Strikeforce Main Event Breakdown: Gilbert Melendez vs. Jorge Masvidal

Filed under: StrikeforceDuring a recent interview with the press, Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez voiced his displeasure with some of the people who discounted his next challenger, Jorge Masvidal.

“A lot of people have been talking n…

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During a recent interview with the press, Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez voiced his displeasure with some of the people who discounted his next challenger, Jorge Masvidal.

“A lot of people have been talking nonsense; that Jorge, like he’s no good. That you’re going to run by him,” Melendez said. “And that talk kind of bothers me because some people are ignorant. They don’t really follow the game that much. If you don’t fight in the UFC, they think you’re no good.”

Like most fighters, Melendez is much more attuned to the subtleties of an opponents’ fight style and skills than most observers, and he understands he’s truly in for a fight in Saturday night’s Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal main event. And he probably understands he’s in a no-win situation as well.

If he does emerge victorious, that’s exactly what he was supposed to do, and if he loses, detractors will say his consensus No. 2 lightweight ranking was never quite deserved.

Masvidal (22-6) is a crafty fighter with a style Melendez hasn’t really experienced in the cage. He keys his offense off a long jab that lengthens his reach and moves his opponent backward, an important strategy that plays into his preference for counter-fighting. Overall, though, he’s a very complete fighter.

Despite having no real base in wrestling, he’s proven his excellence in that department through the most recent part of his career. For example, his last fight was against KJ Noons, who loves to strike and uses his wrestling to keep the fight upright where he thinks he has an advantage. That has largely been a successful strategy for him. According to FightMetric, Noons has successfully defended 71 percent of takedown tries against him, but Masvidal took him down on seven of nine attempts en route to a dominant win.

So that’s one thing for Melendez (19-2) to be concerned about. The other is Masvidal’s striking. As mentioned, Noons has a reputation as a striker but Masvidal had a field day against him on the feet, knocking him down once and out-landing him 73-38 in signature strikes. That’s a fairly common outcome for Masvidal, who has one pro boxing fight under his belt and prides himself on his offensive skills and defensive movement.

Masvidal lands about 50 percent of his strikes while his opponents land less than 30, according to FightMetric. In addition to his jab as a favored weapon, he is one of few fighters who takes advantage of criminally underused body punching, occasionally firing off left hook liver shots. His easy motion and comfort level in his standup often lull his opponents into a false confidence, and then he can use his speed to strike or shoot in for the takedown. But other times, he himself might slow things down, too. That’s good in some matchups, but it’s not the best idea for this one.

Melendez’s style is much more well known than Masvidal’s. Melendez has refined his boxing over the last few years, adding power along the way (four of his last six wins are by KO or TKO). Coupled with an effective wrestling game and ability to create a grinding match, he often forces opponents into a fight that favors his skills. Melendez is also one of those fighters who can take his foe’s best weapon away and turn the bout into his favor that way.

But really, Melendez’s most important single trait is his conditioning, a quality that allows him to push the fight in any direction he wants with little fear of running out of gas. Particularly in five-round bouts, many fighters will pace themselves early, aware that they might need reserve fuel in case they still find themselves fighting 20 minutes or so later. Melendez doesn’t have to think about that.

He’s also trained for five-round title fights multiple times. This will be his seventh straight time preparing for the 25-minute distance, while Masvidal is doing it for the first time.

From a pure skill level, Masvidal is certainly capable of the upset, but it’s hard to overlook some of his past uneven performances. In a fight against Paul Daley that took place in Sept. 2010, for example, the win was there for the taking in round three after the two split the first two rounds, and Masvidal never showed a sense of urgency to seal the deal, allowing Daley to steal it on the scorecards. Given Melendez’s aggression, any kind of passivity may be Melendez’s undoing.

Masvidal has to be more offensive than usual and push forward, but that’s not really not his style, and it’s not likely he’ll change that overnight. If he sits backs and waits to counter, Melendez’s more straightforward style will make a bigger impact with the judges. Masvidal has the chin and boxing skills to bring this fight into the late rounds, but Melendez’s stamina will be the edge to get him to the finish line first. Expect this one to be closer than the wide odds indicate, but Melendez holds on to the belt with a decision win.

 

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A Slimmed Down Snooki Brings You the Fix Friday Link Dump

Some very nice pictures of a model/ring girl/probably actress named Patrycja Mikula: here. Dana White is opening his view to MMA female fighters: here. Holiday ideas for the diehard MMA fan: here. Strikeforce: Melendez vs..

Some very nice pictures of a model/ring girl/probably actress named Patrycja Mikula: here.

Dana White is opening his view to MMA female fighters: here.

Holiday ideas for the diehard MMA fan: here.

Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Mazvidal weigh-ins results: here.

Gabriel Gonazaga returns to UFC by facing fellow Brazilian, Ednaldo Oliveira at UFC: Rio in January: here.

Strikeforce finally announces date for Heavyweight Grand Prix Tournament Finale: Barnett vs. Cormier: here.

Sophia Vergaras‘ see- through pants: here.

Who slims down during the holidays?!?!? That’s impressive. Pictures of Snooki lookin’…good (hell, better than I do) below:

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Friday Afternoon Link Dump

(Video courtesy of YouTube/Kaokor)

– Column: Wrestling is Fake (TheRugged)

–  The 12 Days of Latino Christmas (TuVez)

–  5 Online Bachelor Degrees You’d Be Ashamed Of (Guyism)

–  5 Scathing Obituaries Written By Christopher Hitchens (ScreenJunkies)

– How to Make Last-Minute Gifts from Crap You Have Around the House (MadeMan)

–  15 Biggest Fails in MMA History (BleacherReport)

–  How to Remain Ethical at Your Office Christmas Holiday (HolyTaco)

–  Shogun’s Top 5 Career Fights (FightersOnly)

– Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal Weigh-In Results and Video (LowKick)

–  Barry Bonds Sentenced to House Arrest and Probation for Perjury (Complex)

–  David Cross Calls ‘Alvin and the Chipmunks’ ‘the Most Unpleasant Experience of His Career’ (FilmDrunk)

–  Superset Variations that Develop Rapid Muscle Mass and Definition (MuscleProdigy)

–  Penn State Update: Mike McQueary is Testifying Like Ralph Wiggum (WithLeather)

–  The Worst Original Names for Popular Music Groups (Clutch.MTV)

–  How to Break Up Over the Holidays  (AskMen)

– Arianny’s Most Awkward Interview Ever + Bonus Calendar Pics (TerezOwens)


(Video courtesy of YouTube/Kaokor)

– Column: Wrestling is Fake (TheRugged)

–  The 12 Days of Latino Christmas (TuVez)

–  5 Online Bachelor Degrees You’d Be Ashamed Of (Guyism)

–  5 Scathing Obituaries Written By Christopher Hitchens (ScreenJunkies)

– How to Make Last-Minute Gifts from Crap You Have Around the House (MadeMan)

–  15 Biggest Fails in MMA History (BleacherReport)

–  How to Remain Ethical at Your Office Christmas Holiday (HolyTaco)

–  Shogun’s Top 5 Career Fights (FightersOnly)

– Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal Weigh-In Results and Video (LowKick)

–  Barry Bonds Sentenced to House Arrest and Probation for Perjury (Complex)

–  David Cross Calls ‘Alvin and the Chipmunks’ ‘the Most Unpleasant Experience of His Career’ (FilmDrunk)

–  Superset Variations that Develop Rapid Muscle Mass and Definition (MuscleProdigy)

–  Penn State Update: Mike McQueary is Testifying Like Ralph Wiggum (WithLeather)

–  The Worst Original Names for Popular Music Groups (Clutch.MTV)

–  How to Break Up Over the Holidays  (AskMen)

– Arianny’s Most Awkward Interview Ever + Bonus Calendar Pics (TerezOwens)

Ovince St. Preux: I’m Not Scared of Going Toe-to-Toe With Gegard Mousasi


(Photo via Strikeforce.com)

By Anton Gurevich

This weekend, Ovince St. Preux will step inside the Strikeforce cage to face the former Light Heavyweight Champion Gegard Mousasi as part of the stacked Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal fight card in San Diego, California. Representing Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, 11-4 St. Preux will look to prove a point about his future as one of the best 205’ers on the planet.

Twenty-eight year old Ovince St. Preux turned his career around after fighting six times (!) in 2010, improving his MMA record from 3-4 to a more appropriate 9-4. In 2011, St. Preux recorded two important victories against Abongo Humphrey and Joe Cason that eventually solidified his place on the Light Heavyweight landscape.

Speaking in an interview to LowKick.com, St. Preux gave Gegard Mousasi the credit for being the biggest name he ever faced inside the cage or ring. The Haiti-born fighter expects a well-rounded game from Mousasi, who he considers as one of the 10 best Light Heavyweights in MMA.

Check out this interview on Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com!


(Photo via Strikeforce.com)

By Anton Gurevich

This weekend, Ovince St. Preux will step inside the Strikeforce cage to face the former Light Heavyweight Champion Gegard Mousasi as part of the stacked Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal fight card in San Diego, California. Representing Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, 11-4 St. Preux will look to prove a point about his future as one of the best 205′ers on the planet.

Twenty-eight year old Ovince St. Preux turned his career around after fighting six times (!) in 2010, improving his MMA record from 3-4 to a more appropriate 9-4. In 2011, St. Preux recorded two important victories against Abongo Humphrey and Joe Cason that eventually solidified his place on the Light Heavyweight landscape.

Speaking in an interview to LowKick.com, St. Preux gave Gegard Mousasi the credit for being the biggest name he ever faced inside the cage or ring. The Haiti-born fighter expects a well-rounded game from Mousasi, who he considers as one of the 10 best Light Heavyweights in MMA.

Check out this interview on Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com!

Strikeforce Video Hype: Melendez + Masvidal + Cyborg Highlight Reel

(Props: YouTube.com/Strikeforce)

Reminder — Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal goes down tomorrow night in San Diego, and we’ll be liveblogging the Showtime broadcast beginning at 10 p.m. ET. Strikeforce recently released this promo video focusing exclusively on the lightweight title competitors and Cris Cyborg; Gegard Mousasi and Ovince St. Preux are nowhere to be seen, and the only glimpses we get of KJ Noons and Billy Evangelista are brief clips of them getting beat up by Jorge Masvidal. Still, this could be a surprisingly entertaining card for those who actually care enough to watch it. Either way, that clip of El Nino ruining Kawajiri’s life with elbows never gets old.

After the jump: Jorge Masvidal gets interviewed by three hot Spanish chicks, nearly slaps the crap out of one.


(Props: YouTube.com/Strikeforce)

Reminder — Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal goes down tomorrow night in San Diego, and we’ll be liveblogging the Showtime broadcast beginning at 10 p.m. ET. Strikeforce recently released this promo video focusing exclusively on the lightweight title competitors and Cris Cyborg; Gegard Mousasi and Ovince St. Preux are nowhere to be seen, and the only glimpses we get of KJ Noons and Billy Evangelista are brief clips of them getting beat up by Jorge Masvidal. Still, this could be a surprisingly entertaining card for those who actually care enough to watch it. Either way, that clip of El Nino ruining Kawajiri’s life with elbows never gets old.

After the jump: Jorge Masvidal gets interviewed by three hot Spanish chicks, nearly slaps the crap out of one.


Props: Republica Deportiva via MiddleEasy. The weird slapping demonstration starts at the 5:20 mark. No, I don’t know what they’re saying either, but they’re called “Las Senadoras,” and you should probably watch this video too.

Ovince St. Preux a Confident Underdog Against Ex-Strikeforce Champ Mousasi

Filed under: Strikeforce, MMA Fighting ExclusiveThe opportunity that changed Ovince St. Preux’s future wasn’t supposed to ever happen. Back in the early spring of 2010, when Strikeforce was putting together its soon-to-be infamous Strikeforce: Nashvill…

Filed under: ,

The opportunity that changed Ovince St. Preux‘s future wasn’t supposed to ever happen. Back in the early spring of 2010, when Strikeforce was putting together its soon-to-be infamous Strikeforce: Nashville event, the promotion was looking for local talent to fill out the undercard.

At the time, St. Preux was a relative rookie in the sport, having competed for just over a year. It’s safe to say that back then, he wasn’t exactly a prodigy. With a record of 4-4, he also wasn’t lighting up the radar of major MMA talent seekers. In fact, when St. Preux’s name was floated for the card, Strikeforce execs were against it. It was only the tenacious and repeated calls from some of his coaching staff to the Strikeforce office that ultimately landed him on the event, and St. Preux has taken the opportunity and sprinted with it.

Since that moment, he has yet to lose. Now 11-4 and with five Strikeforce wins under his belt, St. Preux makes the leap to title contender, fighting former light-heavyweight champ Gegard Mousasi in the co-main event of Saturday’s Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal event.

But how did he get from there to here? How does one start off a career winning just three of his first seven bouts, then suddenly find a new gear and dominate everyone put in front of him?

St. Preux said it was a few simple adjustments that changed everything. The former University of Tennessee football player recommitted himself to strength and conditioning, focusing on correcting stamina issues that he says plagued him early on. He also changed his eating habits, and when the time came, he seized his moments.

At Strikeforce: Nashville, he ended up romping in a 47-second TKO. A couple of months later, he scored an 8-second knockout of former UFC fighter Jason Day. With every win, he learned something about himself.

“Some of those fights let me know know where I was,” he told MMA Fighting. “I wouldn’t say I doubted myself, but when you have a lot of people telling you that you’re good, sometimes you ask yourself, ‘Am I that good?’ So when you actually go out against those opponents and take care of business, you go, ‘OK, I think I could push myself a little more.'”

St. Preux’s confidence grew further with wins over hard-hitting strikers Antwain Britt and Benji Radach, and when he added a win over Abongo Humphrey for his seventh win in 11 months, it seemed that St. Preux was on his way to contention. But first he got a strangely matched bout with debuting Joe Cason.

St. Preux didn’t allow himself any disappointment at what most saw as a step back from a matchup perspective, and ran through Cason in just 72 seconds. That set up his current match with Mousasi.

“It’s just a situation that worked out perfectly for me,” he said. “I don’t feel like I have anything to lose. I don’t have my back against the wall. It’s a situation where I’m the underdog for this fight anyway.”

Not that he feels like an underdog. St. Preux acknowledges that Mousasi is the better striker and even the better submission fighter, but he feels the edge is his when it comes to wrestling. Above that, he feels he’s simply a better fighter than Mousasi.

“People will be surprised that I say that, but we’ll see what happens after the fight,” he said. “We’ll see if they’re still surprised after the fight.

“He’s one of those top fighters,” he continued. “He’s 31-3, he’s the type of fighter who has a lot of will, he’s a tough guy. So it’s not like I’m going in there thinking I’m going to cakewalk all over him. I’m going in there like it’s an adventure. I’m definitely going to go in there and make sure I use all my skills to the best of my ability.”

The Strikeforce light-heavyweight championship is currently vacant, left behind by Dan Henderson when he moved over to the UFC. The winner of the St. Preux-Mousasi fight seems a logical choice for one-half of a future title bout. Though that hasn’t been guaranteed, those are likely the stakes he’s playing for.

That’s a pretty good second act for a guy who grew up wanting to play in the NFL. After exhausting his eligibility at UT, St. Preux briefly tried to wedge his way into pro training camps, but wasn’t able to find a situation that offered him a legitimate opportunity to make a roster.

“I always say ‘I never quit football; football quit me,'” he said.

St. Preux still has his roots down in Tennessee, training at the Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, just 15 miles from Neyland Stadium, the home of UT’s football Volunteers. But he sprinkles in occasional work with Team Quest in Temecula, California, and arrived in the state a week earlier than necessary in order to get in some time there before facing Mousasi.

And make no mistake about it, this is the fight he wanted. After his last win over Cason, when Strikeforce announcer Mauro Ranallo asked St. Preux what might be next for him, Mousasi’s name was the first thing out of his mouth.

“Everything kind of worked out my way, and now I’ve got to capitalize on it,” he said. “I’ve just got to do my job and keep on winning.”

In the last two years, that’s all he’s done. And on Saturday, he can continue the unlikely story of going from a losing record to the verge of a major championship.

 

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