The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale: Grades for Every Main Card Fighter

The Ultimate Fighter 18 came to an end on Saturday night, as the UFC crowned two new champions in the men’s and women’s bantamweight divisions. It was a night that saw much excitement and a glimpse into the future.
When it was all said and done, J…

The Ultimate Fighter 18 came to an end on Saturday night, as the UFC crowned two new champions in the men’s and women’s bantamweight divisions. It was a night that saw much excitement and a glimpse into the future.

When it was all said and done, Julianna Pena and Chris Holdsworth of Team Tate took home the season titles. In the main attraction, Nate Diaz took the rubber match over Gray Maynard in impressive fashion.

Here are the grades for each main card fighter.

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The Good, Bad and Strange from The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale

Anytime a six-figure contract is on the line, you can expect some intense battles.
On Saturday night at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale in Las Vegas, two UFC contracts were up for grabs as two men and two women squared off to determine who would gain en…

Anytime a six-figure contract is on the line, you can expect some intense battles.

On Saturday night at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale in Las Vegas, two UFC contracts were up for grabs as two men and two women squared off to determine who would gain entry into the UFC fold. In addition to the hungry prospects looking to break onto the sport’s biggest stage, a pair of top-ranked lightweights traded leather in the main event as Gray Maynard and Nate Diaz closed out their trilogy.

The two fighters initially met during the fifth installment of TUF, with the Stockton representative claiming victory. Their paths crossed again in 2010 as the former three-time All-American wrestler from Michigan State evened the score. The two former title challengers clashed for the third time on Saturday night, and it was all Diaz.

The Stocktonian battered the AKA-trained fighter to score an impressive first-round victory and put the brakes on a two-fight losing streak. The win over Maynard will keep him relevant in the lightweight title picture and puts him back into the hunt for championship gold.

Outside of the main event, the two biggest fights on the card featured a pair of men and women stepping in to become the next “The Ultimate Fighter.”

On the men’s side, Chris Holdsworth and Davey Grant went to work to decide who would be the last man standing, and Holdsworth got the job done on Saturday night. “Holds it Down” submitted the scrappy Brit with a rear-naked choke in the second round to become the male winner of the 18th season of TUF.

In the historic women’s finals, Julianna Pena steamrolled fellow finalist Jessica Rakoczy. The “Venezuelan Vixen” poured it on from the bell and eventually pounded out the stoppage in the waning seconds of the opening round. With the victory, the Spokane-based fighter earned a place on the UFC roster and will head into the next chapter with a solid head of steam.

While the buzz surrounding the card was minimal at best, sometimes the smaller events deliver the most pop. Although the TUF 18 Finale didn’t bring the heat from start to finish, there were still a handful of solid performances to note.

Let’s take a look at the good, bad and strange from The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

 

The Good

Nate Diaz needed a victory in the worst way to stay in the lightweight title hunt, and that’s exactly what he got on Saturday night. The former TUF 5 winner scored a stoppage victory over fellow former title challenger Gray Maynard in the main event of The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale.

While Maynard dictated the initial onset of the fight with his wrestling, the 28-year-old Diaz swung the momentum with a straight left hand that rocked the former contender. After the California transplant was hurt, Diaz poured it on and battered Maynard until referee Yves Lavigne stepped in to stop the fight.

The victory stops a two-fight skid for the younger Diaz brother and keeps him in the upper tier of the 155-pound division.

What will be interesting to watch is where the former title challenger goes next. Although Diaz has talked about a potential return to the welterweight ranks, he’s also shown interest in pursuing another title opportunity. With champion Anthony Pettis out for a solid stretch due to an injury, Diaz could draw a fellow contender if he sticks around the lightweight fold.

With a potentially life-changing opportunity on the line, the fighters stepping into the finals brought a unique brand of hunger. Both Chris Holdsworth and Davey Grant had their eyes on the prize coming into Saturday night, but it was Holdsworth who wanted it more.

The Team Alpha Male prospect poured it on from the opening bell until he sank in a fight-ending rear-naked choke in the second round. With the victory, the Team Tate representative not only locked down a guaranteed spot on the UFC roster but kept his impressive undefeated streak alive in the process.

He will now enter an increasingly competitive bantamweight fold, and his mixture of ground skills and an ever-improving striking game should land him some game matchups right off the bat. He’s in a solid camp, has shown steady improvement since the start of the tournament and will be one of the 135-pound division’s brightest young prospects heading into 2014.

Where the men’s fight was competitive for the better part of two rounds, it took less than one for the women to handle their business.

Julianna Pena wrecked former IBA boxing champion Jessica Rakoczy from start to finish, as the Washington-based fighter used her grappling to put her opponent where she wanted her. Pena moved to full mount and unleashed a torrent of elbows and punches until referee Mario Yamasaki stepped in to call the fight with one second left in the first round.

While Holdsworth will surely take the prospect track, things may be a bit different on Pena’s side. There isn’t a ton of depth yet in the women’s bantamweight ranks. She should grab a solid name in her first post-TUF fight, and it will be interesting to see how she progresses.

Raquel Pennington outclassed veteran Roxanne Modafferi in their tilt to kick off the main card. Both Team Tate representatives were game, but “Rocky” did more damage on Saturday night. Modafferi’s movement was good in the early going, but Pennington’s power and ground-and-pound made the difference as she picked up the unanimous-decision victory.

Veteran Rani Yahya and newcomer Tom Niinimaki engaged in a tactical ground battle during the preliminary portion of the card. With Yahya being a multiple-time jiu-jitsu world champion, it was assumed Niinimaki would avoid the ground, but that wasn’t the case. The Fin used his wrestling to neutralize Yahya’s attack and pulled off the split-decision victory.

Former Oklahoma State University wrestling standout Jared Rosholt survived an early drubbing to come back and score a victory over Walt Harris in his promotional debut. “The Big Show” was dropped hard in the opening round but rebounded to claim the final two frames on the judges’ scorecards.

 

The Bad

The main event featured two former title challengers in desperate need of a victory to keep those hopes alive, and Gray Maynard exited the Octagon in a tough position.

The 34-year-old suffered a tough loss at the hands of Nate Diaz in the rubber match of their rivalry and has now suffered setbacks in three of his last four showings. Maynard once ran an eight-fight winning streak to earn a title shot against Frankie Edgar in 2011; the past two years have come with opposite results.

He was defeated by “The Answer” in their trilogy bout, and while he edged out Clay Guida in his next outing at UFC on FX 4 in July 2012, he suffered a knockout loss to T.J. Grant at UFC 160 in May. A series of injuries and a camp relocation have kept Maynard’s world in flux over that stretch, and his loss to Diaz will certainly his back against the wall in the UFC lightweight division.

The 155-pound collective is one of the most competitive divisions under the UFC banner, and for Maynard to keep his elite status and possibly his job, he’s going to have to turn things around in a big way in his next outing.

Maximo Blanco showed he didn’t have a solid understanding of the rules on Saturday night. He went back flipping across the cage, thinking he had kneed Akira Corassani into submission in the first round of their tilt. Unfortunately for the Venezuelan, the knee landed when the TUF alumnus’ knee and hand were still on the ground, which made it an illegal strike.

Referee Mario Yamasaki waved off the fight and then solidified his call after viewing the replay. The fight went to Corassani via disqualification. The setback will spell further trouble for Blanco, who has struggled since coming over from Japan. He has dropped three of his four showings between Strikeforce and the UFC, and the hype he once had has quickly slipped away.

The final entry into this prestigious category goes to the pacing of the card on Saturday night. To stretch a 10-fight card over five hours was a grueling and head-scratching affair. The lengthy breaks between fights made viewing unbearable at times, and even when certain fights delivered the goods, the commercial-filled gap before the next bout clipped any momentum that had been built. 

 

The Strange

If a card lacking star power wasn’t bad enough, the circumstances that befell the preliminaries was on the verge of taking a hard turn south. With a college football game between Iowa State and West Virginia running over into multiple overtimes, the preliminary card was pushed from Fox Sports 1 to Fox Sports 2.

Fortunately for the promotion, the game wrapped up shortly after, and the prelims moved back to their original channel for the third round of the opening bout between Sean Spencer and Drew Dober. Fans were able to tune in to see the final round of Spencer handing out a beating to the promotional newcomer, as the Virginian picked up his second consecutive victory since returning to welterweight.

While it most likely won’t have a huge impact on the ratings, things jumping around between two channels because of live broadcasts is always chaotic. 

Another turn for the curious came in how the finale card was booked. Historically, the event caps off the season and features the majority of the competitors from the show getting an official shot in the UFC. On Saturday night, the lineup featured the majority of women who competed on the 18th installment, but the men who competed on the show were absent, save for the two finalists.

The only other season that I can remember something like this happening came during the 16th installment, as the fights from that cycle were largely panned by MMA fans and critics. 

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. 

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The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale: The Real Winners and Losers

The Ultimate Fighter concluded its 18th season on Saturday evening, crowning two season winners and revitalizing the career of one of the world’s top lightweights.  
The night’s action featured some excellence, some lethargy and some pec…

The Ultimate Fighter concluded its 18th season on Saturday evening, crowning two season winners and revitalizing the career of one of the world’s top lightweights.  

The night’s action featured some excellence, some lethargy and some peculiarity—basically everything we’ve come to expect from a fight card in 2013. 

Here, the winners and losers are not always what they seem. 

Getting your hand raised at the end of a fight does not confirm that you are a winner in my book; coming up short doesn’t always make you a “loser” either. 

Let’s cut the formalities and check out who won and who lost at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale. 

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The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale: What We Learned from Pena vs. Rakoczy

The first-ever female Ultimate Fighter has been crowned as Julianna Pena absolutely mauled boxing champion Jessica Rakoczy. 
Throughout The Ultimate Fighter season 18, Pena delivered scary performance after scary performance, and this was no diffe…

The first-ever female Ultimate Fighter has been crowned as Julianna Pena absolutely mauled boxing champion Jessica Rakoczy

Throughout The Ultimate Fighter season 18, Pena delivered scary performance after scary performance, and this was no different. While Rakoczy is a great counter-striker, Pena gave her no space and took her down, jumped to mount and went nuts on her.

For the first time in a long time, Pena exits The Ultimate Fighter and enters the UFC as a force to be reckoned with. So what did we learn?

Julianna Pena is a Monster

Seriously. I’ve only said “oh ****” four times while watching women’s MMA. Once was when Sarah Kaufman slammed Roxanne Modafferi, once was when Ronda Rousey turned Miesha Tate’s arm into a balloon animal, and the other two were Julianna Pena.

Pena is one of the few women that enters the cage with the clear objective of hurting their opponent. The only other woman that really applies to, at least for me, is the champion herself.

She rushes in, throws hard, wrestles people to the ground and punches them until the ref has had enough. We’ll see how far she gets in the UFC from here, because she proved that she was a shark among guppies on TUF.

Jessica Rakoczy is Just Not There Yet

Jessica Rakoczy is a boxer. Mixed martial artist? Not yet.

She has all the tools to succeed. You’re a fool if you think she doesn’t. She’s an honest-to-goodness elite striker, but even as Pena gave her chances to escape, Rakoczy didn’t know how to capitalize.

That’s something that will come with time, if she chooses to stay in mixed martial arts. Right now, though, she simply doesn’t quite know how to handle a fighter like Pena, and is likely to see every fighter she faces for the indefinite future employ her strategy.

Women’s MMA Can Still Salvage a Show

Roxanne Modafferi vs. Raquelle Pennington was a savvy veteran surviving against a bigger, stronger opponent. That’s the long way of saying it wasn’t exciting.

Jessamyn Duke vs. Peggy Morgan was illuminating in regards to the strengths and weaknesses of two physically impressive female fighters. That’s the long way of saying it was mildly interesting.

Julianna Pena vs. Jessica Rakoczy, though, showed what the fans have come to expect from ladies’ fights. Two ladies throwing caution to the wind and going for the win with everything they have. This fight, combined with the main event, salvaged a somewhat lackluster card.

It Isn’t a Great Night for Team Rousey

Yeah…

Ronda had a fighter in either tournament’s final and both lost. 

The TUF 18 coach was emotionally invested in her fighters’ success to a fault during the season. It showed as she held back tears as two of her fighters battled in Duke vs. Morgan.

It definitely wasn’t her team’s night, however, and both her finalists left the cage empty-handed.

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Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale: What We Learned from Davey Grant vs Chris Holdsworth

Chris Holdsworth: Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, Team Alpha Male standout and ultimate fighter winner.
Not bad for a 26-year-old fighter with just four fights on his record coming in to the show, eh?
After holding his own on the feet against Grant in …

Chris Holdsworth: Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, Team Alpha Male standout and ultimate fighter winner.

Not bad for a 26-year-old fighter with just four fights on his record coming in to the show, eh?

After holding his own on the feet against Grant in Round 1 at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale, Holdsworth found himself in top position early in Round 2, and he quickly went to work, cinching up the fight-ending rear-naked choke midway through the round.  

Oh, and he won a free Harley! 

Party on, Chris. 

 

What we’ll remember about this fight

Holdsworth‘s striking left the biggest impression on me in this fight. 

Showcasing the results of his training with Duane “Bang” Ludwig at Team Alpha Male, Holdsworth displayed some nice kicks and stiff straight punches against Grant early in the fight, wobbling his foe in the early going. 

Many felt Grant would enjoy a significant advantage in the stand-up portion of this fight, but that was simply not the case. 

An esteemed BJJ black belt, Holdsworth can go far in the division if his striking continues to grow and evolve under Ludwig’s direction. 

 

What we learned about Grant

Grant still has some growing to do. 

We were cheated of his final fight in the house against Anthony Gutierrez after Gutierrez missed weight, so many questions circulated. 

How could he deal with somebody on top of him? What would he do when his grit and determination wasn’t enough?

Against Holdsworth, we learned that he would tap out. 

The 135-pound Brit seems like a class act and a great representative of the sport, but his ground game needs some serious work if he hopes to compete with the absolute killers who inhabit the UFC’s bantamweight division. 

 

What we learned about Holdsworth

See: What we’ll remember about this fight. 

Holdsworth‘s striking is coming around. Look out, bantamweight division. 

 

What’s next for Grant?

Grant needs a low-level bantamweight in his Octagon return. 

Dustin Pague, another former The Ultimate Fighter contestant, is still around despite a four-fight losing streak.

That sounds perfect to me. 

 

What’s next for Holdsworth

I think Holdsworth needs a proven-but-declining veteran like Ivan Menjivar or Brian Bowles next. 

Let’s see if he’s ready to start working for the title right now, or if he needs to log some more hours with Urijah Faber and company first.  

 

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TUF 18 Finale Live Streaming Post-Fight Press Conference

On Saturday, the UFC will crown two more winners of its reality show, The Ultimate Fighter.
Season 18 will reach its conclusion over the weekend on a fight card headlined by former TUF winner Nate Diaz and TUF contest…

On Saturday, the UFC will crown two more winners of its reality show, The Ultimate Fighter.

Season 18 will reach its conclusion over the weekend on a fight card headlined by former TUF winner Nate Diaz and TUF contestant Gray Maynard. In the main event, the slumping top-10 lightweights will battle to return to the win column.

Finalists in the first ever female TUF competition include Julianna Pena and Jessica Rakoczy. History will be made when one has their hand raised on Saturday. In the men’s bantamweight final, Chris Holdsworth will meet David Grant.

While all women participants on TUF 18 are expected to get another shot inside the Octagon, Holdsworth and Grant will be the only male representatives from the season.

At the conclusion of the TUF 18 finale, several fighters will join UFC president Dana White for a post-fight press conference, which can be viewed live on the above video player.

Below is the entire TUF 18 finale fight card.

 

TUF 18 Finale Main Card (10 p.m. EST on Fox Sports 1)

  • Gray Maynard vs. Nate Diaz
  • Julianna Pena vs. Jessica Rakoczy
  • Chris Holdsworth vs. David Grant
  • Jessamyn Duke vs. Margaret Morgan
  • Roxanne Modafferi vs. Raquel Pennington

 

TUF 18 Finale Fox Sports 1 Prelims (8 p.m EST on Fox Sports 1)

  • Akira Corassani vs. Maximo Blanco
  • Rani Yahya vs. Tom Niinimaki
  • Jared Rosholt vs. Walt Harris
  • Sean Spencer vs. Drew Dober

 

TUF 18 Finale Online Prelims (7:30 p.m EST on UFC.com)

  • Josh Sampo vs. Ryan Benoit

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