‘Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov’ Aftermath: UFC Auditions, Sans Mansion

King Mo, during the UFC application process post-fight interview. Props: Showtime Sports

Last night, the real story behind “Barnet vs. Kharitonov had nothing to do with the heavyweight grand prix. It had nothing to do with the middleweight championship of a sinking organization. Last night, as with every other Strikeforce show since the promotion was purchased by Zuffa, was little more than an audition. It was about who will get a UFC contract when Strikeforce goes under, and who will have to go through TUF. The fans knew it, the announcers knew it, going as far as confirming the Belfort vs. Le rumor, and the fighters definitely knew it.

Despite Strikeforce’s best efforts to hype Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov as a potentially close fight, we all knew what to expect: A repeat of Kharitonov vs. Monson, except with a far superior version of Jeff Monson. Because of this, it’s hard to be impressed with anything that Josh Barnett does at this point. The tournament’s biggest names and most intriguing matchups for Barnett- Fedor, Werdum and Overeem- were all removed well before last night. Barnett has become such an overwhelming favorite to win that when he wins, he’s simply living up to expectations. He was paired up against an opponent with weak grappling credentials, knew he would dominate the fight once Kharitonov was on the ground, and fought accordingly. At least the tournament was set up so that he would get to face a competent grappler in the finals.


King Mo, during the UFC application process post-fight interview. Props: Showtime Sports

Last night, the real story behind “Barnet vs. Kharitonov” had nothing to do with the heavyweight grand prix. It had nothing to do with the middleweight championship of a sinking organization. Last night, as with every other Strikeforce show since the promotion was purchased by Zuffa, was little more than an audition. It was about who will get a UFC contract when Strikeforce goes under, and who will have to go through TUF. The fans knew it, the announcers knew it, going as far as confirming the Belfort vs. Le rumor, and the fighters definitely knew it.

Despite Strikeforce’s best efforts to hype Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov as a potentially close fight, we all knew what to expect: A repeat of Kharitonov vs. Monson, except with a far superior version of Jeff Monson. Because of this, it’s hard to be impressed with anything that Josh Barnett does at this point. The tournament’s biggest names and most intriguing matchups for Barnett- Fedor, Werdum and Overeem- were all removed well before last night. Barnett has become such an overwhelming favorite to win that when he wins, he’s simply living up to expectations. He was paired up against an opponent with weak grappling credentials, knew he would dominate the fight once Kharitonov was on the ground, and fought accordingly. At least the tournament was set up so that he would get to face a competent grappler in the finals.

Oh, about that: Looks like the answer to overcoming Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva’s sheer size and strength lies in exploiting that glass chin. Much like he did in his fight with Jeff Monson, Cormier kept the one dimensional grappler standing as often as possible. Although he showed off his wrestling credentials with an occasional takedown, Cormier refused to fight Silva in his comfort zone by forcing the fight to be stood up every time Silva was on his back. That strategy will work against Antonio Silva, but is his striking good enough to do that against Josh Barnett? For that matter, is Josh Barnett’s grappling going to prove too much for Cormier at this point in his career? We’ll have to wait until Cormier recovers from the hand injury he suffered, which will more than likely be early 2012. Assuming that Strikeforce is around at this time, of course.

If there’s one fighter who didn’t seem to realize that last night was an audition, it was “Jacare” Souza. Souza seemed to buy into the nonsense that some people were spewing about how Jacare vs. Anderson Silva would be a fight worth watching, and seemed to believe that as long as he could go the distance against Luke Rockhold, the judges would give him the fight. Yes, it was far closer than the 50-45 fight that some people seemed to believe it was. Yes, Jacare probably should have lost by split decision instead of unanimous decision. But does it really matter? A losing effort, no matter how close, is still a losing effort. Still, give Luke Rockhold the credit that he deserves for his performance last night. After shaking off the cobwebs that come with over a year and a half away from competition during the first round, Luke Rockhold fought like someone who saw the fight for the audition that it was. It’ll be interesting to see who he gets to defend the title against (again, assuming Strikeforce is around long enough for him to do so).

Other than that, King Mo showed that having “good striking for a Gracie” is like being “a good fighter for a professional reporter”, shutting out Roger Gracie’s lights early. Do we even bother angling for a fight against Dan Henderson, or do we just assume that both guys will be in the UFC before the next Strikeforce card? That isn’t rhetorical, comments section. Also, Pat Healy managed to survive Maximo Blanco’s wild strikes- some of which illegal- long enough to spoil Blanco’s hype. Healy sure has a habit of killing the hype for Strikeforce prospects. Let’s see if that translates into a step up in competition for him.

Full results, courtesy of MMAJunkie:

OFFICIAL MAIN CARD RESULTS

Josh Barnett def. Sergei Kharitonov via submission (head-arm triangle choke) – Round 1, 4:28
Daniel Cormier def. Antonio Silva via knockout (strikes) – Round 1, 3:56
Luke Rockhold def. Ronaldo Souza via unanimous decision (50-45, 48-47, 48-47)
Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal def. Roger Gracie via KO (punch) – Round 1, 4:33
Pat Healy def. Maximo Blanco via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 4:24

OFFICIAL PRELIMINARY CARD RESULTS

Mike Kyle def. Marcos Rogerio de Lima via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante def. Yoel Romero via KO (strikes) – Round 2, 4:51
Jordan Mein def. Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos via TKO (strikes) – Round 3, 3:18
Alexis Davis def. Amanda Nunes via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 4:53
Dominique Steele def. Chris Mierzwiak via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-27, 29-27)

Pat Healy Couldn’t Live With Himself if He Stopped Fight After Illegal Kicks

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CINCINNATI — MMA Fighting spoke to Pat Healy following his submission win over Maximo Blanco on Saturday about overcoming the illegal kicks Blanco landed in the first round, how he set up the submission, getting the respect he thinks he deserves after the win, taking this fight on short notice and wanting to a rematch against Josh Thomson next.

 

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CINCINNATI — MMA Fighting spoke to Pat Healy following his submission win over Maximo Blanco on Saturday about overcoming the illegal kicks Blanco landed in the first round, how he set up the submission, getting the respect he thinks he deserves after the win, taking this fight on short notice and wanting to a rematch against Josh Thomson next.

 

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Strikeforce Live Blog: Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco Updates

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CINCINNATI — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco, a lightweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov event at the U.S. Bank Arena.

Healy (25-16) is coming off wins this year against Lyle Beerbohm and Eric Wisely. Blanco (8-2-1) is making his Strikeforce debut after compiling a 6-1 record with Sengoku.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: They collide in a clinch to start things off, then Blanco stings Healy with a kick to the body. Nifty little takedown by Blanco puts Healy on his back, and Blanco is on top in half-guard. Healy pushes him off and manages to get to his feet, though he does pay for it a bit by eating a punch or two. Back on the feet, Healy paws with the jab, but can’t find the smaller, quicker Blanco. Blanco unleashes a kick and then several punches in close, following with another front kick to the face. Healy shoots, but ends up on his back when he can’t finish the desperate takedown attempt. Healy tries for an oma plata, then reaches for a foot lock when Blanco sticks his feet in his face. Apparently forgetting the rules entirely, Blanco begins kicking Healy in the face as they’re both down. That’s a no-no, and the ref moves in to halt the action. Healy gets examined by the doctor while Blanco has a point deducted. They restart in the center and Blanco goes right back on the offensive. He peppers Healy with punches and slams him with another body kick. Healy dives for a leg and stays after it, putting Blanco down even after Blanco grabbed the fence to prevent it initially. Healy ends the round holding Blanco down and working short rights to the side of his head. MMA Fighting scores the round 9-9 after the point deduction.

Round 2:

Round 3:

 

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CINCINNATI — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco, a lightweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov event at the U.S. Bank Arena.

Healy (25-16) is coming off wins this year against Lyle Beerbohm and Eric Wisely. Blanco (8-2-1) is making his Strikeforce debut after compiling a 6-1 record with Sengoku.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: They collide in a clinch to start things off, then Blanco stings Healy with a kick to the body. Nifty little takedown by Blanco puts Healy on his back, and Blanco is on top in half-guard. Healy pushes him off and manages to get to his feet, though he does pay for it a bit by eating a punch or two. Back on the feet, Healy paws with the jab, but can’t find the smaller, quicker Blanco. Blanco unleashes a kick and then several punches in close, following with another front kick to the face. Healy shoots, but ends up on his back when he can’t finish the desperate takedown attempt. Healy tries for an oma plata, then reaches for a foot lock when Blanco sticks his feet in his face. Apparently forgetting the rules entirely, Blanco begins kicking Healy in the face as they’re both down. That’s a no-no, and the ref moves in to halt the action. Healy gets examined by the doctor while Blanco has a point deducted. They restart in the center and Blanco goes right back on the offensive. He peppers Healy with punches and slams him with another body kick. Healy dives for a leg and stays after it, putting Blanco down even after Blanco grabbed the fence to prevent it initially. Healy ends the round holding Blanco down and working short rights to the side of his head. MMA Fighting scores the round 9-9 after the point deduction.

Round 2:

Round 3:

 

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Strikeforce Barnett vs. Kharitonov Predictions

Filed under: StrikeforceWho will advance to the finals of the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix? Can Luke Rockhold shock everyone and take the middleweight belt from Jacare? Will King Mo Lawal come back after more than a year off and defeat Roger Grac…

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Who will advance to the finals of the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix? Can Luke Rockhold shock everyone and take the middleweight belt from Jacare? Will King Mo Lawal come back after more than a year off and defeat Roger Gracie? We’ll attempt to answer those questions as we predict the winners of Saturday’s fights.

What: Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix Semifinals: Barnett vs. Kharitonov

Where: U.S. Bank Arena, Cincinnati

When: Saturday, the HDNet undercard begins at 8 p.m. ET and the Showtime main card begins at 10.

Predictions on the five Showtime fights below.

Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov
This is Barnett’s biggest fight since losing to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at Pride Shockwave 2006, and maybe his last chance to return to relevance and get back some of the respect in the MMA world that he lost when his positive drug test caused his fight with Fedor Emelianenko to be canceled two years ago. It’s huge for Barnett.

It’s a big fight for Kharitonov, too: Although he’s had a long and impressive fighting career, he’s an unknown outside hard-core MMA fans in the United States. And given that Kharitonov’s management in Golden Glory is butting heads with Strikeforce parent company Zuffa right now, Kharitonov needs to impress if he wants to stay in Zuffa going forward. Beating Barnett in the main event could set Kharitonov up for a lucrative fight in the Grand Prix finals, and potentially some very lucrative fights in the UFC after that.

Kharitonov is a better striker than Barnett, and Barnett has struggled at times with good strikers. But I don’t think Kharitonov has good enough defensive wrestling to stay off his back in this fight, and on the ground I see Barnett as having a significant advantage. I like Barnett to win this fight from the top.
Pick: Barnett

Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier
Those Zuffa-Golden Glory problems cost us what should have been a great fight between Silva and Alistair Overeem. Instead we get Bigfoot against Cormier, who’s a world-class wrestler and undefeated fighter but hasn’t faced anything close to Top 10 competition until now.

So is Cormier ready for it? I don’t think so. Cormier is such a good wrestler that he has a chance of getting Silva down and getting on top of him, but I think it’s much more likely that the bigger, stronger Silva will batter Cormier with punches and end up finishing him with ground and pound.
Pick: Silva

Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza vs. Luke Rockhold
As the Strikeforce middleweight champion, Jacare is in a tough position: He wants big fights that give him a chance to prove he’s among the best in the world, but Strikeforce really doesn’t have a middleweight division that can offer him that kind of competition. Rockhold is a 26-year-old who has shown some promise on his way to building up a 7-1 record, but he’s never fought anyone whose skill even approaches that of Jacare. It’ll be a big shock if Jacare doesn’t win this fight by submission.
Pick: Souza

Muhammed Lawal vs. Roger Gracie
This is a fascinating stylistic matchup because King Mo’s favorite tactic is to use his wrestling to take his opponents down and beat them from the top, while Gracie’s world-class Brazilian jiu-jitsu skills make him a threat to anyone off his back. King Mo has been out the last year with a knee injury he suffered when losing the Strikeforce light heavyweight title to Rafael Cavalcante, so we don’t know what kind of shape he’ll be in. But if Mo is healthy, I like him to show off good enough submission defense to handle Gracie on the ground and win by decision.
Pick: Lawal

Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco
Healy took this fight on short notice after Josh Thomson dropped out with an injury, and that should make things easier on Blanco, a Venezuelan who has had a lot of success fighting in Japan and is now making his U.S. debut. Blanco is a very good wrestler and devastating striker, and he should put Healy away quickly.
Pick: Blanco

 

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Pat Healy to Face Maximo Blanco at Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov

Filed under: Strikeforce, NewsUndefeated in two Strikeforce fights this year, lightweight Pat Healy will look for the hat trick against Maximo Blanco (pictured) at Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov on Sept. 10 in Cincinnati.

Strikeforce’s recent co…

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Undefeated in two Strikeforce fights this year, lightweight Pat Healy will look for the hat trick against Maximo Blanco (pictured) at Strikeforce: Barnett vs. Kharitonov on Sept. 10 in Cincinnati.

Strikeforce’s recent confirmation of Healy’s entry to the televised card comes a week after word came out that former Strikeforce champion Josh Thomson would be out of the Blanco fight due to a foot injury.

Coincidentally, Healy is replacing the most recent person to hand him a loss. But ever since that rear-naked choke submission fall to Thomson in June 2010, Healy has scored two unanimous decisions over Lyle Beerbohm and Eric Wisely on Challengers cards. Healy, who turned 28 a month ago, holds a busy 27-17 record and has competed in the past for just about every significant North American promotion in the UFC, IFL, WEC and MFC.

Healy will welcome former Sengoku star Blanco to America. Blanco (8-2-1) is a dangerous striker who won the lightweight Pancrase crown in August 2009 and then continued his tear with five straight Sengoku wins. Having signed with Strikeforce in May after the collapse of Sengoku, this will be Blanco’s first fight of 2011.

Note: During Tuesday’s Strikeforce conference call, Scott Coker announced Dominique Steele vs. Chris Mierzwiak for the undercard.

Showtime Bouts – 10 p.m. ET
Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov
Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier
Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza vs. Luke Rockhold
Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal vs. Roger Gracie
Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco

Preliminary Bouts on HDNet – 8 p.m. ET

Mike Kyle vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima
Rafael Cavalcante vs. Yoel Romero
Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos vs. Jordan Mein
Alexis Davis vs. Amanda Nunes
Dominique Steele vs. Chris Mierzwiak

 

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Injury Knocks Josh Thomson Out of Strikeforce Bout With Maximo Blanco

Filed under: Strikeforce, MMA Fighting Exclusive, NewsA foot injury has sidelined Strikeforce lightweight Josh Thomson, forcing him out of his September 10 matchup with Maximo Blanco, MMA Fighting has learned.

Thompson hurt himself within the past wee…

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A foot injury has sidelined Strikeforce lightweight Josh Thomson, forcing him out of his September 10 matchup with Maximo Blanco, MMA Fighting has learned.

Thompson hurt himself within the past week, and tests revealed damage that left him unable to complete his training camp and compete. A source with knowledge of the situation confirmed the worst-case scenario for a fighter who has had several injury problems in the past.

The Thomson-Blanco match had been scheduled as a main card bout of Strikeforce’s upcoming show in Cincinnati, an event that will feature Heavyweight Grand Prix fights pitting Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov and Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier.

The 32-year-old former Strikeforce lightweight champion hasn’t fought since December 2010, when he dropped a unanimous decision to Tatsuya Kawajiri. He hasn’t competed in the Strikeforce cage since last October, when he defeated Gesias “JZ” Cavalcante via decision.

He is 18-4 with one no contest overall.

Strikeforce officials could not immediately confirm Thomson’s injury, and it is not known if the promotion will seek a replacement fighter to face Blanco (8-2-1, 1 no contest), who was set to debut after six straight wins in Japanese promotions.

 

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