Falling Action: Best and Worst of UFC on Versus 6

Filed under: UFCIt’s not often that we see a title fight on free TV. As expected, Saturday night’s bantamweight contest at UFC on Versus 6 provided the full 25 minutes, and maybe showed some fans the difference between the lumbering heavyweights at the…

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It’s not often that we see a title fight on free TV. As expected, Saturday night’s bantamweight contest at UFC on Versus 6 provided the full 25 minutes, and maybe showed some fans the difference between the lumbering heavyweights at the top of the MMA food chain and the swift little hummingbirds in the lighter divisions.

The 135-pounders may not be long on finishing power, but at least they keep coming without slowing down. They don’t overwhelm, but they also don’t run out of gas halfway through. Either you appreciate that or you don’t. After the performances of some of the heavyweights last weekend at UFC 135, I’m guessing a lot of fight fans do.

But now that another one is in the books, it’s time again to sift through the biggest winners, losers, and everything in between from UFC on Versus 6.

Biggest Winner: Anthony Johnson
He said he wanted an exciting finish to silence the critics who weren’t too pleased about his strategy in the Dan Hardy fight. Kicking Brenneman in the face until he fell down was a good way to go about that. Fight fans have short enough memories that a good TKO win will make them forget all about the time you promised a slugfest and delivered a wrestling match instead. All it took was him placing his foot across another man’s face in as violent a fashion as possible. A very simple and reliable formula for changing public perception if there ever was one.

Biggest Loser: Charlie Brenneman
Fresh off his big win over Rick Story, he gets TKO’d by “Rumble” Johnson in a fight he was never really in. He can complain all he wants about the stoppage, but even before he got kicked in the face he was on wobbly legs, clinging to the fence rather than guarding his head. Maybe he could have fought on, but he wasn’t doing much fighting when he took a foot to the grill. I can’t blame a referee for watching that scene unfold and then deciding Brenneman was done. Now he goes from late-notice hero to just another welterweight in a crowded field. The fall was only slightly quicker than the rise, but looked far more painful.

Most Perfunctory Title Defense: Dominick Cruz
Okay, so it wasn’t the most dominant or impressive victory of his career. He looked mildly vulnerable at times and, most shockingly, even a little bit tired. Still, Cruz controlled the fight down the stretch and did what he had to do, so he goes home with the hardware. Was it a breakout performance that will make him a huge star? Probably not, but any night you leave with the title that you showed up with is a good night indeed. Cruz remains the best 135-pounder in the world, and he showed that he can dig down and gut one out when he needs to. In fact, the only thing he lacks at the moment is fresh, compelling challengers. Unfortunately for him, there’s not a lot he can do about that.

Worst Use of a Reach Advantage: Stefan Struve
While the fight stayed standing, he did very little to keep Barry at a distance. Despite having arms and legs that were about the size of Barry’s entire body, he just kept letting the smaller man walk him down. In fact, of all the problems Barry had in the fight, getting within striking distance seemed to be the least of his troubles. It was only once the fight hit the mat and Struve was on his back that he managed to put his long limbs to good use, locking up a triangle choke that Barry really should have seen coming. Again, Struve’s submissions game continues to sneak up on opponents, though it honestly shouldn’t. He’s won more fights that way than he has by any other method, so when will people stop thinking that it’s a good idea to grapple with him? As long as he uses his range so much better on the ground than he does on the feet, there’s little reason to take the Dutchman down.

Mr. Consistency: Paul Sass
I’ve heard MMA trainers say that what they really want is not a guy who can pull off every submission in the book, but a guy who has one or two good ones that he can nail on command. Sass has the triangle choke and the heel hook, and he doesn’t need anything else. With his heel hook of Michael Johnson he remained unbeaten in twelve pro fights, and he’s ended with a submission in eleven of those. You’d think that any opponent would be able to take a quick look at his record and know what to watch out for, and you’d be right. The fact that he keeps pulling those moves off anyway tells you just how good he is.

Most in Need of a Ground Game: Pat Barry
He’s a great kickboxer and a likeable guy, but at times it seems he can be finished by the merest suggestion of a submission. I don’t care how vicious your leg kicks are, if you can’t defend against a triangle choke any better than that you have a very limited future in the UFC. Barry’s had plenty of time to develop his overall game, and he has improved. Just not enough. The UFC has been somewhat kind to him in terms of matchmaking, largely keeping him away from the better grapplers in the heavyweight division, but still he finds ways to get submitted. It’s a shame, because he’s a lot of fun to watch when he’s in his element. It’s when he’s not that it gets ugly in a hurry.

Most in Need of an Ice Pack: Demetrious Johnson
He showed a lot of heart and did much better than most expected, but he’s still going home with a lump the size of a cueball in his face. That’s not something you can cover with a pair of sunglasses, either. All it takes is for you to roll over on it once in your sleep and your whole night is ruined. Though of course, losing a title fight probably has a similar effect.

Narrowest Margin of Victory: Matt Wiman
Watching him bounce around while the decision was read, I had a flashback to Wiman’s mini-freakout after the judges sided with Dennis Siver over him at UFC 132. That night he bolted from the cage like he’d left his car running out front. If the decision had gone the other way this time, he might have taken off through the streets of D.C. and been halfway to Florida by now. Fortunately for Wiman, he got the nod from the judges, but just barely. A guy who can’t take it when a squeaker doesn’t go his way should really learn to stop leaving it up to the judges. Or if he is going to go the distance, he could at least make it a little clearer who the winner and the loser was. Keeping it that close is a good way to go home disappointed.

 

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UFC on Versus 6 Bonuses: Stefan Struve, Anthony Johnson Lead $65,000 Winners

Filed under: UFC, NewsFour fighters from Saturday’s UFC on Versus 6 card in Washington, D.C., added $65,000 bonus checks to their take-home pay after the show.

Stefan Struve, Anthony Johnson, Matt Wiman and Mac Danzig each took home post-fight bonus …

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Four fighters from Saturday’s UFC on Versus 6 card in Washington, D.C., added $65,000 bonus checks to their take-home pay after the show.

Stefan Struve, Anthony Johnson, Matt Wiman and Mac Danzig each took home post-fight bonus awards for their performances in the final UFC event on the Versus channel. The post-fight awards were announced by UFC president Dana White after the card.

The $65,000 total equals the largest amount for a UFC show on either Versus or Spike, tying the $65,000 bonus awards that were handed out after UFC on Versus 5 in Milwaukee in August. UFC on Versus 6 was the promotion’s debut in the nation’s capital.



Struve, the tallest heavyweight in the UFC, fought the shortest heavyweight in what became a fun kickboxing bout. But when Struve got the fight to the ground and locked in a triangle in the co-main event, Barry used his power to muscle Struve to the sky for a massive slam with the triangle still locked in. Struve though, held the hold, sank it in even tighter and forced Barry to tap, giving Struve the Submission of the Night bonus. It was Barry’s second straight loss, the first losing streak of his career. In June, after nearly stopping Cheick Kongo, Kongo pulled off an epic comeback knockout victory.

“He kept me at bay with his kicks because those were landing hard and will definitely leave bruises tomorrow,” Struve said after the win. “I was eventually able to get him in the [choke], and once I locked it in I wasn’t letting it go. When he slammed me, I was able to put my arm down to catch myself and sink the submission in deeper.”

Johnson won Knockout of the Night for his head-kick finish of Charlie Brenneman on the main card. Though Brenneman popped back up quickly after Johnson’s left kick to the face, referee Mario Yamasaki had already stepped in to shut the fight down, and the official decision was a TKO for Johnson.

“I hit him hard quite a few times in a row and he didn’t look like he was all there,” Johnson said. “I landed that head kick and put him on the canvas. He looked done to me, but if that kick hadn’t have done it, the punches that would have come afterwards would have.”

And Wiman and Danzig rematched after a controversial ending to their first fight in June 2010 – and the reboot was worth the wait. The two battled for three rounds of back-and-forth that earned them Fight of the Night, with Wiman taking a unanimous 29-28 decision. At UFC 115, Wiman won when Yves Lavigne stopped the fight, believing Danzig was out from a choke. He was not, and it’s taken 16 months for the rematch, which was scheduled once but delayed with a Danzig injury.

“Mac did fantastic tonight and has nothing to be ashamed of, because I’ve been on that side of things too,” Wiman said. “But I can’t deny that it feels good to be on this side of things. You really never know what the judges are going think, and I’m just happy it fell to me this time.”

Struve got serious competition from Paul Sass, who submitted Michael Johnson with a heel hook on the preliminary card. Sass stayed unbeaten with the submission and now has 11 of his 12 career wins by tapout. And Wiman-Danzig got competition from the main event bantamweight title fight between champion Dominick Cruz and Demetrious Johnson. But it was likely Cruz’s large amount of time spent keeping Johnson pinned along the fence that kept them from the bonus.

 

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Stefan Struve Submits Pat Barry

Filed under: UFCStefan Struve and Pat Barry had the biggest height differential of any two opponents in UFC history when they stepped into the Octagon on Saturday night. And in the end it was Struve’s long limbs that made the difference, as he was able…

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Stefan Struve and Pat Barry had the biggest height differential of any two opponents in UFC history when they stepped into the Octagon on Saturday night. And in the end it was Struve’s long limbs that made the difference, as he was able to wrap his long legs around Barry’s neck and make him tap to a triangle choke/armbar.

The finish to the fight was great, and showed how good Struve is at using his length on the ground. Struve beautifully transitioned into the triangle choke position and stayed there, and when Barry picked Struve up and slammed him to the ground, Struve simply sunk the triangle in deeper.

Struve said after the fight that he was excited to beat Barry, a man he considers a friend outside the Octagon as well as a rival in it.



“I’ve been working on my kickboxing because Pat is one of the best in the world,” Struve said. “What can I say? I’m thrilled with the result. Give it up for Pat, he’s one of the coolest dudes in MMA.”

The win improves Struve’s record to 26-5, and shows just how dangerous Struve is off his back on the ground. For Barry, the loss drops his record to 6-4 and shows how much work he has to do on the ground: Barry has now been submitted three times inside the Octagon.

The good news for Barry is that he’ll never have to face an opponent with such a great reach advantage again.

 

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Stefan Struve Submits Pat Barry

Filed under: UFCStefan Struve and Pat Barry had the biggest height differential of any two opponents in UFC history when they stepped into the Octagon on Saturday night. And in the end it was Struve’s long limbs that made the difference, as he was able…

Filed under:

Stefan Struve and Pat Barry had the biggest height differential of any two opponents in UFC history when they stepped into the Octagon on Saturday night. And in the end it was Struve’s long limbs that made the difference, as he was able to wrap his long legs around Barry’s neck and make him tap to a triangle choke/armbar.

The finish to the fight was great, and showed how good Struve is at using his length on the ground. Struve beautifully transitioned into the triangle choke position and stayed there, and when Barry picked Struve up and slammed him to the ground, Struve simply sunk the triangle in deeper.

Struve said after the fight that he was excited to beat Barry, a man he considers a friend outside the Octagon as well as a rival in it.



“I’ve been working on my kickboxing because Pat is one of the best in the world,” Struve said. “What can I say? I’m thrilled with the result. Give it up for Pat, he’s one of the coolest dudes in MMA.”

The win improves Struve’s record to 26-5, and shows just how dangerous Struve is off his back on the ground. For Barry, the loss drops his record to 6-4 and shows how much work he has to do on the ground: Barry has now been submitted three times inside the Octagon.

The good news for Barry is that he’ll never have to face an opponent with such a great reach advantage again.

 

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UFC on Versus 6 Live Blog: Pat Barry vs. Stefan Struve Updates

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Pat Barry vs. Stefan Struve is a televised fight on the UFC on Versus 6 card.This is the UFC on Versus 6 live blog for Pat Barry vs. Stefan Struve, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s UFC Live card from the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.

The fight, according to UFC matchmaker Joe Silva, is the biggest height discrepancy in UFC history. Struve (21-5, 5-3 UFC) is the UFC’s tallest fighter at 6-foot-11. Barry (6-3, 3-3 UFC) is 5-11. Both fighters are coming off knockout losses. Struve was stopped by a Travis Browne Superman punch at UFC 130 in May. Barry fell victim to Cheick Kongo’s already legendary come-from-behind knockout at UFC on Versus 4 in June, moments after it appeared Barry had Kongo out on his feet with the fight about to be stopped.

A loss for either will be the first losing streak of his career.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: It’s the tallest heavyweight in the UFC, Struve (6-11), against the shortest, Barry (5-11). The size difference has been comical to both fighters leading up to the bout. But comedy goes out the window now. Tentative start for both. Barry eats the first body kick, then throws a straight kick. Inside leg kick from Barry lands. Then another. Straight left from Struve finds a home, but it’s Barry coming forward. He throws a left, then another inside leg kick, then another left hand. Outside leg kick from Barry now, and he checks a high kick from Struve in exchange. Referee Dan Miragliotta tells the two big guys to show something. A short flurry has not much there for either fighter, but a Barry right looks good right after. Then another inside leg kick. Strive misses a left hook. Barry comes with another inside leg kick, then tries to push through a couple left jabs. Struve works a couple body kicks, and Barry answers with one of his own. Big knee from Struve just misses, and that may be his best bet given the size advantage he has. Struve throws a kick to the knee, then one to the body. Barry then ducks under a right. Another inside leg kick from Barry is good, but it doesn’t seem to be doing a lot of damage. The crowd is slightly restless. Left straight kick from Struve is answered with another inside leg kick from Barry. Struve throws a big kick that lands toward the end of the round. And that might curry favor with some judges in a close round. But we’re giving the first round to Barry, just barely, 10-9, for coming forward more and throwing with a little more consistency.

Round 2:
Dan Miragliotta tells the two they have to “step it up.” So let’s see what happens. Inside leg kick from Struve is answered by a nice uppercut from Barry – and I mean seriously, UPPERcut. He had to in order to reach. Big left head kick from Barry gets to Struve’s right shoulder shortly after. Then an outside leg kick from Barry. Combo to the head, then a kick to the outer leg by Barry, and Struve answers with a nice kick of his own. We trade soft leg kicks with about 2 minutes left. Struve briefly tries to tie Barry up in a clinch, but Barry pushes out of it, wary of the potential for Struve’s knees. Struve throws a kne, and Barry answers with a left. Struve ties him up and tries for a guillotine. Barry is in side control and in a choke. He gets out, but Struve gets a triangle. It’s deep. Barry amazingly picks Struve up with the triangle still on, and drops a massive slam. But Struve still has it, and Barry has to tap. It’s the first two-fight skid of Barry’s career.

Result: Stefan Struve def. Pat Barry, submission (triangle choke), 3:22 Round 2
“I’ve been working on my kickboxing and my reach. I’m thrilled with the result. But give it up for Pat. He’s one of the coolest dudes in MMA,” Struve tells Joe Rogan after the fight.

 

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Filed under:

Pat Barry vs. Stefan Struve is a televised fight on the UFC on Versus 6 card.This is the UFC on Versus 6 live blog for Pat Barry vs. Stefan Struve, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s UFC Live card from the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.

The fight, according to UFC matchmaker Joe Silva, is the biggest height discrepancy in UFC history. Struve (21-5, 5-3 UFC) is the UFC’s tallest fighter at 6-foot-11. Barry (6-3, 3-3 UFC) is 5-11. Both fighters are coming off knockout losses. Struve was stopped by a Travis Browne Superman punch at UFC 130 in May. Barry fell victim to Cheick Kongo’s already legendary come-from-behind knockout at UFC on Versus 4 in June, moments after it appeared Barry had Kongo out on his feet with the fight about to be stopped.

A loss for either will be the first losing streak of his career.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: It’s the tallest heavyweight in the UFC, Struve (6-11), against the shortest, Barry (5-11). The size difference has been comical to both fighters leading up to the bout. But comedy goes out the window now. Tentative start for both. Barry eats the first body kick, then throws a straight kick. Inside leg kick from Barry lands. Then another. Straight left from Struve finds a home, but it’s Barry coming forward. He throws a left, then another inside leg kick, then another left hand. Outside leg kick from Barry now, and he checks a high kick from Struve in exchange. Referee Dan Miragliotta tells the two big guys to show something. A short flurry has not much there for either fighter, but a Barry right looks good right after. Then another inside leg kick. Strive misses a left hook. Barry comes with another inside leg kick, then tries to push through a couple left jabs. Struve works a couple body kicks, and Barry answers with one of his own. Big knee from Struve just misses, and that may be his best bet given the size advantage he has. Struve throws a kick to the knee, then one to the body. Barry then ducks under a right. Another inside leg kick from Barry is good, but it doesn’t seem to be doing a lot of damage. The crowd is slightly restless. Left straight kick from Struve is answered with another inside leg kick from Barry. Struve throws a big kick that lands toward the end of the round. And that might curry favor with some judges in a close round. But we’re giving the first round to Barry, just barely, 10-9, for coming forward more and throwing with a little more consistency.

Round 2:
Dan Miragliotta tells the two they have to “step it up.” So let’s see what happens. Inside leg kick from Struve is answered by a nice uppercut from Barry – and I mean seriously, UPPERcut. He had to in order to reach. Big left head kick from Barry gets to Struve’s right shoulder shortly after. Then an outside leg kick from Barry. Combo to the head, then a kick to the outer leg by Barry, and Struve answers with a nice kick of his own. We trade soft leg kicks with about 2 minutes left. Struve briefly tries to tie Barry up in a clinch, but Barry pushes out of it, wary of the potential for Struve’s knees. Struve throws a kne, and Barry answers with a left. Struve ties him up and tries for a guillotine. Barry is in side control and in a choke. He gets out, but Struve gets a triangle. It’s deep. Barry amazingly picks Struve up with the triangle still on, and drops a massive slam. But Struve still has it, and Barry has to tap. It’s the first two-fight skid of Barry’s career.

Result: Stefan Struve def. Pat Barry, submission (triangle choke), 3:22 Round 2
“I’ve been working on my kickboxing and my reach. I’m thrilled with the result. But give it up for Pat. He’s one of the coolest dudes in MMA,” Struve tells Joe Rogan after the fight.

 

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UFC Live: Cruz Vs. Johnson Main Card Weigh in Video

(Props to MMAWeekly.com

Before you even ask, yes, Anthony Johnson did make weight, and he seemed about as excited to do so as any fighter I’ve ever seen. Joe Rogan informed us that the Struve/Barry fight is “the biggest height discrepancy for a fight ever,” which seems about right if you don’t consider half of Minowaman’s fight career. Either way, if there was a category for stare-down of the year, I’m pretty sure theirs would be the front runner.

All fighters made weight except for Byron Bloodworth, who weighed in at 138 lbs. and was originally given 2 hours to drop the necessary 2 pounds for his bout with Mike Easton. The decision was quickly reversed and Byron was allowed to keep the additional weight without penalty for coming in as such a late replacement. Check out the full weigh in results after the jump.

-Danga 

(Props to MMAWeekly.com

Before you even ask, yes, Anthony Johnson did make weight, and he seemed about as excited to do so as any fighter I’ve ever seen. Joe Rogan informed us that the Struve/Barry fight is “the biggest height discrepancy for a fight ever,” which seems about right if you don’t consider half of Minowaman’s fight career. Either way, if there was a category for stare-down of the year, I’m pretty sure theirs would be the front runner.

All fighters made weight except for Byron Bloodworth, who weighed in at 138 lbs. and was originally given 2 hours to drop the necessary 2 pounds for his bout with Mike Easton. The decision was quickly reversed and Byron was allowed to keep the additional weight without penalty for coming in as such a late replacement. Check out the full weigh in results after the jump.

-Danga 

Main Bouts (On Versus):
-Dominick Cruz (135) vs. Demetrious Johnson (135)
-Pat Barry (243) vs. Stefan Struve (261)
-Anthony Johnson (171) vs. Charlie Brenneman (171)
-Mac Danzig (155) vs. Matt Wiman (156)

Preliminary Bouts:
-Yves Edwards (155) vs. Rafaello Oliveira (155)
-Michael Johnson (156) vs. Paul Sass (155)
-Mike Easton (135) vs. Byron Bloodworth (138)*
-Shane Roller (156) vs. T.J. Grant (155)
-Josh Neer (171) vs. Keith Wisniewski (170)
-Walel Watson (134.5) vs. Joseph Sandoval (134)