Video: Joe Rogan Breaks Down UFC On FOX 22’s VanZant vs. Waterson Main Event

https://youtu.be/ufjyu_QVW9I

Ahead of Saturday’s UFC On FOX 22: VanZant vs. Waterson event in Sacramento, California, Joe Rogan is back with his “Breakdown” videos for many of the top fights scheduled for the main card.

Featured above is the comp…

vanzant-vs-waterson

https://youtu.be/ufjyu_QVW9I

Ahead of Saturday’s UFC On FOX 22: VanZant vs. Waterson event in Sacramento, California, Joe Rogan is back with his “Breakdown” videos for many of the top fights scheduled for the main card.

Featured above is the complete Joe Rogan Breakdown video for the main event of Saturday’s show, which features UFC Women’s Strawweight contenders Paige VanZant and “The Karate Hottie” Michelle Waterson.

UFC On FOX 22 takes place live from the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California on Saturday, December 17, 2016.

UFC on FOX 22 Predictions: Will PVZ Keep Rising?

The UFC returns with their second-to-last card of the year with tomorrow night’s (Sat., December 17, 2016) UFC on FOX 22 from Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. While it may not be receiving the attention of Ronda Rousey’s long-awaited return in the main event of UFC 207 on December 30, UFC on FOX still presents a

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The UFC returns with their second-to-last card of the year with tomorrow night’s (Sat., December 17, 2016) UFC on FOX 22 from Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California.

While it may not be receiving the attention of Ronda Rousey’s long-awaited return in the main event of UFC 207 on December 30, UFC on FOX still presents a packed main card featuring the potential rise of two women’s strawweight stars, two more young welterweight talents, the final bout of longtime top contender Urijah Faber, and an opening bout set to feature all-out fireworks between Alan Jouban and Mike Perry.

All in all, it’s set to be an action-packed night that sets the stage for the massive curtain-closer on what has been a groundbreaking year for the sport of MMA.

Find out whom we picked to win the main and co-main below.

Paige VanZant vs. Michelle Waterson:

Mike Drahota:

This is a bout that’s perfect for a FOX card, as either VanZant or Waterson will be made into one of MMA’s major future stars in front of a large audience, and a back-and-forth fight will boost both women’s popularity exponentially. I think ’12 Gauge’ is one of the toughest outs in the 115-pound division, although that can lead her to take too much damage, like in her bout with Rose Namajunas. She showed some flashy knockout ability in her most recent win over Bec Rawlings, yet the victory masked some deficiencies in her game.

It’s true Waterson has the experience edge on VanZant overall, however, “The Karate Hottie” still has much to prove after only UFC win over Angela Magana in July 2015. Injuries seem to be the only thing holding the former Invicta champion from rapidly climbing the rankings, and she clearly has all the tools to do just that. While she needs to shake the rust of only two fights in over two years, I think Waterson has the fight smarts and well-rounded technique to outlast the brute assault of ’12 Gauge.’ Waterson by unanimous decision.

Rory Kernaghan:

In this strawweight main event, I have to say I really like Paige VanZant’s chances. She’s really starting to grow as a fighter, and what we saw in her last fight was nothing short of incredible. She’s proved to be durable in the past too. Michelle Waterson undoubtedly has her chops in the striking, and has showed rapid improvement in the submission game too. It’s more of a gut pick for me, and I’m taking PVZ by decision.

Mike Henken:

A key factor that went into my prediction for this fight was Waterson’s injuries and lengthy layoff, as she hasn’t competed since July 2015, while VanZant has competed three times during that time. I feel as if “The Karate Hottie” is undoubtedly the more polished striker and she comes from one of the best camps in the world in Jackson’s MMA. I simply feel as if “12 Gauge” will look to push the pace and attempt to out grapple Waterson, which is why I see her securing a victory in her adopted home of Sacramento. VanZant by unanimous decision.

Mandatory Credit Joshua Dahl for USA TODAY Sports
Mandatory Credit Joshua Dahl for USA TODAY Sports

Sage Northcutt vs. Mickey Gall:

Mike Drahota:

It seems like there’s a trend for this card, as the co-main event also features a match between two highly marketable potential future stars. Northcutt has been groomed to be just that ever since he cam into the UFC on the heels of his discovery n Dana White’s “Looking For A Fight,” and Gall was famously CM Punk’s first opponent in the UFC, decimating the former WWE champ with a brutal first-round submission at September’s UFC 203.

Each fighter will become a sudden big name in the incredibly talented welterweight division, but they won’t necessarily quite be contenders just yet. Regardless, I see Northcutt possessing a distinct edge in the striking here, because even though Gall often talks about his striking, he’s a grappler at heart. That are is Northcutt’s one weakness we’ve seen, with his only UFC loss coming to an arm-triangle choke from Bryan Barberena that seemed barely locked in, also at welterweight. I believe Northcutt could end this with a vicious flurry, but ultimately Gall will be too smart to get tagged and take the fight to the ground for a submission attempt. Gall by second round submission.

Rory Kernaghan:

Sage Northcutt’s only loss in the UFC so far came in the welterweight division, so it’s surprising to see him move up from lightweight again here. Mickey Gall, well we’ve really only seen him against CM Punk, which doesn’t say much in terms of how he’ll fare against someone who can fight. 3-0 as a professional, I can’t help but think Northcutt is a little too much to chew at this stage in Gall’s career. Both men are very likeable, but I expect a war in this bout. Northcutt with a grizzly third round TKO.

Mike Henken:

In my opinion, this fight could go either way. Both fighters are rising talents and both have a chance to win this fight. Gall likely has the grappling advantage and I wouldn’t be surprised to see him tap Northcutt out. Gall will also be the bigger man, although “Super Sage” will undoubtedly have the striking advantage. I expect to see Northcutt stick and move and if he can keep the fight standing, I see him taking this one. Northcutt via unanimous decision.

 

 

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Video: Paige VanZant’s UFC On FOX 22 Media Scrum

https://youtu.be/dCL6Egwcnbs

Ahead of her showdown against emerging superstar “The Karate Hottie” Michelle Waterson in the main event of this Saturday’s UFC event on FOX, Paige VanZant took part in a scrum with members of the MMA media.

Featured …

paige-van-zant-fox-22-scrum

https://youtu.be/dCL6Egwcnbs

Ahead of her showdown against emerging superstar “The Karate Hottie” Michelle Waterson in the main event of this Saturday’s UFC event on FOX, Paige VanZant took part in a scrum with members of the MMA media.

Featured above from the USA TODAY Sports YouTube channel are highlights of VanZant’s media scrum from Sacramento, California.

UFC On FOX 22 takes place live from the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California on Saturday, December 17, 2016.

UFC on FOX 22 Weigh-In Video & Results

Heading to Sacramento, California this weekend, the UFC brings us a fun night of fights from the lighter weight divisions. UFC on FOX 22 will feature a number of rising prospects and also the retirement fight of Urijah Faber. ‘The California Kid’ will battle Brad Pickett, after which Faber will hang up the gloves. Going

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Heading to Sacramento, California this weekend, the UFC brings us a fun night of fights from the lighter weight divisions. UFC on FOX 22 will feature a number of rising prospects and also the retirement fight of Urijah Faber. ‘The California Kid’ will battle Brad Pickett, after which Faber will hang up the gloves. Going to war in the main event are strawweight stars Paige VanZant and Michelle Waterson. ’12 Gauge’ last saw action with a stunning KO over Bec Rawlings, and ‘Karate Hottie’ returns from a year out following knee surgery.

Promising young martial artists Sage Northcutt and Mickey Gall meet in the co-main event. Their hilariously respectful trash talk will come to a head, as their battle of the hair styles features in the welterweight division. Fan favorites Alan Jouban and Mike ‘Platinum’ Perry open the main card in California.

December 13, 2013; Sacramento, CA, USA; UFC bantamweight fighter Urijah Faber participates in the official weigh-in for UFC on FOX 9 at Sleep Train Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports
Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

The early weigh-ins are scheduled for 9AM PT, that’s 12 noon ET, and will take place in the host hotel. Either join us here for the early results stream, or check in later for the traditional scales show. The hydrated stream starts at 7 PM ET, and watch for Mike Perry’s weigh-in antics, which are quickly becoming his trademark.

Watch the Fight Night Sacramento official weigh-in on Friday, Dec. 16 at 7pm/4pm ETPT live from the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California.

MAIN CARD (FOX, 8 p.m. ET)

Paige VanZant vs. Michelle Waterson

Mickey Gall vs. Sage Northcutt

Urijah Faber vs. Brad Pickett

Alan Jouban vs. Mike Perry

PRELIMINARY CARD (5 p.m. ET)

Paul Craig vs. Luis Henrique da Silva

Mizuto Hirota vs. Cole Miller

Bryan Barberena vs. Colby Covington

James Moontasri vs. Alex Morono

Josh Emmett vs. Scott Holtzman

Irene Aldana vs. Leslie Smith

PRELIMINARY CARD (3:30 p.m. ET)

Takeya Mizugaki vs. Eddie Wineland

Hector Sandoval vs. Fredy Serrano

Sultan Aliev vs. Bojan Velickovic

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Paige VanZant Is a Rising Star, but Can She Hang with Her Division’s Best?

It didn’t take long, following her November 2014 debut, for the UFC to decide wholeheartedly that the promotion wanted to be in the Paige VanZant business.
She got a main-card slot on Fox in just her second fight, a decision win over Felice Herri…

It didn’t take long, following her November 2014 debut, for the UFC to decide wholeheartedly that the promotion wanted to be in the Paige VanZant business.

She got a main-card slot on Fox in just her second fight, a decision win over Felice Herrig. Before her third UFC fight, a submission win over Alex Chambers in September 2015, VanZant made the media rounds in Los Angeles, a privilege even well-regarded veterans haven’t been afforded.

Rose Namajunas torched VanZant for the better part of 25 minutes before submitting her in the fifth round, and for most fighters, a one-sided defeat in the first headlining bout would lead to a step backward in visibility. Not VanZant: The UFC immediately made the call to get her on Dancing with the Stars, and she got another main-card slot on Fox in her return fight.

On Saturday, December 17, VanZant’s pre-ordained rise to the top continues with a headlining bout on Fox against Michelle Waterson.

The UFC’s priorities are clear and have been from the beginning. The real question is whether VanZant can be a credible competitor on the level at which the UFC would like to promote her.

Bleacher Report’s Steven Rondina and Patrick Wyman break through the promotional side to discuss how VanZant stacks up in the cage against the elite of the strawweight division.

 

Steven: Normally, Patrick, when we talk about Paige VanZant, we talk about her promotional ceiling. The UFC has poured a great deal of effort into transforming her into a faux-celebrity and that, more than her actual in-cage success, is what will determine her value to the company.

Personally, I don’t think all those media spots will amount to much. I know you disagree. But ultimately, we can play the “told you so” game after the ratings come back for UFC on Fox 22.

Today, we should talk about her competitive ceiling.

The UFC, as with Conor McGregor’s rise, has been very particular about whom they match VanZant against. After a strong debut against a game Kailin Curran, the UFC has kept her away from anyone particularly athletic or anyone with genuinely heavy hands. That has led to some wins that looked a lot better than they actually were.

Still, there’s no question that VanZant has some legitimate talent. So I ask you, Patrick, where does VanZant stack up in today’s strawweight division?

        

Patrick: VanZant isn’t a bad fighter, and those who take that line of reasoning either haven’t watched enough raw, young fighters to place her in the right context or have decided a priori that they dislike her. Fair enough, nobody’s saying you have get on board, but that’s not an accurate assessment of her skills.

So what is VanZant?

She’s an athletic, durable, aggressive fighter with a great gas tank and a relentless style that drowns her opponents in offense until they quit or the final bell sounds. We know she has heart and won’t quit in the face of adversity.

She’s also a genuinely subpar defensive fighter who gets hit way too much. Her footwork is lacking. She’s not a great wrestler and relies far too much on her ability to scramble to get her out of trouble on the mat.

That’s not a bad foundation to build on. She trains in a gym full of wrestlers. Defense and footwork are another story, though, and Team Alpha Male isn’t exactly churning out the next Jose Aldo, Anderson Silva or Dominick Cruz in those departments.

At this point, VanZant isn’t going to challenge for a title, but she’s also 22 years old and still improving.

Does that sound like a reasonable assessment, Steven? Since she has yet to defeat a ranked opponent, are there any fighters in the top 10 you’d favor her to beat?

                

Steven: For the most part, I agree with you. I’d nitpick with you over whether or not she really qualifies as “athletic,” but that’s another discussion for another time.

She has the tools to outwork a lot of competition, and she has the toughness to keep going if things go sideways, but she also has plenty of obvious technical shortcomings that could be exploited by high-end fighters. Heck, the fact that her best highlight to date came from her spamming flying kicks says it all.

The question of whether she can beat top-10 competition hinges on which top 10 you’d be referencing. When it comes to the UFC’s official top 10, I’d say she’s about right where she should be. She’d get destroyed by Joanna Jedrzejczyk, Jessica Andrade, Claudia Gadelha and Rose Namajunas (again). A handful more would probably be able to shut down her clinch work.

Valerie Letourneau, though? Maryna Moroz? Sure, I could definitely see her taking a win over either of them, especially in a five-round fight.

When you look to one of the less official (but way more accurate) non-UFC rankings, things get a bit hairy on whether she could beat top-10 competition. I’d pick VanZant to lose to basically anyone in the Invicta FC title picture, and Asia is actually starting to produce some really interesting female talent.

At this point, I think she’s on the high end of the middle tier of the strawweight division, which isn’t a bad position for a 22-year-old with 9 fights on her record. The real question, though, is whether she can grow past that. Maybe I’m missing something but at this point, I’m not entirely convinced she can.

                   

Patrick: Leaving aside the inherent contradiction between you doubting her athleticism and then mentioning her landing a jumping head kick against Bec Rawlings two sentences later, I’m not going to disagree with the broad outlines.

I’m a bit more optimistic.

A polished 22-year-old fighter is a rare commodity, and it’s not reasonable to expect her to match lifelong competitors with deep backgrounds in striking, wrestling or jiu-jitsu. It’s going to take her a bit longer to pull everything together, which is something Team Alpha Male head honcho Urijah Faber echoed earlier this year when he and I discussed VanZant in depth.

With that said, VanZant has been a professional for four and a half years. It’s time for her to start showing some real gains.

One thing that stands out about every potential opponent in the top 15 is that, given her in-your-face style, none of them would be an easy fight. VanZant could probably pressure her way through Letourneau and Moroz, and that kind of approach would likely trouble Joanne Calderwood as well, but each could also put a hurting on a defensively suspect fighter like VanZant.

Everyone ranked above her can match or exceed her physicality while exceeding her skills in one or more areas. I shudder to think about what Jedrzejczyk, Gadelha or Andrade might do to her right now if the demonstrably less dangerous Namajunas could dominate her so thoroughly. Tecia Torres beat her once before, and that’s still a fight VanZant is likely to lose, if likely in less violent fashion.

Even some of the up-and-comers currently ranked behind her, like Alexa Grasso, are rough stylistic matchups. Top Invicta fighters Angela Hill and Livia Renata Souza would probably put a beating on her, based on what we’ve seen to this point.

On one hand, this is as much a commentary on the strength of the blossoming strawweight division as it is on VanZant’s shortcomings. On the other hand, these are her peers, and she’s going to have to face them.

I’ll ask one more question to finish things up. Even if VanZant can’t get over the hump that fighters like Waterson, Torres, Calderwood and Moroz represent—that middle tier of the strawweight elitedoes she still have value for the UFC as a promotional piece?

                    

Steven: I’ll quickly mention that, at 22 years old and with a few years of taekwondo under my belt, I was capable of landing jumping flying head kicks, too. Let me assure you that I’m far from athletic.

As for her promotional value to the UFC, it completely depends on whether or not she sticks with the public.

When you and I discussed the UFC’s general star-making efforts, I bluntly pointed out that being a runner-up in a season-long game show doesn’t do all that much for a person’s career. That applies to Dancing with the Stars as much as it applies to The Voice, American Idol or The Bachelor.

That’s more than Stephen Thompson has going for him, sure, but will that translate into moving the box office, ratings or PPV needle? We’ll know come Monday.

If UFC on Fox 22 does 3.5 million domestic viewership on Fox? Then she’s a big hit, and the UFC is vindicated in promoting her more than actual elite-level fighters, even if she plateaus as a mediocre in-cage talent. If it bombs, though? I expect she goes the way of Erick Silva (which is to say, slowly and steadily down).

 

Patrick: More people watched VanZant at the Dancing with the Stars finale than have ever watched a UFC on Fox event. Even a D-list celebrity coming out of one of those reality shows is infinitely better known to the general public than most UFC champions.

Whether VanZant can translate that baseline level of notorietyshe has 1.2 million followers on Instagram, more than any UFC fighter except Conor McGregor, Ronda Rousey, Miesha Tate, Holly Holm, Jose Aldo and Anderson Silvainto TV ratings is the real question.

If she can, then we can expect her top-notch bookings to continue. My guess is that she’ll turn in a respectable performance in the ratings; how she performs in the cage against Waterson seems far less certain.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Predictions: UFC On FOX 22 “VanZant Vs. Waterson”

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dgV0Bu-Z1XU[/embed]

Before we get to UFC 207 and the return of Ronda Rousey, we’ve got to get through UFC on FOX 22 this Saturday night.

But honestly, the card is really a pretty pleasant surprise for this…

ufc-on-fox-22

Before we get to UFC 207 and the return of Ronda Rousey, we’ve got to get through UFC on FOX 22 this Saturday night.

But honestly, the card is really a pretty pleasant surprise for this late in the year.

In the main event, strawweight contenders Paige VanZant and Michelle Waterson will square off, while the co-main pits Sage Northcutt against Mickey Gall.

Add in the likes of Urijah Faber, Cole Miller, Bryan Barberena and Eddie Wineland scattered throughout, and Saturday should be a fun night.

Here’s a quick look at predictions for each fight and a guess on the “Fight Night” bonuses, as well:

UFC Fight Pass Prelim Card

Bojan Velickovic over Sultan Aliev via split decision
Fredy Serrano over Hector Sandoval via second round TKO
Takeya Mizugaki over Eddie Wineland via first round submission

FOX Sports 1 Prelim Card

Irene Aldana over Leslie Smith via unanimous decision
Josh Emmett over Scott Holtzman via second round TKO
Alex Morono over James Moontasri via split decision
Colby Covington over Bryan Barberena via first round submission
Cole Miller over Mizuto Hirota via third round submission
Luis Henrique da Silva over Paul Craig via first round TKO

FOX Main Card

Mike Perry over Alan Jouban via second round KO
Urijah Faber over Brad Pickett via first round submission
Mickey Gall over Sage Northcutt via third round TKO
Paige VanZant over Michelle Waterson via second round TKO

Fight of the Night: Irene Aldana and Leslie Smith
Performance of the Night: Paige VanZant and Urijah Faber