UFC 199 Aftermath: And the Meek Shall Inherit the Earth…


(“Ehh budday, do you like apples?” (*holds tongue*) “Well go f*ck yourself, apple.” via Getty.)

“If…you believe the son of God came down to earth 2,000 years ago, and he killed himself for our sins, and he can walk on water…if you can believe that, then you can believe that I can knock the f–k out of Luke Rockhold two weeks from Saturday.”

When Michael Bisping first uttered these words to Luke Thomas after being called up on two weeks notice to face rival Luke Rockhold at UFC 199, they actually made a lot of sense. Surely, we were just as likely to see a man walk on water as we were to see Michael Bisping defeat a man who had absolutely obliterated him less than two years ago in their first meeting. And until very recently, I’d sooner commit the ultimate sin than see Bisping, a man whose assholery we have mocked for years, claim the middleweight title from anyone.

And yet, he did, and we’re honestly kind of stoked for him right now.

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(“Ehh budday, do you like apples?” (*holds tongue*) “Well go f*ck yourself, apple.” via Getty.)

“If…you believe the son of God came down to earth 2,000 years ago, and he killed himself for our sins, and he can walk on water…if you can believe that, then you can believe that I can knock the f–k out of Luke Rockhold two weeks from Saturday.”

When Michael Bisping first uttered these words to Luke Thomas after being called up on two weeks notice to face rival Luke Rockhold at UFC 199, they actually made a lot of sense. Surely, we were just as likely to see a man walk on water as we were to see Michael Bisping defeat a man who had absolutely obliterated him less than two years ago in their first meeting. And until very recently, I’d sooner commit the ultimate sin than see Bisping, a man whose assholery we have mocked for years, claim the middleweight title from anyone.

The thing is, Bisping kind of won us over with in those two weeks leading up to last weekend’s event, as we’re sure he did many of you. His penchant for pre-pubescent insults accompanied by and/or preceding finger pointing worked in his favor against an arrogant dullard like Rockhold and, dare we say it, helped paint him as a cheeky and borderline likable underdog headed into the biggest fight of his storied career (and then reminded us of why we disliked him in the first place immediately thereafter).

But credit where credit is due, Bisping might actually have learned something from theass-whipping he suffered at the hands of Rockhold. Something beyond “immediately apologize after yelling faggot at a press conference,” we mean. He went on a three fight win streak after it, the longest of his career since 2011, and somehow managed to legitimately defeat Anderson Silva despite being knocked out by Anderson Silva. And at UFC 199, he not only turned the tables on Rockhold, but put a worse beating on him than Vitor Belfort on TRT did en route to becoming the first Brit to ever hold UFC gold.

Michael Bisping.

Is the middleweight champion.

I swear, that doesn’t look right no matter how many times I carve it into my leg.

Think Michael Bisping winning a title was the craziest thing that happened at UFC 199? THINK AGAIN, because in addition to a pair of insane fights being announced at the event, Dan Henderson done killed Hector Lombard with the most insane finish of his career: a head kick, followed by what can only be described as a “mosh pit elbow.” Just check out the violence in those fight-ending shots. I know I should probably be admonishing Hendo for being so willing to inflict heinous damage on a clearly unconscious opponent, but damn no those elbows were just bleed tap or snap FACE THE PAIN NO ESCAPE CANYOUSTEPTOTHIS awesome.

If Henderson’s post-fight press conference appearance is to be believed, it looks like we may very well have seen the last of the 45-year old that killed Fedor. I’d prefer to see him KO Bisping for the title and then retire, but so be it. At least he’ll be going out in the most Dan Henderson fashion possible (which is getting your ass kicked, then kicking the other guy’s ass worse BTW).

What else? Oh right, Dominick Cruz defeated Urijah Faber by unanimous decision, thanks in part to his superior movement and unpunchability. The two continued to do verbal at the post-fight press conference. Water wet.

Speaking of things that we take for granted, Max Holloway won another fight. His ninth in a row, actually, over quite possibly his toughest test yet in former title challenger Ricardo Lamas. The final exchange of the fight was some of the most badass, baller sh*t we have seen ssince Lawler vs. MacDonald. Give this man a shot once your featherweight champion is done running the show.

The full results for UFC 199 are below.

Main card
Michael Bisping def. Luke Rockhold via first-round KO (3:36)
Dominick Cruz def. Urijah Faber via unanimous decision
Max Holloway def. Ricardo Lamas via unanimous decision
Dan Henderson def. Hector Lombard via second-round KO (1:27)
Dustin Poirier vs. Bobby Green via first-round KO (2:53)

Undercard
Brian Ortega def. Clay Guida via third-round KO (4:40)
Beneil Dariush def. James Vick via first-round KO (4:16)
Jessica Andrade def. Jessica Penne via second-round TKO (2:56)
Alex Caceres def. Cole Miller via unanimous decision
Sean Strickland def. Tom Breese via split decision
Luiz Henrique da Silva def. Jonathan Wilson via second-round TKO (4:11)
Kevin Casey vs. Elvis Mutapcic declared a split draw
Polo Reyes def. Dong Hyun Kim via third-round KO (1:52)

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UFC Lifts Ban On MMA Journalist Ariel Helwani, Issues Statement

dana-white-ariel-helwani

Well, that didn’t last long.

After kicking veteran MMA journalist Ariel Helwani and two of his MMAFighting.com associates out of the UFC 199 pay-per-view at The Forum in Inglewood, California this past Saturday evening prior to Michael Bisping’s shocking upset over Luke Rockhold in the main event, taking his media credential and banning he and the MMA Fighting website for life, UFC has apparently lifted the ban.

On his “MMA Hour” program at MMA Fighting on Monday afternoon, a very emotional Helwani spoke at length about the incident at UFC 199, his being fired from FOX Sports and a lot of other incidents he has had along the way with the UFC and others.

On Monday evening, UFC issued a statement via their official website, UFC.com, which reads as follows:

“Following a conversation with the editorial team at SB Nation, UFC will not prevent MMAFighting.com from receiving media credentials to cover live UFC events. We respect the role the media plays in our sport and beyond, including MMAFighting’s ability to report news. However, in our opinion, we believe the recurring tactics used by its lead reporter extended beyond the purpose of journalism. We feel confident our position has now been adequately communicated to the SB Nation editorial team.

“UFC’s goal as the world’s leading mixed martial arts promotion is to cultivate interest in its world-class athletes and events, and deliver for the fans. We will continue to introduce this sport and its athletes to new fans across the world, and we will do so by working alongside media across all platforms.”

https://twitter.com/arielhelwani/status/739935000699752448

dana-white-ariel-helwani

Well, that didn’t last long.

After kicking veteran MMA journalist Ariel Helwani and two of his MMAFighting.com associates out of the UFC 199 pay-per-view at The Forum in Inglewood, California this past Saturday evening prior to Michael Bisping’s shocking upset over Luke Rockhold in the main event, taking his media credential and banning he and the MMA Fighting website for life, UFC has apparently lifted the ban.

On his “MMA Hour” program at MMA Fighting on Monday afternoon, a very emotional Helwani spoke at length about the incident at UFC 199, his being fired from FOX Sports and a lot of other incidents he has had along the way with the UFC and others.

On Monday evening, UFC issued a statement via their official website, UFC.com, which reads as follows:

“Following a conversation with the editorial team at SB Nation, UFC will not prevent MMAFighting.com from receiving media credentials to cover live UFC events. We respect the role the media plays in our sport and beyond, including MMAFighting’s ability to report news. However, in our opinion, we believe the recurring tactics used by its lead reporter extended beyond the purpose of journalism. We feel confident our position has now been adequately communicated to the SB Nation editorial team.

“UFC’s goal as the world’s leading mixed martial arts promotion is to cultivate interest in its world-class athletes and events, and deliver for the fans. We will continue to introduce this sport and its athletes to new fans across the world, and we will do so by working alongside media across all platforms.”

UFC 199 Medical Suspensions: Hector Lombard Sidelined Six Months

UFC 199, which went down last weekend (Sat., June 4, 2016) from The Forum in Inglewood, California, turned out to be a fantastic night of fights that boasted a plethora of electrifying finishes. Unfortunately, all of the fighters weren’t able to make it out of the event unscathed, as the medical suspensions released by the

The post UFC 199 Medical Suspensions: Hector Lombard Sidelined Six Months appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC 199, which went down last weekend (Sat., June 4, 2016) from The Forum in Inglewood, California, turned out to be a fantastic night of fights that boasted a plethora of electrifying finishes.

Unfortunately, all of the fighters weren’t able to make it out of the event unscathed, as the medical suspensions released by the California State Athletic Commission (via MMAFighting.com) were revealed.

The most notable suspension was a six-month suspension handed out to Hector “Lightning” Lombard who suffered a brutal knockout loss to aging veteran Dan Henderson on the main card.

Lombard lied motionless on the canvas for minutes after the stoppage, and was immediately rushed to a hospital in the aftermath of the bout. Typically, fighters can be cleared by a doctor prior to the six-month mark, but “Lightning” has actually been given a full mandatory six-month stint with no exceptions:

“No exception for prolong recovery from KO,” the document read.

Check out the full list of suspensions below:

  • Luke Rockhold: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact after being knocked out (no exception).
  • Ricardo Lamas: 60-day suspension or cleared by physician due to laceration of left tibial. 45-day suspension, 40 without contact for hard bout (no exception).
  • Hector Lombard: 180-day suspension for prolong recovery from knockout (no exception). 45-day suspension, 30 without contact after being knocked out (no exception).
  • Dan Henderson: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact for hard bout (no exception).
  • Bobby Green: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact due to TKO (no exception).
  • Clay Guida: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact after being knocked out (no exception).
  • James Vick: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact after being knocked out (no exception).
  • Jessica Penne: 45-day suspension, 30 without contact due to TKO (no exception).
  • Sean Strickland: 180-day suspension or cleared by physician due to possible fracture of both hands.
  • Jonathan Wilson: 180-day suspension or cleared by physician due to inability to stand. 60-day suspension or cleared by physician due to laceration of left eye. 45-day suspension, 30 without contact due to TKO (no exception).
  • Kevin Casey: 180-day suspension or cleared by physician due to low blood sugar. 60-day suspension or cleared by physician due to laceration of left eye. 45-day suspension, 30 without contact due to hard bout (no exception).
  • Dong Hyun Kim: 180-day suspension or cleared by physician due to possible broken nose. 60-day suspension or cleared by physician due to laceration of right eye. 45-day suspension, 30 without contact after being knocked out (no exception).
  • Polo Reyes: 180-day suspension or cleared by physician due to possible fracture of both hands and right elbow. 45-day suspension, 30 without contact due to hard bout (no exception).

The post UFC 199 Medical Suspensions: Hector Lombard Sidelined Six Months appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC Rankings Update: Bisping Bursts Onto Pound-For-Pound List

Despite the story of highly-respected journalist Ariel Helwani being ludicrously escorted from last weekend’s (Sat., June 4, 2016) UFC 199 and subsequently ‘banned for life’ by the UFC drowning the media landscape, we simply can’t forget about the fights – and it was a memorable night to say the least. In the main event at

The post UFC Rankings Update: Bisping Bursts Onto Pound-For-Pound List appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Despite the story of highly-respected journalist Ariel Helwani being ludicrously escorted from last weekend’s (Sat., June 4, 2016) UFC 199 and subsequently ‘banned for life’ by the UFC drowning the media landscape, we simply can’t forget about the fights – and it was a memorable night to say the least.

In the main event at The Forum in Inglewood, California, long-time divisional mainstay Michael Bisping shocked the masses and knocked out Luke Rockhold in the very first round to become the undisputed middleweight champion of the world.

A true feel-good story, Bisping completed one of the biggest upsets in recent memory, and as a result has launched himself onto the pound-for-pound list according to the latest rankings update courtesy of UFC.com.

“The Count” now sits at No. 9 after his monumental victory.

Reigning bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz scored an impressive decision victory over bitter rival Urijah Faber in their co-main event trilogy bout. “The Dominator” jumped up a spot to No. 3 on the pound-for-pound list after Rockhold, who previously held that rank, saw a massive drop down to No. 13.

Check out the full rankings update below:

POUND-FOR-POUND
1 Jon Jones
2 Demetrious Johnson
3 Dominick Cruz +1
4 Robbie Lawler +1
5 Rafael Dos Anjos +1
6 Conor McGregor +1
7 Daniel Cormier +1
8 Jose Aldo +1
9 Michael Bisping *NR
10 Frankie Edgar +1
11 Stipe Miocic +2
12 Joanna Jedrzejczyk
13 Luke Rockhold +10
14 Chris Weidman +4
15 Fabricio Werdum

FLYWEIGHT
Champion: Demetrious Johnson
1 Joseph Benavidez
2 Henry Cejudo
3 Jussier Formiga
4 Kyoji Horiguchi
5 Ian McCall
6 John Moraga
7 Zach Makovsky
8 Wilson Reis
9 Dustin Ortiz
10 Ali Bagautinov
11 Justin Scoggins
12 Louis Smolka
13 Ray Borg
14 Sergio Pettis
15 Ben Nguyen

BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Dominick Cruz
1 TJ Dillashaw
2 Urijah Faber
3 Raphael Assuncao
4 Bryan Caraway
5 Michael McDonald
6 Aljamain Sterling
7 Cody Garbrandt
8 John Lineker +1
8 John Dodson
10 Thomas Almeida -1
11 Takeya Mizugaki
12 Frankie Saenz
13 Johnny Eduardo
14 Jimmie Rivera
15 Eddie Wineland

FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion: Conor McGregor
1 Jose Aldo
2 Frankie Edgar
3 Max Holloway +1
4 Chad Mendes -1
5 Ricardo Lamas
6 Cub Swanson
7 Charles Oliveira
8 Jeremy Stephens
9 Dennis Bermudez
10 Brian Ortega +2
11 Hacran Dias -1
12 Darren Elkins -1
13 Yair Rodriguez +1
14 Tatsuya Kawajiri -1
15 Mirsad Bektic

LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion: Rafael Dos Anjos
1 Khabib Nurmagomedov
2 Eddie Alvarez
3 Tony Ferguson
4 Donald Cerrone
5 Nate Diaz
6 Edson Barboza
7 Anthony Pettis
8 Michael Johnson
9 Dustin Poirier +2
10 Michael Chiesa -1
11 Beneil Dariush -1
12 Al Iaquinta
13 Rashid Magomedov +1
14 Evan Dunham +1
15 Francisco Trinaldo *NR

WELTERWEIGHT
Champion: Robbie Lawler
1 Rory MacDonald
2 Stephen Thompson
3 Tyron Woodley
4 Demian Maia
5 Carlos Condit
6 Johny Hendricks
7 Neil Magny
8 Matt Brown
9 Dong Hyun Kim
10 Rick Story
11 Gunnar Nelson
12 Kelvin Gastelum
13 Tarec Saffiedine
14 Thiago Alves +1
15 Albert Tumenov *NR

MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion: Michael Bisping
1 Luke Rockhold -1
2 Chris Weidman -1
3 Jacare Souza -1
4 Vitor Belfort -1
5 Anderson Silva
6 Robert Whittaker
7 Lyoto Machida
8 Gegard Mousasi
9 Uriah Hall +1
10 Tim Kennedy -1
11 Derek Brunson
12 Thales Leites
13 Dan Henderson +2
14 Rafael Natal -1
14 Thiago Santos

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Daniel Cormier
1 Jon Jones (Interim Champion)
2 Anthony Johnson
3 Glover Teixeira
4 Alexander Gustafsson
5 Ryan Bader
6 Ovince Saint Preux
7 Mauricio Rua
8 Rashad Evans
9 Jimi Manuwa
10 Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
11 Nikita Krylov
12 Corey Anderson
13 Ilir Latifi
14 Patrick Cummins
15 Gian Villante

HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Stipe Miocic
1 Fabricio Werdum
2 Cain Velasquez
3 Alistair Overeem
4 Junior Dos Santos
5 Ben Rothwell
6 Andrei Arlovski
7 Travis Browne
8 Mark Hunt
9 Josh Barnett
10 Roy Nelson
11 Derrick Lewis
12 Frank Mir
13 Stefan Struve
14 Ruslan Magomedov
15 Alexey Oliynyk

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT
Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk
1 Claudia Gadelha
2 Carla Esparza
3 Rose Namajunas
4 Tecia Torres
5 Valerie Letourneau
6 Karolina Kowalkiewicz +1
7 Jessica Andrade *NR
8 Maryna Moroz +1
9 Paige VanZant -1
10 Jessica Penne -4
11 Michelle Waterson -1
12 Joanne Calderwood -1
13 Jessica Aguilar
14 Randa Markos -2
15 Juliana Lima -1

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Miesha Tate
1 Holly Holm
2 Ronda Rousey
3 Cat Zingano
4 Amanda Nunes
5 Julianna Pena
6 Sara McMann
7 Valentina Shevchenko
8 Liz Carmouche
9 Raquel Pennington
10 Jessica Eye
11 Bethe Correia
12 Germaine de Randamie
13 Lauren Murphy
14 Ashlee Evans-Smith
15 Marion Reneau

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Michael Bisping’s Tired Homophobia Just the Latest in MMA’s Culture Problem

(Warning: Many of the links below contain NSFW language and/or audio.)
At UFC 199, long-time UFC veteran Michael Bisping ended Luke Rockhold’s brief tenure as middleweight champion with a knockout in the first round. Viewers watched as Bisping, at 37 …

(Warning: Many of the links below contain NSFW language and/or audio.)

At UFC 199, long-time UFC veteran Michael Bisping ended Luke Rockhold‘s brief tenure as middleweight champion with a knockout in the first round. Viewers watched as Bisping, at 37 and 12 years into his MMA career, realized his dream of becoming the UFC middleweight champion. To know the English fighter had toiled for so long, in such a grueling sport, and achieved a feat most assumed was beyond his grasp was a touching scene.

You’d think after so many years in the public eye, and so many missteps, Bisping would be more practiced at making sure he doesn’t say stupid things in front of cameras. Or, at least, making sure he doesn’t use slurs and gender-related insults in front of cameras:

Apparently, he’s not practiced enough. Shortly after his win Sunday night, he got into a verbal spar during the postfight press conference with the fighter he’d just punched unconscious and dethroned. In less than 30 seconds, Bisping called Rockhold a c–ksucker, a p—y and a f—-t. He’s not unaware those slurs don’t go over well; after he used that last one, he said with a chuckle, “S–t, I shouldn’t have said that.”

Rockhold—despite recovering from the knockout, losing the fight and losing the belt—somehow managed to avoid resorting to insults that further marginalize oppressed populations. Maybe Rockhold is more media savvy than Bisping. Maybe he cares more about homophobia and sexism and consciously chose not to. Maybe both!

As we don’t know why Rockhold was able to trash-talk Bisping without using the crutch of sophomoric barbs trumpeting outmoded notions of masculinity, we also don’t know why Bisping wasn’t. Maybe he’s homophobic. Maybe he just uses the language out of habit, the result of years steeped in a culture that didn’t care. 

It doesn’t really matter. It also wasn’t the first time. He called Jorge Rivera a “f—-t motherf–cker” in 2011, per the Guardian. More recently, he called former champion Anderson Silva a “p—y” at UFC Fight Night 84 weigh-ins in February. On June 1, he told the media half the UFC roster are “p—–s.” In 2014, while appearing on The MMA Hourhe berated UFC fighter Tim Kennedy for “dressing like a woman and acting like a queer.” 

Bisping is only the latest of several big-name and/or relevant fighters to employ this rhetoric in taunting opponents.

Featherweight champion Conor McGregor has insulted Jose Aldo several times by saying he has a vagina—in this clip from the UFC 196 pre-fight press conference, he also claimed Frankie Edgar and Rafael dos Anjos have vaginas—and, during an appearance on Conan, that he visits the gynecologist. He called Aldo and dos Anjos each “a p—y” in a Facebook post.

Frankie Edgar responded in kind on Twitter, challenging McGregor and saying, “Now let’s see who has a vagina.” 

Former heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum posted a photoshopped image on Instagram with a caption intended as McGregor‘s words: “‘Please Werdum :: Go slow :: easy you are a heavyweight !!! Wow !!! Now I love you more than #DanaWhite . now I know why.'” 

Former light heavyweight champion Jon Jones routinely uses “p—y” to insult his opponents; his most infamous usage occurred in an off-air exchange with Daniel Cormier on ESPN. During UFC 178 media day, he also said he would “make [Cormier] his wife,” an instance I examined further here

Alistair Overeem (h/t MMAJunkie) called Anthony Johnson’s behavior “p—y”; Johnson responded in typical fashion on Twitter.

Penalizing fighters for this language is an exception rather than the rule. That’s unsurprising, considering the UFC’s employees readily use it as well.

UFC President Dana White has said plenty, including calling former Sherdog reporter Loretta Hunt a “f–king b—h” (h/t ESPN.com) and mocking Cris “Cyborg” Justino’s appearance at a press conference, comparing her to Wanderlei Silva. Commentator Joe Rogan also has an extensive history of thoughtless language. Most recently, he attempted joke on his podcast about Cyborg’s sex in which he told comedian Tony Hinchcliffe he could talk about “her d–k” in a roast.

This is just a handful of examples, most of them fairly recent. I could continue.

It’s 2016. There’s no excuse for using words like “c–ksucker,” “p—y” and “f—-t.” There are only explanations. Indifference. Homophobia. Sexism. Ignorance. Take your pick.

No matter the explanation, this kind of language brings an undeniable embarrassment to the sport. There’s a reason news outlets like the GuardianYahoo and the New York Daily News are running the story of a champion at the highest level of the sport calling the man he just beat a “f—-t.”

It’s not because the media is out to damage the UFC or the perception of the sport. MMA culture, vacillating between indifference and lip service, has that well in hand.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

After Day Break, Michael Bisping Has More Words For Luke Rockhold

[embed]https://www.instagram.com/p/BGUca3LytaU/[/embed]

Michael Bisping isn’t letting Luke Rockhold off the hook just yet.

The new UFC middleweight champion provided Rockhold with something to wake up to Monday morning on Instagram, two days re…

bisping-ufc-champ-2

@lukerockhold

A photo posted by Mikebisping (@mikebisping) on

Michael Bisping isn’t letting Luke Rockhold off the hook just yet.

The new UFC middleweight champion provided Rockhold with something to wake up to Monday morning on Instagram, two days removed from knocking him out at UFC 199.