TUF 18 Finale: 5 Reasons to Watch

Another season of The Ultimate Fighter is set to come to an end this weekend, as the historic season that featured women for the first time wraps up. 
The card features plenty of alumni from different seasons, including Season Five, the …

Another season of The Ultimate Fighter is set to come to an end this weekend, as the historic season that featured women for the first time wraps up. 

The card features plenty of alumni from different seasons, including Season Five, the live fifteenth season and the first Brazilian edition.  

Not only will those participants be showcased, but those who took part in this season’s cast will get a chance to show off their skills. 

Here are five reasons you need to watch TUF 18 Finale this Saturday on Fox Sports 1.

Begin Slideshow

TUF 18 Teammates Jessamyn Duke and Peggy Morgan to Square Off at Finale

The Ultimate Fighter season 18 Finale is starting to take shape, as a huge women’s MMA bout between Team Rousey fighters Peggy Morgan and Jessamyn Duke has been announced by the UFC (via MMA Junkie).
TUF 18 has had a load of female talent on displ…

The Ultimate Fighter season 18 Finale is starting to take shape, as a huge women’s MMA bout between Team Rousey fighters Peggy Morgan and Jessamyn Duke has been announced by the UFC (via MMA Junkie).

TUF 18 has had a load of female talent on display, with almost all the women walking into the House with pro-level skills even before the season’s beginning. Morgan and Duke represented two of the most physically gifted athletes on the show this season, measuring 6’1″ and 5’11” respectively. On top of their frame, they both own strong grappling chops and serviceable striking.

Morgan won her way into the House by beating Bethany Marshall in convincing fashion (which you can watch here). However, she would go on to lose her quarterfinal bout with Team Tate’s Sarah Moras, who took her down and submitted her without incident.

Jessamyn Duke, meanwhile, roughed up Laura Howarth to get into the House (check it out here), but dropped a decision to Raquel Pennington that many pegged as one of the best fights in the history of women’s MMA. Duke’s combination of lengthy, Stefan Struve-like grappling and strong striking in the clinch made her a popular pick to win the show.

While both fighters lost their first official fight of the season, a combination of their obvious skills and the shallowness of the women’s division make them very valuable additions to the UFC in spite of that.

It is unknown as of yet which other fighters from TUF 18 will be making a return, but we know that Shayna Baszler will be cornering Jessamyn Duke and unable to fight at this time due to injury. 

Past Duke and Morgan, we will likely see other eliminated fighters such as Sarah Moras and Michael Wootten make a return at some point in the future.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Struggling TUF 18, Rousey vs. Tate Limps Toward a Lackluster Finale

Saturday, season 18 of The Ultimate Fighter reaches its tournament finals. Miesha Tate and Ronda Rousey have headlined the season to much fanfare. While Tate seems to have emerged from the TV show the popular victor, their bout to decide the bantamweig…

Saturday, season 18 of The Ultimate Fighter reaches its tournament finals. Miesha Tate and Ronda Rousey have headlined the season to much fanfare. While Tate seems to have emerged from the TV show the popular victor, their bout to decide the bantamweight championship will have to wait until Dec. 28 for UFC 168.

Coaches’ bouts rarely have graced the finale cards, but normally, they happen within a week of the season finale. Having the coaches fight nearly a month later may disassociate the TUF finale from the celebrities who were supposed to make this season of TUF compelling to viewers once again. 

Isn’t it baffling that Rousey/Tate II will serve as co-main event for the Silva/Weidman rematch, which will completely overshadow it? It should be, at least a little, since the Rousey/Tate matchup has all the star power to headline an event on its own, for instance TUF finale.

The UFC’s initial offering for the TUF finale was a top-heavy card headlined by a flyweight title bout between Demetrious Johnson and Joseph Benavidez.

After that fight was pushed back to the UFC on FOX 9 card, Nate Diaz and Gray Maynard were left to hold the whole affair up alone. Their headliner is a strong fight, but both fighters are coming off losses, thus, it is hard to argue that the fight has title implications.

The UFC has not seen fit to offset this potential problem by loading up the card with even midtier, recognizable talent.

On the contrary, the majority of the fighters on the undercard (such as Jared Rosholt, Walter Harris, Ryan Benoit, Josh Sampo, Tom Niinimaki and Drew Dober as it stands at the time of publication) are making their promotional debut. That does not even include the non-finalist contestants from this season of TUF who will be making their debut.  

To be fair, the UFC has not historically packed TUF finale cards top to bottom with recognizable talent. But one would think that with the flagging TUF ratings, the UFC would work harder than ever to counter the perception that an event under the TUF banner is not worth tuning in for.

To the casual MMA fan that flips over to Fox Sports 1 because there is nothing else on TV Saturday night, the card will hopefully prove exciting. But to the more discerning fan, this undercard card lacks relevant fighters that would convince them to give up their Saturday night plans and tune in.

Even this lapse on the UFC’s part could potentially be forgiven if the latest season of TUF had produced an exciting batch of future contenders.

But it hasn’t.

Dana White has praised the fact that women’s fights on TUF this season have garnered more attention than the men. But that isn’t saying much considering how unremarkable the male fighters were this season.

Two male fighters (Anthony Gutierrez and Cody Bollinger) even missed weight late in the season, a breach of professionalism unprecedented in the show’s history.

Despite their relative success over the men, the females in this series have not proved terribly exciting either.

Fan-favorite Roxanne Modafferi looked outmatched in her fight with Jessica Rakoczy.

Highly-touted veteran Shayna Baszler was out of the tournament early after getting dominated by relative unknown, Julianna Pena.

Jessamyn Duke lost a barnburner to Raquel Pennington that deserved praise. But at this point, there is no indication that the durable Pennington has even made it to the final with Pena.

While the winner of the TUF 18 crown will have definitely earned her spot in the UFC’s ranks, it’s hard to say whether she will have garnered much attention in doing so. All indications are that the undercard won’t do much to boost viewership for their first moment in the Octagon either.  

The UFC maintains that TUF is a relevant competition in the face of critical doubt and sad ratings. Yet it has inexplicably allowed this finale card to become a receptacle for unknown debut fighters.

If the UFC really hopes to keep its marquee reality show afloat, it had better start acting like it. 

 

Have a different take on this issue? Tell us in the comments below!

Follow John Oakes on Twitter

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

‘TUF 18? Episode 12 Quick Recap: Anthony Gutierrez Blows Weight, David Grant Earns Bye to Finals

(Wow, Miller Lite *and* NOS Energy drinks? Am I in heaven?? / Video via TheUltimateFighterFX)

When was the last time we’ve seen an episode of The Ultimate Fighter that didn’t feature a fight? Has this not happened since Season 3 episode 6, when Noah Inhofer left the house over a letter from his jealous girlfriend? (TUF armchair-historians, please feel free to correct me in the comments section.)

The mood was light in the beginning of last night’s episode of TUF 18, with Team Rousey enjoying a backyard BBQ and male strippers. And then, the moment that maybe a few of you have been waiting for: The Coaches’ Challenge. The game is rock climbing, with a $10,000 cash-stack awarded to the winning coach and an additional $1,500 for every member of her team. Ronda out-hustles Miesha at the top of the wall and yells “FUCK YOU BITCH!” (“I just like Miesha being in the habit of always getting beaten by me,” she says later.)

But the good times could only last so long. Team Rousey teammates Anthony Gutierrez and David Grant start cutting weight for their semi-final showdown, and Gutierrez’s casual approach to his diet is coming back to haunt him. On fight day, he wakes up at 145 pounds, a full weight class over where he’s supposed to be. Four hours later, he hits the scales at 140.


(Wow, Miller Lite *and* NOS Energy drinks? Am I in heaven?? / Video via TheUltimateFighterFX)

When was the last time we’ve seen an episode of The Ultimate Fighter that didn’t feature a fight? Has this not happened since Season 3 episode 6, when Noah Inhofer left the house over a letter from his jealous girlfriend? (TUF armchair-historians, please feel free to correct me in the comments section.)

The mood was light in the beginning of last night’s episode of TUF 18, with Team Rousey enjoying a backyard BBQ and male strippers. And then, the moment that maybe a few of you have been waiting for: The Coaches’ Challenge. The game is rock climbing, with a $10,000 cash-stack awarded to the winning coach and an additional $1,500 for every member of her team. Ronda out-hustles Miesha at the top of the wall and yells “FUCK YOU BITCH!” (“I just like Miesha being in the habit of always getting beaten by me,” she says later.)

But the good times could only last so long. Team Rousey teammates Anthony Gutierrez and David Grant start cutting weight for their semi-final showdown, and Gutierrez’s casual approach to his diet is coming back to haunt him. On fight day, he wakes up at 145 pounds, a full weight class over where he’s supposed to be. Four hours later, he hits the scales at 140.

Gutierrez is given one more hour to shed four pounds, and he gets back in the sauna. It ain’t happening. Though Ronda urges him not to quit, Gutierrez says he can’t cut any more weight, and that’s that. Keep in mind that Gutierrez earned a free pass to the semi-finals because Cody Bollinger missed weight in the quarterfinals, meaning that Gutierrez is the first fighter in TUF history to be eliminated from the semi-final round without ever fighting in the house. Quite an achievement.

After the botched weight-cut, Manny Gamburyan gives Anthony an earful. And then Dana White kicks him out. And then David Grant cries.

Later, a shaken Ronda Rousey decides she’s going to cut to 135 pounds herself, as a weird, self-flagellating show of support/inspiration for her team. Dana explains that the Gutierrez situation is not her fault and he simply lacked that thing that makes her a fighter. “This competition weeds out the fuckin’ weak,” Dana says.

Ronda reportedly made the cut anyway. On next week’s episode, the last semi-final match goes down with Team Tate’s Raquel Pennington facing Team Rousey’s Jessica Rakoczy; the winner of that fight will face Julianna Pena for all the marbles at the TUF 18 Finale.

See also: Gutierrez speaks out after TUF weight-cut disaster

TUF 18 Episode 12 Results and Recap: Coaches’ Challenge, Cursing and Controversy

The Ultimate Fighter was supposed to feature the first semi-final bout for the men, but weight issues crept up again this season. David Grant and Anthony Gutierrez of Team Rousey were on the docket for the episode.
Gutierrez advanced by Cody Bollinger …

The Ultimate Fighter was supposed to feature the first semi-final bout for the men, but weight issues crept up again this season. David Grant and Anthony Gutierrez of Team Rousey were on the docket for the episode.

Gutierrez advanced by Cody Bollinger not making weight. He was the only one to not have to fight in the quarter-finals. Yet, this time it was Gutierrez who missed weight. This allowed Grant to advance to the finals.

TUF 18 rosters
Team Rousey Team Tate
Shayna Baszler Julianna Pena
Jessamyn Duke Sarah Moras
Peggy Morgan Raquel Pennington
Jessica Rakoczy Roxanne Modafferi
Chris Beal Cody Bollinger
David Grant Chris Holdsworth
Anthony Gutierrez Josh Hill
Michael Wootten Louis Fisette

(Note: Winners are in bold, losers are scratched off the list and the next competitors’ names are in italics.)

Even with no fight there was plenty to take away from this episode:

 

  • Ronda Rousey continues to come off as one of, if not the, most caring and passionate coaches in TUF history. In this episode, she went over to the house to cook for her team. It seems as if she is stopping by the house in nearly episode to give something back to her team.
  • Rousey also was on the brink of tears during training. She legitimately cares about her team and doing the best she can for them. It is a welcome sight for The Ultimate Fighter, and it shouldn’t go without praise.
  • The commercials foreshadowed another botched weight cut, and it was apparent it would be Gutierrez early in the episode. For what has to be at least the third time this season the editors focused on his poor eating habits in the house. This time it came back to bite him.
  • This season’s coach’s challenge was a rock climbing competition. This was one of the more fun and competitive competitions in some time. Rousey took the victory over Tate and earned $10,000 for herself and $1,500 for each member of her team.
  • After winning, Rousey had some choice words for Tate and double-birds all the way down from the top of the wall. The hate is very real, but at some point there it begins to come off poorly. I think we’ve reached that moment. However, Rousey makes no bones about being “Team Real Mean” as opposed to her perception of Tate being “Team Fake Nice.”
  • One of the best parts of the entire season was Manny Gamburyan‘s talk with Gutierrez. Gamburyan was brutally honest with the young fighter, and it was beautiful to hear. He told him straight up that he did not belong in the UFC for his actions. No minced words.
  • Dana White gave Gutierrez time to address his peers and coaches, but that came off as someone who was repeating bits that he has heard in the hopes of gaining favor as opposed to someone who was sincere.
  • One of the final scenes of the show was a talk between Rousey and White. It was a good look at both, and a great insight into the pressures of the show. Rousey wanted to do a weight-cut of her own, but White stressed to her it wasn’t her fault. This talk and Gamburyan‘s comments to Gutierrez were reason enough to catch this episode.
  • Next week will be the final women’s bout between Jessica Rakoczy and Raquel Pennington. There seems to be some foreshadowing of Rakoczy‘s constant shoulder problems. We will see how much of an effect that has on the fight.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TUF 18: Jessamyn Duke Fighter Blog, Episode 12

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through a one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.
 
This week’s episode has several highlights, most of them involving food. Some good, some…

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through a one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.

 

This week’s episode has several highlights, most of them involving food. Some good, some bad. Let’s start with Armenian barbecue at the house, because for me personally this was one of the best nights of the whole TUF experience for me. Not just because of the amazing food, but because it was actually my birthday!

The coaches had told us that they were gonna do an Armenian barbecue for us from the very beginning of the show, but they were waiting for the right time to do it so that the most people could enjoy it and not be cutting weight. It just so happened that my birthday fell on the perfect day for this. The only people that had fights left were the semifinalists, and even they had a full week before their fights, so timing was perfect. 

They don’t show any of the birthday festivities on the episode, though, which is a real shame! Rakoczy baked me a delicious red velvet cake, Ronda brought over about 15 different types of ice cream and Shayna orchestrated an amazing magic trick for my entertainment. That magic trick actually explains the ridiculous top hat she was wearing, too. She comes out on the back patio after dinner wearing a top hat and a cape and blindfolds me in a chair. After some monologuing about magic, I hear everyone start beat boxing and they take the blindfold off. Shayna drops the curtain blocking the doorway and suddenly confetti explodes everywhere and two male “strippers” that look a whole lot like Anthony and Josh and are wearing nothing but fedora hats, bow ties, and speedos come bursting out of the kitchen and give me a proper birthday lap dance.

It was one of the most hilarious and entertaining things I’ve ever seen. Not only that, it was incredibly thoughtful. Apparently for weeks Shayna had been planning this and ordering in stuff like speedos and recruiting the others to help with the show. In the TUF house there isn’t much to do for entertainment, so the fact that the others went through all that trouble just for a one-minute lap dance that made me laugh on my birthday really meant a lot. Throwing that on top of the absolutely amazing food from the Armenian barbecue and that made for one of the most memorable birthdays I’ve ever had. 

Now that all that’s out of the way, let’s talk about Davey and Anthony’s fight… Or lack thereof.

Anthony had made weight for his fight with Cody exactly one week prior to his fight with Davey. They didn’t show it, but I saw him step on the scale at 136 for that fight. After that weight cut, though, he kind of went crazy with the food. That whole week he kept treating himself and making exceptions. One week was the longest any of us had to prepare for a weight cut. One of the toughest parts of the show was having to always be so close to weight because if you were picked to fight, you only had 24 hours to make weight… And since you had no guarantee you were gonna fight, you had to cut weight just in case. 

So the fact that he had a whole week to prepare really was a luxury, and he had no excuse not to make the weight. He just lost discipline and lost focus during that time, and it cost him the opportunity of a lifetime. It had nothing to do with him not being physically able to cut the weight either. This is why Ronda made the decision to make weight in 24 hours. The editing of the show makes it seem like Dana talked her out of it, but let me tell you what really happened…

Anthony tried to say that it just wasn’t possible for him to cut the weight because he had screwed up on his diet. But here’s the thing, he could have made it. He left the gym the night before at 144, which is well within a range to make the weight. There is a science to cutting weight and lots of things that we as fighters can do to make it easier on ourselves, but the BIGGEST factor in the weight cut is your mental fortitude…and this is what Ronda wanted to prove.

She jumped on the scale after Anthony missed weight and was 152 pounds. Without any sort of prep (diet, water loading, sodium loading/cutting, etc.) jumped in the sauna and was in there for FIVE hours before it was time to go to the coaches challenge. Yes, Ronda Rousey cut weight in the sauna for five hours, went to a rock climbing challenge, won, and then went BACK to the sauna that night and cut some more.

The next day when it was time for Jessica and Raquel to fight, she was at the gym before anyone else arrived and was back in the sauna cutting weight. When the rest of us arrived she was sitting at 136 pounds in the locker room. I watched her warm up Rakoczy for her fight while on weight and then step on the scale in front of Dana and be 135 pounds. She did this to prove a point.

Cutting weight is mental. You can’t use screwing up your diet or your water loading as an excuse. If you miss weight, it’s because you mentally broke. The fact that she pulled this off really showed that Ronda is on another level mentally. It was inspiring and motivating to see this happen in front of me. It made me realize that I never have to be afraid of missing weight… you just have to be mentally strong and never give up. 

Unfortunately, Anthony gave up. He gave up, and he robbed Davey of his chance to earn his place in the finale what he wanted.

Davey trained harder than anyone else on the team and he was so motivated and excited to fight in front of Dana White and put on a show. He just wanted to make everyone proud for all the hard work and time they put into him. This is why he was so upset. Some people may not understand why he was so upset, but as a fighter, I totally understood. You put in all this work for weeks. You cut the weight. You dream about your shot…and then it’s stolen away from you. It’s such a letdown and so discouraging. We dream about that moment when we get to step in the cage to fight, and without that moment, all of the hard work we put in feels wasted. 

So, onto next week and the ladies fight. Jessica vs. Raquel. I remember when Jessica got this fight and I saw that gleam in her eyes and heard the excitement in her voice when she talked about it, and I couldn’t help but get pumped for her. Both fighters were dealing with injuries, which adds some X-factors, but this was absolutely the semifinal fight I was most looking forward to.

Jessica was a teammate and a good friend and I was confident she had the tools to win the fight…but I had also fought Raquel, and I knew fully what she brings into the cage and respected her skills and determination as a fighter. So tune in next week to see how it all unfolds. You don’t want to miss it. 

 

**Tune in next week to hear Jessamyn’s thoughts on the continued tension between coaching staffs, more in-depth stories from the house and her thoughts on the fight between Jessica Rakoczy and Raquel Pennington.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com