UFC on Versus 4 Results: Kongo vs. Barry

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UFC Live results on Sunday, June 26 in Pittsburgh.MMAFighting.com will have live UFC on Versus 4 results of Cheick Kongo vs. Pat Barry and the rest of the UFC Live card on Sunday, June 26 at the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

In the main event, Cheick Kongo returns after an eight-month absence and will face the charismatic kickboxer, Pat Barry.

The results are below.

Versus Bouts
Pat Barry vs. Cheick Kongo (live blog)
Charlie Brenneman vs. Rick Story (live blog)
Matt Brown vs. John Howard (live blog)
Matt Mitrione vs. Christian Morecraft (live blog)

Preliminary Bouts on Facebook

Manny Gamburyan vs. Tyson Griffin (live blog)
Joe Stevenson vs. Javier Vazquez (live blog)
Joe Lauzon def. Curt Warburton via submission (kimura) – R1, 1:58
(live blog)
Rich Attonito def. Daniel Roberts via unanimous decision (29-27, 30-27, 29-28) (live blog)
Charles Oliveira def. Nik Lentz via submission (rear-naked choke) – R2, 1:48
(live blog)
*Commission will review the fight for an illegal knee by Oliveira not called by the referee
Ricardo Lamas def. Matt Grice via TKO (punches) – R1, 4:41 (live blog)
Michael Johnson def. Edward Faaloloto via TKO (punches) – R1, 4:42 (live blog)

 

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UFC Live results on Sunday, June 26 in Pittsburgh.MMAFighting.com will have live UFC on Versus 4 results of Cheick Kongo vs. Pat Barry and the rest of the UFC Live card on Sunday, June 26 at the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

In the main event, Cheick Kongo returns after an eight-month absence and will face the charismatic kickboxer, Pat Barry.

The results are below.

Versus Bouts
Pat Barry vs. Cheick Kongo (live blog)
Charlie Brenneman vs. Rick Story (live blog)
Matt Brown vs. John Howard (live blog)
Matt Mitrione vs. Christian Morecraft (live blog)

Preliminary Bouts on Facebook

Manny Gamburyan vs. Tyson Griffin (live blog)
Joe Stevenson vs. Javier Vazquez (live blog)
Joe Lauzon def. Curt Warburton via submission (kimura) – R1, 1:58
(live blog)
Rich Attonito def. Daniel Roberts via unanimous decision (29-27, 30-27, 29-28) (live blog)
Charles Oliveira def. Nik Lentz via submission (rear-naked choke) – R2, 1:48
(live blog)
*Commission will review the fight for an illegal knee by Oliveira not called by the referee
Ricardo Lamas def. Matt Grice via TKO (punches) – R1, 4:41 (live blog)
Michael Johnson def. Edward Faaloloto via TKO (punches) – R1, 4:42 (live blog)

 

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UFC on Versus 4 Weigh-In Results

Filed under: UFC, NewsHere are the UFC on Versus 4 weigh-in results of Pat Barry vs. Cheick Kongo and the rest of the UFC Live card taking place Sunday, June 26 at the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

The event was originally scheduled to be headli…

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Here are the UFC on Versus 4 weigh-in results of Pat Barry vs. Cheick Kongo and the rest of the UFC Live card taking place Sunday, June 26 at the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

The event was originally scheduled to be headlined by Nate Marquardt vs. Rick Story, but was changed on the day of the weigh-ins to Barry vs. Kongo. With Marquardt out of the UFC, Charlie Brenneman made weight Saturday and will step in to face Story.

Below are the UFC Live weigh-in results, courtesy of UFC.com.

Versus Bouts – 9:00p.m. ET
Pat Barry (243) vs. Cheick Kongo (234.4)
Rick Story (170.4) vs. Charlie Brenneman (170.6)
John Howard (170.2) vs. Matt Brown (170)
Christian Morecraft (261.4) vs. Matt Mitrione (261.1)

Preliminary Bouts on Facebook – 5:55p.m. ET
Manny Gamburyan (145.8) vs. Tyson Griffin (145.8)
Javier Vazquez (145.8) vs. Joe Stevenson (146)
Curt Warburton (155.6) vs. Joe Lauzon (156)
Rich Attonito (170) vs. Daniel Roberts (170.6)
Charles Oliveira (153.8) vs. Nik Lentz (155.6)
Matt Grice (145.2) vs. Ricardo Lamas (145.4)
Edward Faaloloto (155.4) vs. Michael Johnson (155.2)

 

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Nate Marquardt: Rick Story ‘Doesn’t Know That I’m in a Different League’

Filed under: UFCNate Marquardt didn’t have to be in the UFC’s makeshift workout room the night before the UFC 128 weigh-ins. But hey, he had friends who still had a few pounds to sweat off, so there he was, sitting on the floor in a t-shirt and jeans, …

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Nate Marquardt didn’t have to be in the UFC’s makeshift workout room the night before the UFC 128 weigh-ins. But hey, he had friends who still had a few pounds to sweat off, so there he was, sitting on the floor in a t-shirt and jeans, keeping them company. Solidarity with the starving, and all that.

Only Marquardt wasn’t starving. Even though he also had to weigh in less than 24 hours later for his fight with Dan Miller, he wasn’t even especially hungry.

That’s because while Marquardt was fighting at 185 pounds, he wasn’t doing it the way most guys did. Instead of cutting down from well over 200 pounds in the weeks and days before the fight, he was more or less already on point. All he had to do was show up on the scales and flex.

That’s why it should have come as no surprise when Marquardt announced that he was moving down to welterweight following his unanimous decision win over Dan Miller at UFC 128. It wasn’t that he had no further prospects at middleweight, he said. It was just that it had started to seem foolish to try and put weight on in training camp, rather than take it off.

“I feel I could get the title shot and get the title at 185,” Marquardt said. “If that opportunity ever arises, I’ll go do that. But for now, I’m going to stay at this weight, at my walking around weight. I’m not going to try to bulk up anymore. I just want to stay here.”

But dropping to 170 pounds for his fight against Rick Story on Sunday night’s UFC Live fight card also meant that Marquardt would have to forego some of the luxuries he’d previously enjoyed, such as eating what he wanted without ever giving a thought to calorie content.

Now he suddenly needed to lose weight for the first time in a long time, which is where nutritionist P.R. Cole came in.

“He looks so big, and that’s why everyone thought, my God, how’s he going to make 170?” said Cole, who first came into contact with Marquardt when interviewing him for her nutrition column on UFC.com. “But when he was fighting at middleweight he wasn’t cutting that much. He was just used to going through camp and eating for fuel. He had the pleasure of never really having to think about his calories or anything.”

This time around Marquardt has had to start thinking about portion sizes more than ever, but the potential rewards may be more than worth the sacrifice. For starters, he’ll be fighting smaller opponents, which means he’ll likely have a strength advantage.

Then again, as Marquardt explained, “I feel I had a strength advantage at 185 [pounds]. It doesn’t really matter who I go against, I feel that I’m almost always going to be stronger. The fact that I haven’t lost any strength going down means it’s only more so.”

But perhaps more important is the new life he hopes to find in a new weight class. Unlike many fighters who make the decision to drop down in weight, Marquardt wasn’t chased down by losses. He went down following a win, but he also did it following a year in which he lost two no. 1 contender fights at 185 pounds.

Now at welterweight, he has a clean slate to work with, and he feels he could be “anywhere from one to two fights away” from a title shot. The fact that, because of an injury to his original opponent, he now gets to fight a guy like Story, who’s coming off an upset win over Thiago Alves? That only sweetens the deal for him, Marquardt said.

“I think the fact that Rick Story just beat Thiago Alves, who was considered a former number one contender, that’s a pretty big deal. I can’t really think of anyone [Anthony] Johnson beat like that. Not saying that he’s not tough, but their records, Story has that and Johnson doesn’t,” he said.

“I expect him to come forward the whole time and kind of try to make it a dirty fight, because I think he knows that I’m going to be better in most areas. I think he’ll probably have a similar game plan as he did against Thiago Alves, really.”

If Story is the young rising prospect in this scenario, then Marquardt is more than willing to play the role of the grizzled veteran. After all, he was fighting for a living when Story was still in high school. With those years comes a lot of hard-won knowledge, Marquardt said.

“That’s a good feeling to know that I know a lot more than this guy. The fact that he’s this young up-and-comer, to me that just means that he doesn’t know that I’m in a different league. He’s going to have problems that way.”

For Story, it might be a chance to add another big name to his list of victims. But for Marquardt, it’s a shot at a new beginning. And he didn’t spend the last eight weeks counting all those calories for nothing.

 

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UFC on Versus 4 to Feature Eight Prelim Fights Live on Facebook

Filed under: UFCIt’s been six months since the UFC began experimenting with preliminary card fights on Facebook, and on Sunday it will set a new high-water mark.

The promotion on Monday announced that all eight undercard fights for the upcoming UFC o…

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It’s been six months since the UFC began experimenting with preliminary card fights on Facebook, and on Sunday it will set a new high-water mark.

The promotion on Monday announced that all eight undercard fights for the upcoming UFC on Versus 4 show will stream live on the social networking site. Just last week, with UFC 131, the promotion set a new best with six prelims streaming on Facebook.

This will mark the 11th consecutive fight card that the UFC has streamed fights for free at Facebook, and it will be the fifth consecutive show the promotion has provided a way for fans to see each fight on the card live.

UFC on Versus 4 will feature a four-fight main card that airs live on the Versus cable channel, the second of the UFC’s four-fight 2011 deal with the channel. The Facebook live stream is scheduled to begin at 4:55 p.m. Eastern. The main card starts at 9 p.m. Eastern on Versus. Versus will also again produce a live pre-fight preview show and post-fight analysis show before and after the main card featuring Todd Harris, UFC light heavyweight Stephan Bonnar and MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani.

To gain access to the fights, viewers must “like” the UFC on Facebook. As of Monday evening, the UFC has more than 5.7 million fans at the site.

The “main” and “co-main” events of the Facebook prelims are featherweight bouts featuring a pair of former lightweights dropping down – both looking to snap out of disastrous three-fight losing skids.

Tyson Griffin (14-5, 7-5 UFC) returns to featherweight for the first time since the early part of his career to face Manny Gamburyan (11-5, 2-3 UFC), who fights for the first time since a knockout loss to featherweight champion Jose Aldo last November in a WEC title fight. Griffin has split decision losses to Evan Dunham and Nik Lentz in the last year, plus a quick first-round knockout loss to Takanori Gomi last August on Versus. Gamburyan fights in the UFC for the first time in two years after dropping to featherweight and sliding over to the WEC, where he went 3-0 before his loss to Aldo.

And Joe Stevenson (31-13, 8-7 UFC), the Season 2 welterweight winner of “The Ultimate Fighter,” goes for his first win since October 2009 when he takes on Javier Vazquez (15-5), who makes his UFC debut after going 2-3 in the WEC. Stevenson has dropped decisions to George Sotiropoulos and Danny Castillo, and was knocked out by Mac Danzig in December. Stevenson is 3-6 since challenging BJ Penn for the lightweight title at UFC 80 three and a half years ago, including the loss to Penn. Monday, on “The MMA Hour,” Stevenson talked about his dislike of Vazquez and why he dropped to featherweight.

The Facebook prelims stream opens with a lightweight bout between TUF 12 runner-up Michael Johnson, fighting for the first time since losing to Jonathan Brookins in December on the show’s finale, against Edward Faaloto, who makes his UFC debut after a loss in his WEC debut last November.

Nik Lentz (21-3-2, 5-0-1 UFC) tries to remain unbeaten in the UFC against submission specialist Charles Oliveira in a lightweight bout.

Rich Attonito drops from middleweight after a loss to Dave Branch in December to make his welterweight debut against Daniel Roberts, who lost to Claude Patrick at UFC 129 in April. Attonito was original scheduled to face Matt Brown, but an injury to Martin Kampmann forced him out of a fight with John Howard, and Brown moved up the card for that fight. Roberts stepped in to face Attonito.

Other bouts include a featherweight contest between Ricardo Lamas and Matt Grice, a welterweight bout between Charlie Brenneman and TJ Grant, and Joe Lauzon returns for the first time since a UFC 123 loss in November to Sotiropoulos to face England’s Curt Warburton.

The UFC began streaming preliminary fights in January with its Fight for the Troops 2 show at Fort Hood, Texas. Since then, the promotion has included free Facebook fights for each event, regardless of the main card’s platform – be it on pay-per-view, Spike or Versus.

UFC on Versus 4 takes place Sunday at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh, and will be the promotion’s first event in the Pennsylvania city. The card features a main event between Nate Marquardt and Rick Story – with Marquardt making his welterweight debut and Story fighting on short notice after a win just a month prior against Thiago Alves at UFC 130. Marquardt was scheduled to face Anthony Johnson, but an injury forced Johnson off the card.

And in a pair of heavyweight bouts, kickboxing specialists Pat Barry and Cheick Kongo clash, and Matt Mitrione looks to stay unbeaten against Christian Morecraft, whose last win sent Mitrione friend and training partner Sean McCorkle packing from the UFC.

 

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MMA Top 10 Welterweights: Rick Story Earns His Place

Filed under: UFC, Strikeforce, Rankings, WelterweightsThere’s an exciting new entrant in the list of the Top 10 welterweights in mixed martial arts, as Rick Story earned his spot with an upset of Thiago Alves at UFC 130.

Alves has been considered a To…

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There’s an exciting new entrant in the list of the Top 10 welterweights in mixed martial arts, as Rick Story earned his spot with an upset of Thiago Alves at UFC 130.

Alves has been considered a Top 5 welterweight for years, but Story took the fight to him in the first and second rounds, and although Alves showed in the third round that there are still some holes in Story’s stand-up game, Story demonstrated that he has a strong chin, weathered the storm and came out on top. That kind of victory — Story’s sixth in a row inside the Octagon — warrants a place in the Top 10.

Find out below where, exactly, I rank Story, and who the other new entrants in the welterweight Top 10 are.

(Editor’s note: The individual fighter’s ranking the last time we did welterweights is in parentheses.)

1. Georges St. Pierre (1): Still the champ, the big question is whether he’s going to defend his welterweight title against Nick Diaz, or move up to middleweight to challenge for Anderson Silva’s belt. A Diaz fight seems to be the one that MMA fans want, and that the UFC is working hard to arrange. UPDATE: Hours after we posted this, the UFC announced that GSP-Diaz will happen in October.

2. Jon Fitch (3): The longtime No. 2 welterweight in the world is on the mend from a shoulder injury, and there’s no word on when he might return. Prior to his injury, the UFC announced that he’d have a rematch with B.J. Penn next, but Jake Shields might make more sense as an opponent for him.

3. Jake Shields (2): A fight between Shields and Fitch would be the best way to determine who’s the top welterweight aside from St. Pierre, and it would also be a fascinating stylistic matchup between two guys whose ground games are among the best in all of MMA.

4. Nick Diaz (5): It appears that Diaz’s silly flirtation with going into professional boxing is now behind him, and the lone remaining question is whether the UFC can figure out a way to get him in the Octagon with St. Pierre. Diaz is Strikeforce’s welterweight champion and one of its most popular fighters, so Showtime doesn’t want to lose Diaz. But the fight that makes the most sense is a UFC pay-per-view to determine the real welterweight champion of mixed martial arts.

5. Josh Koscheck (6): There’s still no word on when Koscheck will return from the ugly beating that St. Pierre put on him. Koscheck has always prided himself on being active and ready to fight at a moment’s notice, so it says something about how badly he was hurt against St. Pierre that he still can’t even commit to a return date, six months after the GSP fight.

6. B.J. Penn (7): Like Fitch, the man he fought to a draw early this year, Penn is injured and out of action. If his recovery and Koscheck’s recovery line up and they’re both ready to return at around the same time, that would make a great fight.

7. Carlos Condit (8): If the UFC can’t make St. Pierre-Diaz work, Condit would probably be next in line. Other than Diaz, he’s the highest-ranked welterweight who hasn’t already fought St. Pierre, and he’s also a likable, marketable guy who’s on a three-fight winning streak and coming off wins that earned him Knockout of the Night and Fight of the Night bonuses. Condit has a tough fight with Dong Hyun Kim at UFC 132, so thinking about him as a No. 1 contender might be getting a little too far ahead of things, but in a division without many available challengers, Condit would make sense.

8. Rick Story (NR): One of the exciting things about Story is his age. At 26, he’s younger than everyone ahead of him in the welterweight rankings, and he’s got a lot of good years ahead of him and time to keep getting better. It might seem like the 30-year-old St. Pierre will be champion forever, but the truth is, athletes start to slow down in their 30s. Story is in his athletic prime, and I see a welterweight title shot in his future.

9. Rory MacDonald (NR): Speaking of young and promising fighters, MacDonald is only 21 years old but looked like a seasoned pro while manhandling Nate Diaz for 15 minutes at UFC 129. MacDonald is 11-1, with his only loss coming in a great fight against Condit. Next MacDonald will get another tough test against Mike Pyle at UFC 132

10. John Hathaway (NR): Hathaway is a tough guy to assess because he has great potential at the age of 23, but he’s looked like he’s taking a step back in his last couple of fights, a loss to Mike Pyle and a split decision win over Kris McCray. His 15-1 record includes wins over Story and Diego Sanchez, but it may be time for Hathaway to shake up his training.

 

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Falling Action: Best and Worst of UFC 130

Filed under: UFCPerhaps the best thing we can say about UFC 130 is that it’s over. It started out as the event that would finally put the Frankie Edgar-Gray Maynard saga to rest, and it ended up with “Rampage” Jackson in a main event bout that even he …

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Perhaps the best thing we can say about UFC 130 is that it’s over. It started out as the event that would finally put the Frankie Edgar-Gray Maynard saga to rest, and it ended up with “Rampage” Jackson in a main event bout that even he wasn’t terribly excited about.

But now that the dust has settled and the Octagon has been packed away one more time, let’s look back over Saturday night’s action to see whose stock soared and whose plummeted into the basement of the MGM Grand.

In the wake of UFC 130, here are your biggest winners, losers, and everything in between.

Biggest Winner: Brian Stann
Sure, it makes for a great storyline to see the former Marine beat somebody up on Memorial Day weekend, but forget that for a minute. Stann took on the Sengoku middleweight champ in a fight that was supposed to be a serious test of his skills, and he practically breezed through it with the perfect mix of poise and aggression. He didn’t lose his cool when he had Santiago hurt early. He didn’t lay back too much and let good opportunities slip by. He did exactly what he needed to do, and he got perhaps the biggest win of his career. He also pocketed a Fight of the Night bonus, which is a nice way of reminding everyone that you were one of the few bright spots on an otherwise forgettable fight card. Plus, $70,000 buys a lot of hot dogs and apple pie.

Biggest Loser: Roy Nelson
There’s no questioning his toughness or his ability to take a shot. But his cardio? That’s a different story. You never want to end a round by immediately doubling over and putting your hands on your knees like an out-of-shape businessman who was forced to take the stairs for the first time in ten years. Let’s just say it sends the wrong message. Nelson got overpowered and outworked by Frank Mir, but the worst part is that by the end he just seemed grateful to get out of there and go home. We’ve seen him go the distance before without looking like he needed to have a defibrillator handy in his corner, so I’m not sure what accounts for this poor showing. Whatever it is, he’d better figure it out quick. The UFC seems less inclined to give Nelson the benefit of the doubt that it has extended to others.

Least Compelling Case for a Title Shot: “Rampage” Jackson
The hard part about fighting a guy who the current champ already demolished is that it provides an unavoidable counter-example that your performance will be measured against. Everyone will recall that Jon Jones straight-up assaulted Hamill, while Jackson carried him the distance. Not that the fight was close, mind you. Jackson stuffed all Hamill’s takedowns and put some leather on his face whenever he felt like it. Trouble is, he didn’t feel like it quite enough down the stretch. He’d explode with a combo, wait to see if Hamill was still standing, then catch his breath before trying it again. It’s a competent showing, sure, but not the kind that screams out for a shot at the belt. Jackson is undoubtedly one of the best light heavyweights around, but that means people are going to expect more out of him than what he showed on Saturday night. Whether he has any interest in giving it to them remains to be seen.

Most Impressive in Defeat: Miguel Torres
If nothing else, Torres proved once and for all that you just can’t win a decision off your back in MMA. If it was at all possible, he would have done it on Saturday night with his many, varied attempts at a finish against an opponent who was content to hold on and maintain top position. You could argue that a takedown is an effective way of controlling the fight and dictating the action, so Demetrious Johnson won it fair and square – and you’d probably be right. At the same time, it was Torres doing most of the work to actually end the fight and/or make something interesting happen. It didn’t get him the victory, but it does get him a tip of the cap, for whatever that’s worth.

Least Impressive in Victory: Frank Mir
We know “Big Country” is tough to put away. The Junior dos Santos fight proved that much. But it never looks good when you have an opponent who is almost too exhausted to stand and you let him hang around for the full three rounds with his tongue practically hanging out of his mouth. At times it seems like Mir takes an unfair amount of criticism, particularly from Dana White. But then you stop and ask yourself, even after two straight wins over two name heavyweights, would I really want to see Mir anywhere near a title fight? Not unless he bought a ticket.

Most Surprising: Rick Story
With a decision win over Thiago Alves in the UFC, Story joins a very exclusive club with some strict membership requirements. He did it with a game plan that played brilliantly to his own strengths while taking Alves’ mostly out of the equation, and he also proved that he can take a punch (or a knee) and keep right on coming. Alves is by far the best fighter Story has ever beaten, and he did it in a fight that really wasn’t even close on the scorecards. That’s six in a row for the young welterweight. He keeps this up, and things will get serious in his career very quickly.

Most Memorable: Travis Browne‘s KO
Whenever the 6’11” Struve gets knocked out it always makes for instant highlight reel material. Like a building being imploded, his collapse to the mat looks so awkward and takes so long that it makes a lasting impression on everyone who sees it. That’s bad news for Struve, but great news for Browne, who put himself on the map with a perfectly timed Superman punch. Even if he never does anything else with his MMA career, that knockout will live on in highlight packages for years. It should also instantly erase the bitter memory of Browne’s unimpressive draw with Cheick Kongo at UFC 120. Nothing like a crushing knockout to resurrect your reputation. Now let’s see what he can do with it.

Least Likely to Remain Employed: Kendall Grove
The decision loss to Boetsch marked his third defeat in four attempts. What’s worse, he was never really in the fight. It was takedown, top control, scramble to the feet, then rinse and repeat all night long. By the third round, everyone knew what Boetsch was going to do, yet Grove couldn’t even come close to stopping it. It made for a pretty boring fight, which didn’t do Boetsch any favors, but the only thing worse than winning a fight in that fashion is losing one the same way. Grove is now 7-6 in his UFC career. Most of the fighters he beat recently were later cut from the UFC, which tells you something. He’s been hovering over the chopping block for a while now. My guess is the ax is about to come down.

 

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