UFC 199 Technical Recap: How Bisping Won His Belt and Cruz Defended His Title

Saturday night’s UFC 199 card looked great on paper, and it delivered in practice with a card full of action, exciting finishes and shocking upsets.
In the main event, underdog Michael Bisping pulled off one of the biggest upsets in UFC history as he d…

Saturday night’s UFC 199 card looked great on paper, and it delivered in practice with a card full of action, exciting finishes and shocking upsets.

In the main event, underdog Michael Bisping pulled off one of the biggest upsets in UFC history as he dethroned newly crowned champion Luke Rockhold in the first round. Dominick Cruz lived up to his nickname by dominating the overmatched Urijah Faber in a one-sided decision.

Outside of the evening’s two title fights, Max Holloway put on a show against Ricardo Lamas, Dan Henderson flatlined Hector Lombard with a head kick and Dustin Poirier iced Bobby Green in the opening frame.

Each bout offered compelling action, and in this piece, we’ll break down what we saw on the main card.

 

Dustin Poirier vs. Bobby Green

This fight highlighted Poirier‘s continuing evolution into the most dangerous puncher in the lightweight division. He’s a monster in the pocket with great vision, combination flow and the power to seriously hurt anybody he touches.

What stood out most about Poirier‘s performance was his improved defense. By virtue of wanting to be in the pocket, Poirier is consistently there for his opponent to hit.

As a young fighter, he was genuinely below average in terms of his defensive skills, with little head movement and too much emphasis on a double-forearms guard to block his opponent’s shots. 

Especially since moving up to lightweight, Poirier‘s defense has gotten better by leaps and bounds. Though he’s still there to be hit, Poirier slips his head to the side and rolls under punches more, parries strikes and can still fall back on the double-forearms guard when necessary.

Perhaps counterintuitively, this makes Poirier much more dangerous offensively because it allows him to add layers to his exchanges in the pocketprecisely where he wants to be.

In the past, Poirier might have had to pull out of the pocket after throwing and then getting countered. Now, he can counter his opponent’s counter with much less risk of eating a large dose of leather. This was how he repeatedly caught Green at UFC 199.

Poirier‘s 15 fights in the UFC make him seem like a veteran, but he’s still only 27 years old. If he continues to make these kinds of improvements, he might emulate the division’s champion, Rafael Dos Anjos, and make a late run for the belt.

 

Dan Henderson vs. Hector Lombard

Like most fans and analysts, I gave Henderson little chance against a faster, less shopworn and equally if not more powerful puncher in Lombard.

The American looked good in the early going, however, repeatedly timing right-hand counters and beating the Cuban Olympian to the punch on several occasions.

When Lombard knocked Henderson down with a vicious counter left hand, though, it looked like the predicted outcome would indeed come to pass. Lombard piled on the shots and nearly finished, but Henderson somehow survived into the second round.

The American buzzed Lombard with a high kick and then clipped the Cuban with a sneaky back elbow behind the ear that left him out on the canvas.

Two things stood out about Henderson’s performance: his skill and timing on the counter, and his emphasis on kicks. In his worst performances, Henderson has lumbered forward loading up on the right hand, giving opponents nothing to worry about aside from dodging a telegraphed overhand.

Against Lombard, by contrast, the better version of Henderson—the one who blasted Bisping and Rafael Cavalcante and went to war with Shogun Rua for five rounds—showed up.

He let Lombard lead and timed accurate counters.

Stinging low kicks kept Lombard standing in front of him instead of circling at a pace Henderson couldn’t match, and the flush head kick that preceded the elbow only landed because Lombard expected the kick to go low.

In sum, this was a more varied and sharper game than we’ve seen from Henderson in quite some time.

 

Max Holloway vs. Ricardo Lamas

Holloway’s dominant win over former title contender Lamas ran his hot streak in one of the UFC’s toughest divisions to nine wins. The 24-year-old Hawaiian gets better in every outing, and this was no exception.

This victory highlighted the soundness of Holloway’s process. He can and does finish fights, but if he can’t find the finish, Holloway’s commitment to striking volume and excellent defensive wrestling skills means that he’s a master at winning rounds. 

“He just doesn’t do anything dumb,” color commentator Joe Rogan said on Saturday night, and that’s an excellent way of summing up his game.

While he’s an exciting fighter with a penchant for engaging in action fights, he does so on his terms, using his length, footwork and command of angles to land a high volume of strikes without putting himself in unnecessary danger.

Holloway’s fight IQ played out in distinct ways against Lamas. He’s a good counterpuncher in general, and he’ll throw one or two shots back at practically any attack his opponent tosses in his direction before sliding out of danger on a crisp angle.

The Hawaiian only exchanged with Lamas, however, when Lamas’ back was against the fence.

With his back against the cage, Lamas couldn’t generate much power because his stance wasn’t under him, and with Holloway’s back to the open space of the cage, he had all the room he wanted to move in and out. This means that exchanging was relatively safe for Holloway but a terrible proposition for Lamas.

Holloway is one of the most exciting young talents in the UFC, and he has earned a title shot with nine consecutive wins.

Whether he gets one in the mixed-up Conor McGregor era at 145 pounds is another story entirely.

 

Dominick Cruz vs. Urijah Faber

The bantamweight champion closed the door on his trilogy with Faber in emphatic fashion, taking a pair of 50-45 scorecards and one 49-46.

Cruz even knocked Faber to the mat in the second round and did his best to finish but settled for taking an increasingly one-sided decision as the fight wore on.

The rubber match highlighted the diversity of Cruz’s outstanding footwork. He spent most of the fight against TJ Dillashaw fighting off his back foot, landing counters while circling and attempting to keep his back off the fence.

Against Faber, by contrast, Cruz still landed his counters when Faber led the dance, but more often the champion had to be the one pressing the action.

That’s not necessarily Cruz’s wheelhouse, and it’s a big part of what made his 2011 meeting with Faber such a great fight. While Cruz could pile up volume with his in-and-out strikes and angles, Faber had opportunities to plant hard counters in the brief moments when Cruz found himself stuck inside.

Those moments were much fewer and farther between at UFC 199. Cruz has never looked this comfortable moving forward, and the occasional defensive lapses that gave Faber his chances in 2011 weren’t there.

There’s also the chance that the older Faber had more trouble pulling the trigger on those shots than his younger self would have.

Cruz also seemed to have placed additional emphasis on punching for power. He sat down on his shots, planting his feet and getting his weight into shots in a way that he hasn’t in the past. The knockdown he hit in the second round and the shot with which he stumbled Faber later in the fight were the products of clean, technical punching mechanics.

Combined with his increasingly sharp counterpunching, Cruz’s more dangerous offensive game and willingness to throw with power bode poorly for his potential bantamweight challengers.

 

Michael Bisping vs. Luke Rockhold

Bisping dethroned Rockhold in one of the biggest upsets in UFC history. According to Odds Shark, the challenger came in as a 21-4 underdog, which was largely because of the champion’s utter demolition of Bisping only 18 months ago.

However, a pair of flush left hooks and follow-up punches on the ground left the Manchester, England, native with the title.

This was an interesting fight before the finish. In the first round of their initial meeting in 2014, Rockhold was content to hit Bisping with kicks at range and line up counters. He gauged the space and timing necessary to commit to pressuring later in the round, and then in the second, he hit Bisping with a head kick before submitting him with a one-arm guillotine.

This time around, Rockhold followed much the same plan, but the pace picked up much more quicklylargely because both fighters were willing to exchange in the pocket.

Bisping had surprising success sticking in range and landing right hands as and after Rockhold threw. While Rockhold had a substantial edge in raw power and speed, Bisping was a little tighter technically in those ranges.

That’s precisely what got Rockhold in trouble.

He cracked Bisping with a hard counter right hook and then pressed forward, throwing himself into a leaping jab that left him overextended, his back partially turned to Bisping. The Englishman stood his ground and replied with a straight right-left hook counter, and because of his overcommitment to the jab, Rockhold never saw the second punch coming.

It’s essentially the same counter combination Bisping used to knock down Anderson Silva when they fought in February, and it’s one of his specialties. 

Rockhold got a bit overconfident, made a mistake and Bisping made him pay for it in the most shocking fashion possible.

Whether Bisping holds on to the belt for a while or not, his defeat of Rockhold will stand forever as one of the all-time great upsets and championship fight victories. This was Bisping‘s 26th time in the Octagon, and he crowned a long and productive career with the elusive title he has sought for the last decade.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 199 Technical Recap: How Bisping Won His Belt and Cruz Defended His Title

Saturday night’s UFC 199 card looked great on paper, and it delivered in practice with a card full of action, exciting finishes and shocking upsets.
In the main event, underdog Michael Bisping pulled off one of the biggest upsets in UFC history as he d…

Saturday night’s UFC 199 card looked great on paper, and it delivered in practice with a card full of action, exciting finishes and shocking upsets.

In the main event, underdog Michael Bisping pulled off one of the biggest upsets in UFC history as he dethroned newly crowned champion Luke Rockhold in the first round. Dominick Cruz lived up to his nickname by dominating the overmatched Urijah Faber in a one-sided decision.

Outside of the evening’s two title fights, Max Holloway put on a show against Ricardo Lamas, Dan Henderson flatlined Hector Lombard with a head kick and Dustin Poirier iced Bobby Green in the opening frame.

Each bout offered compelling action, and in this piece, we’ll break down what we saw on the main card.

 

Dustin Poirier vs. Bobby Green

This fight highlighted Poirier‘s continuing evolution into the most dangerous puncher in the lightweight division. He’s a monster in the pocket with great vision, combination flow and the power to seriously hurt anybody he touches.

What stood out most about Poirier‘s performance was his improved defense. By virtue of wanting to be in the pocket, Poirier is consistently there for his opponent to hit.

As a young fighter, he was genuinely below average in terms of his defensive skills, with little head movement and too much emphasis on a double-forearms guard to block his opponent’s shots. 

Especially since moving up to lightweight, Poirier‘s defense has gotten better by leaps and bounds. Though he’s still there to be hit, Poirier slips his head to the side and rolls under punches more, parries strikes and can still fall back on the double-forearms guard when necessary.

Perhaps counterintuitively, this makes Poirier much more dangerous offensively because it allows him to add layers to his exchanges in the pocketprecisely where he wants to be.

In the past, Poirier might have had to pull out of the pocket after throwing and then getting countered. Now, he can counter his opponent’s counter with much less risk of eating a large dose of leather. This was how he repeatedly caught Green at UFC 199.

Poirier‘s 15 fights in the UFC make him seem like a veteran, but he’s still only 27 years old. If he continues to make these kinds of improvements, he might emulate the division’s champion, Rafael Dos Anjos, and make a late run for the belt.

 

Dan Henderson vs. Hector Lombard

Like most fans and analysts, I gave Henderson little chance against a faster, less shopworn and equally if not more powerful puncher in Lombard.

The American looked good in the early going, however, repeatedly timing right-hand counters and beating the Cuban Olympian to the punch on several occasions.

When Lombard knocked Henderson down with a vicious counter left hand, though, it looked like the predicted outcome would indeed come to pass. Lombard piled on the shots and nearly finished, but Henderson somehow survived into the second round.

The American buzzed Lombard with a high kick and then clipped the Cuban with a sneaky back elbow behind the ear that left him out on the canvas.

Two things stood out about Henderson’s performance: his skill and timing on the counter, and his emphasis on kicks. In his worst performances, Henderson has lumbered forward loading up on the right hand, giving opponents nothing to worry about aside from dodging a telegraphed overhand.

Against Lombard, by contrast, the better version of Henderson—the one who blasted Bisping and Rafael Cavalcante and went to war with Shogun Rua for five rounds—showed up.

He let Lombard lead and timed accurate counters.

Stinging low kicks kept Lombard standing in front of him instead of circling at a pace Henderson couldn’t match, and the flush head kick that preceded the elbow only landed because Lombard expected the kick to go low.

In sum, this was a more varied and sharper game than we’ve seen from Henderson in quite some time.

 

Max Holloway vs. Ricardo Lamas

Holloway’s dominant win over former title contender Lamas ran his hot streak in one of the UFC’s toughest divisions to nine wins. The 24-year-old Hawaiian gets better in every outing, and this was no exception.

This victory highlighted the soundness of Holloway’s process. He can and does finish fights, but if he can’t find the finish, Holloway’s commitment to striking volume and excellent defensive wrestling skills means that he’s a master at winning rounds. 

“He just doesn’t do anything dumb,” color commentator Joe Rogan said on Saturday night, and that’s an excellent way of summing up his game.

While he’s an exciting fighter with a penchant for engaging in action fights, he does so on his terms, using his length, footwork and command of angles to land a high volume of strikes without putting himself in unnecessary danger.

Holloway’s fight IQ played out in distinct ways against Lamas. He’s a good counterpuncher in general, and he’ll throw one or two shots back at practically any attack his opponent tosses in his direction before sliding out of danger on a crisp angle.

The Hawaiian only exchanged with Lamas, however, when Lamas’ back was against the fence.

With his back against the cage, Lamas couldn’t generate much power because his stance wasn’t under him, and with Holloway’s back to the open space of the cage, he had all the room he wanted to move in and out. This means that exchanging was relatively safe for Holloway but a terrible proposition for Lamas.

Holloway is one of the most exciting young talents in the UFC, and he has earned a title shot with nine consecutive wins.

Whether he gets one in the mixed-up Conor McGregor era at 145 pounds is another story entirely.

 

Dominick Cruz vs. Urijah Faber

The bantamweight champion closed the door on his trilogy with Faber in emphatic fashion, taking a pair of 50-45 scorecards and one 49-46.

Cruz even knocked Faber to the mat in the second round and did his best to finish but settled for taking an increasingly one-sided decision as the fight wore on.

The rubber match highlighted the diversity of Cruz’s outstanding footwork. He spent most of the fight against TJ Dillashaw fighting off his back foot, landing counters while circling and attempting to keep his back off the fence.

Against Faber, by contrast, Cruz still landed his counters when Faber led the dance, but more often the champion had to be the one pressing the action.

That’s not necessarily Cruz’s wheelhouse, and it’s a big part of what made his 2011 meeting with Faber such a great fight. While Cruz could pile up volume with his in-and-out strikes and angles, Faber had opportunities to plant hard counters in the brief moments when Cruz found himself stuck inside.

Those moments were much fewer and farther between at UFC 199. Cruz has never looked this comfortable moving forward, and the occasional defensive lapses that gave Faber his chances in 2011 weren’t there.

There’s also the chance that the older Faber had more trouble pulling the trigger on those shots than his younger self would have.

Cruz also seemed to have placed additional emphasis on punching for power. He sat down on his shots, planting his feet and getting his weight into shots in a way that he hasn’t in the past. The knockdown he hit in the second round and the shot with which he stumbled Faber later in the fight were the products of clean, technical punching mechanics.

Combined with his increasingly sharp counterpunching, Cruz’s more dangerous offensive game and willingness to throw with power bode poorly for his potential bantamweight challengers.

 

Michael Bisping vs. Luke Rockhold

Bisping dethroned Rockhold in one of the biggest upsets in UFC history. According to Odds Shark, the challenger came in as a 21-4 underdog, which was largely because of the champion’s utter demolition of Bisping only 18 months ago.

However, a pair of flush left hooks and follow-up punches on the ground left the Manchester, England, native with the title.

This was an interesting fight before the finish. In the first round of their initial meeting in 2014, Rockhold was content to hit Bisping with kicks at range and line up counters. He gauged the space and timing necessary to commit to pressuring later in the round, and then in the second, he hit Bisping with a head kick before submitting him with a one-arm guillotine.

This time around, Rockhold followed much the same plan, but the pace picked up much more quicklylargely because both fighters were willing to exchange in the pocket.

Bisping had surprising success sticking in range and landing right hands as and after Rockhold threw. While Rockhold had a substantial edge in raw power and speed, Bisping was a little tighter technically in those ranges.

That’s precisely what got Rockhold in trouble.

He cracked Bisping with a hard counter right hook and then pressed forward, throwing himself into a leaping jab that left him overextended, his back partially turned to Bisping. The Englishman stood his ground and replied with a straight right-left hook counter, and because of his overcommitment to the jab, Rockhold never saw the second punch coming.

It’s essentially the same counter combination Bisping used to knock down Anderson Silva when they fought in February, and it’s one of his specialties. 

Rockhold got a bit overconfident, made a mistake and Bisping made him pay for it in the most shocking fashion possible.

Whether Bisping holds on to the belt for a while or not, his defeat of Rockhold will stand forever as one of the all-time great upsets and championship fight victories. This was Bisping‘s 26th time in the Octagon, and he crowned a long and productive career with the elusive title he has sought for the last decade.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ricky Hatton Congratulates Michael Bisping On Becoming First British UFC Champion

Former boxing champion Ricky Hatton is one of many members of the fight community to congratulate Michael Bisping on becoming UFC Middleweight Champion on Saturday night.

Hatton, a former British fight champion himself, as he was a multiple-time cha…

ricky-hatton-michael-bisping

Former boxing champion Ricky Hatton is one of many members of the fight community to congratulate Michael Bisping on becoming UFC Middleweight Champion on Saturday night.

Hatton, a former British fight champion himself, as he was a multiple-time champion for years in boxing, took to Twitter following Bisping’s knockout victory over former UFC 185-pound champion Luke Rockhold in their rematch in the main event of UFC 199 on Saturday night at The Forum in Inglewood, California.

Hatton posted the following:

UFC also congratulated Bisping on becoming the first-ever British champion in UFC history with the following tweet, which promotes an article on the official UFC website:

Michael Bisping Breaks A Number Of UFC Records With Win At UFC 199

With his knockout victory over Luke Rockhold to become the new UFC Middleweight Champion at Saturday night’s UFC 199 event at The Forum in Inglewood, California, Michael Bisping broke a number of UFC records.

“The Count” completed the longest journe…

m-bisping-on-the-brink

With his knockout victory over Luke Rockhold to become the new UFC Middleweight Champion at Saturday night’s UFC 199 event at The Forum in Inglewood, California, Michael Bisping broke a number of UFC records.

“The Count” completed the longest journey to a UFC title of any past fighter in the history of the promotion on Saturday, as he won the title in his 26th appearance inside the Octagon.

Additionally, Bisping tied Georges St-Pierre as the man with the most victories inside the Octagon with 19 wins. He also tied for the second longest active winning streak in the UFC’s current middleweight division by winning his fourth straight fight, trailing Yoel Romero, who has seven. Bisping holds the most victories in the history of the middleweight division with 15. He is tied with Chris Leben for second place in the history of the UFC’s middleweight division in terms of wins by knockout with five (Anderson Silva holds the record with eight.)

Bisping also became the first-ever British champion in UFC history and the fifth fighter to have won the UFC’s Ultimate Fighter reality show and then go on to become a UFC World Champion. The other four who achieved this were Forrest Griffin, Rashad Evans, Matt Serra and Carla Esparza.

H/T: MMAJunkie.com

Luke Rockhold Lost Just Like The Man Who Was ‘Never On His Level’

Something special went down in the main of last night’s (Sat., June 4, 2016) UFC 199 from The Forum in Inglewood, California. It came in the form of one of, and quite possibly the, biggest comeuppances in UFC history when left-for-the-vultures underdog Michael Bisping knocked out previously touted middleweight champion Luke Rockhold with a pair of

The post Luke Rockhold Lost Just Like The Man Who Was ‘Never On His Level’ appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Something special went down in the main of last night’s (Sat., June 4, 2016) UFC 199 from The Forum in Inglewood, California.

It came in the form of one of, and quite possibly the, biggest comeuppances in UFC history when left-for-the-vultures underdog Michael Bisping knocked out previously touted middleweight champion Luke Rockhold with a pair of perfectly-placed left hooks and a flurry of ground shots in the first round.

Bisping was a late replacement for former champ Chris Weidman, whom Rockhold demolished to steal the belt their UFC 194 match-up, and it was clear that the champion was giving “The Count” little respect after battering and submitting him in their first fight in late 2014.

USATSI_9143577_168380322_lowres

The always brash and cocksure Rockhold had even gone as far as to predict a “one-of-a-kind” knockout of Bisping, while stating that the last man “The Count” defeated, all-time great former champion Anderson Silva “isn’t on his level” and “never was” during an interview on “UFC Tonight”:

“So Bisping was winning, he was dominating the fight, I respect him, but he’s about to find out that Anderson is not on my level. He never was. And this is a completely different fight. He doesn’t know the jump that I’ve made. It’s a completely different fight.”

It was obviously a bold, lofty claim that was rather unsubstantiated considering Rockhold had yet to defend his 185-pound title while Silva had of course racked up a record-setting 10 straight title defenses in the Octagon. Regardless of if the aging Silva is currently on Rockhold’s level or not, however, the main direct parallel that can be drawn from both former champions’ careers right now is that they undoubtedly lost their titles in shockingly similar fashion.

Chris Weidman

Silva was knocked out in the second round of his first match against Weidman at UFC 162, a game-changing knockout that appeared to usher in a new era of UFC middleweights, and a fight that “The Spider” still hasn’t fully recovered from – and most likely won’t.

After Rockhold battered and bloodied Weidman to win the belt in the co-main event of December 2015’s UFC 194, many, if not most, thought he would be the UFC’s true heir apparent to the middleweight throne after he finished five straight opponents in dominant fashion.

Obviously he has a much different fighting style opposed to the flashy Silva, but overall the belief was that Rockhold would roll through Bisping and pretty much anyone else at 185 pounds, at least for the time being. Yet like Silva, Rockhold also became of victim of his own cockiness, and while it didn’t manifest in the same form of Silva’s nonstop clowning that lead to his loss against Weidman, you could indeed tell he was fighting overconfidently with his hands at his sides and his chin high up in the air against Bisping.

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Like “The Spider,” Rockhold got far too sure of himself, and he paid for it in a big way at UFC 199. He’s already claimed that he’l “kill” Bisping in their seemingly inevitable third match-up, but ultimately his air of invincibility was obviously thrown to the ground and stomped on in Los Angeles last night.

What’s next for Rockhold is unknown, but there’s still little doubt that given his overbearing size and athleticism coupled with his technically refined skillset, he can rebound and once again reach the top of the UFC mountaintop. However, last night showed that Silva was indeed on Rockhold’s level quite a bit more than he thought, and it wasn’t for the reason he might have hoped for.

The post Luke Rockhold Lost Just Like The Man Who Was ‘Never On His Level’ appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Archives: Bisping & Rockhold Have To Be Separated After UFC 199 (2016)

In this installment of the MMA News Archives, we revisit the post-fight turmoil between Michael Bisping and Luke Rockhold after UFC 199. At UFC 199, Michael Bisping completed one of the biggest upsets in the promotion’s history when he defeated Luke Rockhold for the middleweight championship. Bisping entered the fight as a +525 underdog but…

Continue Reading Archives: Bisping & Rockhold Have To Be Separated After UFC 199 (2016) at MMA News.

In this installment of the MMA News Archives, we revisit the post-fight turmoil between Michael Bisping and Luke Rockhold after UFC 199.

At UFC 199, Michael Bisping completed one of the biggest upsets in the promotion’s history when he defeated Luke Rockhold for the middleweight championship. Bisping entered the fight as a +525 underdog but shocked the world with a KO victory in the very first round.

Prior to the fight, there was a lot of trash talk between the two middleweights. You can catch some of the heat that was exchanged below.

Latest News

Although there wasn’t an initial thaw between Rockhold and Bisping, MMA News has been on top of the evolution of the relationship between the two former rivals.

In 2020, Rockhold said that he was open to squashing the beef between himself and Bisping. And last year, the two actually began training together, much to the surprise of many fans and observants.

Finally, it was just last week that Coach Jason Parillo revealed how Bisping and Rockhold became friends despite their prior feud.

However, as you will learn from the below archived article published on this day six years ago, they were a long ways apart from such a friendship immediately after UFC 199.

On This Day Six Years Ago…

[ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED JUNE 5, 2016, 2:56 PM]

Headline: Video: Bisping, Rockhold Have To Be Separated After UFC 199 Post-Fight Press Conference

Author: Matt Boone

On late Saturday evening, well after Michael Bisping shocked the world by knocking out Luke Rockhold in the UFC 199 main event to become the new UFC Middleweight Champion, the seeds were planted for a rubber match between the two.

After a heated post-fight press conference where Bisping and Rockhold went back-and-forth with vicious verbal exchanges on multiple occasions, the two had to be physically separated right after the press conference wrapped.

In the video embedded above, you can see the footage, which shows Bisping trying to shake Rockhold’s hand, but Rockhold refusing, leading to another heated exchange that resulted in UFC officials needing to separate the two.

For detailed UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping 2 results, click here. To watch the entire UFC 199 post-fight press conference, click here.

Continue Reading Archives: Bisping & Rockhold Have To Be Separated After UFC 199 (2016) at MMA News.