In arguably the biggest and most shocking title upset in UFC history, current bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw dominated former kingpin Renan Barao at UFC 173.
With tactical precision, overwhelming pressure and the sort of five-round conditioning we’…
In arguably the biggest and most shocking title upset in UFC history, current bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw dominated former kingpin Renan Barao at UFC 173.
With tactical precision, overwhelming pressure and the sort of five-round conditioning we’re not used to seeing, especially in the midst of landing 140 significant strikes, “The Viper” made Barao look like a technician without his tools.
Dillashaw’s commanding performance not only shed light on how dynamic and prolific he can be, but it proved that Barao is in fact mortal and the 135-pound crop heap is more open battleground than closed circuit.
In any case, Barao’s perennial excellence and current pound-for-pound ranking landed him a well-deserved immediate rematch.
That rematch takes place this Saturday at UFC 177 in Sacramento, California—Dillashaw’s home state.
Here is a true head-to-toe breakdown scripting the most anticipated reboot in bantamweight history.
Hello. Come in, I’m glad you came. Sit down. Can I get you something to drink? Coffee, distilled water, perhaps something stronger, Nos Active, whiskey?
Great, that’s great. But let’s get down to brass tacks now. I called you in today because I want to…
Hello. Come in, I’m glad you came. Sit down. Can I get you something to drink? Coffee, distilled water, perhaps something stronger, Nos Active, whiskey?
Great, that’s great. But let’s get down to brass tacks now. I called you in today because I want to level with you. I want to be honest. You do appreciate honesty, don’t you? Honest discussions. They make the world go around, in my opinion.
Today’s honest discussion is about UFC 177. That’s right, the one going on this Saturday in Sacramento.
Well, now that you mention it, no, there will be no rematch between Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson. They scuttled that. Nope, no Demetrious Johnson vs. Chris Cariaso, either. They moved that to UFC 178. I know, I’ve seen those ads, too. They just haven’t replaced the old, outdated version. I’m not sure why.
There is still a title fight on the docket. It’s a rematch of RenanBarao and T.J. Dillashaw for the bantamweight belt. Dillashaw knocked him out in their first match. That was three months ago.
Here’s the bottom line: I’m not saying don’t order UFC 177. I’m not saying don’t watch it, I’m not saying don’t enjoy it. I’m just saying don’t expect it to be something that it’s not, and what it’s not is a top-quality fight card. You have a right to understand that. And you know what else? You don’t have to watch this, if you don’t want to.
Be gimlet-eyed on this one. That’s all I’m suggesting. Sometimes in life, you can make chicken salad out of chicken, you know, leavings. And sometimes you just end up eating leavings.
I’m glad we had this talk. Of course, now there will be five knockouts and five submissions and everyone will come back here and tell me we never should have had this talk. But that won’t change the fact that this pay-per-view card held a notable lack of elite-ness. And you have a right to know that. I’m a public serviceman, after all. A warrior for the truth, if I may. And I wouldn’t be doing my part if I didn’t inform you of the options.
To help you make an even more informed decision, here is a full guide to the 10-fight slate, including information capsules, predictions and viewing coordinates for each and every bout. Thanks again for coming in.
At UFC 173 T.J. Dillashaw put on a scientific performance against Renan Barao, dominating the former champion for almost an entire five rounds before putting him away in the middle of the last round. Barao was thought to be unbeatable, and Dillashaw be…
At UFC 173 T.J. Dillashaw put on a scientific performance against RenanBarao, dominating the former champion for almost an entire five rounds before putting him away in the middle of the last round. Barao was thought to be unbeatable, and Dillashaw beat him with near-impunity.
The rematch is set for the main event of UFC 177 on August 30, but there are other fights that may have been a better option for Dillashaw’s first bantamweight title defense. Because of Barao’s previous 33-fight unbeaten streak, he is definitely deserving of a rematch. But after such a one-sided first fight, it would be smart if Barao took on someone else and rematchedDillashaw coming off of a win.
With so many viable contenders in the bantamweight division, there were numerous fighters Dillashaw could have faced in his first fight as champion. Here are three fights that would have been preferable over the Dillashaw vs. Barao immediate rematch.
TJ Dillashaw put on a mesmerizing performance at UFC 173. One person who didn’t get to witness it was the man who was facing Dillashaw in the main event, Renan Barao.
Barao had a media scrum in Brazil that Guilherme Cruz of MMAFight…
TJ Dillashaw put on a mesmerizing performance at UFC 173. One person who didn’t get to witness it was the man who was facing Dillashaw in the main event, RenanBarao.
“I remember everything that happened until that point,” Barao said. “After (that punch), I only woke up in the locker room. The fight was really close in the beginning, but everything changed after that punch.”
The punch Barao mentions is the one landed by Dillashaw in the opening round that floored the Brazilian. Following the knockdown, the former UFC bantamweight champ said he was basically fighting on autopilot.
It’s not the first time we’ve heard of a fighter making it through a rough outing while on autopilot.
Barao also explained that he believes a different result will occur at UFC 177.
“I accepted the fight on short notice and I wasn’t 100 percent ready for it, but this time will be different,” Barao said. “I never trained so hard in my entire life, so it’s going to be different.”
Depending on your view of the UFC 173 clash, this either echoes the fact that Barao didn’t take Dillashaw as a legit contender or seems like an odd excuse. It was Dillashaw stepping in for an injured Raphael Assuncao while Barao should’ve been in the middle of his training camp. Perhaps Barao meant he didn’t have enough time to game-plan, but he shouldn’t have been out of shape.
It’s also shocking to hear that Barao says he doesn’t remember anything after the first knockdown. In the fight against Dillashaw, he still showed signs of life in the second round. He had his moments in the second frame, and despite getting worked over by Dillashaw up until the finish, Barao never seemed to be totally out of it in the way Dos Santos did in his title fight with Cain Velasquez.
But that’s the intrigue the UFC is hoping will turn into pay-per-view buys at UFC 177. Is Dillashaw really as good as he looked at UFC 173? Or was it just a case of Barao not taking a title challenger seriously?
Hopefully MMA fans will have clear answers to those questions following UFC 177 on Aug. 30.
Most MMA fans, no matter the age, get the opportunity to gaze upon a genuine rivalry between two elite fighters in their lifetime. They square off back and forth, split victories and keep fans hungry.
That’s like winning $15 on a $1 scratcher fro…
Most MMA fans, no matter the age, get the opportunity to gaze upon a genuine rivalry between two elite fighters in their lifetime. They square off back and forth, split victories and keep fans hungry.
That’s like winning $15 on a $1 scratcher from the gas station across the street.
Few fight fans ever get the opportunity to be witness to two of the best fight camps in the world—stocked to the brim with elite fighters—showcasing a similar rivalry.
That’s like landing the rich girl, or guy, who’s light-years out of your league.
MMA fans can rejoice, though, for you’ve all landed your wealthy partner who’s as capable of picking up the check as getting past all your insecurities and emotional baggage.
That partner can otherwise be referred to as the rivalry that’s brewing between Rio deJaneiro’s Nova Uniao and Sacramento’s Team Alpha Male.
Just in case you’re unaware, read on for a bit of a history lesson.
The Featherweights
It’s difficult to pinpoint the exact origin to the rivalry, but it’s safe to assume that Jose Aldo’s victory over Urijah Faber at WEC 48 in 2010 played a big role in getting things going.
Nova Uniao’s Aldo, who at the time was riding a nine-fight winning streak, had just captured the WEC featherweight crown in 2009—a title once held by Team Alpha Male’s Faber.
After an unsuccessful attempt at regaining his title against Mike Brown—the man who would dethrone Faber but lose to Aldo—The California Kid got another crack at the belt.
Unable to defend against Aldo’s vicious leg kicks, Faber was forced to exit the cage with bad bruising on his legs and no belt on his waist.
Aldo would go on to take his winning streak even further, capturing eight more victories en route to becoming the first ever UFC featherweight champion and most dominant man to ever step inside any cage at 145 pounds.
Faber wouldn’t be the last Team Alpha Male member to try to knock Aldo off the mountain and end his dominant reign—a then-undefeated Chad Mendes tried his luck against the dominant Brazilian before taking a vicious knee to the face in the first round of their title fight at UFC 142 in 2012.
Mendes was out cold and Aldo would take his championship record to an undefeated 2-0 against the Sacramento-based team.
Two years later, and Aldo still sits on his throne while Mendes has knocked out four out of his last five victims upon earning a second chance at Aldo’s strap. They haven’t been so cordial this time around.
From volleying performance-enhancing drug allegations back and forth at each other to Mendes questioning the champion’s durability as a fighter, it’s evident these two men have thrown respect out the window.
Mendes first spoke with Sherdog Radio in response to Aldo calling him a “pu–y” (h/t MMAFighting.com) for the PED accusation:
This is huge for me. This is huge for me getting in there and taking that belt from him. I’ve never seen him talk like this about anybody. He’s being very disrespectful. I’ve never been caught red-handed or anything. It’s funny to me that as soon as the whole random drug testing started popping up, the next day he is injured and out of the fight. If anything, I could throw that in his face, but whatever.
The Bantamweights
After realizing he could no longer compete with the bigger, stronger fighters the 145-pound division had to offer, Faber made his way down to bantamweight.
He would go on to lose his first chance at UFC bantamweight gold when he came out on the bad end of a close, but unanimous, decision to then-champion Dominick Cruz.
Faber’s next chance at the title came against a rising, dominant bantamweight star in Nova Uniao’s RenanBarao.
Barao was riding a 28-fight winning streak and Faber was fresh off a dominant submission victory against Brian Bowles.
Faber’s fight against Barao went much like his last fight against a Nova Uniao fighter—he was left battered. A broken rib suffered early on inside the Octagon would prevent Faber from seeing his hand raised and leaving with UFC gold.
Three submissions in four wins in 2013 would place Faber back inside the cage against Barao, who was now seeking to defend his bantamweight belt for the third time.
The sequel would be nothing like the original—but that didn’t mean it would end well for Faber this time, either. Barao dominated Faber on the feet, stunning him and knocking him down twice before a premature stoppage from referee Herb Dean at UFC 169. He was 0-3 in title fights against Nova Uniao.
With seemingly nobody left to challenge Barao’s 32-fight winning streak, the UFC green-lit a bout between Barao and TJ Dillashaw—the latest Team Alpha Male member to get an opportunity at UFC glory.
With just one fight—a loss, at that—against a ranked bantamweight opponent, many (including this author) believed Dillashaw was merely the next body for Barao to dispose of.
He was supposed to be No. 33.
He was inexperienced. He was unproven. He was vulnerable.
It didn’t matter.
It took one round and a jaw-dropping knockdown to silence all the critics—Dillashaw, at the very least, belonged inside the cage with the champion. It took four-and-a-half rounds of complete and utter domination to prove he was the better fighter and the rightful heir to the bantamweight throne.
Team Alpha Male finally had a UFC champion to call its own.
Once an invincible, dominant, pound-for-pound beast, Barao now stands where Dillashaw once did—an undeserving title contender. Really, it wasn’t even close enough to give the greatest of champions an immediate rematch.
So, here we stand.
Bloody Elbow indicates Barao was the latest to take part in a Duane Ludwig striking seminar, and Mendes is finally under Aldo’s skin. If all that history isn’t enough to validate this rivalry, you might want to dust off your dictionary.
Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA.
T.J. Dillashaw made good on his promise to shock the world like Chris Weidman did against Anderson Silva by defeating Renan Barao, and, like Weidman, he’ll have to do it all over again at UFC 177.
MMA journalist Ariel Helwani reported on Wednesda…
T.J. Dillashaw made good on his promise to shock the world like Chris Weidman did against Anderson Silva by defeating Renan Barao, and, like Weidman, he’ll have to do it all over again at UFC 177.
MMA journalist Ariel Helwani reported on Wednesday’s episode of UFC Tonight that the UFC was close to booking a bantamweight championship rematch between Dillashaw and Barao. The bout would likely take place on the August 30 fight card in Sacramento.
Dillashaw, who entered the first bout as an 8-1 underdog, made oddsmakers look silly by netting a fifth-round TKO stoppage over Barao. Many considered the Brazilian to be one of the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world, but he never had an answer for Dillashaw’s speed and ability to change angles and keep him guessing on the feet.
Dillashaw not only dethroned Barao but also snapped a 32-fight unbeaten streak.
The general consensus is that Dillashaw’s dominance warrants a new opponent, particularly Raphael Assuncao. The Brazilian bantamweight was initially set to contend for the UFC title, and he is the last fighter to record a win over Dillashaw.
But, like every great champion, the UFC appears to be rewarding Barao’s past greatness with an opportunity to hit the rewind button. UFC President Dana White hinted at the rematch during a media scrum in June (h/t BloodyElbow.com):
Tell me if I’m wrong. As we sat there and started looking through the list of guys to fight T.J., how do you not give it to Barao, the guy who was undefeated all those years? I agree he got a five-round a** whooping and got finished, but how does it make sense to not give him the rematch? And who doesn’t want to see it? I want to see it.
Marlon Sandro, Barao’s teammate, recently pinned the loss on the UFC in an elongated rant on Instagram. He called the UFC “crooks” for not giving the former champ ample time to rest and “forcing” him to fight Dillashaw after having just fought Urijah Faber in February.
Will a second time be the charm for Barao? More importantly, does he even deserve it?
JordyMcElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon.