The Cut List: Who’s in Desperate Need of a Win at UFC 135?

Filed under: UFCUFC 135 in Denver may feature a title fight at the top of the card, but it also includes its share of fighters who are struggling just to get back in the win column. Some get more second chances than others to turn a losing skid around,…

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UFC 135 in Denver may feature a title fight at the top of the card, but it also includes its share of fighters who are struggling just to get back in the win column. Some get more second chances than others to turn a losing skid around, but there are at least a couple who could be looking at a win-or-go-home scenario.

Who are they, and what are their chances to stay employed after Saturday night? For answers and analysis, we turn to The Cut List.

Nate Diaz (13-7, 8-5 UFC)
Who he’s facing: Takanori Gomi
Why he’s in danger: Don’t look now, but the younger Diaz brother has lost two straight in the UFC after being outgrappled by both Dong Hyun Kim and Rory MacDonald. There’s no shame in losing to either of those beasts, but three in a row is still a dangerous place to be, so he needs this one against Gomi. What complicates matters is Nick Diaz’s suddenly shaky footing with the UFC, though I’m not sure if it helps or hurts Nate in the end. With Nick around, you get a real appreciation for how reasonable and easy to work with Nate is. Plus, just how much would the already paranoid, conspiracy theory-prone Nick freak out if the UFC cut his brother so shortly after his own troubles with the Zuffa overlords? I don’t know, and I’m not sure I want to find out. The best thing for all non-Gomi parties would be for Nate to win this fight and save his bosses the trouble of making those decisions. Still, you can bet that Gomi remembers what happened in his infamous Pride bout with Nick and is eager for a little revenge against Stockton’s first family of fisticuffs.
Odds of getting cut: 4-1. This is a fight Diaz should win, since Gomi will likely be content to keep it on the feet, where Diaz’s height and reach should give him problems. Even if he loses, he’s still an exciting enough fighter to warrant one more chance. The only thing he really can’t do is follow in his brother’s footsteps and fail the drug test.




Matt Hughes (45-8, 18-6 UFC)
Who he’s facing: Josh Koscheck
Why he’s in danger: Okay, so Hughes isn’t really looking at a potential cut per se, but rather a contract that might not be renewed once this final fight is in the books. And honestly? That’s not such a bad thing. Hughes will be 38 in October, and the welterweight division of today is not the same one he dominated half a decade ago. If he sticks around he’s probably looking at an increasingly depressing game of diminishing returns, and for what? He doesn’t need the money and he’s got nothing left to prove in this sport. In fact, the worst-case scenario might be that he upsets Josh Koscheck and decides that Matt Hughes is back, baby! Then he might actually get a new contract, and before you know it he’s the 40-year-old ex-champion getting thumped by Seth Baczynski in a co-co-main event. The best thing might be for him to ride off into the sunset here, which seems a lot more likely to happen if he ends up taking the beating that oddsmakers are forecasting. Koscheck is like a younger, more powerful, and slightly more abrasive version of Hughes. In a bizarre way, it could be the perfect passing of the torch.
Odds of getting cut not retained: Even. I think Hughes is in for a rough night against Koscheck, and I expect that will only make it easier for him to decide that he’d rather be at home in Hillsboro. It’s the right call and the right time for it.

Takanori Gomi (32-7-1 NC, 1-2 UFC)
Who he’s facing: Nate Diaz
Why he’s in danger: Gomi managed to sandwich a knockout win over Tyson Griffin in between losses to Kenny Florian and Clay Guida, so it’s not as if he’s been fighting chumps since coming to the UFC. At the same time, winning more fights than you lose is the best way to ensure job security. A loss to Diaz and Gomi falls to 1-3 in the Octagon, and right after his 33rd birthday. That might make the Japanese lightweight seem like a bad bet to the UFC brass, especially when you look at the uninspired last few years of his career. He can be an exciting slugger when he gets the chance to fight his fight, but he also seems to lack the overall game necessary to ever become a serious contender in a division full of bull-headed wrestlers.
Odds of getting cut: 5-1. Unless he loses very, very badly, “The Fireball Kid” is probably sticking around at least until the UFC’s Japanese invasion in 2012.

Takeya Mizugaki (14-6-2, 1-1 UFC)
Who he’s facing: Cole Escovedo
Why he’s in danger: Right off I’ll just say it — Mizugaki should consider himself lucky to have made the cut when the UFC absorbed the WEC. He was up and down for his entire stay in the WEC, winning the easier ones and losing the tough ones. Not that defeats to guys like Urijah Faber and Miguel Torres are signs that you suck, but let’s be honest and admit that the current lack of depth in the bantamweight division hasn’t hurt Mizugaki any. This prelim bout against Cole Escovedo is a little like the scene in Dark Knight where The Joker drops a broken pool cue in the middle of some faceless henchmen for “tryouts.”
Odds of getting cut: 2-1. This is a very winnable fight for Mizugaki, who can take a beating with the best of them. If he’s smart, he’ll approach it as a must-win and behave accordingly.

Cole Escovedo (17-7, 0-1 UFC)
Who he’s facing: Takeya Mizugaki
Why he’s in danger: Escovedo’s career has been a rollercoaster ride in more ways than one. He’s been up and down in weight, while also following impressive winning streaks with strings of losses. He’s 1-3 in his last four, and that one wasn’t against a particularly impressive opponent. In his lone UFC bout to date he lost a unanimous decision to Nova Uniao standout Renan Barao. He and Mizugaki are fairly evenly matched, so there’s no better time to show the brass that he can be something other than an opponent. But with the way he’s been going lately, he probably won’t get too many more chances to do it.
Odds of getting cut: Even. I give Mizugaki the slight edge in this one. If Escovedo can’t pull it out, there won’t be many reasons for the UFC to keep him around.

 

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In Last Fight of UFC Contract, Matt Hughes Says Outcome ‘Won’t Really Matter’

Filed under: UFCWhen Matt Hughes steps into the Octagon against Josh Koscheck at UFC 135, it will be the 25th fight of his UFC career and the last on his current contract. The former champ turns 38 this October, and he’s not sure what his future holds….

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Matt HughesWhen Matt Hughes steps into the Octagon against Josh Koscheck at UFC 135, it will be the 25th fight of his UFC career and the last on his current contract. The former champ turns 38 this October, and he’s not sure what his future holds.

“My wife tells me I’m done fighting,” Hughes told reporters on Monday’s media call. “She wanted me to quit after the B.J. [Penn] fight. But we’ll just see. We’ll just see what I feel like and what the UFC wants to do.”

If you’re the UFC, a lot might depend on how Hughes looks against Koscheck. It’s a pairing that Hughes wasn’t eager to accept back when Koscheck and the other welterweights from the AKA squad lobbied for it a couple years ago. But after Diego Sanchez pulled out of the September 24 bout due to a broken hand, Hughes thought he might end up without any opponent at all in Denver.

“The first thing that went through my mind was, here I’ve been training for quite a while and expecting to fight on this card and now it’s not going to happen. It was kind of confusing when [UFC president Dana White] called me,” said Hughes, who added that he was first told he might be fighting another AKA 170-pounder, Jon Fitch.

That was the last he heard before boarding a flight, Hughes said. By the time he landed, he found out the UFC wanted him to face Koscheck instead.

“Really, it’s Dana’s call,” he said. “It’s not even my call to decide who it’s going to be. So I said, yeah, whoever you want.”

Coming off his knockout loss to Penn at UFC 123, Hughes had no problem with a considerable layoff between fights. Having ten months to train more casually and pursue other interests “is fine with me,” he explained.

But as he approaches the final fight of his contract, it’s difficult to tell what kind of future Hughes might have inside the Octagon. It seems unlikely that he’ll ever again find himself as a top contender for the UFC welterweight title, and he’s already secured his legacy as one of the most dominant UFC champions and a member of the organization’s Hall of Fame.

At this point, what’s driving him to keep getting in the cage with younger opponents who are still trying to make their name in the sport?

“It’s competition,” Hughes said. “I think that’s what drives your top athletes in the UFC, getting in there against one other person and mixing it up. I don’t have to rely on four other basketball teammates to score a basket or anything. I just have to rely on myself. The fact that it’s just me and one other person competing in there, that’s my drive right there.”

According to many oddsmakers, Koscheck is somewhere in the neighborhood of a 5-1 favorite to beat Hughes on Saturday night. If they’re right, you have to wonder where that will leave the former champ.

With two consecutive losses in his late-30s, a new contract for Hughes would seem like little more than an insurance policy to keep him from taking his talents outside the organization. With an upset victory over a top welterweight like Koscheck, however, it might only get harder for Hughes to convince himself that it’s time to walk away.

But if his immediate future with the UFC really is riding on this fight, don’t tell Hughes. He insists it doesn’t matter, as if winning and losing in the final fight of your contract both lead to the same end. And, when you’re in Hughes’ position, maybe they do.

“This is the last fight on my contract, so the outcome of this fight won’t really matter, to be honest,” he said. “After this fight — win or lose, doesn’t matter — I’ll talk to the UFC and we’ll figure out what we want to do.”

If things don’t go Hughes’ way in Denver, it could be one more decision that is ultimately Dana White’s call.

 

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Josh Koscheck Talks Matt Hughes: ‘Fans Deserved This Fight a Long Time Ago’

Filed under: UFCWhen Josh Koscheck first heard that there might be an opportunity to finally get a fight with former UFC welterweight champ Matt Hughes after he’d long since given up lobbying for it, he didn’t have to think too hard about his answer.

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When Josh Koscheck first heard that there might be an opportunity to finally get a fight with former UFC welterweight champ Matt Hughes after he’d long since given up lobbying for it, he didn’t have to think too hard about his answer.

Diego Sanchez broke his hand and I eventually got a phone call from [manager] ‘Crazy’ Bob Cook and he’s like, ‘Hey, you want to fight Matt Hughes?'” Koscheck said on Monday’s UFC 135 media call. “I didn’t even hesitate. I was like, when are we fighting him?”




What Koscheck didn’t realize, he said, was that this was a late replacement fight. He’d been “so out of the loop” after coming back from a long layoff following an eye injury he suffered against Georges St-Pierre that he didn’t realize Hughes was supposed to fight Sanchez on September 24 in Denver, so he wasn’t expecting to hear Cook tell him that the bout was just three weeks away.

But, Koscheck said, he’d taken enough time off already. For the man who considers himself “always two or three weeks away from being ready to fight,” it was an offer he couldn’t refuse.

“I was like, yep, let’s do it,” Koscheck said. “I’m in shape, let’s go. I didn’t hesitate to take the fight.”

Koscheck hasn’t set foot in the Octagon since losing a unanimous decision to St-Pierre in their five-round title fight at UFC 124. He suffered a broken orbital bone in that fight, thanks to an early jab from GSP, and the pain was even worse than when he’d accidentally severed his own toe at four years of age while “doing something I wasn’t supposed to be doing with a hatchet,” Koscheck said.

The pain of that experience “didn’t compare to the eye injury,” according to Koscheck, who added that he “got through it via pain pills and morphine that night.”

“It was a fun experience, needless to say, that I don’t want to go through ever again,” he quipped.

That was a little over nine months ago, but Koscheck could have come back sooner, he said. He took a little extra time off to “focus on some other areas outside of fighting,” and was planning to return at UFC 139 in San Jose, possibly at middleweight in a rematch with Chris Leben or even a bout against recent Leben knockout victim Wanderlei Silva.

“I was just looking for a big fight, and things happen for a reason,” he said. “I texted Dana White the day of all the confusion with Diego breaking his hand and I said hey, it’s your favorite son, Kos. Make sure I get that fight with Matt Hughes.”

White did just that, apparently. After Hughes agreed to it, the fight that Koscheck had given up on was finally his, albeit after a long layoff from the sport and a short training camp to prepare.

If the timing is of any concern to Koscheck, however, you sure wouldn’t know it.

“Fighting Matt Hughes is a good comeback fight for me,” he said. “I think the fans deserved this fight a long time ago, and now we’re getting the opportunity to do it.”

Better late than never, perhaps. And after what he went through following the GSP fight — not to mention the vague horror of the hatchet incident — how much can there really be left for him to fear?

 

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UFC Fight Night 25: 5 Fights Jake Ellenberger Should Take Next

Jake Ellenberger is for real! After a 53 second destruction of Jake Shields, Ellenberger enters the short list of contenders, and may have the best chance of anyone in the division to take out Georges St-Pierre. It may be a matter of time before &lsquo…

Jake Ellenberger is for real!

After a 53 second destruction of Jake Shields, Ellenberger enters the short list of contenders, and may have the best chance of anyone in the division to take out Georges St-Pierre.

It may be a matter of time before ‘The Juggernaut” gets his shot at UFC gold, and it’s time for him to go after another top name at 170, and attempt to add another name to his growing resume.

Here are five fights for Ellenberger to take next:

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UFC Fight Night 25 Results: 10 Burning Questions for the Next Five UFC Cards

UFC Fight Night 25 is in the books and the results are below:Jake Ellenberger vs. Jake Shields: Ellenberger via TKO (:53 of Round One)Court McGee vs. Dongi Yang: McGee via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-28)Jonathan Brookins vs. Erik Koch: Koch vi…

UFC Fight Night 25 is in the books and the results are below:

Jake Ellenberger vs. Jake Shields: Ellenberger via TKO (:53 of Round One)

Court McGee vs. Dongi Yang: McGee via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-28)

Jonathan Brookins vs. Erik Koch: Koch via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-27)

Alan Belcher vs. Jason MacDonald: Belcher via submission (3:48 of Round One)

Cody McKenzie vs. Vagner Rocha: Rocha via submission (3:49 of Round Two)

Shamar Bailey vs. Evan Dunham: Dunham via unanimous decision (30-27×3)

Lance Benoist vs. Matt Riddle: Benoist via unanimous decision (29-28 x 3)

Ken Stone vs. Donny Walker: Stone via technical submission (2:40 of Round One)

Seth Baczynski vs. Clay Harvison: Baczynski via submission (1:12 of Round Two)

Mike Stumpf vs. T.J. Waldburger: Waldburger via submission (3:52 of Round One)

Mike Lullo vs. Robert Peralta: Peralta via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

Justin Edwards vs. Jorge Lopez: Edwards via unanimous decision (29-28 x 3)

With the completion of the latest UFC Fight Card we can begin to look ahead and ponder the questions facing the UFC as we moved into fall.

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Jake Shields and 5 of Georges St-Pierre’s Toughest Opponents

According to UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in a video on the UFC’s Facebook page, Jake Shields is probably the toughest opponent he’s ever faced.The former Strikeforce middleweight champion stood toe-to-toe with the French Canadian for fi…

According to UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in a video on the UFC’s Facebook page, Jake Shields is probably the toughest opponent he’s ever faced.

The former Strikeforce middleweight champion stood toe-to-toe with the French Canadian for five grueling rounds in their championship bout at UFC 129.

Before facing Shields, St-Pierre hadn’t even lost a round in four years.

He wasn’t able to come away with a victory, but Shields proved that he was one of the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world and certainly worthy of a UFC title shot.

Fans have come to expect dominance from St-Pierre, who has virtually destroyed every upper-echelon foe thrown his way.

Even with his everlasting dominance, there have been moments in St-Pierre’s UFC career where he’s faced adversity.

Join Bleacher Report as we reminisce on Georges St-Pierre’s toughest opponents.

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