UFC 178 Results: The Real Winners and Losers from Johnson vs. Cariaso

UFC 178 has to be one of the oddest MMA cards devised in recent memory. It was also one of the best.
The reason behind its head-scratchingness is simple. First, the card was astoundingly deep, rife with a richness of talent and storylines rare in an ag…

UFC 178 has to be one of the oddest MMA cards devised in recent memory. It was also one of the best.

The reason behind its head-scratchingness is simple. First, the card was astoundingly deep, rife with a richness of talent and storylines rare in an age when the average pay-per-view event is only a mile marker on the larger interstate of fandom. But at the same time, it was bereft in the spot that usually matters most.

That’s the main event we’re talking about, where flyweight champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson defended the strap against Chris Cariaso, a plucky challenger who nevertheless had never defeated a serious contender in the thin 125-pound division when the UFC deposited this title fight in his lap.

As for Johnson himself, he’s garnered a reputation as one of MMA’s most talented competitors, but isn’t exactly the go-to guy when you want to generate copy for a fight card.

Luckily, Johnson got a little help from his friends. The charisma cavalry came in the form of one Conor McGregor, the 26-year-old Irish sensation who has earned a frenzied following after only three contests in the UFC Octagon. The Blarney-blessed knockout artist wasted no time making his fight with Dustin Poirier—easily his toughest opponent to date—an intensely personal matchup, and fans around the world were tuned up accordingly.

McGregor, as is becoming his habit, quickly outshone the rest of the card with his bottomless appetite for interviews and adoration, but there were metaphorical powder kegs metaphorically stashed across the MGM Grand Garden Arena when the curtain rose Saturday evening.

Former Bellator champion Eddie Alvarez made his debut against the hard-charging Donald Cerrone; no way that one doesn’t end with some fireworks. And former UFC bantamweight titlist Dominick Cruz returned to action after three long years of recovery from a litany of serious injuries.

And there was plenty more intrigue to go around. As usual, the final stat lines only reveal so much. Here are the real winners and losers from UFC 178. (Full card results available at the end, if you’re one of those types.) 

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Chris Weidman Injures His Hand, Fight vs. Vitor Belfort Postponed Until February

UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman has been forced to withdraw from his scheduled UFC 181 title fight opposite Vitor Belfort:

Belfort vs. Weidman moved to February, according to Vitor. Damn.
— Guilherme Cruz (@guicruzzz) September 22, 2014

UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman has been forced to withdraw from his scheduled UFC 181 title fight opposite Vitor Belfort:

The news was confirmed shortly thereafter by MMAFighting.com’s Ariel Helwani:

According to a post from Belfort‘s (h/t MMAFighting.com’s Guilherme Cruz), Weidman suffered a broken hand in training and will be unable to make the date. UFC President Dana White would later take to Twitter to confirm the story, saying Weidman had a hairline fracture that required him to wear a cast for four weeks. 

The UFC, however, was quick to find a worthy replacement for UFC 181’s headline spot, with Helwani reporting that the welterweight title rematch between Johny Hendricks and Robbie Lawler will be moved to the December card.

If the fight is indeed moved to February, it’s worth noting that January features two different pay-per-views in UFC 182, headlined by Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier, and UFC 183, headlined by Nick Diaz vs. Anderson Silva. There is just one event slated for February at this point, being the UFC’s return to London’s O2 Arena on February 28.

With that in mind, it is possible we may see a late February double-header, an absolute pileup of pay-per-view cards within a small window of time, or the fight nudged back slightly further to early March, rather than February.

Weidman withdrawing from the fight is just the latest example of UFC champions’ chronic injury troubles in 2014. There have been just 11 UFC title fights in 2014 between nine different champions with four more scheduled. If those four all hold up, it will add up to a shockingly low 15 title fights in 2014, which averages out to under two fights per champion.

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Jon Jones out of UFC 178, Fight with Daniel Cormier Moved to UFC 182

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones is withdrawing from his UFC 178 title defense opposite Daniel Cormier due to a leg injury. Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter first reported the news on Twitter, which the UFC then confirmed on Fox Sports 1’s …

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones is withdrawing from his UFC 178 title defense opposite Daniel Cormier due to a leg injury. Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter first reported the news on Twitter, which the UFC then confirmed on Fox Sports 1’s America’s Pregame news show:

Botter reported via Twitter the specific nature of the injury suffered in training:

The bout with Cormier is being rescheduled for UFC 182, which will take place on Jan. 3, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nevada. A flyweight title fight between champion Demetrious Johnson and Chris Cariaso is moving from UFC 177 to UFC 178, per the UFC’s official Twitter account, and will likely serve as the card’s new main event.

Jones and top light heavyweight contender Cormier have been engaged in a heated rivalry. The beef started years ago, when Cormier was still competing as a heavyweight in Strikeforce. 

Cormier eventually moved down to the light heavyweight division, successfully defeating UFC newcomer Patrick Cummins and Pride legend Dan Henderson.

When former top contender Alexander Gustafsson was forced to withdraw from his UFC 178 fight with Jones, Cormier stepped in, and the two immediately began exchanging words.The rivalry came to a head last week, when the two fighters clashed in a massive brawl in front of the assembled media.

This turn of events is unfortunate, as UFC 178 was one of the strongest top-to-bottom cards the UFC had put together in a long while. It still includes the returns of former bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz and women’s bantamweight contender Cat Zingano, a crucial middleweight tilt between Tim Kennedy and Yoel Romero, a featherweight grudge match between Conor McGregor and Dustin Poirier and much more.

While the majority of the card remains intact, the loss of Jones vs. Cormier is profound. 

Ben Fowkles of MMAJunkie and our own Jeremy Botter summed up the mood of the MMA community with their respective tweets. 

 

Stick with Bleacher Report for more details as they become available.

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Examining the Growth and Popularity of Women’s Mixed Martial Arts

It is uncontroversial to say that sport is a male-dominated enterprise at almost every level, from participation to consumption. Socially constructed gender differences mean that it has been difficult for women to become accepted in an arena that place…

It is uncontroversial to say that sport is a male-dominated enterprise at almost every level, from participation to consumption. Socially constructed gender differences mean that it has been difficult for women to become accepted in an arena that places an overwhelming emphasis on masculinity.

This disparity has been reflected in the respective media attention male and female sports are afforded, with 96 percent of sports news being dedicated to men, and women accounting for a mere 2 percent of network news and ESPN SportsCenter coverage, according to a 2009 study sponsored by the USC Center for Feminist Research.

What are the reasons for such a prohibitive gap in media coverage? Consumer interest drives content, and the interest just hasn’t been there for women’s sport. There appears to be an issue with perception, according to Professor Dale Spencer, author of Ultimate Fighting and Embodiment: Violence, Gender, and Mixed Martial Arts.

“There’s a general attitude in relation to women’s sport,” Spencer argues, “and what leads to the lack of viewership is the fact that women’s sports aren’t at the caliber of men’s sport. Therefore, it’s not worthy of being watched, and there’s this bigger, stronger, faster mentality.

“The valorisation of bigger, stronger, faster ends up taking away from women’s sport because, in the main, women’s sport is characterised by more emphasis placed on things like technique. There’s not as much emphasis placed on being ultra-muscular, so there’s that twofold effect, and I think in the economy of time, that attitude takes away from people wanting to watch women’s sports.”

With this in mind, the rapid growth and booming popularity of women’s mixed martial arts seems utterly counterintuitive. Here we have a sport that, perhaps more than any other, showcases traits traditionally associated with masculinity, such as strength, aggression, toughness and competitiveness. Despite this, female mixed martial artists have almost achieved promotional parity with their male counterparts.

Women’s tennis is arguably the only other sport that can make such a claim. It’s tempting to think that individual sports are intrinsically more egalitarian, but it may have more to do with the way sports like tennis and MMA have been able to focus on marketing individual athletes.

“Tennis and MMA have been able to hypersexualise the women who participate in those sports,” claims Spencer, “especially when they already have a certain physical appeal going for them. They’re able to really promote those women and maintain a level of popularity that is roughly equivalent to the male side of the sport, which isn’t necessarily a viable strategy in certain other sports because they aren’t able to shine the spotlight on a single person in the same way.

“In mixed martial arts, they’ve been able to hypersexualise the women, from someone like Gina Carano—who was the original queen of MMA—to Ronda Rousey, as well as others who have come along. They’ve been able to tap into that, and at the same time these women display a kind of gutsiness and aggression that is appealing. Men may at first be drawn to the fact that these women are physically attractive, but they have ultimately been able to garner a level of respect based on their technical and physical prowess when they enter the cage.”

Perhaps the most impressive part of the growth of women’s MMA is how it has been able to transcend attitudes toward gender. When it comes to combat sports, there are two distinct types of sexism—from opposite ends of the political spectrum—that women are invariably forced to deal with.

The more conservative brand of sexism concerns traditional attitudes toward gender roles. Traits associated with females include being dependent, emotional, passive, nurturing and submissive.

Pursuing a career in a violent sport like MMA trespasses overtly on male territory and is actively discouraged. It is an attitude that is explicitly oppressive, but it is becoming less and less common as society becomes more progressive.

The second, more liberal brand of sexism concerns the way society tends to infantilise women. Many men are instinctively protective of women and have a visceral reaction to watching them take punishment.

There is nothing sinister about this attitude, and it even seems strange to criticise men for caring too much about the well-being of women, but within the context of MMA, it is something female fighters have been forced to overcome in order to be taken seriously.

How quickly these attitudes have been overcome is maybe the most surprising aspect of how the female side of the sport has developed.

“Originally, [UFC president] Dana White had that attitude towards women fighting, and had that kind of visceral reaction to women hitting each other,” notes Spencer. “Men are conditioned to look at women in that way as a product of culture. When Dana White, who is a businessman first and probably a human being second, saw that considerable amounts of money could be made from someone who could carry women’s MMA, and was at the requisite technical level, he became interested.

“When Ronda Rousey came into play, and seeing her judo toss basically everyone, going almost unchallenged, I wasn’t surprised that I saw her enter the UFC. What I was surprised by was how [the UFC] have gone about promoting WMMA since then. I think that they’ve really tried to not just make it into something that is a one-off, is at the beginning of every fight card, and is kind of ancillary to men’s MMA. It has instead been integrated all the way into main events—they have had their own Ultimate Fighter Show, and they’re about to have another one. So that’s what I’ve been most surprised about.”

It goes without saying that the female side of the sport wouldn’t be where it is today but for Ronda Rousey. The UFC’s women’s bantamweight champion set out to single-handedly change White’s mind about WMMA, as she explained to the Orange County Register in 2012:

It was a goal of mine from the very beginning actually. I just refused to be ignored pretty much. I said to myself, “What would work?” I just thought, “I’m going to make myself so impossible to ignore and make myself into something that they didn’t even know that they needed.”

Before I became a pro I was saying that, so when I was training for my pro debut at King of the Cage is when I first said it on camera. I said, “[Dana White] is going to love me and there’s nothing he can do about it.” I was so sure. You know, I never doubted it.

In light of Rousey’s success, it seems strange that women’s boxing, MMA’s closest sporting relative, hasn’t been able to capture the imagination of the average sports fan in the same way. This is perhaps due to a combination of factors mainly relating to the kind of traditional attitudes discussed earlier.

“I think boxing in the main is a reflection of an older style of masculinity. Those who watch boxing, and those who embrace boxing, are protective and defensive about boxing in relation to MMA,” Spencer argues. “They definitely have perceptions of women holding ring cards and walking around half naked at the events, not putting on a pair of gloves and fighting it out. I think some of the work that has been done relatively recently by [Elise] Paradis (you can find more on this research here) and various other people has kind of shown that women have generally been rejected in boxing circles.”

And what about us, the fans who have embraced WMMA? After all, our interest is what drives the kind of content organisations like the UFC provide. Do MMA fans deserve a pat on the back for how we have embraced the sport’s female athletes?

“I’m afraid to put too much power into the hands of the consumer,” states Spencer. “I think one of the things the UFC has done really well is they’ve carefully crafted a campaign to make people interested in WMMA. At the same time, I think that people who are into MMA are a very variegated group of individuals, so on the one hand you have people who are actual practitioners in some martial art—whether it be Muay Thai, BJJ, boxing—and then you have the beer-drinking fans that know MMA in a very kind of fannish way, in that you have fans of soccer who aren’t very good at soccer.

“You have these different groupings and I think one of the things that the UFC has tried to do is appeal to those different levels. Someone like Rousey appeals to the latter as something nice to look at, but at the same time she appeals to the more knowledgeable group of fans for her technical and athletic prowess. The UFC have definitely engaged in a kind of multi-pronged campaign to make WMMA appealing to those groups.”

With the recent addition of a women’s strawweight division, it seems clear that the UFC is fully committed to promoting its female athletes. Despite the popularity of WMMA, it is easy to forget that women only make up a fraction of the UFC’s roster of fighters. There remains substantial room for growth.

Whatever the reasons for WMMA’s growing appeal, one can only hope that it continues on its current trajectory. It isn’t just important for MMA. Embracing female athletes is an important cultural step, and one that our sport should be proud to be a part of.

 

James MacDonald is a freelance writer and featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. Follow James on Twitter.

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Joe Riggs Accidentally Shoots Himself, Out of Fight with Paulo Thiago

Joe Riggs’ resurgence from small-show journeyman to legitimate welterweight over the last three years has been one of the greatest unsung stories in MMA.
While he won Bellator’s Fight Master series in 2013 and was poised to return to the UFC after more…

Joe Riggs’ resurgence from small-show journeyman to legitimate welterweight over the last three years has been one of the greatest unsung stories in MMA.

While he won Bellator’s Fight Master series in 2013 and was poised to return to the UFC after more than eight years outside the world’s biggest mixed martial arts promotion, his scheduled comeback fight with Paulo Thiago has been scrapped after Riggs suffered accidental gunshot wounds to his hand and leg.

The news was first reported on UFC.com:

We were made aware that newly-signed UFC competitor Joe Riggs was involved in an unfortunate accident last night. While cleaning his permitted firearm (a pistol), the gun discharged, injuring his hand and upper thigh. Riggs was transported to a nearby hospital in Arizona where he is being treated by physicians. We wish Joe a speedy recovery.

According to ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto, Riggs is otherwise fine, and his injuries are not life-threatening.

Naturally, witticisms were exchanged in the immediate aftermath on Twitter:

Riggs was released from the UFC in 2006 following a 2-3 stretch that included wins over Nick Diaz and Jason Von Flue and losses to Matt Hughes, Mike Swick and Diego Sanchez. From there, he split time between Strikeforce and regional shows until 2010, when he requested his release from the now-defunct promotion. 

Eventually, Riggs joined the prominent MMA Lab gym, home to former UFC lightweight champion Ben Henderson, and rattled off five straight wins. He parlayed that success into a spot on Bellator’s Fight Master reality show, which he won in November 2013 by defeating Mike Bronzoulis.

While it seemed as though Riggs would be a steady presence in the promotion and was scheduled to compete in the Season 10 welterweight tournament, fans were surprised to learn that he was signed by the UFC last week.

Unfortunately, this accident is likely to shelve him for the foreseeable future. 

The UFC quickly replaced Riggs with Sean Spencer. Spencer will bring a 2-2 UFC record into his fight with Thiago, most recently losing to Alex Garcia at UFC 171 via split decision.

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