TUF 13 Finale Undercard Live Blog: Stephens vs. Downes, Jorgensen vs. Stone, More

Filed under: UFCThis is the TUF 13 Finale undercard live blog for all the preliminary bouts in support of tonight’s Spike TV card from the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.

There are six bouts on tonight’s prelims: Reuben Duran vs. Francisco Rivera, J…

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Jeremy Stephens faces Danny Downes at TUF 13 Finale.This is the TUF 13 Finale undercard live blog for all the preliminary bouts in support of tonight’s Spike TV card from the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.

There are six bouts on tonight’s prelims: Reuben Duran vs. Francisco Rivera, Josh Grispi vs. George Roop, Jeremy Stephens vs. Danny Downes, Scott Jorgensen vs. Ken Stone, Justin Edwards vs. Clay Harvison and Shamar Bailey vs. Ryan McGillivray. All six undercard fights will air on Facebook at 6:30 p.m. ET.

The live blog is below.


More Coverage: TUF 13 Finale Results



Reuben Duran vs. Francisco Rivera

Round 1: We start with a couple of bantamweight bouts. We dance for the first , 30 seconds, then a shoot from Duran. But Rivera locks in a guillotine, and it looks close. But Duran finally slips out of it, leaving Duran on top looking to posture up in Rivera’s guard. They work their way to their feet, and Rivera again works for a guillotine as Duran throws body shots to get his head out. Duran finally bullies Rivera to the cage and the two trade body shots in the clinch, then some good clubs to each other’s heads. Then traded high elbows, then knees. Duran throws an uppercut in tight, but Rivera answers. They stay clinched against the fence, but both are working as Herb Dean looks in. Rivera again sinks in a guillotine, but Duran slams out of it and gets to half guard, looking to pass to side control. It’s not there, and Duran locks in a guillotine of his own as Rivera tries to get to his feet. Rivera gets out, though, and with 30 seconds he begins workin gsome good ground-and-pound from on top. It’s a really fun back-and-forth first round, but MMA Fighting will score it narrowly for Rivera, 10-9.

Round 2: Early kick from Duran, then a couple nice jabs and a roundhouse right that is blocked. The two fire off a couple bombs, and Rivera tags Duran and stumbles him. After a few traded jabs and uppercuts, Duran catches Rivera with an accidental low blow and Rivera takes a breather. Duran comes in with a big shot, but Rivera once again sinks in the guillotine in defense. After 20 seconds of squirming, Duran gets out and is on top. After some ground scrambles, Duran works his way to a late rear naked choke attempt, but Rivera survives the round. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Duran.

Round 3:


Scott Jorgensen vs. Ken Stone

Round 1:


Justin Edwards vs. Clay Harvison

Round 1:

Shamar Bailey vs. Ryan McGillivray

Round 1:


Josh Grispi vs. George Roop

Round 1:

Jeremy Stephens vs. Danny Downes

Round 1:

 

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TUF 13 Finale: Weigh-In Results

How he hangs a hammer from those things we’ll never know.

It’s fair to say that this season of The Ultimate Fighter didn’t live up to expectations. Despite the inclusion of pay-per-view juggernaut Brock Lesnar, this season posted some of the lowest ratings in the franchise’s history. And yet again, the show’s momentum was halted by the revelation that the coaches would not be facing off at the end of the season. But tonight the UFC has a golden opportunity to make chicken salad out of chicken shit with a night of free fights on Spike TV. The UFC announced last night via Twitter that six prelim fights will be aired on Facebook at 6:30pm (Eastern). Tell us who you got in the comments, and if you’re up early enough there still may be time to enter our MMAOutlet.com UFC Fight-Picking Contest.

Results from last night’s weigh-ins are after the jump.

How he hangs a hammer from those things we’ll never know.

It’s fair to say that this season of The Ultimate Fighter didn’t live up to expectations. Despite the inclusion of pay-per-view juggernaut Brock Lesnar, this season posted some of the lowest ratings in the franchise’s history. And yet again, the show’s momentum was halted by the revelation that the coaches would not be facing off at the end of the season.  But tonight the UFC has a golden opportunity to make chicken salad out of chicken shit with a night of free fights on Spike TV. The UFC announced last night via Twitter that six prelim fights will be aired on Facebook at 6:30pm (Eastern). Tell us who you got in the comments, and if you’re up early enough there still may be time to enter our MMAOutlet.com UFC Fight-Picking Contest.

Results from last night’s weigh-ins (via BJPenn.com):

MAIN CARD:
Tony Ferguson (169) vs. Ramsey Nijem (170) – “TUF 13″ tourney finale
Clay Guida (155) vs. Anthony Pettis (155)
Tim Credeur (185) vs. Ed Herman (186)
Kyle Kingsbury (206) vs. Fabio Maldonado (203)
Chris Cope (170) vs. Chuck O’Neil (170)

PRELIMINARY CARD:
Danny Downes (155) vs. Jeremy Stephens (156)
Josh Grispi (145) vs. George Roop (146)
Shamar Bailey (171) vs. Ryan McGillivray (169)
Justin Edwards (170) vs. Clay Harvison (171)
Scott Jorgensen (135) vs. Ken Stone (136)
Reuben Duran (136) vs. Francisco Rivera (136)

Clay Guida on Ladies Only in His RV and Trying the Showtime Kick (EXCLUSIVE VIDEO)

Our host, Steve Cofield catches Clay Guida off guard by telling him that Brian Stann said he has a Ladies Only Policy inside his famed RV “down by the river.” Guida tells Cofield he hopes.

Our host, Steve Cofield catches Clay Guida off guard by telling him that Brian Stann said he has a Ladies Only Policy inside his famed RV “down by the river.” Guida tells Cofield he hopes Anthony Pettis tries the “Showtime Kick” this Saturday night during their TUF 13 Finale headlining bout. He says he’s unsuccessfully tried the kick, himself. Watch the interview below:

Watch Clay Guida on the Ladies Only Policy in His RV and Trying the Showtime Kick on RawVegas.tv

TUF 13 Finale Weigh-In Results

Filed under: UFC, NewsLAS VEGAS – In what is always a more intimate weigh-ins affair than pay-per-view extravaganzas, all fighters made weight Friday for their fights at “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 13 Finale card at The Palms Casino Resort in Las Veg…

Filed under: ,

LAS VEGAS – In what is always a more intimate weigh-ins affair than pay-per-view extravaganzas, all fighters made weight Friday for their fights at “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 13 Finale card at The Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.

Main event fighters Ramsey Nijem and Tony Ferguson came in at 170 and 169 pounds, respectively. The two reached the finals of the current Season 13 of “The Ultimate Fighter” reality competition, which taped earlier this spring. The episode showing their semifinal victories aired Wednesday.

And in an important bout for the UFC’s lightweight division, Clay Guida and Anthony Pettis each hit 155 pounds on the button. Pettis was the WEC’s last lightweight champion and was to get a shot at the UFC title after champion Frankie Edgar’s bout with Gray Maynard at UFC 125 in January. When that fight ended in a draw and a rematch was ordered, Pettis asked for Guida, who has won three straight – all by submission. Ed Herman and Tim Credeur return to the UFC following absences of nearly two years each due to injuries and illnesses. Herman, a TUF 3 cast member, has not fought since a UFC 102 loss in August 2009 to Aaron Simpson, in which he suffered a serious knee injury. Credeur has been on the shelf since a loss to Nate Quarry at Fight Night 19 in September 2009. Despite several booked fights since then, a foot injury and a scare following a routine brain scan has kept him out of action. Herman weighed 186; Credeur was 185.

TUF 13 cast member Chris Cope arrived to the stage to a mixed response from the several hundred fans in attendance. This season’s storylines saw him cast as one of the early villains, for lack of a better term, in the house. The trademark “Wooooo!” that he let out each morning, which set housemate Shamar Bailey off leading up to their quarterfinal fight, was on display when he took the stage. And his opponent, fellow TUF 13 contestant Chuck O’Neil, let out a playful “Wooooo!” of his own. The two smiled through their faceoff.

Down the card, in Saturday’s second preliminary card fight, Scott Jorgensen, just one fight removed from his co-main event bantamweight title fight against Dominick Cruz in December, hit 135 for his fight against American Top Team product Ken Stone, who was 136.

Complete weigh-in results are below.

Main Card
Ramsey Nijem (170) vs. Tony Ferguson (169)
Clay Guida (155) vs. Anthony Pettis (155)
Ed Herman (186) vs. Tim Credeur (185)
Kyle Kingsbury (206) vs. Fabio Maldonado (203)
Chris Cope (170) vs. Chuck O’Neil (170)
Preliminary Card
Jeremy Stephens (156) vs. Danny Downes (155)
Josh Grispi (145) vs. George Roop (146)
Shamar Bailey (171) vs. Ryan McGillivray (169)
Clay Harvison (171) vs. Justin Edwards (170)
Scott Jorgensen (135) vs. Ken Stone (136)
Reuben Duran (136) vs. Francisco Rivera (136)

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Seven Ways of Looking at the TUF 13 Finale

Filed under: UFCAfter a pay-per-view letdown last weekend, it’s nice to have a solid, free fight card to lift our spirits. Now for an examination of the interesting storylines, annoying questions, and begrudging admissions surrounding the TUF 13 Finale…

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After a pay-per-view letdown last weekend, it’s nice to have a solid, free fight card to lift our spirits. Now for an examination of the interesting storylines, annoying questions, and begrudging admissions surrounding the TUF 13 Finale.

I. No one has less to gain and more to lose on Saturday night than Anthony Pettis. Theoretically, he earned a UFC lightweight title shot when he beat Ben Henderson. Then circumstances conspired against him in almost comically unfortunate fashion, one after another, and now he’ll probably have to win two more fights before getting a crack at the gold. Clay Guida is a tough guy to start that journey against. His pace is unrelenting, and he can make you look bad even if you beat him. Aside from a paycheck and a chance to stay active, Pettis can’t possibly get much out of this bout that he hasn’t already been promised. If he doesn’t win and look at least fairly decent doing it, though, those promises are worth about as much as a slurred offering of undying love right around bar closing time. Pettis can’t go up right away, no matter what he does. He has to win just to stay where is, and that’s never a good spot.

II. On the other hand, it’s an ideal situation for Guida.
Talent-wise, he’s not among the best in the division. But talent is only part of the equation in this business, and Guida knows it. His work ethic is exemplary. His toughness is unquestionable. He has the cardio of a gazelle on methamphetamines. In short, he’s a truth machine who will, over the course of a fight, make sure the whole world knows just how seriously you took your training. You can beat him if you show up fully prepared and don’t make many mistakes. Anything less and he’ll expose you. This is not a fight Guida is especially expected to win. More than anything, it’s a way of keeping Pettis in the conversation. If Guida loses, fine. He’s always fun to watch, so he’s not going anywhere. But if he wins? Then suddenly we can’t even have a conversation about the UFC lightweight title picture without breathing his name. That’s exactly where Guida wants to be right now.

III. What does it mean to be “The Ultimate Fighter” in today’s UFC? If you look back at recent winners and finalists from the UFC’s long-running reality show, you quickly find that some Spike TV exposure and a cut-glass trophy does not an MMA superstar make. Some go on to do well. Others do just well enough to hang around. A few get dropped altogether. Lately, relatively few non-finalist contestants on the show even get a tryout in the UFC, which kind of makes you wonder about the true significance of being the best among a group that, on the whole, is deemed not quite good enough for the big leagues. Winning the show is a nice start to a UFC career, but it’s only a start. Remember that when the winner is getting slapped on the back and showered with love in the center of the Octagon on Saturday night.

IV. No one seems quite sure what to expect out of Tim Credeur and Ed Herman, and that’s kind of fun. You take two hard-nosed guys who have been out of action for nearly two years – one with a knee injury and the other with a brain…thing – put them up against each other in a fight both really need to win, and there’s no telling what will happen. Fight of the Night? Wheezing, ring-rusted performances from one or both? Totally forgettable decision? Desperate, frantic attempts to gnaw one another’s faces off? Who knows. If I had to bet, though, I’d say they’re going to put on a show for at least one round. If it goes longer than that, it’s anybody’s guess.

V. Kyle Kingsbury has earned a step up in competition, but he’s still not getting it.
No disrespect to Fabio Maldonado, who seems like a tough dude, but Kingsbury has won three straight in the UFC. Most recently he crushed a very tough Ricardo Romero at UFC 126, which might have led one to believe that he’d get a bigger name opponent in his next fight. Maldonado has one fight and one win in the UFC, over the now not-so-employed James McSweeney. That’s not to say Maldonado isn’t ready for this level of competition, but Kingsbury has already proved that he is. If he wins this, how about giving him a name that fans will recognize in his next outing?

VI. And now that I’m thinking about it, where’s the love for Scott Jorgensen? Back in December he challenged for Dominick Cruz’s bantamweight title. He lost a one-sided decision, sure, but how do you go from a title shot to an unaired prelim fight on a TUF Finale card with one defeat? Seems like a precipitous drop for a guy who’s known to put on exciting performances. Winning five straight may qualify you for a crack at the belt, but apparently one loss to the best in the world at 135-pounds and you get nudged into a dark match just so fans don’t have to miss Chuck O’Neil vs. Chris Cope. What a business.

VII. Okay, I admit it: I’ve been spoiled by all those Facebook prelim fights. Now when I look at a card that features five TV fights and six genuine dark matches, I actually feel a little short-changed. As if it isn’t free. As if an opportunity to see every single fight on the card is a birthright and not a pretty recent (and also awesome) development. How quickly we get used to the new normal. Still though, you’re telling me I probably won’t get to see Jeremy Stephens and Danny Downes go at it? Bummer, man. That’s a bummer.

(Editor’s note: Six prelim fights have been added to Facebook.)

 

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Hey, This TUF 13 Finale Looks Pretty Good

Dammit, who are all you guys again?

Say what you will about The Ultimate Fighter (not like you need an invitation), but the finale shows tend to be pretty damn fun. This season, we actually have two fairly solid finalists, a dynamite co-main in Pettis-Guida, plus a handful of other matchups calibrated for striking showdowns and crowd amazement.

Here’s a quick and dirty rundown of the fights scheduled for this weekend, with a few of those fancy moving pictures that you like so much. Who ya got?

Ramsey Nijem

VS

Tony Ferguson

Well, either this fight is the one you’ve been waiting for, or you’re just wondering what these two nobodies are doing on your UFC card. Tune in to find out which guy gets a contract with the UFC. (Spoiler Alert: It’ll be both of them.)

Dammit, who are all you guys again?

Say what you will about The Ultimate Fighter (not like you need an invitation), but the finale shows tend to be pretty damn fun.  This season, we actually have two fairly solid finalists, a dynamite co-main in Pettis-Guida, plus a handful of other matchups calibrated for striking showdowns and crowd amazement.

Here’s a quick and dirty rundown of the fights scheduled for this weekend, with a few of those fancy moving pictures that you like so much.  Who ya got?

Ramsey Nijem

VS

Tony Ferguson

Well, either this fight is the one you’ve been waiting for, or you’re just wondering what these two nobodies are doing on your UFC card.  Tune in to find out which guy gets a contract with the UFC.  (Spoiler Alert:  It’ll be both of them.)

Anthony Pettis

VS

Clay Guida

If you aren’t looking forward to this fight, you just go ahead and get the hell out of our website.  Neither dude is capable of being in a boring fight.  Guida is confident that he’ll handle Pettis; meanwhile we’ve gotten reports that Showtime is practicing something called a “Shaolin-McTwist bicycle kick.”  Now, maybe we made that up, but maybe not.

Fabio Maldonado


VS

Kyle Kingsbury



Maldonado (18-3) made his UFC debut in October last year, when the Brazilian boxer TKO’d James McSweeney in his hometown.  Maldonado has hands of stone and a chin to match – he’ll want to sleepify Kingsbury standing.  Kingsbury (10-2) has been tearing up the undercard scene ever since he lost to Tom Lawlor in the TUF 8 finals, plus he’s been getting some high-tech training.  This one has flown under the radar, but it should be a good scrap.  We got Kingsbu.

Ed Herman

vs

Tim Credeur


It’s been almost two years (and two surgeries) since Ed Herman’s injury TKO loss to Aaron Simpson. Of course, Short Fuse (19-7) is coming back better than ever — they all say that. His opponent will be Tim Credeur (12-3), who is taking a step up in competition after nearly two years away from the cage himself. We’re leaning toward Herman here, but after that long away from the cage, it comes down to who knocks off the ring rust better.

Chris Cope

VS

Chuck O’Neil

The two guys who lost in the semis will mix it up for third place, presumably for a smaller etched-glass thingie and a nice TapouT watch.

Danny Downes (8-1) v Jeremy Stephens (19-6)

Danny Boy Downes steps in on short notice to replace Jonathan Brookins for his UFC debut after going 2-1 in the WEC. He’ll look to match firepower with Jeremy Stephens in a knockout race, which we are totally fine with. Why yes, we would like some popcorn. Thank you.

George Roop (11-7) vs Josh Grispi (14-2)

George Roop has lost to the cream of the crop at 145 and 155, including Eddie Wineland, George Sotiropoulos, and Mark Hominick, so try not to focus on the numbers too much. On the other hand, his opponent is 22 year old Josh Grispi, who was in line for a shot at Jose Aldo before losing to Dustin Poirier at UFC 125.  Expect Grispi to return to form Saturday night and finish the fight in the first round.

Scott Jorgensen (11-4) v Ken Stone (9-2)

Damn, Ken Stone gets Slampaged at the last-ever WEC show, and his return fight is Scott Jorgensen? That just doesn’t seem right. Jorgensen is going to make an impression in his UFC debut, especially after that frustrating loss to Dominick Cruz. We’re looking for Jorgensen to score a submission win over Keith Stone’s little bro.

Clay Harvison (6-1) vs Justin Edwards (6-0)

Justin Edwards didn’t last long in TUF, suffering a KO loss to Tony Ferguson in the first round of fights.  That’s the risk you run when you’re an offense-first kind of guy.  Edwards has never been to a decision, and a fight with Clay Harvison is likely to be the first.  Expect a brawl … and a knockout.  We’re thinking Harvison, if only because he seems to have a better chin.

Shamar Bailey (13-6) vs Ryan McGillivray (11-4)

McGillivray is the guy that Mike Russel referred to as “the Canadian guy”, while Shamar Bailey has a vanity website.  The Canadian guy lost to finalist Tony Ferguson in the quarterfinal round, while Sham-Wow got sniped off by Chris Cope.  If one of them pulls of a spectacular finish, you can expect to see him around.  Otherwise, expect them to pick up some wins in the minors before getting an invite back.

Francisco Rivera (5-1) v Reuben Duran (7-3-1)

Both coming off losses in their debut fights under the Zuffa banner, Rivera and Duran both need to impress some people if they want to stay on at the big show.

[RX]