UFC 138 Results: Is Chris Leben Washed Up?

Chris Leben isn’t washed up—he was just never that great to begin with.This notion sounds absolutely heretical since Leben has always been a fan favorite due to his exciting fighting style, which always brings spectators to the edge of their seat…

Chris Leben isn’t washed up—he was just never that great to begin with.

This notion sounds absolutely heretical since Leben has always been a fan favorite due to his exciting fighting style, which always brings spectators to the edge of their seats, wanting more.

But it’s true: People only believed Leben was good because they liked watching him fight, and they wanted to believe that he was more than what he was—a brawler.

At UFC 138, it was proven that Leben was just a fighter who ran out of answers when met with a superior athlete.

Mark Munoz set a frantic, grinding pace that Leben couldn’t keep up with. The “Filipino Wrecking Machine” also used his superior wrestling to bring Leben to the mat and batter him, opening up a cut that impaired Leben’s vision in one eye and forced the fight to be stopped.

But was this any surprise to anyone that wasn’t blinded by their love for Leben’s fighting style (or by his bright red hair)?

You might remember a fighter by the name of Jake Rosholt, a great wrestler and good fighter who, despite his skills, only went 1-3 in the UFC.

Who was that one victory over? Chris Leben.

Rosholt stuck to Leben like glue, not letting him get any of his powerful shots off. Rosholt took Leben down at will and eventually submitted him with an arm-triangle choke in the third round.

When Leben’s record is examined further, it doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. He is 12-7 in the UFC, but many of those victories came over lower-caliber fighters.

Leben may have beaten one great wrestler in Aaron Simpson, but Simpson was (and still is in some ways) a wrestler who’s trying to do MMA, rather than a proper MMA fighter; he’s still very uncomfortable when someone throws punches at him a la Brock Lesnar.

Yoshihiro Akiyama is another fighter whom Leben defeated, but Akiyama was one of the most overrated fighters in the UFC. He was somehow considered top competition despite never having beaten any top competition. The native of Japan is currently 1-3 in the UFC, and some would argue 0-4, since the one victory was a controversial decision over Alan Belcher.

What about Leben’s knockout of Pride legend Wanderlei Silva? Silva’s fighting style finally caught up with him; your bell can only be rung so many times.

Leben beat up guys like Alessio Sakara and Jorge Santiago, and he lost even when he took a minor step up in competition, losing to Brian Stann, Jason Macdonald, Michael Bisping and even Kalib Starnes!

Leben isn’t washed up—he was just exposed again as a guy who goes out to “fight” rather than win. While this makes him more popular and even idolized by fans, it ruins his potential.

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UFC 138 Aftermath: Mad World


(2 rounds…10 minutes…600 seconds…that is when this fight will end.)

The UFC’s first ever 5 round non-title affair started off on a rather eerie note last night, as Chris Leben crept toward the octagon accompanied by the song that did for Donnie Darko what “Lux Aeterna” did for Requiem for a Dream. And perhaps the haunting ballad was a sign of things to come, as it took just 2 rounds for Mark Munoz to make Leben hide his head and drown his sorrow like there was no tomorrow, no tomorrow. We can only hope now that Leben doesn’t decide to go joyriding after drowning said sorrows.

Leading up to the fight, many pundits out there believed that Munoz’s wrestling and clinch game would be a deciding factor, but for most of the first round, Early 90’s Scott Weiland was able to keep Munoz at bay, even managing to secure a couple takedowns of his own. But as the second round got under way, it was clear that Leben was much worse for the wear, throwing increasingly slower and sloppier combinations and allowing “The Filipino Wrecking” Machine to unleash some of the vicious ground-and-pound that has become his M.O. And then, in perhaps the most shocking turn of events in Leben’s career, he quit. Think about that for a second. A man who has earned his reputation from absorbing near Noguerian levels of punishment (I said near) decided that he had had enough. A mad world indeed.


(2 rounds…10 minutes…600 seconds…that is when this fight will end.)

The UFC’s first ever 5 round non-title affair started off on a rather eerie note last night, as Chris Leben crept toward the octagon accompanied by the song that did for Donnie Darko what “Lux Aeterna” did for Requiem for a Dream. And perhaps the haunting ballad was a sign of things to come, as it took just 2 rounds for Mark Munoz to make Leben hide his head and drown his sorrow like there was no tomorrow, no tomorrow. We can only hope now that Leben doesn’t decide to go joyriding after drowning said sorrows.

Leading up to the fight, many pundits out there believed that Munoz’s wrestling and clinch game would be a deciding factor, but for most of the first round, Early 90′s Scott Weiland was able to keep Munoz at bay, even managing to secure a couple takedowns of his own. But as the second round got under way, it was clear that Leben was much worse for the wear, throwing increasingly slower and sloppier combinations and allowing “The Filipino Wrecking” Machine to unleash some of the vicious ground-and-pound that has become his M.O. And then, in perhaps the most shocking turn of events in Leben’s career, he quit. Think about that for a second. A man who has earned his reputation from absorbing near Noguerian levels of punishment (I said near) decided that he had had enough. A mad world indeed.

Now, I’m not going to argue over how bad the cut was, or whether or not the doctors would have allowed Leben to continue for that much longer, but I must say that I never thought I would see the day that the granite-skulled TUF 1 alum would go out on anything but his shield. I’m also not going to over analyze the fact that Munoz called out Anderson Silva in his post-fight interview, because I’m pretty sure even Munoz didn’t think that one out. Take a number, bro.

And if, like myself, you were unconvinced that Renan “Barao” was for real, well then kids, sit and listen, sit and listen. Backing up the hype of his 26-1 record, Barao looked like a man possessed in his bantamweight contest with Brad Pickett, unleashing beautiful combinations at every turn before dropping the Brit with a knee and leaping like a goddamn spider monkey into a rear-naked choke to spoil Pickett’s UFC debut in just over 4 minutes of the first round. A disappointing start to Pickett’s UFC career, but I imagine the $70,000 Fight of the Night check he received helped mend some of his wounds.

In other action, Thiago Alves battered UFC newcomer Papy Abedi with strikes before dropping the Swede and securing a first round rear-naked choke victory. I find it kind of funny (I find it kind of sad) that this is the first time we’ve seen Alves utilize the skills that earned him a brown belt in BJJ, but I guess there’s a time and a place for everything. Let’s hope Abedi, on the other hand, gets another chance to showcase his skills inside the octagon, because the man has potential if nothing else.

After more than a year on the shelf since his armbar loss to Rafael Dos Anjos back at UFC 112, Terry Etim showed up bright and early for the daily races, putting away Edward Faaloloto with a guillotine choke in just 17 seconds. Etim walked away with not only the victory, but a $70,000 Submission of the Night award as well. Considering the time it took him to earn it, Etim may have made more money per second than James Toney did when he was schooled by Randy Couture at UFC 118. I’m not going to do the math, because my religion prohibits it on weekends. All hail Zorp.

But even Etim’s victory was not the most impressive of the night. UFC 138 was just as much Che Mills’ coming out party (not that kind) as it was for anyone else. The Gloucester, England native needed just 40 seconds to uncork a Muay Thai ass whooping on Chris Cope that he won’t soon forget. Scratch that, I’m pretty sure Cope won’t remember a damn thing until he sees the fight replay in a couple days. Mills’ brutal series of knees earned him Knockout of the Night honors and household recognition for at least a couple weeks. Not bad for a night’s work. Full results from the event are below.

Mark Munoz def. Chris Leben via TKO (doctor stoppage) at 5:00 of round two
Renan Barao def. Brad Pickett via submission (rear naked choke) at 4:09 of round one
Thiago Alves def. Papy Abedi via submission (rear naked choke) at 3:32 of round one
Anthony Perosh def. Cyrille Diabate via submission (rear naked choke) at 3:09 of round two
Terry Etim def. Edward Faaloloto via submission (guillotine choke) at 0:17 of round one
John Maguire def. Justin Edwards via unanimous decision
Philip De Fries def. Rob Broughton via unanimous decision
Michihiro Omigawa def. Jason Young via unanimous decision
Che Mills def. Chris Cope via TKO (strikes) at 0:40 of round one
Chris Cariaso def. Vaughan Lee via split decision

-Danga 

UFC 138 Results: Chris Leben Needs to Adapt to Survive in the UFC

Although he might have put on a good performance, Chris Leben suffered another setback in his quest to challenge for the UFC middleweight title. After enduring two hard fought rounds in the main event against Mark Munoz at UFC 138, a doctor’s stop…

Although he might have put on a good performance, Chris Leben suffered another setback in his quest to challenge for the UFC middleweight title. 

After enduring two hard fought rounds in the main event against Mark Munoz at UFC 138, a doctor’s stoppage forced “The Crippler” out of the bout after he was complaining about a cut he received above his eye. The decision was met with a resounding number of jeers from fans in attendance, and it was a lackluster conclusion to what was an eventful main card overall. 

While Leben was effective throughout the beginning of the opening round, it became apparent that he was clearly overmatched by the skillful, stronger wrestler in Munoz. The NCAA Division I wrestler continued to have his way with Leben as he took him down repeatedly and controlled him from top position. 

While Leben did put on a strong performance, there are still holes in his game that he does need to improve on. His cardio was one of his biggest weaknesses as the fight wore on. Leben continuously looked for a submission, but he wasted a lot of energy in doing so, causing his strikes to hold less power.

He did show good scrambling technique, however, he demonstrated an inability to properly defend off of his back. Leben also displayed poor wrestling defense throughout the bout as well. 

He might still remain as one of the top competitors at 185 pounds, but Leben’s bout against Munoz indicated that he has not progressed overall as a mixed martial artist, often abandoning it for his brawl-like style.

If he intends on still making a legitimate run to the middleweight crown, Leben will certainly have to fix the present holes in his game that are preventing him from competing against some of the division’s elite fighters. 

Once he is able to properly reassess his overall game and fix the glaring weaknesses, Leben can then begin to establish himself as a contender.

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UFC 138 and the Trouble With Tape-Delay

Filed under: UFCWell, I tried. I did my best to honor the sanctity of tape delay, to make it an entire day without spoilers so I could sit down to watch UFC 138 on Saturday night as if it was a live event. In my hubris, I thought it would be easy. I th…

Filed under:

Mark MunozWell, I tried. I did my best to honor the sanctity of tape delay, to make it an entire day without spoilers so I could sit down to watch UFC 138 on Saturday night as if it was a live event. In my hubris, I thought it would be easy. I thought I could, through sheer force of will, make the Spike TV tape delay a non-issue. I thought I’d be able to enjoy UFC 138 like it was any other event. I was so, so wrong.

I didn’t go into this without a plan. I knew the internet would be a minefield, and that if I so much as opened my web browser my homepage (MMAFighting.com, naturally) would spoil it for me.

Twitter was totally out of the question. Facebook? I have way too many British and European fight fans as friends. Since the entire world seemed to be getting the event live, I knew I’d have to avoid entirely the very medium that connected me to the world.

And I did it. I watched the Facebook prelims, and then I resolved to shut my laptop until the Spike broadcast started some five hours later. Thus disconnected, I thought I was home free. Then my phone buzzed with a text message from a friend. I should have thought twice before checking it, but habit got the better of me. That’s about when my day was ruined.

The text was, let’s just say, unnecessarily unkind to Chris Leben. The text also assumed that I’d been following the action live and had seen the cut stoppage already. When I replied that I had not, along with a few choice obscenities for my fight-spoiling friend, the next text was unnecessarily unkind toward me, with even more choice obscenities in response.

So there it was. Now I knew, and I could not un-know. I still had to wait a couple hours for the broadcast on Spike TV, when I would tweet along with the action for the other sad sacks who were seeing it for the first time on tape delay, but I admit that I felt like the one kid in the neighborhood who was still clinging to a hollow belief in Santa Claus.

The weird part was, only the main event had been spoiled for me. I still didn’t know what happened in the Brad PickettRenan Barao fight. I’d even maintained an impressive degree of ignorance with regards to the fate of Thiago Alves. So why couldn’t I enjoy it as if it was live?

Maybe it was just the fact that other people knew. Maybe it was that half the fun of watching fights is the idea that anything can happen, and none of us can know for sure how it will end. Unless, that is, some of us get to watch it live while others get tortured by the same few commercials on Spike TV hours after the fact.

Over the years, I’ve gotten up ridiculously early and stayed up ridiculously late to watch live MMA events on foreign soil. Neither is especially fun, but I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s better to be a zombie for the rest of the day and get your results as they come in rather than be well rested and intentionally ignorant.

And sure, you could argue that no one can complain about seeing the event a little late as long as it’s on free TV, but stay with that reasoning and see where it goes. If Spike TV showed UFC 138 the following day, is it worth complaining about then? How about a week later?

As the difficulty in avoiding real-time results tells us, we live in the age of instant information. The UFC knows it, as does Spike TV. So why go through the sad charade of tape-delayed events? Wouldn’t it be better to broadcast live to an interested audience in the afternoon than to a ghost town in the evening?

Maybe the boxing fans of 80 years ago could wait weeks to see the moving pictures of a fight, but they didn’t have Twitter. They didn’t have “friends” who would text them unsolicited live commentary. Instead they had polio and fireside chats. All things considered, I’d rather live in our age than theirs. I’d also rather watch my MMA live, no matter what time of day it is, than get a warmed-over broadcast in primetime.

 

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UFC 138 Leben vs. Munoz: The UFC 138 Most Valuable Fighter Is Mark Munoz

I finally decided to bring this column back after a somewhat long hiatus simply because the way Mark Munoz performed was enough to warrant the extra attention. Admittedly, I was skeptical of Munoz coming into this matchup. After seeing both Kendall Gro…

I finally decided to bring this column back after a somewhat long hiatus simply because the way Mark Munoz performed was enough to warrant the extra attention.

Admittedly, I was skeptical of Munoz coming into this matchup. After seeing both Kendall Grove and Demian Maia tag and hurt “The Filipino Wrecking Machine,” I thought it was inevitable that Leben would land one of his powerful left hooks and put Munoz to sleep.

Alas, that moment never seemed to come as Munoz applied constant pressure to “The Crippler” and implemented a solid game plan of devastating ground-and-pound designed to batter and tire the season 1 contestant of The Ultimate Fighter.

Leben was sucking wind from the early stages of the fight and instead of questioning his conditioning, you simply have go give credit where credit is due. Munoz unleashed a barrage of strikes on Leben each and every time the fight hit the floor. One of his punishing right hands opened up a cut just over the eye of Leben which eventually forced the fight to be called.

Meanwhile, Munoz came in thoroughly prepared for everything that Leben could possibly have in store for him. Being that this was scheduled to be the first five-round, non-title fight in UFC history, Munoz looked as though he could have fought 10 rounds.

He knew this was the biggest fight of his life, set on the biggest stage and he was more than prepared to take advantage of the opportunity the organization had afforded him. If that isn’t the mark of a man ready to take the next step and challenge the truly elite fighters of his weight class, I don’t know what is.

UFC Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva simply owned Leben on the feet when the two met back in 2006. “The Spider” connected on such a high volume percentage of his strikes, it was damn near criminal. That was the very first time Leben had been stopped, last night was the first time Leben had been rag dolled.

While it may have taken Munoz a bit longer to achieve the desired effect, the premise was pretty much the same. A battered and beaten Leben and an extremely formidable challenger for the UFC Middleweight Championship were the results of last night’s fight.

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UFC 138 Results: Is Thiago Alves a Legitimate Title Contender?

Thiago Alves has re-emerged in the UFC welterweight division. “The Pitbull” was entering his bout against UFC newcomer Papy Abedi on a two-fight losing streak, thus he was under a lot of pressure to put on a good performance.In addition, Alves fai…

Thiago Alves has re-emerged in the UFC welterweight division. 

“The Pitbull” was entering his bout against UFC newcomer Papy Abedi on a two-fight losing streak, thus he was under a lot of pressure to put on a good performance.

In addition, Alves failed to make weight for the third time in his career. 

However, the Brazilian seemed to react well under the pressure, as he scored a victory over Abedi after he applied a rear naked choke in the first round.

Despite his history with weight problems, Alves looked in shape and didn’t show any signs of fatigue as he immediately put pressure on his opponent.

Following a vintage performance, Alves proved he can still be a dangerous competitor at 170 pounds.

The main concern is whether Alves can remain consistent or not. 

Prior to challenging for the UFC welterweight title, Alves was dominant and a mismatch to almost everyone he faced. However, since his loss to Georges St-Pierre, Alves hasn’t fared well, going 2-2 in has last four bouts. 

He will likely have to continue his current streak, and face a formidable opponent in his next bout, to prove he can compete with the elite fighters in the division. At 28-years-old, Alves can still make a another title run. 

But even though he might still have to climb through the rankings, Alves is still considered a legitimate title contender. 

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