cristiano Marcello (156) vs. Joe Proctor (155)
Rodrigo Damm (156) vs. Ivan Jorge (156)
Francisco Trinaldo (155) vs. Jesse Ronson (156)
Iuri Alcantara (136) vs. Wilson Reis (135)
Felipe Arantes (146) vs. Maximo Blanco (145)
Ildemar Alcantara (171) vs. Albert Tumenov (170)
Douglas Silva de Andrade (145) vs. Zubair Tuhugov (146)
If we can all put aside the shakeup with next weekend’s UFC 170 co-main event, we might be able to instead focus on all of the raw potential in Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night 36 fight card.
In a bid for a chance at the middleweight championship, pere…
If we can all put aside the shakeup with next weekend’s UFC 170 co-main event, we might be able to instead focus on all of the raw potential in Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night 36 fight card.
In a bid for a chance at the middleweight championship, perennial fan favorite Lyoto Machida will look to continue his success at a new weight class when he faces off against veteran Gegard Mousasi. With a combined record of 54-7-2, these two men bring the kind of skill and experience needed to deliver an explosive, technical main event.
One step earlier in the evening, former Strikeforce middleweight champion Ronaldo Souza will look to continue his five-fight win streak against Francis Carmont. Will Jacare’s world-class ground game be enough to hand the Canadian his first Octagon defeat?
Let’s take a look at the entire fight card scheduled for Saturday night:
Machida’s unorthodox style, Souza’s ferocity, Erick Silva’s exciting striking, Charles Oliveira’s slick submissions—all taking place free on Fox Sports 1, but only after seven straight fights brought to you by UFC Fight Pass.
This free card has both top-tier names and enough ranking significance to get me scooting toward the edge of my seat. How about you?
It would certainly be no surprise if Lyoto Machida emerged from UFC Fight Night 36 with the next available middleweight title shot sewn up.
In fact, if you’re the kind of person who only reads the headlines, you might think it’s already sor…
It would certainly be no surprise if LyotoMachida emerged from UFC Fight Night 36 with the next available middleweight title shot sewn up.
In fact, if you’re the kind of person who only reads the headlines, you might think it’s already sort of a done deal.
So long as Machida defeats GegardMousasi in Saturday night’s main event, he’ll likely get the nod over the winner of the evening’s dueling 185-pound contender battle between Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza and Francis Carmont.
Right?
Well, maybe.
That was certainly the predominant takeaway from Dana White’s appearance on Fox Sports 1 earlier this week, when the UFC president mentioned Machida as the likely candidate during a wide-ranging eight-minute interview with host Charissa Thompson.
“Yes,” White said at one point, “if Machida wins, he could possibly be next in line for a title shot.”
Makes sense. Machida certainly has the highest profile among the current crop of middleweight contenders, all of whom have had a hard time getting a word in edgewise as Chris Weidman, Anderson Silva and VitorBelfort have dominated the discussion during the last six months.
Despite the fact he’s got just a single win in the Octagon at 185 pounds, Machida is a former light heavyweight champion, a popular figure in the UFC landscape and a known commodity for matchmakers.
Guy once had an entire era named after him, for Pete’s sake.
Except.
Except.
If you actually listen to what White said during that much-publicized television appearance, it makes the division sound a lot more wide open than all that.
Focus a bit more on the “ifs” and “possiblys” during his 50-second answer to Thompson’s question on the subject and you come away feeling like JacareSouza has just as good a chance to end up as the next opponent for the Belfort-Weidman winner.
Certainly, the lion’s share of the story will be told this weekend, when both Machida and Souza enter their bouts as significant favorites, via Best Fight Odds.
If Machida falters against Mousasi, or even wins via the kind of tepid, unsatisfying decision that was often his calling card at 205 pounds, the No. 1 contender spot could be there for the taking.
And Jacare could be just the man to grab it.
You can’t argue with much about Souza’s resume. The five-time Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion flashed moments of greatness throughout his eight-fight run through Strikeforce, but really seemed to hit his stride as a mixed martial artist after coming to the UFC last May.
He’s looked good—borderline great—in crafting back-to-back victories over Chris Camozzi and YushinOkami. We’ve always known Souza was among the most decorated submission grapplers in the sport, but it was the Okami victory five months ago that served as his proper coming out party in the Octagon.
In that bout, Souza overwhelmed the perennial contender on the feet—kicks, winging punches, even a standing elbow—before dropping him with an overhand right and swarming until the referee stepped in.
If you didn’t know before, it was the sort of showing that proved Souza could be a problem for anyone in his weight class. Even at 34 years old, his athleticism allows him to look leaps and bounds better each time we see him, transforming himself bit by bit from a pure grappler into a competent, even dangerous striker as well.
Moreover, he’s been something Machida can’t always boast—exciting.
We all know that carries more weight in this sport than it probably should.
Against Carmont, Souza will get a stiff test of most of his faculties, including his ability to entertain the masses. Through six consecutive wins in the UFC (11 straight overall) Carmont has established a reputation as a man who wins through inactivity more than anything else.
He’s got stoppage wins over KarlosVemola and MagnusCedenblad, but has otherwise wrestled his way to the bulk of his UFC wins.
It’s the style more than the substance of Carmont’s attack that means nobody is mentioning him alongside Machida and Souza as a potential immediate title contender. That’s probably not fair, but it’s how our system currently works.
Because of that style—and because this fight is in Brazil—Souza will have considerable support, both from the live crowd and the UFC faithful watching at home.
If he can do something impressive against the decision-prone Carmont—a highlight submission or bonus-worthy knockout—then we shouldn’t take for granted that it’ll be Machida fighting for the title later this year.
Instead, it could be Souza grabbing all the headlines.
With Anderson Silva shelved for the foreseeable future, other UFC middleweights are finding out a division without “The Spider” is not so bad.
Guys like Michael Bisping, Ronaldo Souza, Luke Rockhold and even Tim Kennedy all have high hopes for stringin…
With Anderson Silva shelved for the foreseeable future, other UFC middleweights are finding out a division without “The Spider” is not so bad.
Guys like Michael Bisping, Ronaldo Souza, Luke Rockhold and even Tim Kennedy all have high hopes for stringing together some impressive victories and making a run at the title.
But no middleweight is more equipped and dangerous to capture divisional supremacy than former light heavyweight kingpin LyotoMachida.
Remember, “The Dragon” recently dropped down to 185 and made quick work of No. 7-ranked Mark Munoz at UFC Fight Night 30 back in October, finishing the Filipino by a vicious first-round head kick.
He’s now scheduled to take on former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion GegardMousasi on Feb. 15 at UFC Fight Night 36. It will mark Mousasi‘s first fight at middleweight since 2008 when he knocked out Souza with a first-round upkick to win the inaugural DREAM championship.
It’s going to be a tough fight for the Brazilian to say the least, but if he can get past Mousasi then he could earn a shot at the winner of Chris Weidman vs. VitorBelfort.
“If LyotoMachida wins, he could be in line next for a title shot,” said UFC president Dana White during Wednesday night’s edition of Fox Sports Live, originally reported by MMA Fighting.
Now while this is great news for Machida, he was in this position once before. Having defeated Dan Henderson back at UFC 157, Machida was expected to get the winner of Jon Jones vs. ChaelSonnen, but that never came to fruition and he was ultimately eclipsed by Alexander Gustafsson.
And we all know how that played out.
So does Machida have to finish Mousasi to earn a middleweight title shot? Will a close split decision like the one he had opposite “Hendo” be enough to surpass worthy contenders like Souza and Bisping?
It all depends. But one thing is for certain: the middleweight division has never looked this good.
“You’ve got VitorBelfort next, you have JacareSouza, you have LyotoMachida and the list goes on and on of all these nasty, nasty guys at 185 pounds,” added White. “And let’s not forget Anderson Silva could be back in a year and he’s the No. 1 ranked [contender] in the world. That division could not be more exciting.”
Gegard Mousasi’s path toward a UFC title is either about to hit the expressway or detour in the coming weeks. The former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion will face former UFC 205-pound strap holder Lyoto Machida in the main event at Fight Night 3…
GegardMousasi‘s path toward a UFC title is either about to hit the expressway or detour in the coming weeks. The former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion will face former UFC 205-pound strap holder LyotoMachida in the main event at Fight Night 36 on Feb. 15 in Brazil.
While “The Dragon” made his successful middleweight debut against Mark Munoz back in October, Mousasi‘s bout with Machida will be his first at 185 pounds under the UFC banner, and mark the first time he’s competed in the weight class since 2008. Where the Dutch/Armenian fighter made a successful promotional debut as a light heavyweight against IlirLatifi at UFC on Fuel TV 9, he saw the middleweight division as a more fitting road to championship gold.
During a recent appearance on The MMA Hour, the 27-year-old told Ariel Helwani he believes a victory over Machida will put him within striking distance of a title shot:
Getting the chance to fight Machida, I’m excited. Maybe I can get the chance to fight for the title after this because there is not many contenders at middleweight at this moment, I believe. So, at this moment, I’m more excited and this is a fight I cannot lose. I must win, and this is the mentality going into the fight.
With the current situation in the middleweight division, Mousasi‘s notion of earning a potential title shot may not be too far off. Former 185-pound king Anderson Silva is out of the picture for the foreseeable future, and the division is moving on without him. Champion Chris Weidman will face VitorBelfort sometime this summer, and there are no clear-cut contenders beyond that matchup.
Should Mousasi be able to defeat his fellow elite-level striker, it would be hard to deny his place in the divisional hierarchy. A victory over the Team Black House fighter would make it four straight for Mousasi and make him successful in 21 of his last 23 showings.
Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.