A heavyweight featured bout has been added to the upcoming Ultimate Fighter season 17 finale show headed to Las Vegas on April 13. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt and former title contender Gabriel Gonzaga will look to extend his current two-fight win s…
A heavyweight featured bout has been added to the upcoming Ultimate Fighter season 17 finale show headed to Las Vegas on April 13.
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt and former title contender Gabriel Gonzaga will look to extend his current two-fight win streak in the UFC when he faces off with Travis Browne at the finale show.
UFC President Dana White announced the news via Twitter on Monday:
Following a very brief retirement from MMA in 2010, Gonzaga made his way back to fighting almost exactly a year later. And following one victory, he got the call to return to the UFC.
Since that time, Gonzaga has made the most of his return with two wins, both by submission, including a guillotine choke victory over Ben Rothwell at UFC on FX 7 last month in his home country of Brazil.
Facing Gonzaga at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas will be heavyweight prospect Travis Browne, who will look to bounce back from the first loss of his career when he gets back in the cage in April.
Browne lost by TKO in his last fight when he took on Strikeforce transfer Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva at UFC on FX 5 last year. During the bout, he suffered a torn hamstring that hampered him greatly, as he fell to defeat for the first time. But now, with a healthy leg and some much-needed time off, he’s ready to wash the bad taste of loss out of his mouth.
White did not specify where the Browne vs. Gonzaga fight would fall on the Ultimate Fighter finale show, but it’s likely to land on the televised main card, which airs on FX on April 13.
The show will also feature the middleweight finals of the reality show, which is currently airing on Tuesday nights on FX, with coaches Jon Jones and ChaelSonnen leading the way.
Two weeks after the finale, Jones and Sonnen will meet as the main event for UFC 159 in New Jersey.
Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report.
Not even the newfound fitness of Ben Rothwell was able to save him from the dangerous assault of Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC on FX 7. Succumbing to an arm-in guillotine choke in the second round, Rothwell came up short in putting together his first winning …
Not even the newfound fitness of Ben Rothwell was able to save him from the dangerous assault of Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC on FX 7. Succumbing to an arm-in guillotine choke in the second round, Rothwell came up short in putting together his first winning streak since 2007.
Turn back the clock eight months and you would find Rothwell coming off a monumental knockout win over Brendan Schaub at UFC 145. The impressive performance showed us that the kickboxer from Wisconsin has what it takes to compete on the world’s biggest stage.
After his third loss in five UFC appearances, it’s time that we look ahead to see what’s next for “Big” Ben Rothwell.
With Rothwell’s skills rooted in kickboxing, the UFC would be smart to pair him off against a fellow striker in hopes of generating a major knockout. Those sort of highlights are a great addition to any free event. Think about the historical significance of Cheick Kongo vs. Pat Barry or Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Mirko Cro Cop, which were aired on Versus and SPIKE TV, respectively.
Unfortunately, most of the strikers in the UFC are coming off wins, and UFC matchmaker Joe Silva rarely books fighters coming off victories against those coming off defeats.
By that logic, Mark Hunt, Pat Barry and Cheick Kongo are all off of the table. However, there is one impressive knockout artist who is technically on heels of a defeat: Travis Browne.
Carrying only one loss in his 15-fight career, Travis Browne has made a name for himself with highlight-reel finishes against Stefan Struve and Chad Griggs. Heading into the final quarter of 2012, Browne was considered to be the future of the heavyweight division.
At UFC on FX 5, Browne headlined the card by taking on Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva in a fight that was expected to springboard the Hawaiian into the upper echelon of the division.
Unfortunately, after a few minutes of aggressive attack, Browne tore his hamstring and was forced to continue with severely limited movement. Unable to move out of the way of Silva’s monstrous 82-inch reach, Browne lost via TKO for his first professional loss.
Rothwell and Browne were originally scheduled to meet on the main card of UFC on Fox 4 back in August, but Rothwell was forced from the contest due to injury.
At the time of their original booking, both heavyweights were looking to keep building momentum after signature victories. If rebooked for 2013, this fight would allow one man to redeem himself with a win over a notable opponent.
Travis Browne knows that beating the man who gave him his only professional defeat won’t wipe the tick from his loss column, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t eager to even the score.Browne lost for the first time as a mixed martial artist this October wh…
Travis Browne knows that beating the man who gave him his only professional defeat won’t wipe the tick from his loss column, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t eager to even the score.
Browne lost for the first time as a mixed martial artist this October when he was knocked out by Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva in the first round of their UFC on FX 5 main event showdown.
The opening minutes of the bout took on a moderate pace before Browne tore his hamstring while attempting a head-kick. From that moment on Browne’s immobility made the impending result academic and Silva closed in on his wounded prey to finish the match.
MMA Fight Corner’s Heidi Fang recently spoke to Browne about the result, and the Hawaiian was not shy about making his desire for a rematch known:
I think I deserve it [a rematch]. It was just a freak accident. I fell on that kick 10,000 times and just this one time it happened to pop on me. The way I look at it is, he’s the one man in the world that can stand there and say he beat me, that he beat me up, that he whupped my ass. I want that fight back. I want another shot.
While Browne is no doubt eager to return to the win column, whether it be against Silva or any other UFC heavyweight, he’s still in the process of healing up from the injury he suffered at UFC on FX 5.
“I should be back training in full by mid-December and then hopefully start up a fight camp by February,” explained Browne.
Based on that timeline, expect to see “Hapa” looking to build on his 4-1-1 UFC mark in spring, 2013.
Fans knew something was wrong with Travis Browne in the lead-up to getting decked by a right hand from Antonio Silva.Browne began the fight with his trademark footwork and threw a high kick at his Brazilian opponent. At the post-fight press conference,…
Fans knew something was wrong with Travis Browne in the lead-up to getting decked by a right hand from Antonio Silva.
Browne began the fight with his trademark footwork and threw a high kick at his Brazilian opponent.
At the post-fight press conference, Browne stated that he heard his hamstring pop three times. Turns out the injury may have been more severe than a simple hyperextension. MMA Weekly has the details from Browne’s Twitter account.
“They said I tore my hamstring, ill be out for 2-4 months,” Browne tweeted. “Luckily no surgery.”
To his credit, Browne didn’t attempt to use the injury as an excuse for the loss. The loss was Browne’s first of his professional career and also snapped a three-fight win streak inside the Octagon. For Silva, it was his first win in the UFC and allowed the Brazilian to avoid the dreaded three-fight losing streak that generally ends with walking papers.
If Browne can come back as early as January, it could set him up for another possible title run depending how the title fight between Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos plays out.
Alistair Overeem is likely to play a big role in the title picture, but after those three, the list of credible challengers at heavyweight all require at least one more fight before a title bout.
Hype: The currency with which a fighter can purchase a higher profile. The palpable expression of a fan’s affection for their favorite athletes. The closest thing the UFC has to a definable ranking system.MMA is a magnificent sport. As fans, we bear wi…
Hype: The currency with which a fighter can purchase a higher profile. The palpable expression of a fan’s affection for their favorite athletes. The closest thing the UFC has to a definable ranking system.
MMA is a magnificent sport. As fans, we bear witness to modern day gladiators plying their brutal trade and showcasing their skills with the drama and excitement that only physical combat can provide.
We gaze on in awe as physical specimens (and perhaps more impressively, poor physical specimens) utilize that magical combination of desire, intestinal fortitude and skill to triumph on the sport’s largest stage.
And as fans, we invest.
Our time, our money, our passion and our enthusiasm. We retire to dark corners of the Internet to discuss the finer points of the sport with our peers, and in doing so, we create the snowflakes of hype. These snowflakes consolidate themselves into a larger mass by means of blogs and discussion boards, the plethora of fan generated content available online, and by fan-built consensus and dissent.
Eventually, they become a snowball, increasing in size and speed until this churning ball of fan interest and speculation, hope, and in many cases, disdain hits the UFC.
At this point, the market has spoken with its feet and showed that certain fighters elicit a certain degree of attention, and the UFC has a yardstick to measure and gauge the interest in certain potential matchups. Fans speak with their dollars, and the UFC has a tendency to listen.
While its not a great system, its is a system, nonetheless, and it seems to work. It is one that empowers fans and pundits alike to have a contributing role in the formulation of certain matchups, and allows an level of interaction and collaboration between fans and a sporting organization that was, until the UFC, unprecedented.
It has also allowed a formal and definable ranking system to be eschewed in favor of a rather ad hoc system of matchup formulation. Hype has proven to be a more effective means of rank ascension than performance.
There are rankings, this is true, but they generally have absolutely no relevance as to who will fight whom, and leave the decisions about what fights are planned open to extreme interpretation due to the lack of any firm rules regarding entitlement to a fight that will potentially enhance ones standing in the division.
Given that rankings are not issued by the UFC, and are generally consensus ranking formed by leading MMA journalists, it also begs the question: Are these rankings even a legitimate way to form potential matchups, or is this symptomatic of the fans desire to overstate their impact on what fights are put together?
Take, for example, the “Rally for Mark Hunt” that was instigated on Twitter earlier this year. The campaign arose in response to the MMA community’s desire to see an underdog compete for the UFC heavyweight strap in the wake of Alistair Overeem’s suspension, and I was over the moon.
I’m a Mark Hunt fan, he represents my country and it was an awesome moment in fan interaction. The people spoke, and the UFC was forced to listen. I tweeted and re-tweeted hoping the contribution of my opinion would make a difference.
While the UFC did not capitulate to public opinion, they were still hearing what the fans had to say.
The problem was, what the fans had to say, myself included, was in and of itself, pretty ludicrous. I think Mark Hunt would acquit himself well in a match with any current UFC heavyweight. That’s my opinion.
Do I think he was anywhere near as title shot? No. In the landscape of the HW division of the time, it would have been an injustice to any number of fighters who were more deserving of a run at the gold.
This is the problem.
The UFC does a pretty good job of balancing their needs to evolve their fighters profiles with bigger and better matchups when deserved, against the need to create revenue with PPV sales by putting marquee names against each other in big marketable fights. Recently, however, a marquee name can be created on the back of what is essentially factually devoid fan-based-hype.
Take the case of Travis “Hapa” Browne for example. He is a relatively inexperienced fighter, blessed with natural athletic ability and a physically imposing presence that will serve him well in the HW division. He has all the tools to excel, given ample time to develop. He had enjoyed success in the division and was matched up against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva in his most recent tilt at UFC on FX 5.
He was summarily destroyed, and while his lack of competitiveness is due, to a large degree, to the injury he incurred early in the fight, we now look at a gifted young fighter who has probably fallen further down the ladder than he needs to be.
This is not because his performance was terrible, but because, in the weeks coming up to the fight, he was lauded by fans and media alike as the newest and most potent threat to the heavyweight division, based on little more than his assertion that he was a threat to the title. This kind of rhetoric is not uncommon among fighters, but is definitely not the kind of proof that fans should be relying on to justify their expectations.
Nor is it a standard of account we should be holding this man to. What were were led to believe we were seeing was an incumbent threat to the title, in Browne, taking on an elite heavyweight who had not been performing recently. What we saw was an elite heavy weight dismantle a potential filled middle-of-the-pack HW fighter who may have been pitted in a fight beyond his abilities too soon.
Experience, and a measured performance on Silva’s part, overcame the flashier striking and substantial hype behind Browne.
There will always be a winner and a loser, but the gravitas of these victories and defeats is proportionate to how much we hype these fights, and the fighters.
Lets be fair to these guys. Let their performances do the talking, and let the strength of these performances do the heavy lifting when it comes to enhancing their profiles. At the end of the day, hyping every fighter who gets the opportunity of a main card fight is doing them an injustice, and merely adding the pressure of unnecessary and baseless fan expectation.
Now I don’t want this to be interpreted as a knock on fans, because our passion and our dedication is what makes this sport amazing, even if sometimes we say silly things and make dubious assertions.
We all have high hopes for our favorite fighters and relish the opportunity to show them support. All I ask is that, in the tradition of Mr. David Chappelle, we keeps it real.
Let fighters develop in their own time. The sport will thank us in the long run by creating stars whose profiles were built on excellent in-cage performances, not by mass media construction.
It’s time to head to the Octagon for the third time in as many weeks as we take a look at the UFC’s latest show on FX, which was shown live in the early hours this past Saturday morning on ESPN here in Britain. The broadcast began in the we…
It’s time to head to the Octagon for the third time in as many weeks as we take a look at the UFC’s latest show on FX, which was shown live in the early hours this past Saturday morning on ESPN here in Britain.
The broadcast began in the welterweight division, as Josh Neer went up against Justin Edwards.
Sadly, British viewers were blighted by poor picture quality here, but that didn’t stop us from enjoying the action. After a very brief feeling-out period, Edwards jumped up and locked in a guillotine choke. Neer quickly dropped to the ground and the referee stepped in after just 45 seconds to give Edwards the submission win.
Flyweight action followed, as John Dodson took on JussierFormiga.
Time to be totally honest. This fight wasn’t exactly that inspiring. For the entire first round and the majority of the second, it looked as if both fighters were a little tentative, mainly because Dodson was weary of being taken down by the debuting Brazilian.
That was until Dodson connected with a big left that sent Formiga to the canvas. It looked as if Dodson was going to get the win there and then when he followed his man down for a spot of ground and pound, but when Formiga got back to his feet, it was back to normal.
A minute or so later, Dodson connected with another left as Formiga went down once again. Dodson followed him down again, and with Formiga offering nothing in return, the referee stepped in to give Dodson the TKO win and a shot at the title.
Filler material followed in the form of the lightweight encounter between Michael Johnson and Danny Castillo.
Now this was more like it. After an initial feeling-out period, Castillo connected with a big right that sent Johnson crashing. Castillo quickly followed him down, and after a few well-placed hammer fists, Castillo went for an arm triangle. Johnson managed to survive, but only just as Castillo went on to dominate the rest of the round.
Johnson looked like an entirely different fighter in the second round. He went on the attack as soon as the round began, a short left putting Castillo on his backside. A brief moment of ground and pound followed until the referee stepped in to give him the knockout win.
Normal service resumed with more welterweight action, as Jake Ellenberger went up against Jay Hieron.
The only fight on the broadcast that went the distance proved to be a solid, if somewhat unspectacular encounter.
Both guys put in solid performances, although Ellenberger seemed to have a slight edge throughout the fight. This was particularly evident when Hieron went for a takedown when he caught Ellenberger’s leg. As Hieron looked for the sweep, Ellenberger began to hop around the cage as if he were on a pogo stick until he finally escaped from his man’s clutches.
Later on, Ellenberger scored with some impressive takedowns, but Hieron’s defensive work meant that he couldn’t impose his will on the fight. The second takedown was a good example of this when Hieron got back to his feet almost immediately.
After all that, and with no finish in sight, it went down to the judges, as they gave their unanimous decision to Ellenberger.
The main event featured heavyweight action, as Travis Browne took on Antonio Silva.
Browne began his night’s work by going for a couple of explosive blows, including a spinning back kick. The action then settled down a little until the fighters engaged in a clinch against the cage.
But after Browne connected with a few blows from a Thai clinch, it became obvious that he’d hurt his left knee, and after Silva connected with a couple of kicks to worsen the damage, old Bigfoot connected with a big right that rocked his man.
Browne went crashing, and Silva followed him down before the referee stopped the fight to give Silva the TKO win.
In conclusion, while this was definitely the weakest of the recent shows, it still produced its fair share of great action.
The Dodson/Formiga encounter wasn’t the best advertisement for the new flyweight division, although it did show, after the recent criticism, that the smaller guys are capable of finishing their opponents. As for Ellenberger/Hieron, it was OK, but it won’t make any fight of the year lists.
And seeing as how I didn’t see the official fight of the night, I’m left with three candidates for my prestigious no-prize, and this time around I’m giving it to the big boys of the heavyweight division, Travis Browne and Antonio Silva. It was great to see Bigfoot get back to his winning ways, and I hope he gets a fair crack against the division’s top stars.
So with all of that out of the way, let’s end this thing by giving this show the thumbs up. Not the big thumbs up, though.
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