UFC Heavyweight Division: Chaotic 2012 Setting the Table for Exciting 2013

Under the UFC banner the heavyweight division has been a “work in progress” for some time.The days of Brock Lesnar reigning supreme as a pay-per-view draw have passed, and in the void, fighters have slung the heavy leather to establish a new hierarchy …

Under the UFC banner the heavyweight division has been a “work in progress” for some time.

The days of Brock Lesnar reigning supreme as a pay-per-view draw have passed, and in the void, fighters have slung the heavy leather to establish a new hierarchy in the weight class.

As Junior dos Santos and company have helped to usher in a new generation for the organization, the next wave or future contenders have been doing their best to break through. The process has been a knockout-filled extravaganza, and when the dust settles at the end of 2012 the divisional picture will finally develop.

Over the final four months of the year fans will see prospects tested, veterans attempt to hold their ground and a champion defend his title. While the UFC hasn’t promoted the bouts as a tournament format, the manner in which the current schedule is laid out,will certainly decide who steps up and who is ultimately rolled back into the fold.

It is a crucial time for the weight class.

Judging from the action which has already occurred over the past two weekends, the fighters involved understand the opportunity before them.

 

Veterans Hold Strong as the Next Wave Rises

The two most recent cards have put a spotlight on the division as heavyweights have filled the main event slots. In both matchups, veterans have faced surging prospects and in both cases have pulled off upsets in stunning fashion. Two weekends ago in Nottingham, England, Stefan Struve launched himself into the mix of contenders by halting the momentum of Stipe Miocic via a second-round TKO.

Last night at UFC on FX 5, a resilient Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva made good on his pledge of “all or nothing” by earning a first-round stoppage victory over the previously undefeated Travis Browne. Both battles yielded similar results as the victor saw his stock rise and the defeated were rolled back for the time being.

 

The interesting aspect of these particular fights is what the picture would have looked like if the results were different. While Struve is young, the Dutch “Skyscraper” has attempted to break into contention before, and had been Miocic‘s hand raised, the brand of unfulfilled potential may have been officially stamped. Stuve would have none of this as he finally appeared to understand his range advantage and battered Miocic for the stoppage.

Same goes for “Bigfoot” Silva. The glimmer of defeating Fedor Emelianenko has faded and in his two previous outings he found disastrous results. Had Browne found victory in last night’s throwdown, the idea of Silva being a top heavyweight would have exited the cage with him. Instead, Silva came into the fight knowing the weight of the moment and pulled out the impressive victory.

Stuve and Silva will go further into the fire while Miocic and Browne will have to regain their footing.

 

A Rematch One Year in the Making

The UFC has made no secret about its expectation of the heavyweights. The organization fully intends on the weight class becoming one of their premier divisions, solidifying that notion by making a heavyweight title fight the main event of the first showing on Fox. The bout featured a previously undefeated champion in Cain Velasquez against the devastating knockout power of rising star Junior dos Santos.

It only took 64 seconds for “Cigano” to claim the position of heavyweight king as he scored the knockout victory.

While the loss was a setback for Velasquez, it didn’t reshuffle him completely.

He was eager to earn another title shot and the cards played out in his favor. Velasquez was originally slated to face Frank Mir at UFC 146, but following the situation with Alistair Overeem being pulled from the card, Mir was bumped up to fight dos Santos and Velasquez would face Antonio Silva. Both fights would end in dramatic fashion as Velasquez beat Silva to a bloody mess and dos Santos starched Mir in the second round.

Following their victories at UFC 146, UFC President Dana White deemed the timing right for a rematch. The bout was originally slated for UFC 152 in Toronto, but has since been pushed back to the end of the year at UFC 155.

The rematch will serve to answer questions which swirled around the MMA community following their first bout. Velasquez had spent an extensive amount of time on the shelf due to shoulder surgery and dos Santos came into the fight nursing an injured knee. With both men at the top of their game it will be a clear look at two of the division’s best.

 

Nelson vs. Carwin to Decide Who Stays in the Mix

In the current state of the division one would be hard-pressed to find two fighters with more high-profile experience than Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin.

Both have been inside the Octagon with the division’s best and are set to square-off on Dec. 15 at the TUF 16 Finale. They were originally slated to fight at UFC 125, but an injury to Carwin forced the bout to be scrapped. Now they will have the opportunity to let their heavy hands fly when they step into the cage at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in December.

The apparent grudge which has developed between the two fighters will be front and center for the bout, but the real story will be in what comes after.

Carwin has lost his last two fights, and when he steps into the Octagon with Nelson it will come at the end of nearly year-and-a-half layoff. It is doubtful a third consecutive loss would cost the former interim champion his job with the UFC, but it would certainly be enough to push him out of contender waters for the foreseeable future.

Carwin isn’t getting any younger, and with the amount of injuries which have piled up over the past few years, now is his time to make a stand. While a victory over Nelson most likely won’t result in another title shot, it will keep his slot as one of the division’s best intact.

“Big Country” has spent a career in the UFC throwing hands with the best of the best and Carwin is the next step on that journey. Following a rough patch which saw him drop back to back fights against dos Santos and Mir, Nelson has battled back to claim two of his last three fights, with his most recent showing coming by way of one-punch devastation at the expense of Dave Herman at UFC 146.

In facing Carwin at the Finale, Nelson will have the opportunity to take another big step up on the divisional ladder. Should he find victory, Nelson will solidify himself in the divisional upper tier where a defeat would push him back into the lower deck.

 

The Wild Cards

While the division plays out, there are certainly variables that exist in the fringe.

A handful of the world’s top heavyweights find themselves at the mercy of circumstance, and the eventuality of their inclusion in the weight class serves to bolster a bright future for the division.

The current Strikeforce Grand Prix champion and rising star Daniel Cormier has made quite the impact over the past year. Big wins over Silva and Josh Barnett launched Cormier‘s name onto Top 10 lists around the sport, and his trajectory only appeared to be rising. With the UFC absorbing Strikeforce’s heavyweight roster, it looked as if “DC” was going to hit the ground running with the world’s top heavyweights.

Following the conclusion of Grand Prix, it was announced Cormier had one final fight to fulfill on his Strikeforce contract before coming over. The rumor of a potential opponent floated around for months, but when the UFC announced former champion Frank Mir would be coming over, a high-profile throwdown was set for Nov. 3 in Oklahoma.

Unfortunately Mir would succumb to injury, which left Cormier once again without an opponent. Over the past several weeks, multiple names have surfaced as replacements but all have been shot down before coming to fruition. Less than a month remains until fight night, and Cormier still has no idea who he will be facing. While a future facing the UFC’s best is a near certainty, getting there appears to be the hardest part.

You can’t talk about top heavyweights in the sport of MMA without mentioning Alistair Overeem. “The Reem” has been a wrecking machine, going nearly five years without a notch in the loss column. Over this time he has championed multiple organizations and made an impressive debut by scoring a TKO victory over Brock Lesnar at UFC 141.

The good vibes faded for Overeem following his smashing of Lesnar.

His title shot against dos Santos was revoked when he failed a pre-fight drug test for elevated levels of testosterone. Overeem would eventually go in front of the Nevada State Athletic Commission to explain the reason’s behind the failed test, but NSAC’s decision left him unable to re-apply for licensing until December of this year. Once Overeem returns to the action the divisional race will only become that much more exciting.

Another top heavyweight on the “limbo” list is Fabricio Werdum.

The Brazilian submission ace cannot seem to find a direct path to contention since coming over to the UFC from Strikeforce. Despite an impressive debut showing against Nelson at UFC 143, Werdum was then matched up with Mike Russow in one of the year’s most lopsided affairs. It was a pairing which made very little sense in regard to the big picture, and Werdum dispatched of the Chicago Police officer in quick fashion.

Werdum is sitting on back-to-back victories since crossing over, and it appears as if he will remain sitting for a bit longer. With all of the top heavyweights currently locked into fights, the King’s MMA-trained fighter will most likely have to sit on the shelf.

Following his victory over Miocic, Struve requested Werdum for his next opponent, and while that matchup makes sense, it would most likely come in early 2013, if it gets put together. That is a long time for Werdum to wait, but if he intends to stay amongst the top of his weight class, it may be the best option he has.

The year will conclude with several high-profile, action-packed matchups that will ultimately set the table for what could be an incredible run for the heavyweight division in 2013.

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TUF 16 Finale Is On: Tickets for Carwin vs. Nelson on Sale Next Week

Only a week ago, MMA fans held their breath, worried that the TUF 16 Finale between Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin might be off after “The Engineer” injured his knee. But you can breathe a sigh of relief, because the UFC has announced the figh…

Only a week ago, MMA fans held their breath, worried that the TUF 16 Finale between Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin might be off after “The Engineer” injured his knee.

But you can breathe a sigh of relief, because the UFC has announced the fight for December 15, with tickets due to go on sale on October 12.

According to a press release, the heated rivalry between two of the sport’s hardest-hitting heavyweights will be settled as the UFC returns to The Joint at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas.

Former UFC interim heavyweight champion Carwin will meet TUF season 10 winner Nelson in the night’s five-round main event, after the two end their stint as opposing coaches on the latest season of TUF.

Also crowned at the Vegas event will be the winner of TUF 16, which features welterweight fighters.

“Roy Nelson has gotten under Shane Carwin’s skin all season and Shane’s ready to try to knock him out,” UFC president Dana White said. “I don’t expect this one to go the distance.”

“Roy and Shane were civil to each other on ‘TUF,’ but they can’t stand each other and after having to spend six weeks together Shane said he can’t wait to knock Roy out,” White added. “These two are both known for having heavy hands. Chances are someone is getting knocked out. Best part is the coaches will fight on the TUF Finale Live on FX from Hard Rock Hotel here in Vegas.”

Tickets for the show are priced at $304, $254, $179, $154, $104 and $79 and can be bought from the Hard Rock Box Office, Ticketmaster or charge-by-phone at 800.745.3000.

The main card will also air live on FX at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

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TUF 16: The Ultimate Fighter Draws Record Low Ratings at 775K Viewers

Three episodes into its season, “The Ultimate Fighter 16: Team Carwin vs. Team Nelson” is still suffering from poor TV ratings, reportedly drawing 775,000 viewers on FX this past Friday.MMA Junkie notes this as the lowest-rated episode in the seri…

Three episodes into its season, “The Ultimate Fighter 16: Team Carwin vs. Team Nelson” is still suffering from poor TV ratings, reportedly drawing 775,000 viewers on FX this past Friday.

MMA Junkie notes this as the lowest-rated episode in the series’ history, continuing a downward trend that hasn’t recovered since the debut of “The Ultimate Fighter: Live” on March 9th, 2012.

According to their data, viewership has continued to drop by significant amounts each episode:

  • “The Ultimate Fighter 16” episode No. 1: 947,000 viewers
  • “The Ultimate Fighter 16” episode No. 2: 872,000 viewers
  • “The Ultimate Fighter 16” episode No. 3: 775,000 viewers

Ever since “TUF” debuted on FX, a condition of the UFC’s seven-year TV deal with FOX, ratings have slowly regressed from its 1.2 million-viewer network premiere.

In addition to the show’s rating troubles, UFC heavyweight Shane Carwin—coaching opposite Roy Nelson—caused a stir when he posted about a knee injury on his Twitter account a few days ago.

According to MMA Payout, the UFC averaged 1.84 million viewers during its last five seasons on Spike TV. “The Ultimate Fighter: Heavyweights” (also known as “TUF 10”) was listed as the highest-rated season in that span with an average of 3.0 million viewers. By comparison, “TUF: Live” averaged 1.01 million during its run on FX.

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Shane Carwin Discusses Knee Injury and ‘Backstabber’ Roy Nelson

The MMA community took a collective sigh of relief when Shane Carwin and his team announced that his recent knee injury wouldn’t prevent him from facing Roy Nelson. The two men are coaches on The Ultimate Fighter and have weeks to build up to what is s…

The MMA community took a collective sigh of relief when Shane Carwin and his team announced that his recent knee injury wouldn’t prevent him from facing Roy Nelson. The two men are coaches on The Ultimate Fighter and have weeks to build up to what is sure to be a grudge match.

Carwin was able to talk to Tapout Radio about a number of topics and Bloody Elbow has the key quotes. He began the discussion about settling any doubts fans may have about the knee injury.

It happened during wrestling. A guy was in on a single and I went to throw my hips back and I heard ‘pop! pop! pop!’, so we stopped and he had to help me up. It’s down in size now. It was about the size of a watermelon, but now it’s the size of a cantaloupe. The good news is the doctor doesn’t think I need to have surgery, and we’re still going to push to stay in that fight on December 15th, and I think we’ll be good to go.

It’s no secret that Carwin isn’t the biggest fan, or a fan at all of his future opponent “Big Country.” The show was built around the differences in personality between the two men and Carwin isn’t holding back on his disdain of Nelson. The former interim-heavyweight champion even went as far as to say Nelson is a backstabber.

I don’t respect that guy. I don’t like him. I just think he’s disrespectful. He’ll talk all kinds of sh*t behind your back and stuff, but then when he’s at my face, all he wanted to do was talk about the UFC contracts to me. I’m like, ‘Who are you, man? Get out of my face.’ I’m just not up for that type of bullsh*t. I hate people that when you turn around, they’re stabbing you in the back, and when you’re back at their face, they’re trying to be your best friend. That doesn’t work for me. There’s nobody else I want to fight more. I can’t wait to fight this guy. I’m excited that he’ll be the first guy I get to punch when I get back to action.

The difference between the two is apparent in their coaching styles as well, something Carwin was quick to pick up on.

He’s telling everybody, ‘just do enough to win’, and I was telling my guys, ‘if you go out there and perform for these guys, and put on exciting fights, win or lose, they’re probably gonna bring you back.’ There’s a bunch of guys that are like that. My view is to go out and give it your all for the sport that you love, and his was to just do enough to win, so you can get that six figure contract.

I’m sure there will be plenty of back and forth banter between these two men in the media while TUF is on the air, but the most important part of the interview is Carwin‘s knee will be healthy come Dec. 15.

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The Ultimate Fighter: Shane Carwin vs. Roy Nelson Head-to-Toe Breakdown

The Ultimate Fighter season 16 is underway.Coaches Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin are slated to duke it out on the finale in an attempt to make their claim for a UFC Heavyweight Championship title shot.Carwin will remain in the main event despite recent m…

The Ultimate Fighter season 16 is underway.

Coaches Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin are slated to duke it out on the finale in an attempt to make their claim for a UFC Heavyweight Championship title shot.

Carwin will remain in the main event despite recent minor knee injury.

The bout will headline The Ultimate Fighter Finale from the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas on December 15th.

Carwin returns to the Octagon for the first time in over a year; his last two outings were defeats at the hands of Brock Lesnar and current UFC Heavyweight Champion Junior dos Santos.

His counterpart, Nelson, is coming off a knockout victory at UFC 146 over Dave Herman.

Here is how the two heavyweights size up against one another.

Begin Slideshow

Shane Carwin Suffers Minor Injury: Nelson Bout Still on

UFC heavyweight Shane Carwin may have averted the curse of The Ultimate Fighter coach; but only just.According to MMA Weekly, Carwin has suffered a minor knee injury training for a fight against Roy Nelson—but his manager says it will not ke…

UFC heavyweight Shane Carwin may have averted the curse of The Ultimate Fighter coach; but only just.

According to MMA Weekly, Carwin has suffered a minor knee injury training for a fight against Roy Nelson—but his manager says it will not keep him from fighting ‘Big Country’ at the season finale on December 15.

Carwin was due in England to help promote UFC on Fuel 5 which takes place in Nottingham this Saturday, however the former interim heavyweight champion Tweeted on Thursday:

 

However, according to MMA Weekly:

Carwin’s manager Jason Genet of Ingrained Media told MMAWeekly.com that he injured the knee while in wrestling practice, but he suffered no major tears or damage to the knee.

“The injury was enough for Carwin to cancel a trip to England this week for a signing, but with time to rehab and recover the former heavyweight champion should be ready in time for his Dec. 15 showdown with Roy Nelson.”

Carwin and Nelson are opposing coaches of this year’s season of TUF. In the past, the show has been beset with injuries to its coaches, who are expected to face each other in the Octagon as part of the season finale.

Some of those injured during filming of the show include Tito Ortiz, who needed surgery on his neck; Brock Lesnar, who came down with diverticulitis; Dominick Cruz, who injured his knee; and Vitor Belfort, who injured his hand.

Carwin himself hasn’t seen Octagon action since getting battered by Junior Dos Santos in June 2011. The 37-year-old has needed multiple back surgeries and has only recently rehabilitated himself back to health.

 

Khurram Aziz is a Feautred Columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter:

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