MMA Top 10 Heavyweights: Junior Dos Santos Moves to the Top

Filed under: UFC, Rankings, HeavyweightsJunior Dos Santos has had a rather amazing UFC career. Signed to make his debut against Fabricio Werdum at UFC 90, Dos Santos was such a big underdog that some people suggested he was only brought to the UFC beca…

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Junior dos Santos celebrates after his win at UFC on FOX.Junior Dos Santos has had a rather amazing UFC career. Signed to make his debut against Fabricio Werdum at UFC 90, Dos Santos was such a big underdog that some people suggested he was only brought to the UFC because it would give Werdum an easy win on his way to a heavyweight title shot. Instead, Dos Santos knocked Werdum out in the first round, beginning a UFC run that would lead to him taking the heavyweight belt from Cain Velasquez on Saturday night.

There’s nothing the least bit fancy about what Dos Santos does: He just hits the other guy really, really hard. Dos Santos is 8-0 in the UFC, and he finished six of his opponents with punches, while winning the other two fights by lopsided unanimous decision, battering those two opponents with punches for 15 minutes each. And yet even though everyone who steps into the Octagon with Dos Santos knows what’s coming, no one can do anything about it.

Dos Santos has never had an easy opponent: Between Werdum and Velasquez his victims were Stefan Struve, Mirko Cro Cop, Gilbert Yvel, Gabriel Gonzaga, Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin. And yet Dos Santos always makes it look easy.

So there’s little doubt that Dos Santos is at the top of our heavyweight rankings. For the rest of the rankings, see below.

Top 10 heavyweights in mixed martial arts
(Editor’s note: The individual fighter’s ranking the last time we did heavyweights are in parentheses.)

1. Junior Dos Santos (2): The biggest question for the UFC’s bottom line is how many of the new viewers who tuned in to see the fight on Saturday night are now Dos Santos fans who will pay to watch him again. Dos Santos isn’t a proven pay-per-view draw yet, but he’s an appealing and likable fighter who has just reached by far his biggest audience yet.

2. Cain Velasquez (1): I firmly believe that Velasquez will be back. Velasquez has too much talent and too much work ethic not to be fighting for the heavyweight title again some day in the future.

3. Alistair Overeem (3): I think Overeem would represent the most interesting possible opponent for Dos Santos. Overeem is the one fighter in the heavyweight division who might actually be a better striker than Dos Santos, and if Overeem can beat Brock Lesnar on December 30, then some time in 2012 we’ll see Overeem and Dos Santos go at it.

4. Brock Lesnar (4): Lesnar was articulate and engaging in his commentary role on the UFC on Fox broadcast, and seeing him again was a reminder of just how important a star he’s become to the UFC. His fight with Overeem will likely be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view draw of 2011, and if he wins that fight his bout with Dos Santos would likely be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view draw of 2012.

5. Fabricio Werdum (5): In the last four years Werdum’s only losses have been to Dos Santos and Overeem, while he’s had impressive victories over Gabriel Gonzaga, Brandon Vera, Mike Kyle, Antonio Silva and Fedor Emelianenko. Werdum fights high-level opponents and usually comes out on top, and I’m excited about the prospects of seeing him back in the UFC soon.

6. Daniel Cormier (6): The 9-0 Cormier has hardly even been tested so far in his MMA career, including a dominant first-round knockout victory over Antonio Silva in September. He’s set to face Josh Barnett in the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix final, and if he wins that fight, the logical next step would be a shot at the UFC heavyweight title.

7. Shane Carwin (7): Carwin has lost back-to-back fights to Lesnar and Dos Santos, and his bad back is expected to keep him out for several more months, so he may drop in the heavyweight rankings soon.

8. Frank Mir (8): Mir has won two in a row since being knocked out by Carwin a year and a half ago, and in December he’ll try to make it three straight wins with a rematch against Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. If Mir wins that one, he’d make a lot of sense as the next opponent for Velasquez.

9. Josh Barnett (9): Although UFC President Dana White has badmouthed Barnett many times, there’s little doubt that he’ll be welcomed back to the UFC if he beats Cormier to win the Strikeforce tournament.

10. Antonio Silva (10): Bigfoot’s future is a bit murky because the future is murky for everyone who’s still on the Strikeforce side of the Zuffa roster. But in the UFC there are a lot of very interesting fights for Silva. A UFC debut against the loser over the Overeem-Lesnar bout would be a huge heavyweight fight to make in 2012.

 

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UFC on FOX Results: Junior Dos Santos vs. Anderson Silva Breakdown

Junior dos Santos looked awfully impressive in the UFC’s debut on FOX, finishing reigning heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez in a mere 64 seconds. JDS once again showed that his MMA boxing is something special and that few, if any, fighters in th…

Junior dos Santos looked awfully impressive in the UFC‘s debut on FOX, finishing reigning heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez in a mere 64 seconds. 

JDS once again showed that his MMA boxing is something special and that few, if any, fighters in the heavyweight division will be able to stand and trade with the heavy-handed Brazilian.  

Interestingly, one of “Cigano’s” main sparring partners is Black House teammate Anderson Silva.

While a fight with the reigning UFC middleweight champion is incredibly unlikely, given JDS’s recent title win, it is compelling to sit down and think about what a super fight between these two exceptional strikers would look like.

Let’s take a look at how this fantasy fight could play out.   

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Shane Carwin Is Done as a UFC Heavyweight Title Contender

Shane Carwin comes across as a great guy when you see him in interviews or read his interactions with fans online. Any man who can lay claim to being an engineer and a former UFC interim heavyweight champion at the same time deserves respect, but the w…

Shane Carwin comes across as a great guy when you see him in interviews or read his interactions with fans online. Any man who can lay claim to being an engineer and a former UFC interim heavyweight champion at the same time deserves respect, but the way Carwin carries himself makes it even easier to appreciate.

He’s also put on some exceptional heavyweight fights in recent years, providing fans with violent stoppages, vicious beatdowns and gutsy showings.

That’s why it’s hard to say this: He’s done as a title contender in the heavyweight division.

Unfortunately, Carwin is in the process of a surgery that will keep him out of action until mid-2012, scrapping a rumoured Dec. 30 tilt with top-five big man Fabricio Werdum. It’s the second time this year the hulking Coloradoan will go under the knife and the second time he’s been knocked down a rung on the heavyweight ladder as a result.

The reality is that at 36 years old, Carwin didn’t have a lot of mileage left in the first place. He’ll be 37 by the time he returns to the cage, and he won’t be particularly close to gold given that he’ll have had three fights in three years—two of them losses.

It’s tough to have to say that about someone who could win fights on bulk and wrestling ability but has elected to go out and entertain people with carnage instead. He battered Brock Lesnar to within an inch of his life, put on an epic display of heart in a loss to Junior Dos Santos and has thunderous wins over Frank Mir, Gabriel Gonzaga and Christian Wellisch in the UFC. His highlight reel is impressive, and he’s gained fans as a result.

However, the sport is not designed for men of Carwin’s age and medical history to succeed. For every Anderson Silva or Randy Couture, there are a hundred guys who held on a little too long and kept coming back only to worsen injuries or lessen their quality of life down the line. And that’s not only talking about repeated knockout losses, of which Carwin has never suffered even one. That’s talking about wear-and-tear injuries like the neck, back, knees and hips.

Realistically, Carwin has nothing left to prove in the sport. He started late—almost 31 years old when he won his first pro fight—and tore to the top of the UFC in only a few short years. He could get out now and go back to helping teammates train for fights while spending his days in the office using his head as something other than a target for giant men to swing at.

Don’t expect him to pack it in yet, though, as he’s long said he fights for the love of competition. He’ll be back next summer, perhaps against Werdum or another highly ranked heavyweight that will guarantee an interesting matchup. However, with the clock ticking and his history of health problems, don’t expect a win or even a few wins to come easy or to get him back into the title picture.

Those days are behind him.

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Frank Mir Feels Brock Lesnar Will “Easily” Beat Alistair Overeem at UFC 141

Frank Mir once said that he wanted Brock Lesnar “to be the first person that dies to Octagon-related injuries.”  Despite that fact, he is still picking the former UFC heavyweight champion to defeat Alistair Overeem in his Octagon debut…

Frank Mir once said that he wanted Brock Lesnarto be the first person that dies to Octagon-related injuries.” 

Despite that fact, he is still picking the former UFC heavyweight champion to defeat Alistair Overeem in his Octagon debut.

While speaking to ESPN.com, Mir surprisingly endorsed his rival pretty decisively when speaking about the headlining fight at UFC 141. 

“Honestly, I think Brock will win pretty easily,” Mir indicated.  He explained that Lesnar’s wrestling pedigree will simply be too much for “The Demolition Man” to overcome.

“I think we’re going to see the closest thing to a grappler versus striker match you’ll see nowadays. Brock is going to cover up; maybe throw one jab. He’ll rush Overeem to the cage, reach down for a leg and rip him down.”

Despite a pretty solid grappling resume winning 19 of his 35 fights by way of submission, Mir more or less said the most recent Strikeforce heavyweight champion will be helpless once he gets taken down. 

“I don’t think he’s going to get off his back,” Mir said. “I’d be very shocked—I’d applaud Overeem if he got off his back.” 

Mir also said that he no longer has any problems with Lesnar, mentioning that their real life vendetta was not as big of a deal as they made it out to be.

“Time heals all wounds,” Mir reflected. “And in reality, I played that up because at that time in my life I thought being loud and saying those things would be good marketing for a third fight.”

“In the last couple years I’ve realized, if people are going to dislike me, I want it to be because of my personality and not because of something I did for marketing a fight.”

Mir handed Lesnar his first professional loss when he submitted him with a kneebar back at UFC 81.  However, Brock got his revenge at UFC 100 when he finished Mir with some vicious ground and pound in the second round.

Mir is riding a two-fight win streak after being knocked out by Shane Carwin at UFC 111 and is set to have a part two with Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC 140.  Mir won their first meeting by TKO at UFC 92.

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For Shane Carwin, It’s Surgery, Then Return to Address ‘Unfinished Business’

Filed under: UFC, MMA Fighting Exclusive, NewsThe days and nights are not especially comfortable for Shane Carwin. Sitting at his desk, he feels the middle three toes on his left foot go numb. Working out, his legs freeze for split-seconds at a time. L…

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The days and nights are not especially comfortable for Shane Carwin. Sitting at his desk, he feels the middle three toes on his left foot go numb. Working out, his legs freeze for split-seconds at a time. Lying on his bed at night, he can’t find a comfortable position to rest in.

For Carwin, the problem will result in his second major surgery in a year. On November 15, doctors will perform a procedure that will drill out bone and give his spinal cord some room to keep a disc from pressing against his nerves.

The surgery is scary, but as Carwin tells it, not as scary as the moment that led to it.

He had noticed that anytime he was doing jumping exercises, his legs would lock up briefly, but he reasoned that his muscles were just taking longer than usual to warm up. But on one recent day, he was working on wrestling takedowns, and suddenly fell flat on his back. It was at that point when he realized that his legs had gone completely stiff.

“Honestly, I thought I was almost paralyzed,” he told MMA Fighting.

The feeling came back about 15 seconds later, but Carwin knew something was very wrong with his body. A follow-up MRI revealed damage that put the former UFC interim light-heavyweight champion on the shelf and in a predicament. His doctor gave him two options. Either he could go through surgery, or he could retire.

While it wasn’t a snap decision, it wasn’t a hard one either.

After consulting with his doctor, Carwin (12-2) spoke with both his wife Lani and manager Jason Genet. To him, it sounded like the surgery was inevitable at some point as his symptoms weren’t likely to just go away on their own. It was possible he could retire and need the procedure a year down the road, so, he reasoned, why not just do it now and continue on with his fight career? It’s not like he’s afraid of the hard work he’ll have to put in to return. This is the guy who nearly won a UFC championship while holding a fulltime job as an engineer. If anyone was going to embrace this uphill task, it’s him.

“If I didn’t believe I still had a title run left in me, I would retire,” he said. “I feel like I still have some things to prove. I have unfinished business. I love the doubters.”

Carwin is not likely to return to the octagon until around the summer of 2012. At that point he’ll be 37 years old, coming off two surgeries in less than two years, and looking to break a two-fight losing streak. So there will likely be many doubters to be found.

It wasn’t long ago though when he was the next big thing, an undefeated 12-0 with 12 first-round finishes heading into his heavyweight championship fight with Brock Lesnar at UFC 116. In that bout, he seemed on his way to lucky 13, punishing Lesnar in a first-round barrage that nearly caused a stoppage on more than one occasion. But Lesnar withstood the ferocious onslaught and rebounded with a second-round arm-triangle submission.

After surgery in November 2010 that addressed neck and disc damage that was a result of wear and tear throughout his athletic career, Carwin came back almost a year after his last fight, ironically replacing a recently dethroned Lesnar in a No. 1 contenders bout with Junior dos Santos at UFC 131. The performance undeniably exhibited Carwin’s toughness (he was outstruck 104-22 according to FightMetric), but for him, it ultimately proved to be the most disappointing of his career.

Carwin offers few excuses for the loss, saying that it’s the one fight he’d like to take back.

“The Junior fight just wasn’t me,” he said. “I don’t think mentally it was me. When I went out there, I didn’t press and get in his face like I typically would. That’s one time to perform, and I just didn’t perform to my best. I could sit here and look at things here or there I could have done better, but the fact of the matter is that I didn’t perform to my best.”

That memory will at least partially motivate Carwin forward as he works though rehabilitation and finds his way back into the gym. At least for a short time, it had already been doing so. Shortly before his injury occurred, the UFC had given Carwin an indication that he would be on the year-end event at UFC 141, and he had been in the gym gearing up his training.

By the time he returns a few months from now, the division is likely to look quite different. A title fight with Cain Velasquez hoping to defend his belt against dos Santos is on the horizon, and at the end of the year, Brock Lesnar and Alistair Overeem will tangle in a bout that could produce the next top contender.

“The heavyweight division is exciting,” he said. “I can see any of those four guys holding the belt. It sure makes for some exciting matchups.”

But there’s even more depth likely on the way. Top 10 heavyweight Fabricio Werdum is likely to be shipped in soon, and by the time Carwin returns, Strikeforce might have folded up shop and brought its talented big men to the UFC’s octagon.

Carwin has no predictions on the world he’ll walk back into when his body is healed up, but he knows the division has its challenges.

The only challenge for him now is getting healthy. Doctors have told him that he should return to “as normal as whatever athletes can be” after years of wear and tear. There is no guarantee, just the promise in his mind. Asked if he has anything he’d like to say about his future, the soft-spoken heavyweight laughs. There will be no big proclamations forthcoming.

“I appreciate being part of the sport and the opportunities it’s given me in life,” he says.

And with that, Shane Carwin goes back to work.

 

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MMA: GSP out of UFC 137, Surgery for Shane Carwin and the Week’s Biggest News

It was a rough week for the world of mixed martial arts as a number of fighters suffered injuries and were forced out of upcoming bouts.Most notably, UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre fell victim to a knee injury and is out of the UFC 137 main e…

It was a rough week for the world of mixed martial arts as a number of fighters suffered injuries and were forced out of upcoming bouts.

Most notably, UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre fell victim to a knee injury and is out of the UFC 137 main event against Carlos Condit.

Former UFC interim heavyweight champ Shane Carwin revealed that will be out until 2012 due to lower back surgery.

Additionally, a former winner of the The Ultimate Fighter has found a new promotion and a number of upcoming cards have undergone changes.

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