Iron Chins: The 10 Toughest Fighters In The UFC

In mixed martial arts (MMA), we can often point out certain competitors that just seem to have been crafted from a different cloth. The toughness and grit needed to compete inside of the cage is unparalleled, and while all fighters should be given credit for taking on such a daunting task, not all fighters have

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In mixed martial arts (MMA), we can often point out certain competitors that just seem to have been crafted from a different cloth.

The toughness and grit needed to compete inside of the cage is unparalleled, and while all fighters should be given credit for taking on such a daunting task, not all fighters have that extra push deep inside of them.

Some of our favorite combatants are simply warriors at heart; they were made to do what they do, and in MMA, enduring punishment is sometimes just as important as dishing it out.

Let’s take a look at 10 of the UFC’s toughest fighters:

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Roy Nelson & Derrick Lewis Call Each Other Out For Fight Later This Year

roy-nelson

Derrick Lewis is scheduled to fight Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC Fight Night 86 on April 10th, but he still has his eyes on Roy Nelson. Lewis and Nelson are rumored to fight later this year.

When Nelson got word that Lewis was going to fill in for the injured Ruslan Magomedov at UFN 86 in April, he made it clear he still wants the fight even if Lewis loses.

“Well I still want [Lewis] after he loses to [Gonzaga],” Nelson wrote on his Facebook page. “Can’t call a man out and not expect consequences!”

Nelson’s comments prompted Lewis to fire back, assuring him he’s still interested in the match up.

“Relax,” Lewis said on Twitter. “You will still get your turn to look up at the lights, old man. I PROMISE”

UFN 86 takes place on April 10, 2016 at the Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia.

roy-nelson

Derrick Lewis is scheduled to fight Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC Fight Night 86 on April 10th, but he still has his eyes on Roy Nelson. Lewis and Nelson are rumored to fight later this year.

When Nelson got word that Lewis was going to fill in for the injured Ruslan Magomedov at UFN 86 in April, he made it clear he still wants the fight even if Lewis loses.

“Well I still want [Lewis] after he loses to [Gonzaga],” Nelson wrote on his Facebook page. “Can’t call a man out and not expect consequences!”

Nelson’s comments prompted Lewis to fire back, assuring him he’s still interested in the match up.

“Relax,” Lewis said on Twitter. “You will still get your turn to look up at the lights, old man. I PROMISE”

UFN 86 takes place on April 10, 2016 at the Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia.

UFC Fight Night 82 Salaries: ‘Wonderboy’s’ Bonus Bigger Than His Paycheck

Rising UFC welterweight Stephen Thompson may have picked up what ranks as by far his biggest win when he knocked out former champion Johny ‘Bigg Rigg’ Hendricks in the main event of last weekend’s (Sat., February 6, 2015) UFC Fight Night 82 from the MGM Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, but his paycheck didn’t

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Rising UFC welterweight Stephen Thompson may have picked up what ranks as by far his biggest win when he knocked out former champion Johny ‘Bigg Rigg’ Hendricks in the main event of last weekend’s (Sat., February 6, 2015) UFC Fight Night 82 from the MGM Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, but his paycheck didn’t necessarily reflect it.

Thompson was paid $24,000 to win and $24,000 for a total of $48,000 for the thrilling performance against Hendricks, an amount that was actually $2,000 less than the much-deserved $50,000 ‘Performance of the Night’ bonus he received afterward.

In an odd twist, UFC Fight Night 82 featured a high number of six-figure earners aside from Thompson, as five total fighters made $100,000 or more last Saturday. They were headlined by Hendricks ($100,000), Roy Nelson ($150,000), Joseph Benavidez ($118,000), Ovince St. Preux ($102,000), and longtime veteran Mike Pyle, who earned $106,000 in addition to $50,000 more for ‘Fight of the Night’ in his exciting stoppage win over Sean Spencer.

Here is the full list of disclosed UFC Fight Night 82 payouts:

Main Card (FOX Sports 1):
Stephen Thompson ($24,000 + $24,000 = $48,000) def. Johny Hendricks ($100,000)
Roy Nelson ($75,000 + $75,000 = $150,000) def. Jared Rosholt ($33,000)
Ovince St. Preux ($51,000 + $51,000 = $102,000) def. Rafael Cavalcante ($42,000)
Joseph Benavidez ($59,000 + $59,000 = $118,000) def. Zach Makovsky ($19,000)
Misha Cirkunov ($12,000 + $12,000 = $24,000) def. Alex Nicholson ($10,000)
Mike Pyle ($53,000 + $53,000 = $106,000) def. Sean Spencer ($17,000)

Preliminary Card (FOX Sports 1):
Josh Burkman ($45,000 + $45,000 = $90,000) def. K.J. Noons ($34,000)
Derrick Lewis ($25,000 + $25,000 = $50,000) def. Damian Grabowski ($18,000)
Justin Scoggins ($17,000 + $17,000 = $34,000) def. Ray Borg ($18,000)
Diego Rivas ($10,000 + $10,000 = $20,000) def. Noad Lahat ($17,000)

Preliminary Card (UFC Fight Pass):
Mickey Gall ($10,000 + $10,000 = $20,000) def. Mike Jackson ($10,000)
Alex White ($12,000 + $12,000 = $24,000) def. Artem Lobov ($13,000)

 

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Fight Night 82 Highlights/Results: Thompson Steamrolls Hendricks, Nelson Bests Rosholt, + More

So I guess it’s about time that we start taking Stephen Thompson seriously as a title contender, eh?

Matched up against former welterweight champion Johny Hendricks in the main of event of Saturday’s Fight Night 82, the general consensus seemed to be that “Wonderboy” would ultimately succumb to the wrestling prowess of “Bigg Rigg” as several more talented grapplers had before him. Of course, you can’t exactly outwrestle your opponent if you can’t touch him, and it appeared as if Stephen Thompson was fighting from the future.

Utilizing his trademark karate stance and a level of accuracy that rivaled Anderson Silva‘s UFC debut, Thompson not only tore through Hendricks, he did so almost effortlessly. He stuffed the former champ’s takedowns, beautifully managed his distance, and mixed up his attacks with almost machine-like precision, cracking one of the game’s most lauded chins in the process. Once you take away a man’s steakhouse, you take away his fire, I always say, and Hendricks looked like a man without fire on Saturday. The guy with a canon of a left hand just isn’t there anymore, it would seem, and a credit is due to “Wonderboy” for the ease with which he was able to nullify Hendricks.

Fight Night 82 also featured Roy Nelson’s return to the win column, a horrifically broken jaw, and an early contender for “Knockout of the Year,” so check out all the highlights and results after the jump.

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So I guess it’s about time that we start taking Stephen Thompson seriously as a title contender, eh?

Matched up against former welterweight champion Johny Hendricks in the main of event of Saturday’s Fight Night 82, the general consensus seemed to be that “Wonderboy” would ultimately succumb to the wrestling prowess of “Bigg Rigg” as several more talented grapplers had before him. Of course, you can’t exactly outwrestle your opponent if you can’t touch him, and it appeared as if Stephen Thompson was fighting from the future.

Utilizing his trademark karate stance and a level of accuracy that rivaled Anderson Silva‘s UFC debut, Thompson not only tore through Hendricks, he did so almost effortlessly. He stuffed the former champ’s takedowns, beautifully managed his distance, and mixed up his attacks with almost machine-like precision, cracking one of the game’s most lauded chins in the process. Once you take away a man’s steakhouse, you take away his fire, I always say, and Hendricks looked like a man without fire on Saturday. The guy with a canon of a left hand just isn’t there anymore, it would seem, and a credit is due to “Wonderboy” for the ease with which he was able to nullify Hendricks.

Fight Night 82 also featured Roy Nelson’s return to the win column, a horrifically broken jaw, and an early contender for “Knockout of the Year,” so check out all the highlights and results after the jump.

In the evening’s co-main event, Roy Nelson defeated Jared Rosholt by unanimous decision. That is the most objectively positive thing you can say about the fight, as well as the only real thing you could take away from it. Roy Nelson continues to be Roy Nelson, in that his fights suck if he doesn’t land an overhand right in the first 7 or so minutes, and Jared Rosholt continues to be the least entertaining fighter in the division.

In fact, Nelson would prefer if we stopped referring to Rosholt as a “fighter” altogether, telling Megan Olivi that “I try to give the fans exactly what they (want). An explosion, a fun fight to watch. It’s just, I didn’t think he was going to run the whole time. I mean, Jared is a great athlete, but he’s not a fighter. And tonight I think I showed that to the UFC world, that he’s a great athlete, but man, when you’ve got a fight, you have to fight.”

Nelson went on to call Rosholt “a track star,” so let’s hope that Joe Silva does the right thing and books Rosholt vs. Starnes in the main event of an upcoming Fight Pass card. Put it in one of those weird Eastern European countries, like Estonia or Latvia — they’ll just be happy to be out of the house.

Over at Uproxx, I sometimes like to try my hand at the fight-picking game. I went 107-56-1 last year and am off to a rough 6-6 start this year thanks to Johny Hendricks and pretty much every undercard fight that happened at Fight Night 82. When making my predictions for the Misha Cirkunov vs. Alex Nicholson, however, I made the following observation:

It’s great that Nicholson made the most out of the weigh-ins for this event, because his octagon debut is going to be both incredibly brief and unmemorable, in that the only thing he will remember from it will be the ride to the hospital.

With that out there, I’d like to now apologize to Alex Nicholson for what in hindsight . Nicholson *will* be able to remember his UFC debut, he’ll be able to remember it well, because Alex Nicholson was not lucky enough to merely be separated from his conscious like most of Cirkunov’s past opponents. No, he had his jaw cranked until it broke.

While he was awake.

So again, my apologies Alex. Let’s hope that proving me wrong served as some solace to you…on your ride to the hospital.

The ease with which Cirkunov fractured his opponent’s jaw served as a doppelganger of sorts to the finish of Diego Rivas vs. Noad Lahat earlier in the night, in that the force with which Rivas flying knee’d Lahat should have broken his jaw in no less than 4 places. Was that too complicated a way of putting that? Who cares, just watch this already.

Main card
Stephen Thompson def. Johny Hendricks via first-round TKO (3:31)
Roy Nelson def. Jared Rosholt via unanimous decision
Ovince St. Preux def. Rafael Cavalcante via unanimous decision
Joseph Benavidez def. Zach Makovsky via unanimous decision
Misha Cirkunov def. Alex Nicholson via rear-naked choke (R2, 1:28)
Mike Pyle def. Sean Spencer via third-round TKO (4:25)

Undercard
Josh Burkman def. K.J. Noons via unanimous decision
Derrick Lewis def. Damian Grabowski via first-round TKO (2:17)
Justin Scoggins def. Ray Borg via unanimous decision
Diego Rivas def. Noad Lahat via second-round KO (0:23)
Mickey Gall def. Mike Jackson via rear-naked choke (R1, 0:45)
Alex White def. Artem Lobov via unanimous decision

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UFC Fight Night 82 Results: Matches to Make for the Winners and Losers

Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson has arrived as a fresh face of the UFC’s welterweight division.
Johny Hendricks entered the fight appearing in great shape, but looks aren’t everything.
Thompson dusted former champion, and No. 1-ranked contender, Hendricks…

Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson has arrived as a fresh face of the UFC’s welterweight division.

Johny Hendricks entered the fight appearing in great shape, but looks aren’t everything.

Thompson dusted former champion, and No. 1-ranked contender, Hendricks inside of the first round at UFC Fight Night 82 in Las Vegas. He was accurate and deadly with his strikes. Hendricks stood in front of him, eating punches and kicks until he could no longer take the punishment.

The 170-pound division was not short on viable contenders before Saturday, and it certainly is not post-Saturday. Thompson looked the part of a title challenger.

What’s next for Thompson, and where does Hendricks go from here? What about the others who competed at UFC Fight Night 82? Here are the matches to make following all the action in Las Vegas.

Begin Slideshow

UFC Fight Night 82 Post-Fight Press Conference

Although originally scheduled to be UFC 196 featuring a heavyweight title fight, UFC Fight Night 82 went down this evening (February 6, 2016) live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. No. 2-ranked former welterweight champion Johny “Bigg Rigg” Hendricks squared off with rising No. 8-ranked Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson in the event’s

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Although originally scheduled to be UFC 196 featuring a heavyweight title fight, UFC Fight Night 82 went down this evening (February 6, 2016) live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

No. 2-ranked former welterweight champion Johny “Bigg Rigg” Hendricks squared off with rising No. 8-ranked Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson in the event’s headliner.

Heavyweight slugger Roy “Big Country” Nelson clashed with former division one wrestler Jared Rosholt in the co-main event of the evening.

Light heavyweights Ovince Saint Preux and Rafael Cavalcante fought on the main card as well as flyweight contenders Joseph Benavidez and Zack Makovsky.

Check out what the fighters had to say after the fights in the UFC Fight Night 82 post-fight press conference below courtesy of the UFC:

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