5 Best Moments of BJ Penn’s Career

Contrary to what our short-term memory wants us to believe, BJ Penn will still go down as the most dominant UFC lightweight champion ever. 
We shouldn’t remember him as the guy who fled his native division after dropping back-to-back losses to Fra…

Contrary to what our short-term memory wants us to believe, BJ Penn will still go down as the most dominant UFC lightweight champion ever. 

We shouldn’t remember him as the guy who fled his native division after dropping back-to-back losses to Frankie Edgar. We shouldn’t remember him as the guy who was woefully outboxed by a bigger and stronger Nick Diaz.

We shouldn’t remember him as the guy who was dramatically undersized against a younger, faster Rory MacDonald. We shouldn’t remember him as the guy who came out of retirement after a two-year absence to face Edgar at 145 pounds.

We might have to try hard, but hopefully we won’t remember that questionably stiff and overly upright striking stance he had in his last outing. 

We have plenty of reasons to still consider him one of the best lightweights to ever compete inside of the Octagon. Continue reading to see the top five. 

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UFC Still Suffering from Self-Imposed Lack of Characters

The lights dim. A faint tune can be heard over the stadium speakers. The bass drops and house music starts loudly thumping. The lights brighten, and in step 10 young Japanese women, wearing stereotypical school uniforms. They get into two lines and sta…

The lights dim. A faint tune can be heard over the stadium speakers. The bass drops and house music starts loudly thumping. The lights brighten, and in step 10 young Japanese women, wearing stereotypical school uniforms. They get into two lines and start dancing.

Behind them stands a single man, sporting a glistening track suit, a red stripe in his hair and a big, dumb smile. He starts dancing along, and the announcer chimes in.

“In the blue corner…from the United States…Jason. Mayhem. Miller.” 

The schoolgirls disperse. He walks to the ring, strips and puts in his mouthpiece. The lights dim again.

Some hip-hop tune comes on. Another man sets foot on the ramp and starts walking toward the squared circle, flanked by several middle-aged men, probably his coaches, and sporting a Dethrone or Affliction or TapouT T-shirt and hat. His name is announced.

“In the red corner…pretty much any other mixed martial artist.”

One small thing can send a very big message, and Miller was loud and clear with his creative walkout at Dream 9. He is the life of the party, and you’re going to have fun whenever he’s around. That “fun” persona made him one of MMA‘s biggest stars before he ever fought in the UFC.

Was he the best middleweight in the world? Certainly not. Was he even particularly good? It’s tough to tell but ultimately irrelevant. Good, bad or mediocre, he was a fighter to watch. His opponent for that fight, by the way, was Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, and if you happen to remember that, you have a better memory than most.

 

A Little Bit of History

Who are the most memorable fighters in MMA history? The most enduring names?

Royce Gracie and Ken Shamrock, of course. Randy Couture, Chuck Liddell, Tito Ortiz and Fedor Emelianenko are all musts. Matt Hughes likely meets the mark. Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva are both men we will tell our grandchildren about.

All of those fighters are all-time greats, of course, but the question wasn’t about the greatest fighters of all time. It was about the most memorable.

While the UFC’s retconned version of MMA history may not acknowledge it, Tank Abbott was one of the biggest stars of the SEG era. An aggressively mediocre fighter, he became one of the biggest stars in American MMA not necessarily because of his in-cage prowess but because of his cocky, surly, bar-brawler persona.

While Abbott is an extreme example, he isn’t alone. There are many, many fighters who achieved notoriety not by having elite skills but by having bombastic personalities and/or a commitment to entertainment. 

Genki Sudo was the toast of the Japanese MMA scene for a time, not necessarily because of his crafty ground work but because of his over-the-top walkouts. Chael Sonnen went from above-average middleweight to MMA’s top draw with his relentless smack talk. Pat Barry wouldn’t even be a recognizable name for MMA fans if it weren’t for his “big kid” persona. 

Athletes are supposed to be larger than life, and make no mistake, this isn’t exclusive to MMA. It isn’t even exclusive to combat sports.

Sean Avery. Rob Gronkowski. Zinedine Zidane. John McEnroe. Johnny Manziel.

They are all characters, and characters sell.

Don’t assume that being a character and being good are mutually exclusive, either. Royce Gracie was the Little Mac of the UFC’s real-life Punch-Out!! Fedor Emelianenko tapped into the cold, emotionless, near-robotic mystique of the Soviet Union’s Olympic hockey teams of yesteryear. Tito Ortiz’s nickname, “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy,” was spot-on.

That sort of branding allows fans to instantly gravitate to a fighter. 

 

Why the UFC Doesn’t Want Characters

Engaging fans? Increased interest in fighters? Sounds great, doesn’t it?

Well, not so fast. The UFC, in reality, wants to generally keep the interaction between fighters and the public at large under its control.

The primary reason for this, of course, is that mixed martial artists tend to be remarkably bad when it comes to public relations. Sure, there are Chael Sonnens and Ronda Rouseys who are incredibly media savvy. For every Sonnen, however, there are 30 Matt Browns calling for topless women’s MMA, Josh Thomsons ruffling feathers with a discussion of gay marriage and Jon Joneses throwing homophobic slurs at teenagers for being mean on Instagram.

That’s valid, of course, but the second reason is to dial down on the drawing power of lower-level fighters.

Consider a fighter like Pat Barry. Despite the fact that he was a definitively below-average heavyweight and owned a humble 5-7 record, his heavy hands and must-follow status on Twitter made him surprisingly popular. He would retire from MMA following his loss to Soa Palelei last year in order to return to kickboxing…but what if he didn’t?

A 2-5 stretch typically ends with a pink slip, so his UFC days were likely over either way. If he had chosen to stay in MMA, however, Barry would have been a worthwhile addition to either Bellator or World Series of Fighting. Both would have happily taken him had he wound up in the MMA free-agent pool.

In that way, Barry did what few others have: He took away the UFC’s bargaining power. Zuffa relishes the historically lopsided negotiations it has with its employees, but when fighters become individually branded rather than just bleeding for those three letters, the power is no longer completely in its hands.

Just consider how the UFC responded to Rich Attonito resisting the promotion’s bully tactics in comparison to Nate Diaz. Then ask yourself why the UFC would want to have to deal with dozens of fighters with similar leverage.

Then think about fighters who actually became brands unto themselves—men like Fedor Emelianenko, Randy Couture, Tito Ortiz and Jon Jones. Why would the UFC want guys like Jose Aldo, Demetrious Johnson or Johny Hendricks to end up becoming another one of them?

 

How That’s Coming Back to Bite Them

There was a time, just a few short years ago, that the UFC was stacked with fighters that fans cared about. Not just two or three of the champions, either. 

Back in 2011, a top contender bout between Junior dos Santos and Shane Carwin did solid numbers. A throwaway light heavyweight fight between Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Matt freakin‘ Hamill drew 325,000 buys. Events headlined by fights such as BJ Penn vs. Jon Fitch, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua vs. Dan Henderson and Rashad Evans vs. Tito Ortiz all drew numbers that the UFC would kill for these days.

Today, the UFC can’t attract crickets to chirp at its cards. Part of it is undeniably this “oversaturation” thing you’ve heard so much about, with fans finding less and less reason to throw away $65 on a medium-quality pay-per-view when they could see a free UFC event (or maybe even two) a week later. 

A comparably big part of it, however, is the lack of individually interesting fighters in the UFC today. 

The UFC tries to sell events on its name alone and, as such, tries to keep individual fighters from sticking out too much. That has kept fighters from becoming popular enough to warrant a bigger paycheck, sure…but it has also kept fighters from becoming popular enough to get fans to turn on their TVs.

For the hardcore fan, guys like Cub Swanson, Frankie Edgar and Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza are worth tuning in for based on their technical brilliance alone. For less discriminating (or, perhaps, more discriminating) fans, that isn’t enough.

Between its willingness to cut top-10 fighters and willy-nilly gifting of title shots, the UFC has forsaken its status as a sports organization in favor of the (theoretically) more lucrative sports entertainment branding. However, limiting or outright denying fighters the opportunity to mesh with fans makes for an inherently inferior product.

After all, would professional wrestling be at all interesting if it wasn’t character-driven? Would the Harlem Globetrotters have lasted past their inception if not for identifiable ballers like Wilt Chamberlain and Meadowlark Lemon? Would Katniss and Peeta have both survived the Hunger Games if the Capitol didn’t buy into their star-crossed-lovers storyline?

The answer to all three of those questions, of course, is no.

So while Dana White has taken every opportunity to insult fighters like Roy Nelson, Jason Miller and Ben Askren for daring to stick out, the biggest loser in all that has been his company.

 

A New Hope…?

While the UFC may have shot its foot with its commitment to reducing every card to 11 Fighter A vs. Fighter B affairs, it seems to be realizing the error of its ways of late. While it hasn’t quite flung open the doors to letting fighters freely self-promote, the UFC is acknowledging and appreciating the power that a bit of flair can bring. 

In the coming days, Donald Cerrone and Conor McGregor will both headline cards.

Cerrone, long regarded as one of the better fighters in the lightweight division, has only recently become a steadily pushed presence on cards. Part of it is because fans were forced to take notice of his amazing finishing power, but an equally important part of that has been his full-on “Cowboy” persona.

McGregor stood out among the European circuit because of both his skills and nutty persona. It was his bombast, however, that made him an overnight sensation and earned him a spot on the stacked UFC Fight Night 26 card and, in turn, headliner status in just his third UFC fight.

The UFC is still being very selective in terms of who it allows to stand out—Cerrone is a big-time company man and McGregor is the backbone to the promotion’s presence in a potentially lucrative market—but the UFC seems to be appreciating the fact that, no matter how badly it wants to sell tickets with its brand name alone, it just isn’t happening.

Still, Zuffa seems to be softening its no-nonsense-from-its-fighters stance.

Will the company accept that fans caring about individual fighters is an important part about getting fans to care about the UFC in any real way? Only time will tell.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Fight Night 45: Live Results, Play-by-Play and Main Card Highlights

UFC Fight Night 45 hits Atlantic City on Wednesday evening, and Bleacher Report will be here to give you all the details on the event.
No. 6-ranked contender Donald Cerrone defeated No. 7-ranked Jim Miller by knockout in the evening’s main event. He wo…

UFC Fight Night 45 hits Atlantic City on Wednesday evening, and Bleacher Report will be here to give you all the details on the event.

No. 6-ranked contender Donald Cerrone defeated No. 7-ranked Jim Miller by knockout in the evening’s main event. He worked the body early, got Miller to drop his hands and finished with a massive head kick. An amazing performance.

10 more bouts filled out the card with only two fights going to the judge’s scorecards. It was a great night of fights.

 

UFC Fight Night 45 Quick Results

Donald Cerrone defeats Jim Miller by KO at 3:31 of the second round
Edson Barboza defeats Evan Dunham by TKO at 3:06 of the first round
Rick Story defeats Leonardo Mafra via submission (arm-triangle) at 2:12 of the second round
Joe Proctor defeats Justin Salas by TKO at 3:27 of the second round
John Lineker defeats Alptekin Ozkilic by TKO at 4:51 of the third round
Lucas Martins defeats Alex White by KO at 2:08 of the third round
Gleison Tibau defats Pat Healy by unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)
Leslie Smith defeats Jessamyn Duke by TKO at 2:24 of the first round
Aljamain Sterling defeats Hugo Viana by TKO at 3:50 of the third round
Yosdenis Cedeno defeats Jerrod Sanders by TKO (retirement) at 5:00 of the first round
Claudia Gadelha defeats Tina Lahdemaki by unanimous decision (30-26, 30-27, 30-27)

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

McGregor vs. Brandao: A Complete Guide to UFC Fight Night 46

Hoist up the Irish tricolour and put on your day-drinking pants. Here comes UFC Fight Night 46, straight out of fightin’ Dublin, Ireland.
I might as well go ahead and use up all my dumb stereotypes, just as the UFC is using up all of&nbs…

Hoist up the Irish tricolour and put on your day-drinking pants. Here comes UFC Fight Night 46, straight out of fightin‘ Dublin, Ireland.

I might as well go ahead and use up all my dumb stereotypes, just as the UFC is using up all of its own Irishness this Saturday for its triumphant return to The Emerald Isle. No less than four Irish fighters—five, if you count Norman Parkepopulate this card. Not bad, considering there was nary an Irishman to be found on the UFC roster 18 months ago.

If not all of this is because of Conor McGregor, a lot of it certainly is.

This is the UFC’s second event in Ireland and the first in five years. The promotion is not going back because it has a hankering for an authentic boxty, although a good boxty can make for a simple but filling meal. 

It’s almost entirely on the shoulders of McGregor, the fast-talking, sharp-dressing, hard-striking 26-year-old Dubliner who has taken the UFC featherweight division by storm and happens to be making his comeback fight on this card, following an 11-month absence after ACL repair surgery.

McGregor is the headline, but he has a real challenge in Brazilian bull Diego Brandao. Cathal Pendred, a standout from the recently concluded season of The Ultimate Fighter, helps round out the national intrigue. But there’s plenty of good stuff up and down the card, which begins at 3 p.m. ET Saturday afternoon and airs entirely on UFC Fight Pass, the company’s subscription streaming service.

Here’s a complete guide to the action, including information capsules, predictions and viewing coordinates for each and every bout on the slate.

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UFC Champions After Their Title Reign: Heavyweight

The first UFC heavyweight title fight took place all the way back in 1997 between Mark Coleman and Dan Severn. Since that time, the belt has changed hands more than any other division in the UFC.
The heavyweight title is the only UFC title of the origi…

The first UFC heavyweight title fight took place all the way back in 1997 between Mark Coleman and Dan Severn. Since that time, the belt has changed hands more than any other division in the UFC.

The heavyweight title is the only UFC title of the original five weight classes that has not been defended more than twice consecutively. There has never been a wildly dominant champion, and that has allowed anyone to have a serious chance to win the belt.

Every champion’s reign has to end at some point. Some have had long, illustrious careers afterward, while other saw their careers basically end. Several have even been able to reclaim their lost belts.

Let’s check out what every UFC heavyweight champion has been able to accomplish after his title reign.

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5 Current MMA Fighters Who Got Better After the Age of 30

Father Time hates MMA fighters. 
He hates almost all athletes, really (except NFL kickers), but he’s especially unkind to the select few who choose to fashion their careers inside a steel cage.
In basketball, when a player ages and slows down, he …

Father Time hates MMA fighters. 

He hates almost all athletes, really (except NFL kickers), but he’s especially unkind to the select few who choose to fashion their careers inside a steel cage.

In basketball, when a player ages and slows down, he starts missing routine layups. He starts getting burned on defense. He can’t finish that breakaway dunk with the same pizzazz.

He turns into 2014 NBA Finals Dwyane Wade.

In MMA, however, an aging fighter’s shortcomings become painfully obvious once the door locks and the referee claps his hands.

The result is not an embarrassing, shrug-it-off-and-chuckle missed field goal; it’s unconsciousness. It’s humiliation. It’s frantic taps for help.

For the vast majority of fighters, age slows them down and beats them into retirement. It’s not pretty or glamorous. 

That’s the fight game. 

Other fighters, however, flip Father Time the bird and tell him to stay away for now. There’s work to be done, and, at 30 years old (and up), they’re just hitting their stride. 

To honor those who defeated Mr. Time and put on their best performances after the age of 30, I present the following slideshow. 

Click on to see who kicks off the list. 

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