Fight Night 81 Highlights/Results: Cruz Tops Dillashaw in Close Decision, Alvarez Outworks Pettis, + More

(via UFC on FOX)

“Ring rust does not exist.”

It was a mantra that Dominick Cruz had been repeating for years…literally, years. In the two years he had spent battling injuries since his last fight and the four years he spent doing the same before his *other* last fight, Cruz has kindly been reminding us that 1) Ring rust is a lie 2) He never really lost his belt and 3) The members of Team Alpha Male were a bunch of meathead jocks that couldn’t ‘andle his riddum’. But until last night, the former WEC and UFC bantamweight champion was all talk.

“You can’t hit what you can’t catch,” was another trademarked slogan that Cruz made sure to repeat ad nauseum in the trash talk-filled lead up to his bantamweight title fight with TJ Dillashaw at Fight Night 81, and without comparing him to the one true MMA psychic, Mystic Mac, it’s safe to say that “The Dominator” might have a magical crystal ball of his own.

The post Fight Night 81 Highlights/Results: Cruz Tops Dillashaw in Close Decision, Alvarez Outworks Pettis, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via UFC on FOX)

“Ring rust does not exist.”

It was a mantra that Dominick Cruz had been repeating for years…literally, years. In the two years he had spent battling injuries since his last fight and the four years he spent doing the same before his *other* last fight, Cruz has kindly been reminding us that 1) Ring rust is a lie 2) He never really lost his belt and 3) The members of Team Alpha Male were a bunch of meathead jocks that couldn’t ‘andle his riddum’. But until last night, the former WEC and UFC bantamweight champion was all talk.

“You can’t hit what you can’t catch,” was another trademarked slogan that Cruz made sure to repeat ad nauseum in the trash talk-filled lead up to his bantamweight title fight with TJ Dillashaw at Fight Night 81, and without comparing him to the one true MMA psychic, Mystic Mac, it’s safe to say that “The Dominator” might have a magical crystal ball of his own.

In a thrilling, hyper-paced five round fight, Cruz made Dillashaw miss, miss, and miss again, utilizing his classical, ferocious footwork to stay two steps ahead of the champion while countering brilliantly throughout the fight. In total, Dillashaw landed just 109 of the 408 strikes he threw last night while absorbing 112 of Cruz’s 302 attempts. It was a razor-close fight if you were to go purely by the numbers, but “The Dominator” was clearly the better man when all was said and done, and the judges (or at least, two of them) seemed to agree.

To Dillashaw’s credit, he was able to land far more strikes on the returning Cruz than any fighter before him ever had, and arguably took both of the championship rounds, but it just wasn’t enough. The former champion may have risen up the ranks by emanating Cruz’s style, but he was simply left flat-footed and swinging at air when forced to deal with the real McCoy. We’re sure that a rematch will be on the horizon for these two, but for now, that loss is going to be a tough one for Dillashaw to eat.

In the co-main event of the evening, former UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis faced off against former Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez and looked like a shell of his former self, to put it mildly. Utilizing the blueprint Rafael Dos Anjos used to dethrone Pettis, Alvarez opted to, for lack of a better term, “grapplefuck” Pettis into a state of tranquility over the course of three rounds. Even in the brief moments that the fight was being contested at range, Pettis just seemed unable or unwilling to let his hands go, resulting in an undoubtedly disappointing, yet dominant win for Alvarez (that was of course rendered a split decision).

While the judging on display at Fight Night 81 was its usual mix of indecisiveness and incompetence, the refereeing was, for the most part, on point. That was, of course, until the featured heavyweight bout between Matt Mitrione and Travis Browne. On two separate occasions, Browne’s fingers managed to find their way into Mitrione’s eyes without so much as a warning from referee Gary Forman, with the second instance not even resulting in a pause in the action until Mitrione complained that he was “seeing double.”

Of course, there was also the issue of the clearly separated shoulder that Mitrione suffered in the fight to no avail, but that’s for another day. As it stands, Browne picked up another big TKO win, and the only thing more gruesome than Mitrione’s eye are his free agent prospects following the tough loss.

Check out the full results for Fight Night 81.

Main card
Dominick Cruz def. T.J. Dillashaw via split decision
Eddie Alvarez def. Anthony Pettis via split decision
Travis Browne def. Matt Mitrione via third-round TKO (4:01)
Francisco Trinaldo def. Ross Pearson via unanimous decision

Undercard
Patrick Cote def. Ben Saunders via second-round TKO (1:14)
Ed Herman def. Tim Boetsch via second-round TKO (1:39)
Chris Wade def. Mehdi Baghdad via submission (RNC) (1st, 4:30)
Luke Sanders def. Maximo Blanco via submission (RNC) (1st, 3:38)
Paul Felder def. Daron Cruickshank via submission (RNC) (3rd, 3:56)
Ilir Latifi def. Sean O’Connell via first-round TKO (:30)
Charles Rosa def. Kyle Bochniak via unanimous decision
Rob Font def. Joey Gomez via second-round TKO (4:13)
Francimar Barroso def. Elvis Mutapcic via unanimous decision

The post Fight Night 81 Highlights/Results: Cruz Tops Dillashaw in Close Decision, Alvarez Outworks Pettis, + More appeared first on Cagepotato.

Urijah Faber Eyes Trilogy Bout, Cruz Shakes It Off

UFC Fight Night 81 is in the books as the event went down last night (January 17, 2015) live on FOX Sports 1 from the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The main event featured a highly anticipated and long awaited bantamweight title fight between TJ Dillashaw and Dominick “The Dominator” Cruz. After competing just once

The post Urijah Faber Eyes Trilogy Bout, Cruz Shakes It Off appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC Fight Night 81 is in the books as the event went down last night (January 17, 2015) live on FOX Sports 1 from the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.

The main event featured a highly anticipated and long awaited bantamweight title fight between TJ Dillashaw and Dominick “The Dominator” Cruz.

After competing just once over the last few years, and going through multiple surgeries, Cruz rose to the occasion, regaining the title he had never actually lost with a close fought decision victory over Dillashaw.

Despite the MMA community’s highly regarded interest in the bout, one fighter in particular had his eyes closely fixed on the clash and that would be former WEC champion Urijah Faber.

After losing all three of his UFC title shots, “The California Kid” had the perfect opportunity in front of him. A fight with Dillashaw would be massive given the now former champion’s departure from Faber’s Team Alpha Male. And if Cruz ended up on top which he did, the UFC could finally book Cruz vs. Faber III, a trilogy bout between bitter rivals.

In the after math of the event, Faber was quick to call out “The Dominator”:

“Cruz, you have got to give it to him. What a journey he has been on,” Faber told Fox Sports on the post-fight show. “He’s a real champion, he’s a true champion, he’s only lost to one team, that’s Team Alpha Male. He’s only lost to one guy, that’s me.”

“And I feel like I beat him the second time also. I connected to his chin. I know he feels like he’s hard to hit. I found his chin, his butt found the ground, and I’m going to make that happen again. So let’s do it, Dom! this has been a long time coming.”

“I’ve been sticking around a couple extra years just to let you heal up buddy! You’re not made for battle. Thank goodness you made it out this thing, hopefully alive, hopefully, the foot’s okay. Let’s do this!”

Although it would undoubtedly be a huge fight, the newly crowned champion didn’t seem all the interested in mixing it up with his old foe again:

“I don’t even want to talk about that guy. We’re still talking about him?” Cruz responded. “How many title shots has he had?”

Who should Cruz defend his title against next?

The post Urijah Faber Eyes Trilogy Bout, Cruz Shakes It Off appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC Fight Night Technical Recap: What Went Right, Wrong for Cruz and Dillashaw

On Sunday night in Boston, Dominick Cruz came back from a series of devastating injuries and years on the shelf to defeat bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw and reclaim the title that he never actually lost.
It was an all-timer of a performance from a …

On Sunday night in Boston, Dominick Cruz came back from a series of devastating injuries and years on the shelf to defeat bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw and reclaim the title that he never actually lost.

It was an all-timer of a performance from a truly great fighter who has grown more popular in his absence than he ever was as an active competitor. The criticisms of a point fighter who didn’t finish have given way to praise of a technical genius whose defensive savvy is unlike anything the sport has ever seen.

With all of that said, it was a close fight, one of the closest five-round affairs in MMA history.

Aside from the fourth frame, which went to Dillashaw on every scorecard except judge Tony Weeks’, there was a legitimate argument to be made for both fighters in every round.

I scored it 48-47 Dillashaw, with the first two rounds going to Cruz and the last three to Dillashaw, but the range of acceptable and defensible scorecards was wide. The fight wasn’t a robbery either way, and refreshingly, most discussion seems to center on how close it was rather than salty partisans crying robbery.

So how did Dillashaw and Cruz make the fight so close? What went right and wrong for each man?

Let’s start with Cruz. First and foremost, this was the very best version of the former and current champion we’ve ever seen.

The guy who repeatedly got backed up to the fence and was largely out-struck by the diminutive Demetrious Johnson in October 2011 would have been in serious trouble against Dillashaw, but the January 2016 version of Cruz is a different and much more effective animal.

Two distinct improvements in Cruz’s game made the difference for him. First, he was far less prone to moving backwards in straight lines when pressured, which generally kept him off the fence. When Dillashaw did force him back, Cruz did an excellent job of changing directions and immediately getting out.

This had been a problem for him in the past. As good as Cruz’s footwork had been in open space, it seemingly disappeared once his back hit the fence, and he relied on grabbing ahold of the clinch or changing levels for a takedown to break off and create space.

That wasn’t an issue here, as his command of the distance was such that he was able to anticipate Dillashaw‘s pressure and quickly get out of harm’s way.

He rarely got backed up all the way to the fence and was unpredictable with the direction of his movement, which left him less vulnerable to Dillashaw‘s high kicks on the exits.

Second, Cruz’s counters were absolutely on point. In the past, he would evade, evade some more and then pick a spot to throw a single uppercut or straight as his opponent rushed in. Cruz did so far more frequently against Dillashaw, in part because the former champion’s aggressiveness presented opportunities but also because Cruz’s instincts had vastly improved.

Instead of committing only to single counters and then getting himself safely out of the way, Cruz was much more willing to set his feet and throw combinations before exiting. Those sequences of two and three punches caught Dillashaw by surprise and represented the cleanest, most effective offense Cruz produced in the entire fight.

Those were both substantial improvements to Cruz’s game.

He got more bodyweight into his punches than had been the case in the past, too, especially in the later rounds when he seemed to realize Dillashaw was taking over.

That was the good side of Cruz’s game, and it’s what won him the fight. The guy who relied on his wrestling to grind out Johnson would have been soundly out-struck and possibly finished by Dillashaw.

What went wrong? Several things.

First, Dillashaw came close to knocking out Cruz with a head kick on numerous occasions. By my count, Cruz ate at least two clean, shin-to-dome kicks and three or four more that glanced off or landed at the very end of their arc, and any one of them could have been the strike that ended Cruz’s night. Only a ridiculous chin, good spacing and a lot of luck got Cruz out of trouble there.

This speaks to the deeper issue of how to attack Cruz. Dillashaw spammed head kicks because those strikes counter lateral movement. Anything that comes in a circular arc has a wider margin for error than something like a jab or cross that comes on a straight line.

Once Dillashaw adjusted by throwing more kicks to the leg and body instead of concentrating on the head, Cruz had a lot more trouble.

Cruz also had surprisingly little success with his takedowns and transitional offense. FightMetric credited him with four takedowns, but he was never able to hold Dillashaw down for more than a couple of seconds, transition to a dominant position or land strikes as Dillashaw scrambled.

It’s normally the best part of his game, but Dillashaw completely shut him down.

While Cruz had his best possible performance and fought to the limits of his ability, the same isn’t necessarily true for Dillashaw. Two things stand out as particular problems.

First, he relied far too much on high kicks to deter Cruz from moving laterally. I laid out the reasoning for kicks above—circular strikes attack space rather than a point and therefore have greater margin for error against an elusive opponent—but high kicks were a poor choice in the grand scheme of things.

Spamming high kicks was a potentially high-reward strategy, as a clean shot might have meant a knockout, but as kicks go, targeting the head reduces your effective range. A high kick lands cleanly at about the same distance as a cross, while middle kicks go a bit further out and low kicks further still.

Against Cruz, who was always just a bit out of range, low or middle kicks would have been the better strategy.

It’s not a coincidence that once Dillashaw stopped throwing so many high kicks and switched to the legs and body, he started to have more success in the later rounds.

They took away Cruz’s margin for error in his movement, which is exactly why Duane Ludwig asked him to finish his combinations with kicks as Cruz tried to escape, and more importantly, it wore Cruz down with attrition. 

Repeatedly attacking with round kicks was the right strategy to attack an elusive opponent, but going with high kicks early was a mistake.

Imagine how much more success Dillashaw might have had late if some of those high kicks in the first and second round had gone to the legs and body instead and piled up damage to tire Cruz and limit his movement.

The second issue was one of inconsistent pressure, especially in the fourth and fifth rounds.

The leg and body kicks were slowing Cruz down, and as he tired, it became easier for Dillashaw to get him to the fence. Once Cruz got there, though, Dillashaw was largely content to throw only one or two shots instead of a flurry.

This probably had something to do with Cruz’s success on the counter early, which made Dillashaw hesitate a bit, but at the end of the fight, Dillashaw simply had to pour it on. Cruz was in something like trouble at various points in the last two rounds, and a long flurry of the kind Dillashaw has thrown in his last few fights might have swayed the judges.

Remember, Weeks scored the last four rounds for Cruz: The difference between winning and losing the fight might have been just one more effective combination when Cruz’s back hit the fence in the fourth and fifth.

It was uncharacteristic of Dillashaw to let him off the hook in that position, but it speaks to how effectively Cruz put the now-former champion off his game.

If that’s what went wrong for Dillashaw, what went right?

His use of round kicks to attack Cruz’s lateral movement was one thing. Moreover, despite the commentators’ remarks about Dillashaw being frustrated and loading up too much, he never really let up on the volume. Missing on strikes failed to dissuade him from continuing to throw, and flustered fighters don’t throw 408 strikes in 25 minutes.

Ironically, this might have hurt Dillashaw with the judges, and it certainly did so with fans who extolled Cruz’s defense.

Despite landing at essentially the same pace as Cruz in every round —if FightMetric is to be believed, Cruz landed 112 to Dillashaw‘s 109Dillashaw threw over 100 more strikes, and the perception that he was missing a great deal distracted from the fact that his shots were in fact hitting home.

Defense isn’t a judging criterion. Not getting hit is its own reward, not something that judges are supposed to score separately.

With that said, perception matters a great deal, and unless judges were actually counting landed strikes in the midst of an active, high-paced fight, it’s easy to see how that might have hurt Dillashaw.

Cruz’s inability to get anything meaningful going in the wrestling and grappling departments had everything to do with Dillashaw‘s skill in transitions. He never let Cruz establish control and immediately looked to get back to his feet. At one point, he nearly took Cruz’s back against the fence.

In sum, Dillashaw completely shut down Cruz’s best skill set.

The two champions put on the best bantamweight title fight in MMA history, and one of the closest we’ll ever see. While immediate rematches have been a bane of the UFC in the last several years, it’s hard to argue that a fight this competitive wouldn’t deserve one.

 

Patrick Wyman is the Senior MMA Analyst for Bleacher Report and the co-host of the Heavy Hands Podcast, your source for the finer points of face-punching. He can be found on Twitter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Fight Night Technical Recap: What Went Right, Wrong for Cruz and Dillashaw

On Sunday night in Boston, Dominick Cruz came back from a series of devastating injuries and years on the shelf to defeat bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw and reclaim the title that he never actually lost.
It was an all-timer of a performance from a …

On Sunday night in Boston, Dominick Cruz came back from a series of devastating injuries and years on the shelf to defeat bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw and reclaim the title that he never actually lost.

It was an all-timer of a performance from a truly great fighter who has grown more popular in his absence than he ever was as an active competitor. The criticisms of a point fighter who didn’t finish have given way to praise of a technical genius whose defensive savvy is unlike anything the sport has ever seen.

With all of that said, it was a close fight, one of the closest five-round affairs in MMA history.

Aside from the fourth frame, which went to Dillashaw on every scorecard except judge Tony Weeks’, there was a legitimate argument to be made for both fighters in every round.

I scored it 48-47 Dillashaw, with the first two rounds going to Cruz and the last three to Dillashaw, but the range of acceptable and defensible scorecards was wide. The fight wasn’t a robbery either way, and refreshingly, most discussion seems to center on how close it was rather than salty partisans crying robbery.

So how did Dillashaw and Cruz make the fight so close? What went right and wrong for each man?

Let’s start with Cruz. First and foremost, this was the very best version of the former and current champion we’ve ever seen.

The guy who repeatedly got backed up to the fence and was largely out-struck by the diminutive Demetrious Johnson in October 2011 would have been in serious trouble against Dillashaw, but the January 2016 version of Cruz is a different and much more effective animal.

Two distinct improvements in Cruz’s game made the difference for him. First, he was far less prone to moving backwards in straight lines when pressured, which generally kept him off the fence. When Dillashaw did force him back, Cruz did an excellent job of changing directions and immediately getting out.

This had been a problem for him in the past. As good as Cruz’s footwork had been in open space, it seemingly disappeared once his back hit the fence, and he relied on grabbing ahold of the clinch or changing levels for a takedown to break off and create space.

That wasn’t an issue here, as his command of the distance was such that he was able to anticipate Dillashaw‘s pressure and quickly get out of harm’s way.

He rarely got backed up all the way to the fence and was unpredictable with the direction of his movement, which left him less vulnerable to Dillashaw‘s high kicks on the exits.

Second, Cruz’s counters were absolutely on point. In the past, he would evade, evade some more and then pick a spot to throw a single uppercut or straight as his opponent rushed in. Cruz did so far more frequently against Dillashaw, in part because the former champion’s aggressiveness presented opportunities but also because Cruz’s instincts had vastly improved.

Instead of committing only to single counters and then getting himself safely out of the way, Cruz was much more willing to set his feet and throw combinations before exiting. Those sequences of two and three punches caught Dillashaw by surprise and represented the cleanest, most effective offense Cruz produced in the entire fight.

Those were both substantial improvements to Cruz’s game.

He got more bodyweight into his punches than had been the case in the past, too, especially in the later rounds when he seemed to realize Dillashaw was taking over.

That was the good side of Cruz’s game, and it’s what won him the fight. The guy who relied on his wrestling to grind out Johnson would have been soundly out-struck and possibly finished by Dillashaw.

What went wrong? Several things.

First, Dillashaw came close to knocking out Cruz with a head kick on numerous occasions. By my count, Cruz ate at least two clean, shin-to-dome kicks and three or four more that glanced off or landed at the very end of their arc, and any one of them could have been the strike that ended Cruz’s night. Only a ridiculous chin, good spacing and a lot of luck got Cruz out of trouble there.

This speaks to the deeper issue of how to attack Cruz. Dillashaw spammed head kicks because those strikes counter lateral movement. Anything that comes in a circular arc has a wider margin for error than something like a jab or cross that comes on a straight line.

Once Dillashaw adjusted by throwing more kicks to the leg and body instead of concentrating on the head, Cruz had a lot more trouble.

Cruz also had surprisingly little success with his takedowns and transitional offense. FightMetric credited him with four takedowns, but he was never able to hold Dillashaw down for more than a couple of seconds, transition to a dominant position or land strikes as Dillashaw scrambled.

It’s normally the best part of his game, but Dillashaw completely shut him down.

While Cruz had his best possible performance and fought to the limits of his ability, the same isn’t necessarily true for Dillashaw. Two things stand out as particular problems.

First, he relied far too much on high kicks to deter Cruz from moving laterally. I laid out the reasoning for kicks above—circular strikes attack space rather than a point and therefore have greater margin for error against an elusive opponent—but high kicks were a poor choice in the grand scheme of things.

Spamming high kicks was a potentially high-reward strategy, as a clean shot might have meant a knockout, but as kicks go, targeting the head reduces your effective range. A high kick lands cleanly at about the same distance as a cross, while middle kicks go a bit further out and low kicks further still.

Against Cruz, who was always just a bit out of range, low or middle kicks would have been the better strategy.

It’s not a coincidence that once Dillashaw stopped throwing so many high kicks and switched to the legs and body, he started to have more success in the later rounds.

They took away Cruz’s margin for error in his movement, which is exactly why Duane Ludwig asked him to finish his combinations with kicks as Cruz tried to escape, and more importantly, it wore Cruz down with attrition. 

Repeatedly attacking with round kicks was the right strategy to attack an elusive opponent, but going with high kicks early was a mistake.

Imagine how much more success Dillashaw might have had late if some of those high kicks in the first and second round had gone to the legs and body instead and piled up damage to tire Cruz and limit his movement.

The second issue was one of inconsistent pressure, especially in the fourth and fifth rounds.

The leg and body kicks were slowing Cruz down, and as he tired, it became easier for Dillashaw to get him to the fence. Once Cruz got there, though, Dillashaw was largely content to throw only one or two shots instead of a flurry.

This probably had something to do with Cruz’s success on the counter early, which made Dillashaw hesitate a bit, but at the end of the fight, Dillashaw simply had to pour it on. Cruz was in something like trouble at various points in the last two rounds, and a long flurry of the kind Dillashaw has thrown in his last few fights might have swayed the judges.

Remember, Weeks scored the last four rounds for Cruz: The difference between winning and losing the fight might have been just one more effective combination when Cruz’s back hit the fence in the fourth and fifth.

It was uncharacteristic of Dillashaw to let him off the hook in that position, but it speaks to how effectively Cruz put the now-former champion off his game.

If that’s what went wrong for Dillashaw, what went right?

His use of round kicks to attack Cruz’s lateral movement was one thing. Moreover, despite the commentators’ remarks about Dillashaw being frustrated and loading up too much, he never really let up on the volume. Missing on strikes failed to dissuade him from continuing to throw, and flustered fighters don’t throw 408 strikes in 25 minutes.

Ironically, this might have hurt Dillashaw with the judges, and it certainly did so with fans who extolled Cruz’s defense.

Despite landing at essentially the same pace as Cruz in every round —if FightMetric is to be believed, Cruz landed 112 to Dillashaw‘s 109Dillashaw threw over 100 more strikes, and the perception that he was missing a great deal distracted from the fact that his shots were in fact hitting home.

Defense isn’t a judging criterion. Not getting hit is its own reward, not something that judges are supposed to score separately.

With that said, perception matters a great deal, and unless judges were actually counting landed strikes in the midst of an active, high-paced fight, it’s easy to see how that might have hurt Dillashaw.

Cruz’s inability to get anything meaningful going in the wrestling and grappling departments had everything to do with Dillashaw‘s skill in transitions. He never let Cruz establish control and immediately looked to get back to his feet. At one point, he nearly took Cruz’s back against the fence.

In sum, Dillashaw completely shut down Cruz’s best skill set.

The two champions put on the best bantamweight title fight in MMA history, and one of the closest we’ll ever see. While immediate rematches have been a bane of the UFC in the last several years, it’s hard to argue that a fight this competitive wouldn’t deserve one.

 

Patrick Wyman is the Senior MMA Analyst for Bleacher Report and the co-host of the Heavy Hands Podcast, your source for the finer points of face-punching. He can be found on Twitter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

VIDEO: UFC Fight Night 81: Dillashaw vs. Cruz Post-Fight Press Conference

https://youtu.be/Z1y0q6DT9qg

Dominick Cruz, who successfully regained the UFC Bantamweight title that he never lost inside the Octagon, spoke about defeating the man who rose to the top during his own lengthy absence from active competition, TJ Dill…

ufn-81-cruz-dillashaw-post-

https://youtu.be/Z1y0q6DT9qg

Dominick Cruz, who successfully regained the UFC Bantamweight title that he never lost inside the Octagon, spoke about defeating the man who rose to the top during his own lengthy absence from active competition, TJ Dillashaw, at the UFC Fight Night 81 event on Sunday night.

Featured above is the complete video archive of the UFC Fight Night 81 post-fight press conference, which features UFC President Dana White, both Cruz and Dillashaw, as well as additional fighters who competed on Sunday’s show at the TD Garden in Boston, Mass.

Dominick Cruz Blasts Kenny Florian: Quit Copy & Pasting Man

Dominick Cruz may have re-won his UFC bantamweight title last night, but that doesn’t mean he was going to let suspended broadcast partner Kenny Florian off the hook…. Newly crowned UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz regained the championship he never lost by defeating TJ Dillashaw in the main event of last night’s (January 17, 2016) UFC

The post Dominick Cruz Blasts Kenny Florian: Quit Copy & Pasting Man appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Dominick Cruz may have re-won his UFC bantamweight title last night, but that doesn’t mean he was going to let suspended broadcast partner Kenny Florian off the hook….

Newly crowned UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz regained the championship he never lost by defeating TJ Dillashaw in the main event of last night’s (January 17, 2016) UFC Fight Night 81 from the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, but Cruz return from the most harrowing injury layoff in MMA history was more about the belt.

It was the culmination of four years of heartache, hard work, and perseverance that culminated in the highly emotional return to the mountaintop for Cruz. ‘The Dominator’ had to topple one of the world’s best pound-for-pound fighters in Dillashaw to do it, but that doesn’t mean that Cruz was going to take it all seriously.

Apparently Cruz was in a joking mood, and used his post-fight mic time to call out fellow UFC analyst Kenny Florian. Read on to watch his hilarious callout on the next page…

The post Dominick Cruz Blasts Kenny Florian: Quit Copy & Pasting Man appeared first on LowKick MMA.