UFC 173 Fight Video: Watch TJ Dillashaw Upend Renan Barao for Bantamweight Belt

We have a new champion.
Heavy underdog T.J. Dillashaw battered and upended Brazilian dynamo Renan Barao at UFC 173 Saturday night to capture the UFC bantamweight belt. 
The official result was a TKO victory at 2:22 of the fifth and final round.
“I…

We have a new champion.

Heavy underdog T.J. Dillashaw battered and upended Brazilian dynamo Renan Barao at UFC 173 Saturday night to capture the UFC bantamweight belt. 

The official result was a TKO victory at 2:22 of the fifth and final round.

“I’ve dreamed this for so long,” Dillashaw said in his post-fight comments. “Barao’s the best in the world in my eyes…that’s what brought it out in me.”

Dillashaw served notice early on that this would not be a normal fight for Barao. The challenger charged forward often and toward the end of the first round cracked and floored Barao with a heavy right hand. Though Dillashaw was unable to finish the fight at that moment despite a swarm of follow-up strikes, the blow appeared to put a fog on Barao that never fully lifted.

Nevertheless, the Brazilian fought gamely as the rounds wore on, landing leg kicks and stifling several takedown attempts from the former Cal State Fullerton wrestler. Through it all, though, Dillashaw remained light on his feet, staying clear of Barao‘s attack and stalking down the champion when the openings arose.

Barao finally succumbed in the fifth frame, but there was no fluke about this one. Dillashaw was the better and more aggressive fighter from horn to horn. And now he’s the new UFC bantamweight champion.

According to official UFC statistics provider FightMetric, Dillashaw landed 140 of 309 significant strikes, for a 45 percent clip. Barao, by contrast, connected on just 64 of 273 significant strike attempts, for a 23 percent success rate.

It was the first professional loss for Barao since his professional debut, all the way back in 2005.

The 28-year-old Dillashaw, who first gained notoriety as a cast member on the 14th season of The Ultimate Fighter, is now 10-2 as a pro. Barao, 27, is now 32-2 (1).

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TJ Dillashaw Re-Legitimizes ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ as Talent Source at UFC 173

The Ultimate Fighter has never been 100 percent embraced by MMA fans. You can’t downplay its importance, of course, because The Ultimate Fighter Season 1 and the bout between Forrest Griffin and Stephan Bonnar was the turning point for the sport in Ame…

The Ultimate Fighter has never been 100 percent embraced by MMA fans. You can’t downplay its importance, of course, because The Ultimate Fighter Season 1 and the bout between Forrest Griffin and Stephan Bonnar was the turning point for the sport in America. 

But how good were any of the fighters, really?

How can it be pitched as a starting place for future champions when…well…no champions have come from it since Season 2? When Rashad Evans is the last guy to have won a belt? When Jon Jones, Frankie Edgar, Johny Hendricks, Chris Weidman, on and on, never came from The Ultimate Fighter?

How can it be billed as sports when there is all of this nonsense? Shouting “let me bang, bro” and peeing on beds…these are the guys that the UFC puts forward as faces of the sport? 

How can it be pitched as a legitimate source of talent when even its winners, guys such as Efrain Escudero and Kendall Grove, wash out of the promotion?

Well, times have changed, ladies and gentlemen. While you wouldn’t expect it to come from one single event, The Ultimate Fighter has been re-legitimized as a source of talent.

TUF 18 winner Chris Holdsworth was the first season winner to kick the night off. The lanky bantamweight utterly dominated Chico Camus with his crafty groundwork, taking a handy 30-27 unanimous-decision win. The win arguably vaults him right into the bantamweight top 10, and at the very least, it makes him somebody to watch in the division.

TUF 13 winner Tony Ferguson followed that up with an even more impressive win. Against wild Japanese striker Katsunori Kikuno, he adjusted to his Wushu stance and started freely landing hard punches. Like Holdsworth, he suddenly finds himself as a major player in the upper half of the lightweight division.

TUF 15 winner Michael Chiesa? No big deal…just a dominant win over Francisco Trinaldo that advances his UFC record to 4-1.

Last but not least? It wasn’t a TUF winner who took top prize…but TUF 14 bantamweight runner-up TJ Dillashaw.

The Team Alpha Male product absolutely dominated Renan Barao, making the fighter who was comically labeled as the top pound-for-pound fighter in MMA look downright amateurish as he delivered unanswered strikes for, essentially, the entire fight.

Naturally, that is causing many to take a second look at the recent seasons of The Ultimate Fighter. While Seasons 6 through 11 provided the UFC with just a handful of middling fighters (the toast of those years would likely be heavyweight gatekeeper Roy Nelson), more recent seasons are providing many legitimately interesting talents.

Following UFC 173, it’s hard not to be reminded that ranked fighters such as John Dodson, Myles Jury and Michael Johnson all came in from TUF. It’s also hard not to suddenly be very bullish on the future outlook for fighters such as Julianna Pena, Dennis Bermudez and Luke Barnatt.

It’s a fast but very welcome change that has me thinking “Hey…maybe I actually should start watching The Ultimate Fighter again…”

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UFC 173: TJ Dillashaw and the Knockdown That Changed Everything

TJ Dillashaw shocked the world at UFC 173.
The No. 4-ranked contender was written off before the fight. The confident Team Alpha Male fighter knew something the majority of the world did not. He stepped into the cage and completely dominated Renan Bara…

TJ Dillashaw shocked the world at UFC 173.

The No. 4-ranked contender was written off before the fight. The confident Team Alpha Male fighter knew something the majority of the world did not. He stepped into the cage and completely dominated Renan Barao for more than four rounds before finishing the fight.

Everything changed in the very first round when Dillashaw dropped the champion.

When Barao fell, the crowd arose. There was a sense that Dillashaw was the real deal, and he could very well upset the champion.

The challenger looked sharp from the get-go. His footwork and head movement were reminiscent of former champion Dominick Cruz. He was fast. Dillashaw was in and out quickly. He attacked up and down with punches and kicks.

It was the perfect send-off for head coach Duane Ludwig, who will now leave Team Alpha Male. His protege perfected the game plan to destroy a top pound-for-pound fighter.

He feinted effectively. Barao looked befuddled at the movement.

Dillashaw connected on Barao, and when the power shot came to floor the Brazilian, the fight looked like it could be over quickly. The champion was able to survive, but Dillashaw stayed within himself not to blow his gas tank going for a finish that was unlikely to happen.

Following the knockdown, Barao was finished.

He never recovered. He looked slow, plodding and like he was thinking too much. Dillashaw had him confused. He was never sure as to what Dillashaw was going to do next. It was a masterful performance that earned Dillashaw a Performance of the Night bonus.

There are not enough adjectives to accurately state how stellar Dillashaw was at UFC 173.

The opening round of the main event was reminiscent of Randy Couture vs. Tim Sylvia from UFC 68 in Columbus, Ohio.

Couture clocked Sylvia with a big shot early in the fight, and Sylvia never recovered. Couture rode out the decision victory, but Dillashaw was able to finish his fight against Barao. It highlights how difficult it is to recover from a devastating knockdown early in a fight and how drastically it can alter a bout.

Even without the knockdown, it was going to be a difficult fight for Barao. That is how on point Dillashaw was on Saturday.

Who knows how this fight plays out if Dillashaw does not land that early knockdown blow. What we do know is that after Dillashaw landed that punch, Barao was never able to get back into the fight. It was the moment that changed everything.

Dillashaw stole the show and became the new bantamweight champion in the process.

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UFC 173: Recapping the Fight Night Bonuses

UFC 173 was an exciting event. There were quality performances throughout the card, but only two would earn some extra money. And only one fight could earn the title of Fight of the Night.
UFC President Dana White and Co. had some tough decisions to ma…

UFC 173 was an exciting event. There were quality performances throughout the card, but only two would earn some extra money. And only one fight could earn the title of Fight of the Night.

UFC President Dana White and Co. had some tough decisions to make.

TJ Dillashaw became the new UFC bantamweight titleholder, Daniel Cormier dominated Dan Henderson and Robbie Lawler outclassed Jake Ellenberger. And those were only the premier bouts that everyone was anticipating on Saturday night in Las Vegas. 

The undercard also delivered. But who would come away with some extra checks?

Let’s take a look at your performance bonus winners.

 

Performance of the Night: Mitch Clarke

Mitch Clarke had one of the more surprising performances at UFC 173.

Al Iaquinta was dominating the action. Clarke was not being outclassed, but Iaquinta was controlling the action. Clarke looked out of sorts.

Iaquinta gave the savvy Clarke a small window of opportunity, and in MMA that is all it takes.

Clarke laced up a brabo choke and put Iaquinta to sleep in a matter of seconds. Iaquinta went seemingly cross-eyed as Clarke squeezed the air out of him. It was a serene violence. The submission put Clarke on the map in the division, and it earned him a little extra pocket change.

 

Performance of the Night: TJ Dillashaw

There was no question that Dillashaw was going to earn a performance bonus on Saturday.

His championship-winning performance could be the performance of the year thus far in MMA. It was a complete domination of one of the pound-for-pound best fighters in the world. The speed, footwork and head movement confused Barao in each and every round.

Dillashaw looked simply phenomenal.

This was a special performance by Dillashaw, and one that fans should not take for granted. These performances are rarely seen.

 

Fight of the Night: TJ Dillashaw vs. Renan Barao

It is not often that we see a one-sided affair win Fight of the Night, but that is how special Dillashaw‘s performance was.

It ignited the crowd.

The stunning showing from the challenger, now champion, put fans on their feet. It was something unexpected. More importantly for this award, it was non-stop action. Dillashaw did not stop moving. He was in, out and around Barao for nearly 25 minutes of action.

Barao recovered from a near knockout in the first round, but he could never get into the fight. He connected a few times. Dillashaw was too good on Saturday. He looked the role of a pound-for-pound great. He took what Barao had. All of the momentum is now his.

Dillashaw never relented. He never took his foot off the gas pedal. He did not leave this fight in the hands of the judges. He went out and finished the champion in the fifth and final round. He did exactly what was needed to make himself a star in this sport.

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Renan Barao Vs.TJ Dillashaw: What We Learned from UFC 173 Main Event

As you probably saw or heard, Renan Barao was defeated by TJ Dillashaw at UFC 173. Not just defeated, either. 
“Manhandled” is an appropriate word. “Outclassed” works, too. “Slapped around” if you’re feeling nasty.
It was hypnotizing.

Slice it an…

As you probably saw or heard, Renan Barao was defeated by TJ Dillashaw at UFC 173. Not just defeated, either. 

“Manhandled” is an appropriate word. “Outclassed” works, too. “Slapped around” if you’re feeling nasty.

It was hypnotizing.

Slice it any way you want, Barao is a downright fearsome striker. Dillashaw, though, slipped around him, peppering him with punches and kicks to the body and head for the entire length of the fight. In the fifth round, he clipped him with a head-kick and followed it with a right hook that floored Barao. He swarmed on him with punches afterward and got referee Herb Dean to wave it off at 2:26 of the final round.

There is no way to downplay how impressive Dillashaw was. He beat the best in his weight class at his own game. Badly. He showed that he is a true champion.

Barao, meanwhile, unequivocally showed that he isn’t.

That’s a harsh thing to say, of course. He’s a fighter who puts his life on the line in a sport that requires superhuman levels of cajones. For him to have the success he has had, he must be something special. 

And of course, Barao is something special. It’s impossible to say he isn’t.

The old saying, however, is that “when the going gets tough, the tough get going.” It holds true in MMA for all the greatest champions of today and yesterday. 

When Demetrious Johnson found himself down two rounds John Dodson, he lived up to the occasion, found his range and took the fight back after being battered through the first 10 minutes.

Jon Jones had his eye socket ventilated by Alexander Gustafsson, but kept his belt by mustering up two strong rounds against a fighter that was every bit his equal.

Johny Hendricks battled back from a beating at the hands of Robbie Lawler, and would take the fight and the belt by putting in a strong final frame. 

Barao found himself in the same situation as other champions. When his push, his looping hooks and deadly kicks were returned with an emphatic shove in the form of a right hook that put him on his butt in the first round? He backed down.

From that point on in the fight, he was tentative. Slow. Dare I say it…scared. That invited Dillashaw to expand his lead and, even as his coaches and cornermen begged for him to take the fight to the ground, he reared back, putting forward a token resistance, but little else.

So what did we learn? 

Renan Barao doesn’t have the heart of a champion. This may change, of course. He still has plenty of years left in the sport, and we’ve seen legends in the sport battle back from worse than this loss right here.

Right now, though, he just isn’t up to snuff with TJ Dillashaw. Never even mind all those fighters who have always sat above him on the pound-for-pound lists.

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UFC 173 Results: Grades for Every Main Card Fighter

UFC 173 lit up Memorial Day weekend on Saturday night, offering a solid night of fights for MMA fans looking for their fix.
TJ Dillashaw shocked the world with not only a win but also a pure domination of Renan Barao, Daniel Cormier officially staked h…

UFC 173 lit up Memorial Day weekend on Saturday night, offering a solid night of fights for MMA fans looking for their fix.

TJ Dillashaw shocked the world with not only a win but also a pure domination of Renan Barao, Daniel Cormier officially staked his claim to the top of the 205-pound division and Robbie Lawler showed that he’s still the contender to beat at welterweight going forward.

All in all, it was not a bad way to spend an evening. Here are the grades for those who took to the Octagon.

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