On This Day in MMA History: A Main Event Falls Apart, And the UFC Does the Unthinkable


(Don’t cry, son. This little guy is in MMA poster heaven now, just as happy as can be.)

“On This Day in MMA History” pays tribute to some of the more bizarre and infamous news stories of MMA’s past. The following article was originally published on August 23rd, 2012, one year ago today. We’ve placed some related links at the end of this post, to give you a sense of the wide-ranging aftermath of this “sport-killing” moment.

BREAKING: UFC 151 *Canceled* After Dan Henderson Pulls Out With Knee Injury; Jones Turns Down Sonnen, Dana White Incredibly Pissed Off

The rumors were true — and even worse than we thought. Due to a knee injury suffered in training, Dan Henderson has been forced to withdraw from his scheduled light-heavyweight title fight against Jon Jones at UFC 151, and because the UFC couldn’t find a suitable main event replacement, the UFC is canceling an event for the first time in the Zuffa era. Dana White confirmed the news in a press conference held earlier today — describing the cancellation as “probably one of my all-time lows as being president of the UFC” — and he made no attempt to hide his heated emotions during the call. Here are the brass tacks…

– Henderson suffered a partial tear in his MCL during training, which was serious enough to keep him from competing.

– According to Dana White, Chael Sonnen immediately jumped up to take the fight (“I’ll fly to Vegas tonight and fight him,” White quoted Sonnen as saying), and the UFC immediately began preparing behind-the-scenes to promote Jones vs. Sonnen on eight days’ notice. But Jon Jones turned down the matchup, refusing to fight Sonnen on short notice.

– White is extremely upset that Jones, a UFC champion and pound-for-pound candidate, would turn down a fight that would save an event. Even Tito Ortiz never pulled this shit, he pointed out. White lambasted the idea that Jones would turn this fight down for business reasons. “If he was a businessman, we wouldn’t be having this conversation right now,” he said. White agreed that his relationship with Jones would change “a lot” after this: “Me and Lorenzo are both disgusted.” Later in the call, White pointed out how Jones turning down the fight now screws all the supporting-card fighters out of paychecks.


(Don’t cry, son. This little guy is in MMA poster heaven now, just as happy as can be.)

“On This Day in MMA History” pays tribute to some of the more bizarre and infamous news stories of MMA’s past. The following article was originally published on August 23rd, 2012, one year ago today. We’ve placed some related links at the end of this post, to give you a sense of the wide-ranging aftermath of this “sport-killing” moment.

BREAKING: UFC 151 *Canceled* After Dan Henderson Pulls Out With Knee Injury; Jones Turns Down Sonnen, Dana White Incredibly Pissed Off

The rumors were true — and even worse than we thought. Due to a knee injury suffered in training, Dan Henderson has been forced to withdraw from his scheduled light-heavyweight title fight against Jon Jones at UFC 151, and because the UFC couldn’t find a suitable main event replacement, the UFC is canceling an event for the first time in the Zuffa era. Dana White confirmed the news in a press conference held earlier today — describing the cancellation as “probably one of my all-time lows as being president of the UFC” — and he made no attempt to hide his heated emotions during the call. Here are the brass tacks…

– Henderson suffered a partial tear in his MCL during training, which was serious enough to keep him from competing.

– According to Dana White, Chael Sonnen immediately jumped up to take the fight (“I’ll fly to Vegas tonight and fight him,” White quoted Sonnen as saying), and the UFC immediately began preparing behind-the-scenes to promote Jones vs. Sonnen on eight days’ notice. But Jon Jones turned down the matchup, refusing to fight Sonnen on short notice.

– White is extremely upset that Jones, a UFC champion and pound-for-pound candidate, would turn down a fight that would save an event. Even Tito Ortiz never pulled this shit, he pointed out. White lambasted the idea that Jones would turn this fight down for business reasons. “If he was a businessman, we wouldn’t be having this conversation right now,” he said. White agreed that his relationship with Jones would change “a lot” after this: “Me and Lorenzo are both disgusted.” Later in the call, White pointed out how Jones turning down the fight now screws all the supporting-card fighters out of paychecks.

– White saved additional venom for trainer Greg Jackson, who reportedly told Jones, “There’s no way you take this fight on eight days notice, it would be the biggest mistake of your entire career.” Said White: “How much faith do you have in your champion and your guy? [Jackson] is a fucking sport killer. This guy’s from another planet….Greg Jackson should never be interviewed by anybody ever again, except by a psychiatrist.”

– Though Lyoto Machida was considered for a replacement opponent for Jones, Machida was flying back to Brazil when all this went down, and it simply wasn’t possible from a timing perspective. “I can accept why Machida didn’t take the fight,” White said.

– Now, Jon Jones vs. Lyoto Machida is scheduled for UFC 152 (September 22nd, Toronto). Or actually, UFC 151, since UFC 151 never happened. (Thanks to Ariel Helwani for that important clarification.) “I can tell you right now, [Jones] ain’t turning down the Machida fight. If he does, we’re gonna have another conference call this afternoon.” [*cue spooky music*Update: Actually, Machida turned down the Jones fight. How delightfully ironic! Now, Jones will face Vitor Belfort, of all people, at UFC 152, which is still being called UFC 152.

– There wasn’t enough time to consider other options like putting the PPV on free TV. Dana White disagreed with the suggestion that the event would still go on if it had a stronger co-main event.

– Our suggestion of having Ronda Rousey vs. Cris Cyborg step in to headline the card with a 140-pound superfight was politely ignored.

Jesus, what a fiasco. We’ll update you when we get Jones’s reaction to this mess.

Related links:
UFC 151 Aftermath (?): Jones Opens As -475 Favorite Over Machida While His Peers Tear Him a New One
– Lyoto Machida Turns Down Jon Jones Fight at UFC 152, Vitor Belfort Steps in After Shogun Declines as Well [JONESANITY]
– The Champ Speaks: Jon Jones Apologizes for UFC 151 Cancellation, Says Fighting Sonnen Would’ve Been “The Dumbest Idea Ever”
– Turns Out, Dan Henderson Injured His Knee Over a Fortnight Ago
Chael Sonnen Debuts “The Jon Jones Special Pizza” at Mean Street Pizza
– Even While Apologizing for UFC 151 Fiasco, Jon Jones Can’t Help Comparing Himself to Jesus
– Jon Jones Publicity Nightmare of the Day: In Which Bones Asks Dana to Make Chael Stop Mocking Him
UFC 151: Henderson vs. Jones — Live Results & Commentary. Wait, What?!

Lyoto Machida Drops to Middleweight to Face Tim Kennedy at ‘Fight for the Troops 3?


(Let me guess: Liquid diet?)

Lyoto Machida had a damn good run at light-heavyweight. The hard-to-touch karate fighter spent a year as the UFC’s 205-pound champion in 2009-2010, and has earned victories against Dan Henderson, Randy Couture, Rashad Evans, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Tito Ortiz, Ryan Bader, and Thiago Silva. If you’re keeping score, that’s five former world-champions, a TUF winner, and a weed-puffin’ juice-monkey. What other active LHW can claim that kind of resume, outside of Jon Jones himself?

But following a loss to Phil Davis earlier this month — which he blamed on Davis running away from him during the fight, oh irony of ironies — Machida will officially be testing the waters in a new weight class. UFC president Dana White announced last night on FOX Sports Live that Machida will be making the drop to middleweight, and will face Tim Kennedy in the main event of Fight for the Troops 3, November 6th at Fort Campbell in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Kennedy is on a two-fight win streak, most recently getting Roger Gracie fired at UFC 162, and will surely be the recipient of some totally-acceptable “USA!” chants during the match.

For Machida, the drop in weight is a logical step and long overdue. “The Dragon” has often showed up to weigh-ins under the 205-pound limit, most notably coming in four pounds under for his August 2012 fight against Ryan Bader, and three pounds under for his subsequent fight against Dan Henderson. In terms of height and reach, he’s not too much different from Nick Diaz, who he was rumored to fight until the UFC realized it was a bad idea. Fighting smaller opponents at 185 could jump-start Machida’s career, and put him on a new path to a title — as long as his longtime friend Anderson Silva doesn’t get in the way.

At this point, the only other match booked for Fight for the Troops 3 is the lightweight scrap between Jorge Masvidal and Rustam Khabilov. The two previous installments of Fight for the Troops helped raise over $8 million for the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund.


(Let me guess: Liquid diet?)

Lyoto Machida had a damn good run at light-heavyweight. The hard-to-touch karate fighter spent a year as the UFC’s 205-pound champion in 2009-2010, and has earned victories against Dan Henderson, Randy Couture, Rashad Evans, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Tito Ortiz, Ryan Bader, and Thiago Silva. If you’re keeping score, that’s five former world-champions, a TUF winner, and a weed-puffin’ juice-monkey. What other active LHW can claim that kind of resume, outside of Jon Jones himself?

But following a loss to Phil Davis earlier this month — which he blamed on Davis running away from him during the fight, oh irony of ironies — Machida will officially be testing the waters in a new weight class. UFC president Dana White announced last night on FOX Sports Live that Machida will be making the drop to middleweight, and will face Tim Kennedy in the main event of Fight for the Troops 3, November 6th at Fort Campbell in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Kennedy is on a two-fight win streak, most recently getting Roger Gracie fired at UFC 162, and will surely be the recipient of some totally-acceptable “USA!” chants during the match.

For Machida, the drop in weight is a logical step and long overdue. “The Dragon” has often showed up to weigh-ins under the 205-pound limit, most notably coming in four pounds under for his August 2012 fight against Ryan Bader, and three pounds under for his subsequent fight against Dan Henderson. In terms of height and reach, he’s not too much different from Nick Diaz, who he was rumored to fight until the UFC realized it was a bad idea. Fighting smaller opponents at 185 could jump-start Machida’s career, and put him on a new path to a title — as long as his longtime friend Anderson Silva doesn’t get in the way.

At this point, the only other match booked for Fight for the Troops 3 is the lightweight scrap between Jorge Masvidal and Rustam Khabilov. The two previous installments of Fight for the Troops helped raise over $8 million for the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund.

Lyoto Machida Moves to Middleweight, Faces Tim Kennedy at Fight for the Troops 3

Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida will make a move down to the middleweight division for his next fight, where he will meet Strikeforce transfer Tim Kennedy in his debut at 185 pounds.
UFC president Dana White announced during an appe…

Former UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida will make a move down to the middleweight division for his next fight, where he will meet Strikeforce transfer Tim Kennedy in his debut at 185 pounds.

UFC president Dana White announced during an appearance on Fox Sports Live via Fox Sports 1 that Machida has decided to move down a weight class following his last fight—a controversial loss to Phil Davis at UFC 163.

“One thing that we haven’t announced yet that I’ll announce tonight is Lyoto Machida is moving down to middleweight,” White said. “He’s going to face Tim Kennedy in the next Fight for the Troops, which will be on Fox Sports 1.”

Machida has flirted with the idea of moving down in weight for some time, and now, it seems, is the right moment for him to make the move.

Machida meets Kennedy in the main event for the next UFC Fight for the Troops show, which will take place on November 6 in Fort Campbell, Kentucky.

This will technically mark the fourth time the UFC has done a show for the armed forces. The first wasn’t actually called Fight for the Troops, but it took place at MCAS Miramar, which was the first time a UFC event took place on a military base.

The second event, which took on the name Fight for the Troops, took place in 2008 in Fayetteville, North Carolina, while the third was held at Fort Hood in Texas in 2011.

Now the UFC will land at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The proceeds from the event will be given to charity to support troops coming back from overseas.

Kennedy served in the military for several tours of duty overseas, where he was a part of the Army Special Forces and also an Army Ranger.

The fight in November will be a major step up in competition for Kennedy. He has fought for the Strikeforce middleweight title on two past occasions, but he has not faced a competitor on the level of Machida in his career.

If the upcoming Fight for the Troops card is similar to past shows the UFC has done, expect several fighters with military backgrounds to end up on the card. The UFC has numerous fighters on the roster who have served in the armed forces, and if previous Fight for the Troops cards are any indication, they will all be clamoring for a spot.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Vitor Belfort vs. Dan Henderson Planned For Nov. 9th Brazil Card


(Vitor and Dan in 2006, tanned to the gills and ready to rock. / Photo via MMAWeekly)

On Tuesday’s installment of UFC Tonight, it was announced that the UFC is looking to book former champions Vitor Belfort and Dan Henderson against one another for a fight November 9th in Brazil. The fight would be a rematch of their October 2006 Pride 32 bout, which resulted in a decision win for Henderson and a steroid suspension for Belfort.

UFC Tonight did not specify what weight the fight would take place at; both men have campaigned at middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight in the past. However, it will be a safe bet that the TRT will be coursing freely through the veins of both future hall of famers, though, as Brazil ain’t exactly Nevada or New Jersey when it comes to drug testing credibility.

If Belfort agrees to the fight, it will be an interesting move given how fickle and picky he’s been with proposed match-ups in recent months. He’s turned down Tim Kennedy, ignored an offer from Lyoto Machida and said he wouldn’t fight at middleweight unless it was for the belt, before challenging Chael Sonnen (at what weight, no one knows). Sonnen accepted publicly but now it appears Belfort will go for Henderson — who is on a two-fight losing streak compared to Belfort’s two-fight win streak.


(Vitor and Dan in 2006, tanned to the gills and ready to rock. / Photo via MMAWeekly)

On Tuesday’s installment of UFC Tonight, it was announced that the UFC is looking to book former champions Vitor Belfort and Dan Henderson against one another for a fight November 9th in Brazil. The fight would be a rematch of their October 2006 Pride 32 bout, which resulted in a decision win for Henderson and a steroid suspension for Belfort.

UFC Tonight did not specify what weight the fight would take place at; both men have campaigned at middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight in the past. However, it will be a safe bet that the TRT will be coursing freely through the veins of both future hall of famers, though, as Brazil ain’t exactly Nevada or New Jersey when it comes to drug testing credibility.

If Belfort agrees to the fight, it will be an interesting move given how fickle and picky he’s been with proposed match-ups in recent months. He’s turned down Tim Kennedy, ignored an offer from Lyoto Machida and said he wouldn’t fight at middleweight unless it was for the belt, before challenging Chael Sonnen (at what weight, no one knows). Sonnen accepted publicly but now it appears Belfort will go for Henderson — who is on a two-fight losing streak compared to Belfort’s two-fight win streak.

Henderson has a great chance to jump back into title consideration with a win over Belfort, however. If he beats the red-hot Brazilian on his own turf, he’ll likely be able to make a case for more big match ups at either middleweight or light heavyweight and, if he could win another one of those in exciting fashion, Hendo might very well find himself on a short list of title challengers, depending on who the champions are. Meanwhile, Belfort will take a fight against a 43 year old man on a losing skid in a fight that will likely not help his standing in any weight division. I guess.

What do you say, taters? Do you want to see this rematch and, if it happens, who do you see coming out on top and how?

Elias Cepeda

Lyoto Machida Says He Has Unfinished Business with Sonnen, Belfort and Davis

Lyoto Machida has a pretty full dance card these days.
The former UFC light heavyweight champion said he is ready to move down to middleweight to consummate his rivalry with Chael Sonnen or Vitor Belfort. And he still wants that rematch with Phil Davi…

Lyoto Machida has a pretty full dance card these days.

The former UFC light heavyweight champion said he is ready to move down to middleweight to consummate his rivalry with Chael Sonnen or Vitor Belfort. And he still wants that rematch with Phil Davis at light heavyweight.

“I watched the fight with Shogun and Sonnen, and I saw a great opportunity to fight against Sonnen,” Machida said Monday on The MMA Hour broadcast with host Ariel Helwani. “Because Sonnen is a great man and he’s a big name…and I think I can beat him. And he talked bad about me back in the day.”

The interview came as the normally headline-allergic Machida (19-4) found himself in the middle of a couple of different MMA discourse threads. Earlier in August, he indicated he’d be willing to drop down to middleweight for the right fight. Machida confirmed that willingness on Monday, saying he’s open to fighting in both divisions, and just wants “a big fight.”

Armchair matchmaking reached a new level shortly after Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 26, in which Chael Sonnen submitted Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in a light heavyweight bout and then said he’d return to his normal middleweight division. Machida, who had previously been linked to a middleweight matchup with Vitor Belfort, immediately tweeted his hat into the Sonnen ring.

 

 

Machida said Monday he’d be open to either fight, though he did add a caveat.

“If this fight is going to happen in Brazil, I’d prefer to fight against Vitor Belfort,” Machida said. “But if the fight is going to happen anywhere else in the world, I will fight against whoever.”

Machida also said that Belfort, who was critical of Machida for declining to fight Jon Jones on short notice to salvage UFC 151 last summer, was himself avoiding a confrontation, and was therefor acting hypocritically.

“I challenged [Belfort] to fight this fight, and he said no,” Machida said. “I don’t know why, but he has to follow what he said.”

Belfort has also called for a fight with Sonnen. Sonnen himself seems to prefer Wanderlei Silva, but has said he is willing to fight whomever the UFC deems fit.

To add yet another twist to the mix, Machida lost a very controversial decision to Phil Davis earlier this month at UFC 163, and said Monday he is still not over it.

“[The decision] was not convincing for me,” Machida said. “I would like another fight.”

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Lyoto Machida Calls Out Chael Sonnen Following Vitor Belfort Challenge

Lots of folks are looking for a piece of Chael Sonnen these days. Following an impressive submission victory over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, “The American Gangster” called out former Pride great Wanderlei Silva.
Not so fast, though.
Vitor Belfort thre…

Lots of folks are looking for a piece of Chael Sonnen these days. Following an impressive submission victory over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, “The American Gangster” called out former Pride great Wanderlei Silva.

Not so fast, though.

Vitor Belfort threw his hat into the Chael Sonnen ring immediately after. Now even less fast! Former light heavyweight champ Lyoto Machida also expressed his interest to fight the powerful wrestler, via Twitter: 

When a number of former champions line up to fight you, it must mean you’re doing something right.

Sonnen has had a long-standing feud with Brazilian fighters ever since his wide-ranging rants regarding at-the-time middleweight champ Anderson Silva. During the year-and-a-half he jawed at “The Spider,” he took shots at numerous well-regarded teammates and former teammates, including both Belfort and Machida, as well as other random fighters such as Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva.

As one of the most recognizable, marketable and (like it or not) popular fighters in the sport, Sonnen is a hot commodity, and the big win at UFC Fight Night 26 makes him an even better opponent. 

While fights with Silva, Machida and Belfort are all marketable and make sense from a ratings and rankings perspective, the big question here is what Sonnen plans to do in terms of his weight. Last month, Sonnen expressed the desire to go back down to his old stomping grounds at 185 pounds after two fights at 205 pounds.

Belfort has been locked in as the top contender at 185 pounds for a little while now. Machida has been at 205 pounds for the majority of his career but recently expressed interest in a fight with Belfort and has always been a candidate for a drop to middleweight. Silva fought at middleweight from 2010 through 2012 but went back to light heavyweight earlier this year for his fight with Brian Stann and plans to stay there.

Focusing strictly on a fight with Machida, it would be one of the most interesting striker-vs.-grappler matchups of all time. However, if Chris Weidman maintains his spot as champion, Sonnen could realistically find himself challenging for the middleweight belt again.

A win over Belfort would instantly make him a top contender, and that isn’t the case with Machida. Regardless, keep an eye on how things pan out with Sonnen from here.

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