UFC Fight Night 49’s Benson Henderson: Far Beyond Driven

Benson Henderson is as goal-oriented as you’ll find in the fight business.
The former WEC and UFC lightweight champion is a man fueled by possibility and the potential to test his physical and mental talents against the most elite level of competition …

Benson Henderson is as goal-oriented as you’ll find in the fight business.

The former WEC and UFC lightweight champion is a man fueled by possibility and the potential to test his physical and mental talents against the most elite level of competition in the world. Those motivations matched with a seemingly unbreakable spirit and unique skill set have taken the MMA Lab leader to great heights in the realm of mixed martial arts, and his quest—in some senses—is far from over. 

In Henderson’s mind there are still many battles to be fought, wills to be broken and victories to be had inside the Octagon. He’s a fighter marching to the beat of his own drum, and in the current era where circumstance and injuries put title pictures on hold at lengthy clips, Henderson slows down for no one. While his eyes have been set on regaining the title he lost last August, he can’t control the decisions made by others, and he’s not keen on sitting around on the sidelines waiting for things to play out.

Henderson operates in the present tense and believes the here and now belongs to him. The lightweight strap has been out of play ever since it left his possession last August in Milwaukee, and he’s proceeded with his business as if it was the very next step around the corner as the 30-year-old Arizona transplant has picked up two crucial victories in the interim.

“Smooth” edged out Josh Thomson via split decision when the two squared off at UFC on Fox 10 back in January, then ran roughshod over highly touted Dagestan-born fighter Rustam Khabilov in Albuquerque, New Mexico, five months later. As Henderson pointed out in his post-fight interviews, he’s put the lightweight division “on his back,” and he has no intention of taking his foot off the proverbial gas pedal anytime soon.

“I’m doing my best to carry this division,” Henderson told Bleacher Report. “The belt is on a temporary hiatus—it is what it is—and I’m doing my best to keep the division moving forward and to keep people talking about it. I’m doing the best I can.”

In regard to those efforts, Henderson has kept remarkably active in comparison to the rest of his peers on the lightweight roster. With the exception of fellow WEC alum Donald Cerrone, the Colorado native’s activity has been unmatched as he’s competed 10 times in the three years he’s been under the UFC banner, with his 11th showing on deck for this weekend at Fight Night 49. These numbers are impressive, and even more so when the current rate of fighter injury is taken into account.

Furthermore, Henderson is notorious for his work ethic and dedication to being in the gym working with his teammates at the MMA Lab, which means either the perennial contender is doing something special or other fighters across the fighting landscape are taking the wrong approach to their preparation.

“I think a big part of it comes down to your coaches and training partners and making sure you have guys you can trust with you in the gym,” Henderson said. “You don’t want a case where some guy is having a bad day at home with his wife and comes into the gym where you are drilling arm locks and he snaps your arm because he’s had a bad day or something like that.

“It’s really important to have a great coaches and a great training staff who know when to push you and know when to ease off. It’s important to have coaches who can recognize when you need to pull back, regroup and come back tomorrow ready to get after it. 

“Another big part of it is knowing yourself and knowing when to calm down,” he added. “I work hard now, but earlier in my career I was in the gym all the time and training all the time. Back then my coaches had to hold me back, but I had to learn how to hold myself back as well. But those are things you learn over time.”

With the lightweight title tied up until Anthony Pettis and Gilbert Melendez handle their business on Dec. 6, Henderson will continue to scrap his way toward another championship opportunity. Following his dominant performance against Khabilov back in June, he could have taken to the sidelines to allow things to play out, but that simply isn’t the way he goes about his business.

Instead, he opened the door for another challenge to materialize, and he will face Rafael dos Anjos at Fight Night 49 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Much like Henderson, “RDA” has been on a hot streak of his own, and the Glendale, Arizona, representative is looking forward to mixing it up with the savvy Brazilian this Saturday night. 

“It’s a great fight from a stylistic standpoint,” Henderson said. “We are both southpaws and we both push the pace. He likes to push the pace and come forward and does a really good job at it. I’m trying to do the same thing. I’m always looking to push the pace and use my cardio to my advantage. I want to test my opponent’s cardio and push their muscular endurance to a place they’ve never been before. He likes to do the same thing, and it’s going to be nice to get in there with someone who wants to throw down as much as I want to throw down.”

While a victory over Dos Anjos would bring him one step closer to achieving his goal of regaining the lightweight strap, Henderson is also conscious of the time line he’s operating on. The former champion has been outspoken in the past that he’s not going to be a fighter who allows the sport to leave him in shambles, and he has set a hard line that he will retire by the age of 34. 

With Henderson having officially crossed over into his 30s last November, that leaves the hard-charging lightweight cardio machine just three years to accomplish every goal he’s set out to achieve in mixed martial arts. Even in a rapidly moving sport like MMA, three years isn’t a big window by any standard, and a highly motivated Henderson on a race against time could very well spell bad news for the rest of the 155-pound fighters on the UFC roster.

“I’m not going to be fighting that much longer—that’s for sure,” Henderson said. “I’m all about setting goals and doing the best I can to go out there and go get them. I give myself a certain time limit to get those goals done. I will retire when I’m 33 and before I turn 34. This is a tough sport and we see a lot of athletes retire somewhat early in their careers nowadays. Whether you are a mixed martial artist or a football player, your body gets beat up. You get mentally ran down and cutting weight sucks. There are just a lot of things that play into it and they all take a toll. I won’t be around forever so enjoy it while you can. 

“That’s why I’m trying to go as hard as I can. I’m trying to get as much as I can because I know I’m not going to be here for too much longer. I’m trying to hurry up and get everything I can in.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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Randy Couture ‘Not Opposed’ to Grappling Match with Fedor at Metamoris

UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture has no intention to put the gloves back on at 51 years old, but high-profile grappling matches are still a legitimate possibility.
Speaking on Sunday’s edition of Submission Radio, “The Natural” said he’d be interested i…

UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture has no intention to put the gloves back on at 51 years old, but high-profile grappling matches are still a legitimate possibility.

Speaking on Sunday’s edition of Submission Radio, “The Natural” said he’d be interested in competing on a Metamoris card against none other than former Pride FC star Fedor Emelianenko

That would be interesting, and certainly given the time to prepare and get back up into good, solid grappling and wrestling shape, that would be a lot of fun I think, you know. I’m not sure how active Fedor is at this stage, you know him being retired as well, but I’m certainly not opposed to an idea like that. 

Couture retired from mixed martial arts after suffering a knockout loss to Lyoto Machida at UFC 129 in April 2011, his first defeat in his previous four fights. 

The Team Quest co-founder was one of just two UFC fighters (the other being B.J. Penn) to win titles in two separate weight classes: light heavyweight and heavyweight. 

Generally regarded as one of the pioneers of MMA, “Captain America” Couture left the UFC in late 2007, eight months removed from his UFC heavyweight title win over Tim Sylvia at UFC 68 in March 2007. 

One reason he cited for leaving the company was the inability to bring Fedor Emelianenko, one of Pride’s most recognized faces, for a potential superfight, per Sherdog

Emelianenko retired from the cage after scoring a quick first-round knockout over former UFC heavyweight title challenger Pedro Rizzo at an M-1 Global show in June 2012.

Couture was tabbed a late replacement for Chael Sonnen at Metamoris 4 on August 9 but declined the offer due to media obligations tied to the release of The Expendables 3.

Given the latest turn of events, should Metamoris promoter Ralek Gracie reach out to Couture and Emelianenko in hopes of them headlining a grappling card before the end of the year?

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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Michael Bisping Needs Impressive Win over Cung Le to Prove He Still Belongs

Say this much for Michael Bisping: The man is a professional.
From the outside looking in, it’d be easy to greet Bisping’s latest assignment with one of the brash Brit’s trademark sneers. Cung Le? In China? As the headliner of an earl…

Say this much for Michael Bisping: The man is a professional.

From the outside looking in, it’d be easy to greet Bisping’s latest assignment with one of the brash Brit’s trademark sneers. Cung Le? In China? As the headliner of an early-morning fight card airing only on the UFC’s Internet subscription service?

Surely Bisping deserves better than that.

Granted, he’s had a tough go of it recently, scuffling to a 2-3 record since the beginning of 2012. But after eight years and 20 fights as one of the UFC’s most polarizing figures, this seems decidedly beneath his station.

Don’t tell that to Bisping, though. He’s still out there giving it the old university try.

Over the years, The Ultimate Fighter 3‘s light heavyweight winner has managed to feud with such otherwise inoffensive entities as Jorge Rivera, Dan Henderson and Alan Belcher, to name just a few.

This week, he’s even beefed a little bit with Le—as affable and vanilla a fighter as you’ll find—in advance of Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 48 main event.

“He hasn’t fought in a couple of years, so I’m guessing his profile has dipped, he’s probably not getting too many embarrassing kung-fu movie offers right now and—probably worst of all for him—Channing Tatum has stopped retweeting him,” Bisping said in an email shared with Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter. “I’m going to put a beating on him, and he can disappear again back to B-movies.”

See? Bisping has traditionally been one of the UFC’s more bankable commodities because he’s willing to add some sizzle to nearly any matchup. He’s the consummate company man, an unflappable agent provocateur.

True to form, he’s giving Le the business despite the fact that Covers indicates he’ll go off as a 4-13 favorite in a bout that comparatively few fans will even get to see.

So well-honed is Bisping’s penchant for trash talk, so superhuman his ability to perceive insultsthose real, and imaginedthat he’s spent nearly every second of his UFC career inspiring fight fans to experience real human emotion.

It’s still nearly impossible to remain neutral about him, no matter how far his star has dipped or how out-of-the-blue this particular matchmaking may seem.

He carries on in spite—or maybe because of—the fact that, at 35 years old and entering what will likely be the final years of his career, his standing in the UFC middleweight division has taken a considerable hit.

As of this writing, Bisping is as far away from true contender status as he’s ever been during his UFC run, and it’s unclear whether merely defeating Le improves on that.

Certainly, a “W” would be better than the alternative, but beating a 42-year-old part-timer who hasn’t fought in nearly two years doesn’t exactly sound like a cure-all.

Bisping and Le may have the proper stand-up styles to make this an entertaining scrap—it’ll be Le’s flash against Bisping’s pace and persistence—but it should amount to a walk in the park for the younger man.

That means if he hopes to one day recapture the momentum he enjoyed in 2010-11, if he ever means to fight his way back into contentionnot to mention, back on TV and pay-per-viewBisping needs to do more than just win. He needs to impress.

It felt as though Ryan Bader let a similar opportunity slip through his fingers last week against Ovince St. Preux. Bader won the UFC Fight Night 47 main event—even dominated most of it—but walked away with a fairly tepid unanimous decision.

In the aftermath, it’s been easy to shortchange him as a limited fighter who isn’t worthy of rejoining the light heavyweight elite.

To avoid a similar fate here, Bisping will have to do something better. If he rides his high-volume but low-impact kickboxing attack to a 25-minute decision against Le, it’ll be too easy to dismiss it as “typical Bisping.”

Instead, he likely needs to craft the sort of dominating stoppages we saw from him against overmatched opponents like Rivera and Jason Miller.

If he can do that, it would go a long to way to proving he still deserves high-profile fights against relevant middleweight contenders.

If he can’t, then all the businesslike trash talk in the world probably won’t return him to his former glory.

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Andrei Arlovski Blasts Alistair Overeem Following Injury to UFC Champ Jon Jones

Alistair Overeem isn’t a popular guy lately.
Not that he’s ever won a popularity contest with MMA fans, but Overeem has left fans with a sour taste in their mouths following the news that he injured UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones in preparati…

Alistair Overeem isn’t a popular guy lately.

Not that he’s ever won a popularity contest with MMA fans, but Overeem has left fans with a sour taste in their mouths following the news that he injured UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones in preparation for Jones’ fight against Daniel Cormier at UFC 178.

Although the injury was pegged as accidental by nearly everyone involved, former UFC heavyweight champ Andrei Arlovski believes differently. He spoke with Sports.ru, and the interview was translated by MixedMartialArts.com (h/t Bloody Elbow).

“Now I know that Overeem injured Jon Jones simply because he injures everyone he trains with,” Arlovski said.

Arlovski shared his own story about how “The Reem” sent him to the hospital following a round of sparring:

Couple of days ago I sparred with Overeem and learned such outcome by my own experience. Usually sparring partners don’t try to inflict a real damage to each other. But Overeem at one moment kneed me really hard in the stomach. In a real fight I could have been KO’ed after that.

I rushed to a hospital to make sure that my ribs are not broken.

Luckily, Arlovski wasn’t seriously injured, and his scheduled fight against a returning Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva will go down as planned.

Arlovski’s statements echo those made by Overeem’s former training partners at the Blackzilian camp in Florida. According to Bloody Elbow’s Karim ZidanGilbert Burns claimed Overeem was arrogant and left after blowing out the knee of Guto Inocente during their training sessions.

The injury to Inocente was also caused by an Overeem takedown.

Another former teammate, Anthony “Rumble” Johnson said virtually the same thing as Arlovski, per Fighters Only‘s Nick Peet (h/t MMA Mania). The surging light heavyweight contender said if UFC matchmaker Joe Silva offered him to fight Overeem, he’d do it in a heartbeat.

Overeem did have a very public fallout from the Blackzilians so it’s to be expected that they might not have the nicest things to say about him. But it’s an entirely different matter when those kind of statements come from Arlovski, a current member of the Jackson’s MMA team.

Former opponent and now teammate Travis Browne has already set the law down on what he (and likely the rest of the team) expects from Overeem joining their ranks.

Of course accidents happen all the time during training, and knee injuries are common during grappling sessions. But Overeem has been in the game long enough to know his own strength, his limits and how to conduct himself in a professional manner behind closed doors.

He’s had a negative reputation for years from fellow fighters and fans. Outside of eliminating world hunger, it’s not likely to change.  The only one who knows if the incident was completely accidental is Overeem, and he will likely continue with the “it was an accident” story.

Accident or not, injuring the best fighter in the world—the face of the Jackson’s MMA and one of the few major marketable stars currently in the UFC—isn’t the way to endear yourself to the promotion or your new teammates.

 

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Bellator Officially Releases Bellator Champ Eddie Alvarez

It was a long time coming, but according to Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com, Bellator has released Bellator Lightweight Champion Eddie Alvarez from his contract, making him a free agent.
Scott Coker confirmed the story with ESPN Tuesday afternoon, which is h…

It was a long time coming, but according to Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com, Bellator has released Bellator Lightweight Champion Eddie Alvarez from his contract, making him a free agent.

Scott Coker confirmed the story with ESPN Tuesday afternoon, which is huge for the free-agent market.

Alvarez, who famously had a huge legal battle with Bellator, returned to the company after a long litigation with former boss Bjorn Rebney and the company. He eventually returned to the company for a rematch with Michael Chandler, winning a decision to take the 155-pound belt.

He now becomes the hottest and most talented free agent on the market. Not only that, but also he leaves a company he has tried to get away from for well over a year in favor of the UFC, where he will likely end up.

The release seems to be a great move for three parties involved.

First off, it’s great for Alvarez, as he finally gets his wish to leave the company. His intentions were to leave Bellator for the UFC, and it now appears that he will get that wish.

It’s also great for the UFC, as it will likely end up with a top-10 lightweight in the world. He is a draw that can make an immediate impact at 155 pounds, which could use some fresh contenders in the division.

Finally, it is actually good for Bellator. The entire Alvarez court case was a black mark on Bellator as a company, as most fans wanted to let Rebney and company let him go. Instead, it looked like a tyrant keeping a fighter from going to greener pastures for more money.

Now Bellator has allowed Alvarez to follow his desires while saving some face for itself.

Alvarez currently holds a record of 25-3, as he has beaten the likes of Chandler, Patricky Freire, Shinya Aoki, Pat Curran and Roger Huerta. His last bout was in November of last year, when he defeated Chandler for the belt.

Obviously, the UFC has not signed Alvarez yet, but it’s because he was just released today. Expect the world’s largest MMA promotion to make a quick move on him and, in turn, put him on an upcoming card.

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‘Mayhem’ Miller’s Return to MMA ‘Worth a Conversation,’ Bellator’s Coker Says

You might think Scott Coker has had enough of Jason “Mayhem” Miller. But you would be mistaken.
The new president of Bellator MMA, and former honcho at Strikeforce, said Monday that he would be open to a return from the semi-retired Miller, provided th…

You might think Scott Coker has had enough of Jason “Mayhem” Miller. But you would be mistaken.

The new president of Bellator MMA, and former honcho at Strikeforce, said Monday that he would be open to a return from the semi-retired Miller, provided the troubled but popular middleweight could meet certain prerequisites.

“It’s worth a conversation, because everybody deserves a second chance,” Coker said Monday on The MMA Hour with host Ariel Helwani. “I just hope he’s OK. And if he’s OK then we can take a more serious step. But the first step would be, you know, is he OK? That’s really what it comes down to.”

Though the statement is far from an assurance, it does open the proverbial door for a return, which is a new development for Mayhem. Miller (28-9-1) has not competed professionally since 2012, when he lost by decision to C.B. Dollaway at UFC 146.

After that uninspiring performance, Miller retired from MMA and, oddly, also was fired by UFC president Dana White for unspecified behaviors outside the cage. 

That was only the beginning of Miller’s troubles. A few months after his UFC departure, Mayhem was arrested for breaking into a church. The charges were later dropped. 

In 2013, Miller was arrested multiple times for various incidents relating to felony domestic abuse and violating court orders. 

He has also displayed erratic behavior in interviews, on social media and in other public appearances. Last year he called UFC fighter Uriah Hall, who is black, a racial epithet, thus inciting a brawl in a hotel lobby.

Coker is also no stranger to direct troubles with Miller. In 2010, when Coker was presiding over Strikeforce, Miller famously touched off “the Nashville brawl,” an in-cage melee that began when Miller entered the cage unannounced to demand a rematch with Jake Shields.

Shields and members of Shields’ team, including brothers Nick and Nate Diaz, attacked Miller for his actions. Miller later received a three-month suspension.

To his credit, Miller has been more subdued lately in public forums, and has expressed a desire to return to active competition. 

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