Booking Roundup: Koch vs. Lamas, Pickett vs. Wineland, + More Paired for UFC 155


(A bit of insider info: The tattoo on Koch’s right arm stands for Zeitgeist, while the one on the left stands for Honey Boo Boo child. True story.) 

It may not come as a shock to any of you, but needless to say, UFC 155 a.k.a the UFC’s annual New Year’s Eve card is looking pretty stacked at this point. Sure, we will lose at least half of these fights to injury, but for the time being we are going to revel in these awesome matchups God damn it and there’s nothing you can do to stop us la la la la we can’t hear you!

Just last week, we announced that Phil Davis would be stepping in to replace Chael Sonnen against Forrest Griffin in the night’s co-main event, and today, a whole slew of interesting matchups were announced, starting with Erik Koch vs Ricardo Lamas.

If you recall, Koch has spent roughly ten years on the shelf due to injury, yet despite this, was in line to receive the next shot at Jose Aldo. Then Jose got injured, then the bout was rescheduled, then Koch injured himself again, then Jose got injured again. My God, that was as depressing an assessment of the current UFC landscape as I’ve ever written. In any case, it appears that Koch will finally return to action on New Year’s against fellow top contender Ricardo Lamas, who is fresh off a victory over Hatsu Hioki at UFC on FX 4. Koch and Lamas find themselves in a very similar position coming into this fight — both are relatively unknown by casual fans yet will likely earn the next featherweight title shot with a win — so expect both guys to try and make a statement with this fight, or at the minimum, talk a lot of shit to Jose Aldo afterward.

In other UFC 155 news…


(A bit of insider info: The tattoo on Koch’s right arm stands for Zeitgeist, while the one on the left stands for Honey Boo Boo child. True story.) 

It may not come as a shock to any of you, but needless to say, UFC 155 a.k.a the UFC’s annual New Year’s Eve card is looking pretty stacked at this point. Sure, we will lose at least half of these fights to injury, but for the time being we are going to revel in these awesome matchups God damn it and there’s nothing you can do to stop us la la la la we can’t hear you!

Just last week, we announced that Phil Davis would be stepping in to replace Chael Sonnen against Forrest Griffin in the night’s co-main event, and today, a whole slew of interesting matchups were announced, starting with Erik Koch vs Ricardo Lamas.

If you recall, Koch has spent roughly ten years on the shelf due to injury, yet despite this, was in line to receive the next shot at Jose Aldo. Then Jose got injured, then the bout was rescheduled, then Koch injured himself again, then Jose got injured again. My God, that was as depressing an assessment of the current UFC landscape as I’ve ever written. In any case, it appears that Koch will finally return to action on New Year’s against fellow top contender Ricardo Lamas, who is fresh off a victory over Hatsu Hioki at UFC on FX 4. Koch and Lamas find themselves in a very similar position coming into this fight — both are relatively unknown by casual fans yet will likely earn the next featherweight title shot with a win — so expect both guys to try and make a statement with this fight, or at the minimum, talk a lot of shit to Jose Aldo afterward.

In other UFC 155 news…

Hard-hitting bantamweights Brad Pickett and Eddie Wineland have been booked to throw down at the UFC’s year-end event as well. In his last appearance at UFC on FX 3, Wineland became the first man to ever knock out perennial bantamweight contender Scott Jorgensen, an impressive fact made all the more impressive when you consider that Jorgensen has shared the octagon with such names as current bantamweight interim champ Renan Barao and current actual champ Dominick Cruz among others.

Speaking of Barao, since dropping a first round submission loss to the Nova Uniao product, Pickett has scored two straight victories over Damacio Page via submission (obviously) and Yves Jabouin via uppercut of death. As is the case for Lamas/Koch, either man could find themselves on the short line of contenders with an impressive win. That is, if the respective champions of their division can ever make it to the ring to defend their titles.

And finally, a pair of relatively unknown bantamweights in Byron Bloodworth and Erik Perez are also scheduled to throw down at UFC 155. With a name that sounds like every Scooby-Doo villan ever, Bloodworth has not fought since last October, where he was defeated via late second round TKO at the hands of Mike Easton in his UFC debut. Perez, on the other hand, has been absolutely lights out since entering the UFC back in June. Ironically, Perez actually replaced Bloodworth against John Albert at the TUF 15 Finale, where he scored a first round armbar submission over the tough-nosed castmember. When we last saw him at UFC 150, Perez added to Ken Stone’s brutal lowlight reel by knocking the WEC veteran out cold in only 17 seconds. Fun fact: The knockout currently holds the record for fastest UFC/WEC bantamweight KO of all time.

And here you were all complaining that the little guys couldn’t finish. Shame on you all.

J. Jones

UFC 152: Five Fights for Cub Swanson to Take Next

Last night at UFC 152, Cub Swanson once again showed why he is a threat in the featherweight division. Swanson earned “Knockout of the Night” for his performance against Charles Oliveira. The win was Swanson’s third straight, all of which hav…

Last night at UFC 152, Cub Swanson once again showed why he is a threat in the featherweight division. 

Swanson earned “Knockout of the Night” for his performance against Charles Oliveira

The win was Swanson’s third straight, all of which have come by TKO. 

The win should also put Swanson in serious title contention. 

Here are some fights he should take to get one step closer to a title fight. 

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Exclusive: Ricardo Lamas Was Offered Fights with Frankie Edgar and Jose Aldo

The life of a fighter changes constantly. You can be scheduled for a fight with one fighter one day, then the next it can be someone different due to injury or other circumstances. Ricardo Lamas, though, went from having no fight to being offered a set…

The life of a fighter changes constantly. You can be scheduled for a fight with one fighter one day, then the next it can be someone different due to injury or other circumstances. Ricardo Lamas, though, went from having no fight to being offered a set of fights.

The UFC featherweight had come off a win over the highly ranked Hatsu Hioki in June at UFC on FX 4. He was just waiting on getting his next fight. About two weeks ago, Lamas got a phone call for a fight against a former world champion.

“They [the UFC] offered me a fight with Frankie Edgar in December and we accepted it,” Lamas told Bleacher Report. “We were just waiting to hear back from UFC matchmaker Sean Shelby as we didn’t know if they had talked to Frankie yet or not. We accepted the fight on our side and we were just awaiting confirmation.”

Things then got more interesting. The UFC announced on Thursday that Erik Koch had to bow out of his fight with UFC Featherweight Champion Jose Aldo at UFC 153 with an undisclosed injury and Edgar would be stepping in to face Aldo. Before that announcement was made, it was Lamas who was going to face Aldo.

“They [UFC] had called me first on Thursday,” Lamas stated. “They had called me up at about 3:30 p.m. Central time and said, ‘Obviously Koch is injured and we need to know tonight if you want to take this fight with Aldo? We think you deserve it and we need to redo your contract. We need to get it all done by tonight.'”

‘We said ‘Yes, yes, yes,'” Lamas stated. “We got my contract figured out and was just waiting on a bout agreement. Then they [the UFC] called at 9 p.m. Central and said they decided to in a different direction with the fight and that’s when they decided to go with Frankie.”

Lamas, hoping to fight by the end of the year, is naturally disappointed with not getting a fight with either Edgar or Aldo. He is grateful that his employer thinks highly enough of him to consider him to fight two high-profile fighters.

“I was disappointed,” Lamas stated. “I was really excited. That’s an opportunity guys wait their entire career for. The opportunity came of out nowhere. I wasn’t promised for months to fight Aldo. It came about last second. I can also see where the UFC thinks that it is going to be a better fight with Frankie Edgar. He [Edgar] is a former world champion and he’s more well known than I am. I appreciate that the UFC offered me the fights. It means they hold me in high regard and have me in mind.”

 

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC: Featherweights Were Scoffed At; Now They’re Stealing the Show

When the UFC adopted WEC’s featherweights, the division lacked depth and lore. I’d shrug at the mention of the smaller weight classes.   Featherweight fighters were regarded as cute novelties. In suit, the Zuffa featherweight roster was consi…

When the UFC adopted WEC’s featherweights, the division lacked depth and lore. I’d shrug at the mention of the smaller weight classes.   

Featherweight fighters were regarded as cute novelties. In suit, the Zuffa featherweight roster was considered shallow, dull, and extraneous by many UFC fanatics. 

They were wrong. 

Less then two years after the merger, UFC featherweights are creating a huge splash that defies their little bodies. They’ve sparkled under the UFC’s prevailing banner. 

The UFC featherweight journey began in cinematic fashion: Jose Aldo and Mark Hominick put on a wild show; one of the year’s best fights. Yet the “Fight of the Year” candidate didn’t suspend doubts about the division’s future. The featherweight landscape would remain desolate for months.  

UFC casuals saw the featherweights as alien midgets, among them only a few recognizable names. I remember some “fans”even contested the entertainment value of fun-sized warriors to the point of refusing to watch them.  

Unknowns bred doubt. Questions swirled around the future of the newborn weight class.

Good thing it wasn’t aborted.

Time passed. Rightful contenders arose from the proving grounds. Upon proper exposure, several of the original featherweights plucked from the WEC gained hordes of fans and enough popularity to headline shows. Meanwhile, Dana White‘s hunt for free agents didn’t cease, as guys like Hatsu Hioki have kept the division fresh. 

The WEC merger needed incubation time. Indeed, a healthy product has hatched. Let’s bask in the triumph of the UFC’s featherweight division:

Aldo has proven himself an exciting and marketable champion. His reign over 145 is long and oppressive – casual fans remember his name. He’s etching out a shining star while directing attention towards featherweight MMA that only a dominant champ could demand. “Scarface” has been instrumental to the division’s appeal. 

Another important cog: “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung-Jung has bloomed into a fan favorite. The undead Korean brawls with no regard for life, so he’s garnered a legion of Zombie fanatics. His stardom has helped unlock international markets and lure attention to the Octagon and to featherweight MMA.  

The list of gems winds on: There’s Jimy Hettes, unbeaten submission wizard; Ricardo Lamas, imposing grappler and striker; Erik Koch, strike-first youngster with wrestling credentials; Chad Mendes, wrestler whose work ethic sparkles; Charles Oliveira, daring finisher whose guard could choke a mule; Cub Swanson, evolving and resurgent veteran; Dustin Poirier, cagey and polished in all areas; Dennis Siver, formidable kick boxer; and Hatsu Hioki, Japanese champ with UFC gold in sight. There’s plenty more worthy of mention, but you get it. A thick crop of talent is ripening.  

Another perk of the featherweight division: Small lightweights have found comfort in dropping down—ask Charles Oliveira and Dennis Siver. They were dwarfed by larger lightweights. Remember how each was rendered a mere plaything by Donald Cerrone? Now they’ve found sanctuary at 145.

 

Since the lightweight division is teeming with impatient beasts, we’ll keep seeing lightweights use the featherweight division as a restart button for their careers. I salivate at the buffet of cross-divisional fights within reason  (I’m waiting for you, Frankie Edgar). 

These are the formative years of 145. Aldo’s reign is clear, but the pecking order is a murky tangle beneath him. Time will clear it up—the division is still an infant. There are countless match ups yet to unfold between these dynamos; match ups I wish I didn’t have to wait for. 

Here’s to you, featherweights. Despite your stubby legs, you’ve come a long way in little time. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ricardo Lamas Looks to Go from Underdog to UFC Champion

Ricardo Lamas spent his time in the WEC quietly collecting wins and sharpening the tools he would one day need to be a serious contender in the sport.But after the UFC merger and a drop to featherweight, Lamas flipped the switch into high gear and has …

Ricardo Lamas spent his time in the WEC quietly collecting wins and sharpening the tools he would one day need to be a serious contender in the sport.

But after the UFC merger and a drop to featherweight, Lamas flipped the switch into high gear and has steamrolled every opponent put in his path.

He made an impressive Octagon debut with a nasty head kick TKO over Matt Grice. Lamas followed up that performance by submitting the always-game Cub Swanson in the second round of his next outing, but despite back-to-back finishes, there was little talk of the Chicago native being amongst the divisional contenders.

This circumstance would change when Lamas stepped in against highly-touted Japanese superstar Hatsu Hioki in Atlantic City.

With Hioki on the verge of a title shot and Lamas a heavy underdog, “The Bully” shocked the MMA world when he dominated Hioki from bell to bell. The victory was undoubtedly the biggest of Lamas’ young career and he now finds himself within reach of obtaining his ultimate goal.

“I knew I was going to be the underdog going into the Hioki fight,” Lamas told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview.

“It didn’t bother me at all because it’s not the first time I’ve been in that position. The thing people need to understand is that I have a lot of confidence in myself and I don’t listen to those things that are being said. Opinions and MMA rankings don’t matter to me because I know what I’m capable of. What matters is what I believe in my own heart and I knew I stood a good chance of beating him. I went out and proved it.

“Little by little, as the fight progressed on I started to realize a lot of the things around him were hype. It became more obvious the longer the fight went.

“I went into the fight extremely confident because I had worked very hard in my preparation. I train with some of the best in the world in striking, jiu-jitsu and just all-around MMA. I went in there with a lot of confidence and knew I had what it took to beat him.”

As soon as the action got underway, it was all Lamas as he took the fight to Hioki. By using his pressure and wrestling, he was able to keep his opponent off balance.

In the second round, Lamas latched onto an arm-in guillotine which appeared to have Hioki in deep trouble. But despite having the submission locked on tight, Hioki was able to survive the hold and make it out of the round.

“I truly thought I was close to finishing him with that choke,” Lamas said. “In training, when I catch someone with that guillotine, especially the arm-in guillotine, there is no getting out of it. They always tap and when he didn’t, I was definitely surprised.

“I think part of Hioki’s training must be to hold his breath as long as he possibly can because that’s exactly what he was doing. I said at the post-fight press conference he must’ve had gills or something because I don’t know how he was getting air. That choke was tight.”

A year ago, the competition was thin in the UFC featherweight division, but now things have begun to heat up as several contenders are hovering towards the top. With the victory over Hioki, Lamas has propelled himself up directly into the middle of the mix.

With champion Jose Aldo preparing to face Erik Koch later this year, there is a vacancy in the “next” position. The recent announcement of Chan Sung Jung (Korean Zombie) taking time off due to injury, the only two upper-tier fighters left standing are Lamas and former No. 1 contender Chad Mendes.

Lamas holds Mendes and his camp in high regard and would be excited for the opportunity should the UFC make that call.

“I have a lot of respect for Chad Mendes and his camp,” Lamas said.

“When I first started fighting, Urijah Faber was one of the fighters I really looked up to. I still do and he’s one of my favorite fighters out there.

“We are both wrestlers. We are both explosive, strong and powerful. I think it would be a war. It would be a really fun fight and I think it has ‘Fight of the Night’ written all over it. If that’s what the UFC throws at me, then that is what we will do.”

It has been a mixture of skill and heart which has allowed Lamas to become one of the best featherweight fighters on the planet. Despite being overlooked by many, he has refused to allow outside static to slow down his pursuit for championship gold.

It is a goal he believes he can reach and he will stop at nothing until that mission is accomplished.

“Even before the fight with Hioki, I thought I could go in there and mix it up with the best guys in the world,” Lamas said.

“That opinion hasn’t changed. I believe I can go in there and not only compete but defeat anyone at the highest level. I think I’m right up there with the best guys in the division.

“My goal is the same as everyone else. I want to be able to wear that gold around my waist someday. To become the champion is the ultimate goal.

“As far as this year is concerned, I just want to keep the ball rolling like I have been. I want to keep winning and I really want to continue finishing my fights the way I did in 2011. I want to get back to where I not only win but finish my opponents as well.

“I have as much as heart as anyone out there. Whether it is in my division or the sport, I give it my all every time out. I’ll never back down from anyone and people should never count me out of fight.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Hatsu Hioki Turns Down Title Shot vs. Jose Aldo

Honestly, if you are in a business like professional fighting, you know you are going to get a lot of bumps and bruises along the way. You have to accept the challenges given to you,.

Honestly, if you are in a business like professional fighting, you know you are going to get a lot of bumps and bruises along the way. You have to accept the challenges given to you, and try to overcome the hardships to reign as the best. This is not the way Hatsu Hioki apparently sees his professional career. He is the top-ranked Japanese fighter in the world, a well-traveled athlete, and was 2-0 in the octagon. In the featherweight division of the UFC, Jose Aldo is undoubtedly one of the greatest mma fighters in the world. He is a tough contender, so it is understandable for any man to be distressed to even stand by him, let alone fight with him in the octagon. Unless of course that is your professional career.

So goes the story for Hioki who turned down a title shot with Aldo in April. Apparently, he truly felt like he was not ready to fight the champion. He believed he needed more octagon time, and more experience in the cage to put on the best performance for Aldo. Honestly though, all that would happen, best case scenario, would be Hioki would fight one or two top contenders in the featherweight division, beat them, and then once again have a chance to fight Aldo. It was an extremely poor decision on his part.

So he instead accepted a fight with Ricardo Lamas for UFC on FX 4. So on June 22 what happened? He lost. The idea of himself not being good enough to fight the champion now played into his mental game of fighting period. If you tell yourself you cannot win, you start to believe that you actually cannot win. I believe this was Hioki’s main downfall for his loss to Lamas. Maybe he truly wasn’t ready for a shot at the title, but as a professional athlete he never should have declined the offer. We can all remember in 2003 when Pete Spratt declined a title fight against then welterweight champion Matt Hughes. Now the title of refusing a title shot has been given to Hioki. If you are going to be in a business like professional mma fighting, you must always believe in yourself. This immensely improves your physical and mental game. Learn the lesson from Hioki: Always take a title shot when offered.

By: Elise Kapala