Interim Belt Aside, Yoel Romero vs. Robert Whittaker Will Decide World’s No.1 MW

The Michael Bisping era in the UFC middleweight division hasn’t exactly been a model of consistency.
By the time Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker fight for an interim championship at UFC 213 Saturday in Las Vegas, it will have been nine months since th…

The Michael Bisping era in the UFC middleweight division hasn’t exactly been a model of consistency.

By the time Yoel Romero and Robert Whittaker fight for an interim championship at UFC 213 Saturday in Las Vegas, it will have been nine months since the 185-pound title saw the light of day. Even longer since anybody who might rightly be considered a top middleweight contender got a sniff at the gold.

To find the last time a 185-pound title fight featured arguably the Octagon’s top two middleweights, you have to go all the way back to October 2015, when Luke Rockhold beat Chris Weidman at UFC 162.

Six months later at UFC 199, Rockhold‘s reign ended with a shocking first-round KO by Bisping.

That win not only made Bisping one of the most unlikely titlists in UFC history, it also created that rarest of situations in the Octagon: One where the champion isn’t necessarily regarded as the best fighter in his own weight class.

With any semblance of 185-pound order smashed, Bisping set about marking his own course. He ignored a gaggle of contenders clamoring for his gold in favor of picking and choosing his own matchups. He rematched the legendary Dan Henderson at UFC 204 and then began chasing an on-again, off-again booking against returning former welterweight titlist Georges St-Pierre.

In the process, normal business at middleweight has essentially ground to a halt.

Honestly? It hasn’t been all bad. If nothing else, it has been interesting.

It was initially considered a feelgood story that Bisping became champion. After a career spent as an important and influential draw for the UFC, it was like watching a well-liked coworker rip the wrapping paper off the gold Rolex at his retirement party.

It’s been nice to see “The Count” get a little time to bask in the limelight before calling it a career. On the other hand, his reign has ushered in a noticeable competitive drought in what should be one of the UFC’s most competitive and interesting weight classes.

To make matters worse, after negotiations for the St-Pierre fight bogged down, Bisping revealed he’s still recovering from knee surgery and may not fight again until the end of the year.

The whole situation has caused no small amount of unrest among fans, as well as the 185-pound rank and file. In May, Rockhold essentially advised his fellow middleweights to go on strike until matchmakers could install a workable plan for the weight class.

This week, the former champion made an even more dire pronouncement.

“The division is f–ked,” Rockhold told MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani. “No interesting fights.”

With all due respect to Rockhold, however, it’s possible Romero vs. Whittaker has the potential to unuhhscrew the 185-pound division in one fell swoop.

For starters, this bout finally gives two elite fighters a crack at winning a version of the title. Even with the interim tag looming, that’s a very good thing.

Second, it’ll be our best chance in a long time to anoint someone the consensus No. 1 middleweight on the planet.

An originally crowded herd of contenders that included Weidman, Rockhold, Romero, Gegard Mousasi and Jacare Souza has thinned a little bit at the moment. That leaves the door open for the winner of this fight to seize the throne atop the world rankings.

Third—and perhaps best of all—this fight shapes up as a scintillating matchup of styles between two of the division’s most compelling figures.

The 26-year-old Whittaker is as aggressive inside the cage as he is affable outside it. Currently riding an impressive seven-fight win streak, he made his bones as a legitimate title threat with a second-round TKO over perennial contender Souza three months ago.

But if Whittaker is a relative newcomer to the championship picture, it doesn’t make him any less dangerous. His five stoppages in nine UFC wins attest to that.

“I’m going to control this fight,” Whittaker said this week, via MMA Junkie’s Fernanda Prates and Ken Hathaway. “I think it’s going to be a smart fight … [but] I just see me putting too much hurt on him.”

Meanwhile, Romero has already been waiting for this opportunity for a long time.

The 40-year-old former Olympic wrestler has been ticketed as a potential title contender from nearly the moment he arrived in the UFC in 2013. With his outstanding amateur credentials and comic book physique, he certainly looks the part of a fearsome MMA destroyer.

After jetting to an 8-0 record in the Octagon, Romero has made good on that obvious potential. After looking a bit green during early UFC appearances, his most recent bouts have shown what the finished product might look like for him—and results have been scary good.

After edging Souza via split decision at UFC 194, he authored a 2016 knockout-of-the-year candidate with a flying knee on Weidman at UFC 205. By stacking those wins back-to-back, it’s hard to make a case anyone deserves a shot at the title more than Romero.

But that doesn’t mean he’s overlooking the up-and-coming Whittaker, either.

“All opponents are dangerous,” Romero said this week, via MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn and Hathaway. “He’s a young fighter, he’s hungry. These things always make your opponent dangerous.”

There has been some controversy to Romero’s UFC run, however. In between the Souza and Weidman wins, he was suspended six months for a positive drug test later determined to be the result of a contaminated dietary supplement. Though Romero’s claim that he’d done nothing wrong appeared to hold up, some people weren’t going to let him off the hook so easily.

One of those people is Bisping, obviously. The current champ has mocked Romero as a steroid user and waffled on whether he would deign to give the consensus No. 1 contender a title shot.

This week, however, the champion sent the clearest signal he may be open to fighting the Whittaker-Romero winner—even if his intent was merely to put more pressure on GSP.

“Georges, you’ve got until Saturday,” Bisping told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour (via Fansided’s Mike Heck). “Because on Saturday, I’m going to be on the FS1 post fight show and one of those two, tune in, Whittaker or Romero will be joining me at the desk, so you know that will have fireworks. If I can’t say I’m fighting GSP by then, then I have to say that I’m fighting Whittaker or Romero.”

UFC President Dana White also told MMAJunkie in an exclusive interview that Bisping‘s next fight will be against the winner of Romero-Whittaker, making it feel as though we’re tantalizingly close to getting the middleweight division back on track.

The first step toward that goal happens this weekend, when either Romero or Whittaker will leave T-Mobile Arena with a UFC belt around his waist.

The guy who holds that interim title may well hold the key to getting the weight class moving again.

With all due respect to the standing champion, they’ll also be regarded as the best 185-pounder in the world until Bisping gets his chance to prove that ranking wrong.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Fight Night 213 Predictions – Yoel Romero Vs. Robert Whittaker

UFC 212 was no doubt a highly entertaining event which was full of talented fighters going at one another, but in all honesty, it lacked the illustrious, big names that the fans wants to see. When the fight card came out, most people were underwhelmed. It looks like the UFC have keenly identified their previous […]

UFC 212 was no doubt a highly entertaining event which was full of talented fighters going at one another, but in all honesty, it lacked the illustrious, big names that the fans wants to see. When the fight card came out, most people were underwhelmed. It looks like the UFC have keenly identified their previous short comings and have evidently more than compensated for them with the fight card for UFC 213. There are several highly anticipated big name  fights that will be fought come July 8th in T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada. However, in the men’s class, the fight that everyone will have their eyes on is Yoel Romero (12 – 1) against Robert Whittaker (18-4) in the middleweight division.

It is no secret that the middle weight division has been cursed with a lack of bouts in the UFC. The dates have had one set back after another as the UFC scramble to get put together a middleweight title bout between Michael Bisping and Georges St-Pierre. The rest of the fighters in the division have been put on a hold, and now finally Yoel Romero can take on Robert Whittaker and the wait, if anything, has only added to the build up of this fight. Whittaker has proved his mettle as a fighter, he has steadily progressed through the ranks for three years now and has even taken down an established contender such as Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza. However, Romero is no slouch either and has been on a roll himself with victories against revered talents such as Lyoto Machida and Chris Weidman. In fact, Romero is on an unstoppable 8 fight winning streak.

While Whittaker is more technical and seems to have superior cardiovascular fitness levels, Romero is a sensational finisher. It is going to be a tough fight to call, but we have to put our money on Romero to win by unanimous decision.

Chris Weidman vs. Anderson Silva III Nearly Happened This Year

In only two days’ time, it will be the four-year anniversary of when Chris Weidman shocked the whole mixed martial arts (MMA) universe by knocking out a clowning Anderson Silva at UFC 162, changing the course of revered UFC middleweight division in the process. After their UFC 168 rematch six months later where Silva broke […]

The post Chris Weidman vs. Anderson Silva III Nearly Happened This Year appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

In only two days’ time, it will be the four-year anniversary of when Chris Weidman shocked the whole mixed martial arts (MMA) universe by knocking out a clowning Anderson Silva at UFC 162, changing the course of revered UFC middleweight division in the process.

After their UFC 168 rematch six months later where Silva broke his leg, Weidman went on to defend the title twice against two former light heavyweight champs in Lyoto Machida at UFC 175 and Vitor “The Phenom” Belfort at UFC 187. Four straight wins over true UFC legends in tow, it looked as if Weidman was on his way to becoming a legend himself.

Photo Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea for USA TODAY Sports

Fast-forward two years, though, and after a brutal beating from Luke Rockhold, a devastating flying knee from Yoel Romero, and a controversial TKO loss to Gegard Mousasi, and Weidman is suddenly fighting to merely be a top contender in the deeply talented 185-pound fray heading into his headlining bout against rising star Kelvin Gastelum in the main event of July 22’s UFC on FOX 25 from the Nassau Coliseum.

During an appearance on today’s episode of The MMA Hour, however, Weidman revealed he almost had another big fight lined up this year after the UFC offered him a trilogy match at June 3’s UFC 212 from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, after Gastelum of all foes was forced out for failing a drug test for marijuana. Weidman was still getting the injuries from his fight versus Mousasi checked out, and had to decline:

“The UFC was asking me if I would fight Anderson Silva. This was, I think three and a half weeks before that fight was going on. In Rio, and I’m just like ‘no’. I was still getting things checked out on my body, and going to different doctors.”

Photo Credit: Kevin Hoffman for USA TODAY Sports

And even though he’s on by far the worst run of his career, Weidman still wasn’t desperate enough to fight a man he’s already beaten twice before in his volatile hometown on super-short notice:

“I had just gone to Vegas, got it all checked out. I already beat the guy twice, I’m going to take a fight on short notice and head to his hometown to fight him? I’m like ‘yeah, that’s not happening. If you want me to fight Anderson again, bump it up a couple of weeks, if you want to do it in Nassau Colosseum or some other time, but I’m not going to do it on short notice.”

Weidman was ultimately booked versus Gastelum in his present must-win fight, yet it’s at least somewhat legitimate to wonder if Weidman would be better off fighting an aging 41-year-old superstar with huge name value rather than a surging 25-year-old knockout striker who’s looked nothing less than lethal in recent outings.

If he does somehow get past Gastelum, perhaps a trilogy match with “The Spider” could be a possibility while the all-out mess of the middleweight division is sorted out when Yoel Romero meets Robert Whittaker for the interim belt at this weekend’s UFC 213 and then waits for injured champion Michael Bisping to finally return and defend the title against a real contender.

The post Chris Weidman vs. Anderson Silva III Nearly Happened This Year appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Jacare Souza Gives Prediction For Romero vs. Whittaker

Jacare Souza knows who he is picking in the interim middleweight title match-up between No. 1-ranked Yoel Romero and No. 3-ranked Robert Whittaker, seeing as he has shared the Octagon with both men. It was announced earlier this year that current UFC 185-pound champ Michael Bisping would defend his strap against the returning former welterweight […]

The post Jacare Souza Gives Prediction For Romero vs. Whittaker appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Jacare Souza knows who he is picking in the interim middleweight title match-up between No. 1-ranked Yoel Romero and No. 3-ranked Robert Whittaker, seeing as he has shared the Octagon with both men.

It was announced earlier this year that current UFC 185-pound champ Michael Bisping would defend his strap against the returning former welterweight king Georges St-Pierre, however, no date or venue was ever set for the bout. St-Pierre stated that he wouldn’t be ready to fight until after October, prompting UFC President Dana White to call the fight off and make other arrangements.

Instead, “Rush” will return to his former championship weight of 185 pounds while Bisping nurses an injury. In the meanwhile, the UFC’s middleweight title will receive an interim champion this weekend (Sat. July 8, 2017) when Romero and Whittaker are locked in the Octagon.

Jacare Souza is a man who has fought both of these top-ranked middleweight contenders, suffering a controversial split decision loss to Romero in December of 2015 and a knockout loss to Whittaker earlier this year, and offered his pick for this weekend’s title clash. The Brazilian picked Romero to walk away victorious due to his massive size and ability to remain calm under pressure (quotes via MMA Fighting):

“I think Romero wins this fight,” Souza said. “He’s stronger, keeps the distance well and is really calm. Robert Whittaker can surprise him and win because he’s really fast for the middleweight division, but I bet on Romero.”

Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports

Although the UFC waited until after Jacare lost to Whittaker to implement the interim strap, he isn’t holding any grudges and is eager to see a good fight between two of the UFC’s finest at 185 pounds:

“Better late than never,” he said. “Robert Whittaker is a great champion and earned this chance. I’m happy for him. And Romero also proved he deserved it by knocking out (Chris) Weidman. They deserve to fight for the interim belt and then fight Bisping.

“The division is finally moving now. I’m coming back and will earn my title shot.”

The post Jacare Souza Gives Prediction For Romero vs. Whittaker appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Robert Whittaker Knocks Michael Bisping For Lack Of Title Defenses

After reinventing himself at middleweight and parlaying the decision into five straight wins, No. 3-ranked Robert Whittaker is in the for the fight of his career when he meets No. 1 Yoel Romero for the interim 185-pound championship in the co-main event of this weekend’s (Sat., July 8, 2017) UFC 213 from the T-Mobile Arena […]

The post Robert Whittaker Knocks Michael Bisping For Lack Of Title Defenses appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

After reinventing himself at middleweight and parlaying the decision into five straight wins, No. 3-ranked Robert Whittaker is in the for the fight of his career when he meets No. 1 Yoel Romero for the interim 185-pound championship in the co-main event of this weekend’s (Sat., July 8, 2017) UFC 213 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The 26-year-old New Zealander has risen to the top the old-fashioned way as well, choosing to let his fists and feet do his talking on the way to a title fight rather than jumping the queue with well-timed trash talk. In fact, Whittaker remains respectful of the similarly streaking Romero, expressing his excitement at the huge fight in a recent interview with TMZ Sports:

“First and foremost, I’m just excited to be fighting Yoel Romero. I wanna the top of the food chain, I wanna fight that high fight. You know, Yoel’s a great name to fight, and I wanna fight him, and that’s before anything.”

Ron Chenoy for USA TODAY Sports

One fighter he’s not as respectful of is the champion, however, as Whittaker put things in plain terms when resented with the prospect of Bisping saying the UFC 213 co-main was a worthless fight. To him, the fact that “the Count” hasn’t faced a true top middleweight throughout his entire controversial title reign means he needed to step in and keep the division moving:

“Secondly, Bisping’s out; he hasn’t fought a guy in the Top 10 for a long time. And you know, someone’s gotta keep his seat warm. and I’m happy to do that.”

But even though he could be headed for a fight against Bisping if and when he defeats Romero, “The Reaper” held strong in the stance that he’s only focused on Romero right now, probably a good idea considering the brute force stopping power of the Cuban wrestling behemoth:

“I haven’t given in a thought, man. There is nothing past Yoel Romero. July 88 is the end of my calendar year.”

Finally, Whittaker closed by offering a warning to “The Soldier of God,” suggesting he should be ready for a war on Saturday:

“Hope you’re ready. It’s going to be a tough fight and expect a war.”

The post Robert Whittaker Knocks Michael Bisping For Lack Of Title Defenses appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Jacare Souza Gives Edge to Yoel Romero Over Robert Whittaker

Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza is picking Yoel Romero to become the interim Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight title holder. This Saturday night (July 8), Romero will battle Robert Whittaker inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The interim title bout will serve as UFC 213’s co-main event. The action goes down as part of “International […]

Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza is picking Yoel Romero to become the interim Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight title holder. This Saturday night (July 8), Romero will battle Robert Whittaker inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The interim title bout will serve as UFC 213’s co-main event. The action goes down as part of “International […]