Killing the King: Benson Henderson UFC Lightweight Champion

Those of you who have followed my work since my time at Bloody Elbow will be familiar with my Killing the King series, but it has been quite some time since I wrote a piece in this series. The Killing the King series is my attempt to hypothetically tak…

Those of you who have followed my work since my time at Bloody Elbow will be familiar with my Killing the King series, but it has been quite some time since I wrote a piece in this series. The Killing the King series is my attempt to hypothetically take apart the champions of each UFC division.

It is the great temptation of anyone in the MMA media to simply declare that a fighter was “too good” or “hungrier” to explain away any victory but this causes us to forget the very nature of fighting.

Everyone is making mistakes all the time. It is not about who is making the least mistakes, but who forces and capitalizes on the most mistakes from his opponent. 

The moment we forget that and start treating Anderson Silva, Jon Jones or Fedor Emelianenko like gods, we suddenly lose sight of their humanity, their vulnerability and in fact what makes them so great. If every fighter is making mistakes—it is a case of finding these mistakes and working out which challengers are in the best position to capitalize.

I should hope I don’t have to tell my readers that men who have won UFC belts are not slouches and most (with rare exceptions such as Brock Lesnar) have truly been tested by a wide selection of opponents on their way there. Most have fought at least one good striker, one good wrestler, a dangerous puncher and so on.

Yes, it will take a lot more than “will to win”, “wanting it more” or “scary power” to commit divisional regicide in any of the UFC’s weight classes. This series is as much for my own enjoyment than that of my readers—it is simply fun for me to examine the greatest fighters in the world with a fine tooth comb—but I hope my readers can get some enjoyment out of this too.

 

Being Benson Henderson

With two successful title defenses already in the bag, Benson Henderson is well on the way to being remembered as one of the best in his division’s history. The two things which interest me so much about Henderson are

1) his continued improvement and his carrying a new skill or strategy into almost every fight,

2) his being yet another wrestler who has learned to kick well. This type of fighter is still rare but because of their wrestling pedigree they can open up with kicks like no-one else in MMA can afford to. Cheick Kongo kicks a lot more fluidly and dangerously than Jon Jones (watch his Muay Thai career)—but he is limited to using his mediocre boxing in MMA because he lacks ability in wrestling and jiu jitsu.

Benson Henderson’s great strengths are obvious to anyone who has seen his bouts—he can fight at a frantic pace for five rounds and has brilliant wrestling.

Furthermore he can cause a scramble seemingly whenever he is in trouble on the ground and while he sometimes misses a kick and gives away a bodylock from the back he can often channel the spirit of Kazushi Sakuraba and threaten the standing kimura to get his opponent off of him. 

Henderson is a hard enough puncher to trouble his opponents on the feet but the majority of his success there comes from his movement and snappy kicking prowess. Coming from a Tae Kwon Do background, Henderson seems adept in kicking without the ‘set up step,’ which is prevalent in Muay Thai.

Henderson simply picks his leg up and snaps his shin or foot against his opponent with little in the way of telegraphing. In Henderson’s title-winning effort against Frankie Edgar, though Edgar was able to catch many of Henderson’s kicks, he often ate the power of the kick because he didn’t have the time or the warning to step in the same direction as the kick.

Henderson’s low kicks also serve as a powerful point scorer and have the power to really beat up an opponent’s stance as he did to Frankie Edgar in the opening rounds of their second bout.

As a wrestler AND a good kicker with good movement—Henderson represented a nightmare opponent for Nate Diaz. The Diaz brothers have never had much to offer wrestlers except the chance of a submission, but on the feet was where Henderson surprised many casual fans. 

The Diaz brothers’ lead leg is almost always turned in, exposing the tender back of their lead leg for kicking, which will also buckle their stance and prevent them from countering. Carlos Condit received criticism when he ruthlessly exploited Nick Diaz‘s footwork in this way, but Henderson was able to do the same thing while spicing his performance with hard punches and periods of frantic striking and scrambling on the ground.

Henderson’s best punch is undoubtedly his counter right hand. Far from a banger, Henderson’s successes on the feet have come from drawing an opponent in and catching them with a short right on the snout. This could spell trouble for Gilbert Melendez for reasons I will touch on later this week…

If I could find a fault with this method it is quite simply that Bendo doesn’t have many ways of drawing his opponent on this counter punch. Against Frankie Edgar he continually showed a backhanded jab with no hope of connecting—in order to get Edgar to come back at him.

A few great southpaws have used a slapping, backhanded jab in order to give the opponent a parry and invite a returned jab. That is when they counter. In the case of Naseem Hamed, he would lean back and land a right hook over the opponent’s counter jab. In the case of star of the moment, Guillermo Rigondeaux–a counter left straight as at 2:50 of the video below.

Henderson would simply withdraw his right hand while retreating and land a good jab on Edgar’s snout. Despite being a fighter who is touted as having great head movement, Edgar has shown to have trouble with linear punches against his last two opponents. While he moves constantly—Edgar must always enter on a straight line, and he can often be forced to eat a shot as he does so. 

What flaws can be seen in the obviously well rounded game of Benson Henderson then?

 

Ringcraft

As always the issue of ring craft is an important one. While Henderson often uses footwork to get out of the way of strikes, he does not always show the best awareness of where he is in the cage. Often he will find himself in an exchange near the fence and not have anywhere to retreat. 

Clay Guida was able to drop Henderson in one such exchange, and Frankie Edgar was able to do the same in their second bout. 

No

one exploited the weaknesses in Henderson’s cage placement quite as well as Anthony Pettis, the last man to defeat Henderson. Most folks should know by now that Pettis loves to pressure an opponent towards the fence. 

Not only did Pettis land his magnificent rebounding kick off the cage, but he often uses the cage to take away one direction of movement from an opponent so that he can attempt a spinning back kick or another power strike. Pettis will also attempt to force a shot from the opponent and look to catch them with a hard knee.

Against Henderson, Pettis backed the WEC champion towards the cage, then took a step back and allowed Henderson to attempt to fight his way out from the fence with punches—then countered with strikes of his own.

It is not coincidence that Pettis ends up in position to use his spectacular techniques – he will physically push an opponent towards the cage if he has to (as he did with Donald Cerrone—or use a push kick to get them there, as he did against Henderson.

As with many of the facets I look at in this series—it is hard to tell how Henderson’s ring craft has come along since these issues because it has not really been tested.

Frankie Edgar is a fighter who likes to move around the outside of the octagon anyway, and only in the last two rounds of the rematch moved Henderson to between himself and the cage. Equally, Nate Diaz shares his brother’s poor footwork and struggles to cut off the octagon unless his opponent is wilting from exhaustion.

 

Lack of Set Ups

The second major fault in Henderson’s striking is that he rarely sets up his kicks. While I pointed out his ability to kick straight from his stance is a unique skill and an enviable one, it should be used to bolster an orthodox striking game, rather than replace orthodox set ups and technique.

While Frankie Edgar was forced to eat the power of Henderson’s kicks when Henderson threw them in the first bout, he did catch a great many of Henderson’s kicks to the point where he looked almost telepathic. We all know that the jab is faster than the rear hand, because of the extra distance that the rear hand has to cover—but think how much further even the fastest rear leg kick has to travel. 

In his rematch with Edgar, Henderson focused more intensely on the low kick which is much harder to throw without the set up step. If not set up with punches, the low kick can easily be seen coming and against Guida, Edgar and Diaz, Henderson has ended up turning his back to his opponents off of his missed kicks.

Henderson’s tendency to throw one strike at a time from the outside also plays against him sometimes. While pot-shotting is perfect for fighting Nick Diaz and Frankie Edgar—offensive strikers—Anthony Pettis had his success against Henderson on the counter.

On the few occasions which Henderson threw more than one strike in combination he had great success against Pettis and didn’t offer such large openings for counter strikes.

 

Conclusions

It seems as though the best method for at least out striking Henderson (the field in which I can offer the most insight) seems to be in countering his most common habits. As Henderson almost always engages with kicks, baiting the low kick and withdrawing the leg before dashing in with punches as he misses seems like a method which might work well to carry the fight to Henderson.

With regards to boxing—Henderson has a solid left hand but it is not nearly as dexterous as his right—and it often falls out of position in exchanges (such as when Frankie Edgar hurt him). Circling toward Henderson’s left side would afford the opportunity to counter strike either off of a slow Henderson left straight, or in muffling a left roundhouse kick with the forearms and coming back with a punching combination before Henderson could set his foot down.

If a fighter were able to pressure Henderson in this way without conceding the takedown—drawing kicks and coming back with counter combinations—he could hopefully either hurt Henderson or put him on the run. When Henderson feels himself near the fence is when he is tempted to fight his way out—this is certainly the point at which he seems most vulnerable.

Of course this is all hypothetical and many of these holes may not even exist anymore. Gilbert Melendez might not even try to exploit them.

Hopefully UFC on Fox 7 will offer us further insight—but it should at least provide us with an entertaining title scrap. 

Jack Slack breaks down over 70 striking tactics employed by 20 elite strikers in his first ebookAdvanced Striking, and discusses the fundamentals of strategy in his new ebookElementary Striking.

Jack can be found on TwitterFacebook and at his blog: Fights Gone By.

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Diaz Coach Cesar Gracie: ‘Reports of Our Demise Are Greatly Exaggerated’

Despite rumors of turmoil at Cesar Gracie Jiu-Jitsu, head coach Cesar Gracie can still be seen grinning from ear to ear with star pupils Nick and Nate Diaz at his side.Gracie posted this image on Twitter after a training session:Concerns rose about the…

Despite rumors of turmoil at Cesar Gracie Jiu-Jitsu, head coach Cesar Gracie can still be seen grinning from ear to ear with star pupils Nick and Nate Diaz at his side.

Gracie posted this image on Twitter after a training session:

Concerns rose about the future of Team Cesar Gracie following Nick’s retirement and Nate seeking new management.

After losing to Georges St-Pierre at UFC 158, Nick once again announced he was leaving MMA unless he either received a rematch or a super fight with Anderson Silva. His decision is expected to stand, with neither bout appearing to be in the realm of possibility at this time.

At the post-fight press conference (via MMAFighting.com), UFC President Dana White claimed Gracie was a “huge part of the problem” behind Nick’s issues, which included multiple failed appearances at mandatory pre-fight events.

Even Gracie admitted in an appearance on The MMA Hour that he would have to sit down and have a discussion with Nick regarding his future with the team.

A few weeks after Nick’s loss, MMA journalist Ariel Helwani broke the story that Nate would no longer be managed by Gracie. According to the report, he had moved on to new manager Mike Kogan.

Despite a change in management, there was never any indication Nate was ever leaving Team Caesar Gracie.

The team is currently all accounted for and awaiting Gilbert Melendez’s lightweight title shot against Benson Henderson on Saturday at UFC on FOX 7. Nate will also be in action that night against former Strikeforce lightweight champ Josh Thomson.

After nearly a year hiatus, Jake Shields will also be returning from his suspension to take on Tyron Woodley at UFC 161.

As for Nick, your guess is as good as ours.

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Josh Thomson Targets Title Shot After Beating Nate Diaz at UFC on Fox 7

 UFC lightweight Josh Thomson has been around the block and back during his MMA career, and he’s not planning on wasting any time now that he’s returning to the Octagon. It’s been nearly nine years since Thomson called the UFC home.  The last…

 

UFC lightweight Josh Thomson has been around the block and back during his MMA career, and he’s not planning on wasting any time now that he’s returning to the Octagon.

It’s been nearly nine years since Thomson called the UFC home.  The last time Thomson was in the promotion, he lost his job only because the UFC decided they were going to drop the lightweight division altogether.

That sent Thomson packing over to Strikeforce where he became lightweight champion at one point, and while he’s battled injuries and time off on several occasions, he’s managed to always stay in the peripheral vision of anyone spotting top-ten fighters.

Now Thomson gets his chance to come roaring back in the UFC with a fight against former title contender Nate Diaz this weekend at UFC on Fox 7.  He’ll be featured on the main card in a showcase fight against one of the top names in his division.

As honored as he is to get this spot on day one back in the UFC, Thomson isn’t returning to the promotion for main card slots and fun fights.  He’s gunning to get back to the top of the sport in a hurry.

“I’m not content with just ‘I’m on the main card in the UFC on Fox.’  I’m not settling for that,” Thomson told Bleacher Report’s Great Debate Radio recently. “I feel like with a big win here, I’m looking forward to being the person who gets the next title shot.  I’m looking at the bigger picture. The big picture is to get this win and to basically settle a lot of those minds because there was a lot of controversy about me and Gil in our last fight and that should be me fighting Benson (Henderson).

“So with a big win here, I think that puts me right in the position where I want to be to get my next title shot.”

Thomson’s last fight in May 2012 was a razor-close split decision loss to his old rival and former Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez. Following that fight, Melendez is now fighting UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson, and Thomson is ready to win against Diaz and secure his spot atop the contender’s race.

Thomson is savvy enough to know that the UFC rarely places a fighter in a title bout off of one win, but he also sees the landscape of the lightweight division right now. There is no clear cut No. 1 contender behind Melendez currently, especially now with former WEC champion Anthony Pettis venturing down to 145 pounds to face Jose Aldo in August.

“Honestly, I would have seen had I fought Nate and get a win maybe they’d put me against (Anthony) Pettis before the title shot, but now Pettis is dropping to 145.  There really is no one,” Thomson stated.   “Not only that, but like Gray (Maynard) would be the next one, but Gray has just fought twice for the title against Frankie (Edgar). 

“I really could be wrong. They could throw him right back in there especially with a big win over T.J. Grant.  But I’m really just putting myself in the best position that fits me and my career and that’s getting a big win and leaving it up to them on hopefully putting me in for the next title shot. That would be the best situation possible.”

Thomson’s title shot aspirations go nowhere if he doesn’t get past Diaz this Saturday, and he knows that’s going to be a daunting task.  Always a student of the game, Thomson has watched a lot of fights lately where people seemed to have figured out the Diaz style of fighting.  From Nate’s loss to Henderson in December to his brother Nick’s defeats at the hands of Georges St-Pierre and Carlos Condit, Thomson has reviewed plenty of tape to see where he can best Diaz this weekend.

“I looked at the Benson fight, I also looked at the Carlos Condit fight, and the Georges St-Pierre fights with his brother,” said Thomson. “All three of those fights, you can take a little bit of each one and really try to focus in on all the high points of each fight and try to use those to my benefit.”

He also knows that the Diaz brothers are notorious for dragging their opponents into their game with some in-fight taunting.  To combat that, Thomson literally had training partners shouting at him and trying to goad him into a fight just like Diaz will do on Saturday. 

The preparation he hopes will pay off because he’s going to follow the rule of tuning out whatever Diaz does inside the cage, that way he can unleash his best attacks to thwart the Stockton native from doing much, if any, damage at all.

“That’s the key with all three of those guys—they didn’t let that stuff get to them,” Thomson said referring back to the fights he watched where the Diaz brothers lost.   “When they started doing that, they really tried to capitalize when the showboating started.  Once the fighters came in with the mentality of, ‘I’m not going to let you get to me like that,’ I think they had pretty much already won the fight.”

Thomson wants to employ a similar strategy to beat Diaz and then target the winner of Henderson and Melendez, which happens to be the main event of the same card he’s competing on Saturday night.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained first-hand unless otherwise noted.

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[VIDEO] UFC on Fox 7: Melendez vs. Henderson — ‘Road to the Octagon’ Preview Show

(Props: YouTube.com/UFC)

It’s as simple as this — Saturday’s UFC on Fox 7: Henderson vs. Melendez card features top-ranked fighters and heavy stakes. As such, we love getting a lil’ something extra in anticipation of it. This UFC on Fox 7: Road to the Octagon documentary gives us just that, including behind-the-scenes footage with Benson Henderson (competing at a Jiu Jitsu tournament with his mom, working out with the NFL’s Larry Fitzgerald), Gilbert Melendez (at home and at work with his ex-fighter fiance and business partner, chilling with his tight-knit ‘Skrap Pack’), Frank Mir (crying, and on a flight to New Mexico to conduct the first training camp of his career away from his wife and twenty kids) and more pre-fight action from Josh Thomson, Nate Diaz, and Daniel Cormier.

It’s a good way to waste your lunch hour today — better, at least, than talking to that weird guy at the office who always just eats a can of soup for lunch, like, every day. (Seriously? Get some protein in there, you’re a grown ass man.) Anyway, watch it and tune in Saturday. It’s free, so you’ve got no excuse not to, fight fans.

Elias Cepeda


(Props: YouTube.com/UFC)

It’s as simple as this — Saturday’s UFC on Fox 7: Henderson vs. Melendez card features top-ranked fighters and heavy stakes. As such, we love getting a lil’ something extra in anticipation of it. This UFC on Fox 7: Road to the Octagon documentary gives us just that, including behind-the-scenes footage with Benson Henderson (competing at a Jiu Jitsu tournament with his mom, working out with the NFL’s Larry Fitzgerald), Gilbert Melendez (at home and at work with his ex-fighter fiance and business partner, chilling with his tight-knit ‘Skrap Pack’), Frank Mir (crying, and on a flight to New Mexico to conduct the first training camp of his career away from his wife and twenty kids) and more pre-fight action from Josh Thomson, Nate Diaz, and Daniel Cormier.

It’s a good way to waste your lunch hour today — better, at least, than talking to that weird guy at the office who always just eats a can of soup for lunch, like, every day. (Seriously? Get some protein in there, you’re a grown ass man.) Anyway, watch it and tune in Saturday. It’s free, so you’ve got no excuse not to, fight fans.

Elias Cepeda

Nate Diaz Drops Cesar Gracie as Manager, Picks Up Mike Kogan

The Diaz brothers are at it again. This time it’s Nate who’s heading to the drama well to stir up some more talk among MMA fans.According to Ariel Helwani, Diaz has dropped Cesar Gracie as his manager and picked up Mike Kogan.”As just reported on @ufct…

The Diaz brothers are at it again. This time it’s Nate who’s heading to the drama well to stir up some more talk among MMA fans.

According to Ariel Helwani, Diaz has dropped Cesar Gracie as his manager and picked up Mike Kogan.

“As just reported on , according to sources v. close to Nate Diaz, his new manager is .”

This comes on the heels of Nate’s older brother Nick complaining about not having a proper camp in the weeks leading up to his clash with Georges St-Pierre at UFC 158.

“I felt like everyone knew I had it coming, like Cesar knew I had it coming, everyone knew I had it coming, and then as soon as I had it coming, no one was around to help me,” Diaz said during the post-fight press conference.

“The only ones that came to help me  was my sambo coach Gil Castillo. And you know, Jake (Shields) and Gil (Melendez), they obviously, they can’t train hard right now, they have fights coming up” (via Bleacher Report).

If Gracie was having issues getting a proper camp together for Nick in the biggest fight of his life, it must be difficult for the other guys in the gym. Of course Nate’s change of heart may have something to do with Dana White‘s recent comments about Gracie being “a huge part of the problem” with Nick’s unreliability.

As we’ve seen in the past with Golden Glory, the UFC doesn’t care to be embroiled in a debate with a fighter’s management and will push the fighters to the side.

Nate hasn’t left Gracie’s camp entirely, and it’s expected he’ll still train there, as it’s the only place Nate has been. And training with guys like Jake Shields and Gilbert Melendez for so long, I’d assume their bond is pretty tight.

Even if Nate doesn’t leave entirely, it’s a good move on his part, as it seems like Gracie can’t handle being a manager and a coach at the same time (based on Nick’s comments). It’s probably best for Gracie to focus on just making Nate a better fighter instead of shooting out texts looking to fly guys in.

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Nate Diaz Drops Cesar Gracie as Manager, Picks Up Mike Kogan

The Diaz brothers are at it again. This time it’s Nate who’s heading to the drama well to stir up some more talk among MMA fans.According to Ariel Helwani, Diaz has dropped Cesar Gracie as his manager and picked up Mike Kogan.”As just reported on @ufct…

The Diaz brothers are at it again. This time it’s Nate who’s heading to the drama well to stir up some more talk among MMA fans.

According to Ariel Helwani, Diaz has dropped Cesar Gracie as his manager and picked up Mike Kogan.

“As just reported on , according to sources v. close to Nate Diaz, his new manager is .”

This comes on the heels of Nate’s older brother Nick complaining about not having a proper camp in the weeks leading up to his clash with Georges St-Pierre at UFC 158.

“I felt like everyone knew I had it coming, like Cesar knew I had it coming, everyone knew I had it coming, and then as soon as I had it coming, no one was around to help me,” Diaz said during the post-fight press conference.

“The only ones that came to help me  was my sambo coach Gil Castillo. And you know, Jake (Shields) and Gil (Melendez), they obviously, they can’t train hard right now, they have fights coming up” (via Bleacher Report).

If Gracie was having issues getting a proper camp together for Nick in the biggest fight of his life, it must be difficult for the other guys in the gym. Of course Nate’s change of heart may have something to do with Dana White‘s recent comments about Gracie being “a huge part of the problem” with Nick’s unreliability.

As we’ve seen in the past with Golden Glory, the UFC doesn’t care to be embroiled in a debate with a fighter’s management and will push the fighters to the side.

Nate hasn’t left Gracie’s camp entirely, and it’s expected he’ll still train there, as it’s the only place Nate has been. And training with guys like Jake Shields and Gilbert Melendez for so long, I’d assume their bond is pretty tight.

Even if Nate doesn’t leave entirely, it’s a good move on his part, as it seems like Gracie can’t handle being a manager and a coach at the same time (based on Nick’s comments). It’s probably best for Gracie to focus on just making Nate a better fighter instead of shooting out texts looking to fly guys in.

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