UFC 130 Morning After: Rampage vs. Hamill, a Dud of a Main Event

Filed under: UFCA few months ago, when UFC 130 was first scheduled, it looked like a hell of a fight card: Frankie Edgar would take on Gray Maynard in the rematch of their epic lightweight title fight, and Rampage Jackson would take on Thiago Silva in …

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Rampage JacksonA few months ago, when UFC 130 was first scheduled, it looked like a hell of a fight card: Frankie Edgar would take on Gray Maynard in the rematch of their epic lightweight title fight, and Rampage Jackson would take on Thiago Silva in what promised to be a thrilling, hard-hitting co-main event.

What we actually got at UFC 130 was a lot different: Edgar and Maynard both dropped out of the event with injuries, Silva got busted for cheating on a drug test, and we were left with Rampage vs. Matt Hamill as a main event.

What else can be said but that the main event turned into a dud?

Rampage vs. Hamill looked like a bad fight on paper, and it turned out to be a bad fight in the Octagon: Hamill is a swell guy whom UFC fans will always like and respect, but he’s just not in the same class as Rampage. It was a one-sided beatdown from start to finish, and a disappointing main event. The first Edgar vs. Maynard fight was the UFC’s best main event so far this year. Rampage vs. Hamill was the worst.

And as bad as losing the Edgar-Maynard fight was, losing Silva from what had been scheduled as a co-main event fight with Rampage was big, too. A Silva-Rampage fight would have been guaranteed fireworks. It’s not just that Hamill isn’t as good as Silva, it’s also that he has a very different fighting style than Silva, and a Rampage-Hamill fight is just not as compelling as Rampage-Silva would have been.

And, of course, when you lose a main event, all the other fights have to move up a spot on the card. So when Rampage-Silva as the co-main turned into Rampage-Hamill as the main event, that bumped Frank Mir vs. Roy Nelson into the co-main event spot. So while Edgar-Maynard and Rampage-Silva would have been awesome main and co-main events, what fans got instead were lousy main and co-main events, Rampage-Hamill and Mir-Nelson.

The first three fights on the pay-per-view card were all entertaining, so it’s not like the fans who bought the pay-per-view didn’t get any value for their money. But they didn’t get the value they were hoping for. This was a fight card that once looked great, and instead turned into a disappointment.

Notes from UFC 130
— According to CompuStrike, Tim Boetsch was successful on nine of 11 takedown attempts against Kendall Grove. Boetsch has always had good striking power, and if he’s able to be that effective with takendowns now that he has moved down from light heavyweight to middleweight, he’s going to be a force at 185 pounds.

— Stefan Struve is 5-3 in his UFC career, and at just 23 years old, he has a lot of promise. But I have to say, I’m worried about his future if he doesn’t get better at striking defense. All three of his UFC losses have been by first-round knockout: To Junior Dos Santos, to Roy Nelson and now, on Saturday, to Travis Browne.

— The UFC has started showing fighters’ Twitter handles under their names on its on-screen graphics. At a time when other major sports leagues are terrified that athletes will use social media to say something embarrassing, this was yet another indication that the UFC is way ahead of the pack on that front.

Quotes from UFC 130
“You just moved up the ladder here tonight, kid. It’s a big, big victory for you. From here on it’s nothing but top contenders.” — Joe Rogan to Rick Story. He’s right. Story has a big future ahead of him in the welterweight division.

“How many times did I hit him in the face? What’s up with that guy’s chin?” — Frank Mir after battering Roy Nelson for 15 minutes. In Nelson’s last two fights he has been in the cage for six rounds with Mir and Junior dos Santos, and although he was beaten badly both times, he certainly does have a great chin, as neither man was able to knock Nelson out.

Good call
“This seems to be the difference between a real, true, legitimate heavyweight and a guy who’s fighting at heavyweight because he likes food.” — Rogan on Frank Mir vs. Roy Nelson. Rogan was right: Nelson won’t be a great fighter until he’s willing to take his diet and conditioning seriously, as a professional athlete should.

Bad call
When Jackson and Hamill backed away from each other with about 90 seconds to go in the main event, Mike Goldberg said, “A little respect from both men,” as if they were backing away because they like each other. In reality, they were backing away because they were fatigued, and the fans were justified in their booing.

Stock up
Herb Dean showed once again that he’s the best referee in the business because he thinks of everything. When the timekeeper gave the 10-second warning at the end of the rounds of the main event, Dean held up 10 fingers to show the deaf Hamill that there were 10 seconds left. Contrast Dean’s work with the athletic commission official who interrupted Hamill’s corner after the first round of the fight and didn’t seem to realize that Hamill is deaf and needed a sign language interpreter.

Stock Down
Thiago Alves is never going to compete at a high level again if he doesn’t figure out how to stop a takedown. His loss to Story was the third time in Alves’s last four fights that a superior wrestler has been able to control him and win a decision, and as great a striker as Alves is, it’s clear that other fighters realize that there’s a giant hole in Alves’s game.

Final thought
Given the light heavyweight landscape right now and the timing of Jon Jones’ return from a hand injury, Rampage Jackson is probably the best choice available to get the next light heavyweight title shot, if Rampage himself is healthy. But as dominant as Jackson was against Hamill, he didn’t do anything to indicate he’d have much of a chance of getting the light heavyweight belt back. Rampage can sleepwalk his way through a victory against an opponent like Hamill, but he’d need to fight at a much higher level to have a prayer against Jones.

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UFC 130 Results: Rampage vs. Jon Jones and 10 Fights to Make After the PPV

Four years ago, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson was conceived as the most devastating fighter in the UFC’s light heavyweight division. A vicious knockout artist, Jackson ended the legendary Chuck Liddell’s title reign with a thunderou…

Four years ago, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson was conceived as the most devastating fighter in the UFC’s light heavyweight division.

A vicious knockout artist, Jackson ended the legendary Chuck Liddell’s title reign with a thunderous left hook in the first round of their 2007 meeting.

He defended the belt in a slugfest against Dan Henderson before the tide changed at UFC 86 on July 5, 2008.

Jackson dropped a unanimous decision to Forrest Griffin, losing his coveted light heavyweight championship in the process.

Unlike other dominant champions of the past and present, Jackson never received a rematch.

He’s had to work his way back into contention and, following a dominant decision win over Matt Hamill at UFC 130, it appears he’s finally earned a shot at the gold once again.

In addition to Jackson’s title shot, here are some other pivotal matchups that should be made following UFC 130.

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UFC 130 Results: Report Cards for All the Main Card Fighters

UFC 130 is now officially in the MMA history books.There are going to be plenty of people out there that think this event wasn’t the best they’ve ever seen. But despite that fact, there were a few fighters who put on impressive performances.Now it’s ti…

UFC 130 is now officially in the MMA history books.

There are going to be plenty of people out there that think this event wasn’t the best they’ve ever seen. But despite that fact, there were a few fighters who put on impressive performances.

Now it’s time for Professor Schielke to take a look at the bodies of work put on display, and dish out the grades to fighters who added $55 to your cable or satellite bill Saturday night.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 130 Results: The Real Winners and Losers

UFC 130: Rampage vs. Hamill is in the books and the results are in. Though it was one of the least anticipated UFC cards in recent memory, there were still quite a few highlights and some major questions were answered in just about every division.&nbsp…

UFC 130: Rampage vs. Hamill is in the books and the results are in. Though it was one of the least anticipated UFC cards in recent memory, there were still quite a few highlights and some major questions were answered in just about every division. 

Quinton Jackson edged out Matt Hamill in the main event and Roy Nelson fell short in defeating Frank Mir, but the results don’t always tell the whole story. Sometimes there’s more that goes into it than that. 

So let’s take a closer look at who the real winners and losers were from Saturday night’s pay-per-view.

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UFC 130 Results: Questions Answered and Lessons Learned

UFC 130 is now in the books an the dust is beginning to settle.Quinton “Rampage” Jackson outclassed Matt “The Hammer” Hamill just like Frank Mir did to Roy “Big Country” Nelson.Stefan Struve and Jorge Santiago were both finished, the former in a specta…

UFC 130 is now in the books an the dust is beginning to settle.

Quinton “Rampage” Jackson outclassed Matt “The Hammer” Hamill just like Frank Mir did to Roy “Big Country” Nelson.

Stefan Struve and Jorge Santiago were both finished, the former in a spectacular fashion, by their adversaries Travis Browne and Brian Stann respectively.

On the Spike TV portion of the card, Demetrius Johnson lived up to his “Mighty Mouse” namesake and managed to out-scramble Miguel Torres en route to a unanimous decision and the reinvigorated Tim “The Barbarian” Boetsch proved too in terms of strength much for Kendal Grove, the former winning a lopsided decision.

On the Facebook preliminaries, Renan Barão, Michael McDonald, and Gleison Tibau were all victorious.

Despite the event being only mediocre, there are some important lessons to take away from it. What are they? Read and find out!

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UFC 130 Results: Why Quinton "Rampage" Jackson Is Quite Undeserving of Jon Jones

Perhaps the biggest thing that UFC 130 proved to fans is that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is not on the level of current budding champion Jon “Bones” Jones.Credit the chin and will of Matt Hamill to Jackson’s inability to finish the fight against Hamill …

Perhaps the biggest thing that UFC 130 proved to fans is that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is not on the level of current budding champion Jon “Bones” Jones.

Credit the chin and will of Matt Hamill to Jackson’s inability to finish the fight against Hamill at UFC 130, but discredit Jackson’s excuse that his hand was fractured coming into the bout with Hamill. It should be an unwritten rule that fighters should not disclose injuries, especially as a possible excuse in a lackluster bout. 

Jackson indeed tried his hardest to put away “The Hammer” landing almost double the amount of total strikes in the fight, 61-34. By far though, the most telling fact of the fight was Jackson’s takedown defense, stuffing all 17 attempts by Hamill en route to the decision victory.

With his win over Hamill, if Jackson skips over current No. 1 contender Rashad Evans or light heavyweight prospect Phil Davis, he’ll have his work cutout for him against Jones. If fans will remember correctly, it wasn’t till the third round of his fight with Evans when Jackson appeared to solve Evans, but still came out on the losing side of the decision. He’ll need a much better performance if he’s going to be the first man (aside from Hamill) to beat Jones.

The thing that is most difficult to understand is Rampage’s motivation. He’s publicly stated that he would like to retire at 35, leaving him with roughly two years remaining before he calls it quits.

Fighting current champ Jones may well be within that range of time, but Jackson’s no longer at the peak of his career and getting up for a fight of such a magnitude is, well, harder than it was many years ago for the MMA legend.

 

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