Luke Rockhold: I’m A Better Pound-For-Pound Fighter Than Jon Jones

UFC middleweight champion Luke Rockhold is at the pinnacle of the fight game heading into his UFC 199 rematch with late replacement Michael Bisping on June 4 from The Forum in Inglewood, California, but he’s looking to make a much, much bigger impact. Rockhold was originally supposed to face former champion Chris Weidman, whom he

The post Luke Rockhold: I’m A Better Pound-For-Pound Fighter Than Jon Jones appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC middleweight champion Luke Rockhold is at the pinnacle of the fight game heading into his UFC 199 rematch with late replacement Michael Bisping on June 4 from The Forum in Inglewood, California, but he’s looking to make a much, much bigger impact.

Rockhold was originally supposed to face former champion Chris Weidman, whom he ripped the belt from with a brutal fourth-round stoppage at last year’s UFC 194, in an immediate rematch, but a serious neck injury forced the oft-injured Weidman to the sidelines and opened a path for Bisping to finally get a long-awaited title shot that had eluded him in his 10-year UFC career.

Weidman may have seemed motivated to avenge a previous loss that was the first of his career, but when the news came that he was out, Rockhold told Dave Meltzer of MMA Fighting that he wasn’t surprised, as there were reasons available why he would. The champ did note that he knew Weidman’s injury was a serious one, however:

chris weidman vs. luke rockhold

“I wasn’t surprised Weidman would fall out,” said Rockhold. “He’s always been a brittle character. Yeah, and with New York on the table, I thought he had a lot of things to pull him away from this fight. What he had it looks like he couldn’t push through from what it sounds like” Rockhold said. “It’s an unfortunate situation. I wish him the best to heal up. I don’t want anyone to get injured on that level.”

The timing may set up nicely for Weidman to return at the anticipated UFC 20 from his home state of New York this November, but he has to heal up fully first, and in the meantime, the title picture will get sorted out in California next weekend.

When Weidman’s injury became known, it was obvious that only a couple of elite middleweights were actually contenders. It became clear to Rockhold that Bisping was the choice when the other man, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza needed minor knee surgery after his dominant win over Vitor Belfort at UFC 198, and Rockhold respects the British vet for stepping up:

“If you look at the division there were two obvious names (of replacements), Jacare (Souza) and Bisping,” Rockhold said. “Everyone else is a joke. At this point I haven’t seen anyone tear themselves from the pack. I think it was pretty obvious (who he was facing) when Jacare committed to having surgery. It was a pretty obvious choice, and Bisping wanted it. I respect Bisping for stepping up. He’s a courageous motherf******.”

Luke Rockhold

Discussing their fight, which is a rematch of their first match-up at UFC Fight Night 55 in November 2014, Rockhold expressed his understandable excitement at defending the belt at The Forum in his home state:

“It excites me,” he said. “Being in California excites me. Inglewood, the first fight at The Forum. It’s going to be a fun event. I checked it out. There’s a lot of history in that building, NBA history, musical history, it’s a legendary concert hall. I’m looking to leave my mark at The Forum–on Bisping’s face.”

Never one to miss a stinging barb at his opponent, Rockhold then shifted his focus to the reason he’s evolved to such a high level as a fighter due to his pairing of his mental preparation with his already elite athleticism. The middleweight king then made the bold proclamation that he had mastered the mental and technical aspects of fighting so much that no one could match him in those areas, not even pound-for-pound king and all-time great former light heavyweight champion Jon Jones.

Read on to the next page to find out why Rockhold believes he’s become the best overall fighter MMA.

The post Luke Rockhold: I’m A Better Pound-For-Pound Fighter Than Jon Jones appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Video: UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping Extended Preview

https://youtu.be/GbN1dK784Vw

On Friday, UFC released the 10-minute “extended preview” for their upcoming UFC 199 pay-per-view event, which features two title fights.

Embedded above is the new preview for the June 4th pay-per-view event, which fea…

ufc-199-rockhold-bisping-4

https://youtu.be/GbN1dK784Vw

On Friday, UFC released the 10-minute “extended preview” for their upcoming UFC 199 pay-per-view event, which features two title fights.

Embedded above is the new preview for the June 4th pay-per-view event, which features Luke Rockhold vs. Michael Bisping II for the UFC Middleweight Championship and Dominick Cruz vs. Urijah Faber III for the UFC Bantamweight Championship.

UFC 199 is scheduled to take place at The Forum in Inglewood, California on Saturday, June 4, 2016. Make sure to join us here at MMANews.com on 6/4 for the absolute best UFC 199 live results coverage on the web!

Chael Sonnen Blasts Jacare For Turning Down Luke Rockhold Fight At UFC 199

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Chael Sonnen joined Michael Bisping in criticizing Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza for turning down the opportunity given to him by the UFC to take the title fight against Luke Rockhold at UFC 199 on short-notice when Chris Weidman pulled out of the fight due to injury.

Sonnen spoke about the situation during his appearance on Monday’s edition of “The MMA Hour” at MMAFighting.com.

“[Souza] is great. I would never make believe that he’s not,” said Sonnen. “But the bottom line is, the word is ‘yes.’ If you want an opportunity in America, when one comes, you need to know one word and that is ‘yes.’ The difference between Michael Bisping and everybody else is one word: ‘yes.’ When the opportunity came, that’s what he said. ‘Jacare’ is hurt? Look, fine, I’m sure he is hurt after that long, drawn-out war he just had with Vitor. You think Michael Bisping isn’t hurt? Of course he’s hurt. Whether he advertising it or not, he goes in and fights men everyday. There’s no way to not be hurt. Who gives a damn if you’re hurt, man? You’re either a tough guy or you aren’t.”

Sonnen continued, “We’re not worried about who the best fighter is,” added Sonnen. “There’s no way to know. It’s too speculative. All we’re trying to find out is who is the toughest guy in the world, at this weight class, in this set of rules, on this specific day. If you come forward and you go, ‘I can’t even make the walk, I’m not even tough enough to make the walk,’ fair enough, but you’re now out of the conversation. They should take you out of the rankings.”

“You can’t hold the No. 3 spot in the world when you’re openly telling everybody, ‘man, I’m not even tough enough to walk out there and try,'” said Sonnen. “Fair enough. People get hurt, I get it. But you’re now not that guy. If you were a true tough guy, you shut your mouth and you make the freaking walk, and it’s as simple as that. The chips fall where the chips fall. But Michael Bisping, for nothing else, is a tough guy and he said yes.”

UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping II is scheduled for Saturday, June 4, 2016 at The Forum in Inglewood, California. Make sure to join us here at MMANews.com on 6/4 for the best UFC 199 live results coverage on the web!

chael-sonnen-otr

Chael Sonnen joined Michael Bisping in criticizing Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza for turning down the opportunity given to him by the UFC to take the title fight against Luke Rockhold at UFC 199 on short-notice when Chris Weidman pulled out of the fight due to injury.

Sonnen spoke about the situation during his appearance on Monday’s edition of “The MMA Hour” at MMAFighting.com.

“[Souza] is great. I would never make believe that he’s not,” said Sonnen. “But the bottom line is, the word is ‘yes.’ If you want an opportunity in America, when one comes, you need to know one word and that is ‘yes.’ The difference between Michael Bisping and everybody else is one word: ‘yes.’ When the opportunity came, that’s what he said. ‘Jacare’ is hurt? Look, fine, I’m sure he is hurt after that long, drawn-out war he just had with Vitor. You think Michael Bisping isn’t hurt? Of course he’s hurt. Whether he advertising it or not, he goes in and fights men everyday. There’s no way to not be hurt. Who gives a damn if you’re hurt, man? You’re either a tough guy or you aren’t.”

Sonnen continued, “We’re not worried about who the best fighter is,” added Sonnen. “There’s no way to know. It’s too speculative. All we’re trying to find out is who is the toughest guy in the world, at this weight class, in this set of rules, on this specific day. If you come forward and you go, ‘I can’t even make the walk, I’m not even tough enough to make the walk,’ fair enough, but you’re now out of the conversation. They should take you out of the rankings.”

“You can’t hold the No. 3 spot in the world when you’re openly telling everybody, ‘man, I’m not even tough enough to walk out there and try,'” said Sonnen. “Fair enough. People get hurt, I get it. But you’re now not that guy. If you were a true tough guy, you shut your mouth and you make the freaking walk, and it’s as simple as that. The chips fall where the chips fall. But Michael Bisping, for nothing else, is a tough guy and he said yes.”

UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping II is scheduled for Saturday, June 4, 2016 at The Forum in Inglewood, California. Make sure to join us here at MMANews.com on 6/4 for the best UFC 199 live results coverage on the web!

UFC Gold Couldn’t Possibly Define Michael Bisping’s Career

Imagine you work your whole life for a dream. To reach it, you have to compete against people taking shortcuts. Imagine those shortcuts lead them ahead of you. Imagine that dream falls away, likely never to return. Imagine a twist of fate suddenly goes…

Imagine you work your whole life for a dream. To reach it, you have to compete against people taking shortcuts. Imagine those shortcuts lead them ahead of you. Imagine that dream falls away, likely never to return. Imagine a twist of fate suddenly goes your way, and that dream is again in play.

Then imagine no one believes you can actually reach it.

In a strange way, this is what you’ve conditioned them to believe. Even if you’ve gone further and accomplished more than 99 percent of your competition, you’ve still always fallen short of the ultimate goal.

This is Michael Bisping’s UFC life today. 

At 37, he’s finally received the middleweight title shot that has long eluded him. That’s the good news. The bad news is that it comes with just two weeks’ notice and against an opponent who is younger and bigger and has already soundly defeated him. Last time they met, Luke Rockhold kicked Bisping in the head, knocked him down and choked him out with one arm.

It was both brutal and decisive. And yet here we are again, 16 months later, accepting this UFC 199 matchup as some kind of career achievement award for Bisping even though the reality is…well, it appears rather bleak.

This time around, according to some sportsbooks on Odds Shark, Rockhold is as much as a minus-1100 favorite. If you’re not the gambling type, rest assured that number isn’t common in UFC championship matches with a challenger ranked in the Top Five.

By comparison, when longtime middleweight kingpin Anderson Silva held the belt, only one time did he enter a fight with comparable oddswhen he fought Demian Maia and danced and taunted his way to an uninspired yet lopsided victory.

“I have no pressure. I know I’m expected to lose this fight,” Bisping said during Thursday’s UFC 199 conference call. “The world is expecting me to lose this fight, and that’s so nice, that feels good. I haven’t had 10 weeks of evaluating footage and going through the emotional roller coaster. Feeling confident, feeling negative, feeling confident again, then negative again. I don’t have time for that s–t. I’m very, very confident. I’m in great shape. My weight is perfect.

“I’m expected to lose? That’s awesome.”

Ten years in the hurt business is something close to an eternity. Prospects come and go. Promotions arrive with fanfare before disappearing without a trace. Entire landscapes shift beneath your feet. 

Ten years in the major leagues is something else entirely. Bisping has seen the sport literally evolve before his eyes. 

When he started his UFC career, Tim Sylvia was the heavyweight champion. Rich Franklin was the middleweight champion, and the UFC lightweight division did not exist. 

From limited sanctioning to wrestling dominance to testosterone replacement therapy and beyond, Bisping has found ways to adapt to the prevailing winds of the moment, staying relevant for a full decade. He’s been controversialeven hated for his ability to talk his way under the skin of both fighters and fans alikeand has hung around so long that he’s won many of those same critics over through respect for his longevity and drive. 

And that is why for Bisping it should not matter, even though, of course, it does.

Here’s the thing about Bisping: Even if he wins, you couldn’t possibly define his career with one line. 

His career has been too rich in moments, too textured.

It’s been long forgotten that when he debuted in the UFC through The Ultimate Fighter 3 in 2006, Bisping was something of a wild card. He was an undefeated fighter but one without the wrestling pedigree that seemed critical during the heyday of ground-and-pound. During the show’s draft, he was chosen fifth out of the 16 contestants, with coaches Tito Ortiz and Ken Shamrock viewing Matt Hamill, Jesse Forbes, Kalib Starnes and Rory Singer as more promising prospects.

Big mistake. 

Bisping not only stormed through the competition with three straight stoppage wins, but he also became a dominant personality to match the colorful coaches.

His success was crucial for the breakthrough of the company in Europe, as he became one of the front men for the sport’s growth, opening up opportunities for both fighters and the local markets. Indeed, when the UFC brought an event to Bisping’s then-home city of Manchester, England in April 2007, it was largely because of his exploding star power there. The company hadn’t taken the Octagon outside the U.S. in nearly five years.

It was a formula the UFC would later replicate to great success with Alexander Gustafsson and Conor McGregor in tapping an exploding European market.

Bisping? He was the blueprint.

The rematch with Rockhold will be the 26th fight of Bisping’s UFC career, tying him with Gleison Tibau and putting him just one behind the co-record holders, Frank Mir and Ortiz.

It will also mark the 18th time he’s featured in either the main event or co-main event, and in every fight of his UFC career, he’s been on the main card, something only a handful with such longevity can boast.

If this timing wasn’t ideal—coming on short notice and shortly after Bisping wrapped a movie—it was better than the alternative of never. Bisping only received the opportunity after first alternate Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza pronounced himself unable to compete due to a knee injury.

“Mike, he’s a tough dude,” Rockhold said on the conference call. “He’s got balls. He took this fight, but this will not be his fairy tale. This will be his swan song.”

Maybe.

It’s almost certainly the Brit’s last chance for a UFC title, but if he falls short, it does nothing to blunt his importance during the promotion’s key years of growth.

So, he loses. Imagine that. 

Imagine you’ve worked your whole life for a moment that didn’t live up to its promise. Then imagine everything that’s come before it. 

He doesn’t have to. He did it. But if he wants to, Bisping can close his eyes and think back on it all, content in the knowledge that all he did was as important to his legacy as any precious metal.  

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 199 Media Conference Call Set For Today At 5:30 PM ET

Hear from Luke Rockhold, Michael Bisping, Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber later today on a special media conference call to promote UFC 199.

The event, which streams live in the video below, is set to begin at 5:30 p.m. ET.

Rockhold defends his mi…

ufc-199-rockhold-bisping-2

Hear from Luke Rockhold, Michael Bisping, Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber later today on a special media conference call to promote UFC 199.

The event, which streams live in the video below, is set to begin at 5:30 p.m. ET.

Rockhold defends his middleweight title against Bisping on June 4, while Cruz puts his bantamweight belt up for grabs vs. Faber that same night.

Jacare Responds To Bisping’s Criticism Of His Decision To Turn Down UFC 199 Opportunity

ronaldo-jacare-souza

When Michael Bisping received the call from UFC management offering him the title fight against Luke Rockhold in the UFC 199 main event on short-notice, “The Count” was the guy to count-on for the company, however he wasn’t their first choice.

As noted, UFC initially contacted Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, who was coming off a dominant performance in stopping MMA legend Vitor Belfort at UFC 198 in Curitiba, Brazil earlier this month. Jacare, however, turned down the bout.

When Bisping found out about the fact that Souza had declined the title fight with Rockhold, which would have also been a rematch for the UFC 185-pound champion, he took the Brazilian contender to task, openly criticizing him for turning down such a big opportunity.

Upon hearing about Bisping’s comments, Souza spoke with MMAFighting.com, where he offered his retort.

“Honestly, I didn’t know I’d get hurt so bad,” Souza told MMA Fighting about the reason why he had to turn down the short-notice offer to fight Rockhold in the UFC 199 main event on June 4. “I felt the pain before UFC 198, but was well trained and strong, so I didn’t train for a week. I felt the knee again during the fight. I was devastated because I did the MRI on May 16 and on May 17 I got the news that Weidman was injured. If I knew about it, I wouldn’t even do the MRI [laughs]. I had to open the black box to see what was going on with my knee.”

Souza continued, “It was a clean surgery, and I’m walking normally now. I had to do this surgery. I had a meniscus injury, and it would definitely get worse if I didn’t do this now. I was physically well in the fight, could move normally. Everybody has injuries going into a fight, it’s impossible to be 100 percent, but thank God I had the best strategy and won.”

As he would go on to explain, Jacare is scheduled to start rehab with his doctor and physical therapist and is expected to be cleared to train in approximately 20 days.

“I was going to say yes (and fight at UFC 199), but the MRI was done. I couldn’t just ignore the results,” he said. “Healthy first. I’m a Christian man, so I prayed. Whatever was in the MRI results would determine my future, if I would take the fight or not. The doctor told me ‘you fought Belfort for five minutes and can’t walk now. Imagine yourself fighting Rockhold for 25 minutes. You’ll lose your leg’. I decided not to fight because of my health.”

Jacare was scheduled to be ringside for the originally scheduled Rockhold vs. Chris Weidman title fight at UFC 199, however he still plans to be in attendance when Bisping challenges Rockhold for the title in Inglewood, California.

“I am the next challenger,” said the Brazilian. “Weidman won’t be back in a while, (Yoel) Romero was caught in a doping test, and I’ve earned a shot. I already asked the UFC for my flight ticket.”

In the end, Jacare made it clear that he’s next in line for a shot at the 185-pound title, and despite Bisping’s harsh criticism of his decision to turn down the short-notice opportunity at UFC 199, he wished the Englishman good luck in his upcoming title fight.

“(Bisping) is in the UFC for a long time, but that means nothing,” Souza responded. “I fought the guy that knocked him out, so no way he’s in front of me. The guys I beat are tougher than the ones he defeated. Time means nothing, what really means is what you’ve done to earn it. I earned it. They called me on short notice and I couldn’t take it, but I’m next. No need to say anything else. My loss to Romero was a robbery and then he got caught. Weidman won’t return until November. And I beat Vitor up, so I’m next.”

“But I wish him good luck, a good fight,” he continued. “He can say whatever he wants, and I’ll say what I want. I hope he does a good fight. He’s in the UFC for 10 years and does a good job, so I hope he fights well.”

UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping II is scheduled to take place on Saturday, June 4, 2016 from The Forum in Inglewood, California.

Make sure to visit MMANews.com on 6/4 for the best UFC 199 live results coverage on the web!

ronaldo-jacare-souza

When Michael Bisping received the call from UFC management offering him the title fight against Luke Rockhold in the UFC 199 main event on short-notice, “The Count” was the guy to count-on for the company, however he wasn’t their first choice.

As noted, UFC initially contacted Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, who was coming off a dominant performance in stopping MMA legend Vitor Belfort at UFC 198 in Curitiba, Brazil earlier this month. Jacare, however, turned down the bout.

When Bisping found out about the fact that Souza had declined the title fight with Rockhold, which would have also been a rematch for the UFC 185-pound champion, he took the Brazilian contender to task, openly criticizing him for turning down such a big opportunity.

Upon hearing about Bisping’s comments, Souza spoke with MMAFighting.com, where he offered his retort.

“Honestly, I didn’t know I’d get hurt so bad,” Souza told MMA Fighting about the reason why he had to turn down the short-notice offer to fight Rockhold in the UFC 199 main event on June 4. “I felt the pain before UFC 198, but was well trained and strong, so I didn’t train for a week. I felt the knee again during the fight. I was devastated because I did the MRI on May 16 and on May 17 I got the news that Weidman was injured. If I knew about it, I wouldn’t even do the MRI [laughs]. I had to open the black box to see what was going on with my knee.”

Souza continued, “It was a clean surgery, and I’m walking normally now. I had to do this surgery. I had a meniscus injury, and it would definitely get worse if I didn’t do this now. I was physically well in the fight, could move normally. Everybody has injuries going into a fight, it’s impossible to be 100 percent, but thank God I had the best strategy and won.”

As he would go on to explain, Jacare is scheduled to start rehab with his doctor and physical therapist and is expected to be cleared to train in approximately 20 days.

“I was going to say yes (and fight at UFC 199), but the MRI was done. I couldn’t just ignore the results,” he said. “Healthy first. I’m a Christian man, so I prayed. Whatever was in the MRI results would determine my future, if I would take the fight or not. The doctor told me ‘you fought Belfort for five minutes and can’t walk now. Imagine yourself fighting Rockhold for 25 minutes. You’ll lose your leg’. I decided not to fight because of my health.”

Jacare was scheduled to be ringside for the originally scheduled Rockhold vs. Chris Weidman title fight at UFC 199, however he still plans to be in attendance when Bisping challenges Rockhold for the title in Inglewood, California.

“I am the next challenger,” said the Brazilian. “Weidman won’t be back in a while, (Yoel) Romero was caught in a doping test, and I’ve earned a shot. I already asked the UFC for my flight ticket.”

In the end, Jacare made it clear that he’s next in line for a shot at the 185-pound title, and despite Bisping’s harsh criticism of his decision to turn down the short-notice opportunity at UFC 199, he wished the Englishman good luck in his upcoming title fight.

“(Bisping) is in the UFC for a long time, but that means nothing,” Souza responded. “I fought the guy that knocked him out, so no way he’s in front of me. The guys I beat are tougher than the ones he defeated. Time means nothing, what really means is what you’ve done to earn it. I earned it. They called me on short notice and I couldn’t take it, but I’m next. No need to say anything else. My loss to Romero was a robbery and then he got caught. Weidman won’t return until November. And I beat Vitor up, so I’m next.”

“But I wish him good luck, a good fight,” he continued. “He can say whatever he wants, and I’ll say what I want. I hope he does a good fight. He’s in the UFC for 10 years and does a good job, so I hope he fights well.”

UFC 199: Rockhold vs. Bisping II is scheduled to take place on Saturday, June 4, 2016 from The Forum in Inglewood, California.

Make sure to visit MMANews.com on 6/4 for the best UFC 199 live results coverage on the web!