UFC 150: Jared Hamman Fueled by Love of the Fight

Fans of mixed martial arts love to see a fighter enter the cage and put it all on the line. But in a sport where winning is heralded above all else, there are times when strategy gives way to security. When this becomes the case, the action stalls as t…

Fans of mixed martial arts love to see a fighter enter the cage and put it all on the line. But in a sport where winning is heralded above all else, there are times when strategy gives way to security. When this becomes the case, the action stalls as the fighter rides out the time clock. They are happy to take home the victory on the judge’s scorecards as they make promises for a more exciting showing on another occasion.

Jared Hamman will never be this type of fighter.

The former college football player turned mixed martial artist entered the sport to test his abilities as a fighter and has operated with the type of mentality rarely seen at the highest level. Every time “The Messenger” steps into the cage, he does so with genuine intention that the fight will never reach the cageside judges.

There have been times when this approach has not worked in his favor, but his “never say die” attitude has shown UFC fans he’s willing to give everything he has to get the job done.

If he fails, it becomes a lesson learned. But when he is victorious, it is further validation following his heart and passion to fight was the best choice he could have made.

“Of course I want to win, but this sport is fun for me,” Hamman told Bleacher Report. “I don’t over-pressure myself when thinking about winning. I always fight hard and go for the finish because to me that is fun. I never want to win a fight by slap boxing or laying on my opponent.

“I want to get hit far less that’s for dang sure, but for me, the fun in all of this is going out there, trying to beat my opponent down, and finish the fight. I don’t want to win by the judge’s decision. The day that changes I’ll quit fighting because it will no longer be fun to me.

“I get the fact that some people are so afraid to lose they become overly cautious and whatnot. Some guys fight that way, but others don’t. There are fighters just naturally inclined to go out there fighting to win and are still exciting. Nobody has to tell a guy like Nick Diaz how to fight.

“It sounds like a funky thing to say, but I would rather go out on my shield, knowing I gave everything I had to get the win than holding back and trying my best not to lose.

“We are never promised our next fight. I could get in a car accident tomorrow and never be able to compete again. That could absolutely happen. With that being said, I want to go in there, fight my butt off like I always have and have some fun. I’m not saying I want to go out there and get hit a bunch. I know there are technical aspects to fighting, but my philosophy is to always be trying to end the fight before the judges get to it. If I can’t do that, then I won’t fight anymore.”

In the days leading up to his previous bout against Constantinous Philippou at UFC 140, sudden family issues arose, which prompted Hamman and his wife to relocate to Denver. When Hamman squares off this Saturday against Michael Kuiper at UFC 150 in his new backyard, he will be looking to rebound back into the win column.

The move has also landed Hamman at Grudge training facility and he believes the benefits will show on fight night.

“My camp for this fight has been awesome,” Hamman said. “I’ve trained a lot with Nate Marquardt and he’s helped me tremendously. It has been a huge plus leading up to this fight. I’ve also trained with Brendan Schaub when he has been here in Denver in addition to guys like Eliot Marshall. There are a bunch of great dudes to train with out here.

“I’ve had some great coaching and that’s not to say I haven’t had great coaching this entire time. I want people to know, when I moved to Colorado, it was because of a lifestyle change and not because I’m not friends with Vladimir Matyushenko and those guys anymore. We left on great terms and we moved out here for family reasons.”

Prior to facing Rafael Natal in his UFC debut, Kuiper had yet to see the loss column. The Judo black belt strung together 11 consecutive wins, with every victory coming by way of finish. While Hamman can appreciate his opponent’s skill set, he feels time on the sport’s biggest stage will be one of the factors in this fight.

 

“It’s a funny thing, but for the first time, I believe me being a veteran is going to make a difference in this fight,” Hamman said. “I’ve only had a handful of fights more than he has, but my experience in the UFC and my ability to handle the ups and downs is going to play a part.

“Kuiper is very good at getting up and his ground game is solid. I’m always working on my ground game and wrestling. For this camp, I’ve had some excellent guys to work with in those departments as well.

“I’ve also had some great Judo training. There is a coach out here by the name of Buck who helps train the Olympic Judo team. He comes in and trains with us all the time, so I’ve actually had some great Judo guys to go with. It’s worked out very well.”

When the cage door closes on Saturday and the referee gives the signal, Jared Hamman will be looking to give it everything he has. He will be pushing the action from the opening bell as he battles to get his hand raised at fight’s end. It is the only way he knows how and it’s something he knows will never change.

“I want to do my very best to finish fights,” Hamman said. “I’m not saying to go out there and be reckless, which I have been at times, but I’m getting better at it and the results will hopefully show.

“I’m going to bring the same thing I always bring into fights, but this time it’s going to be a in a little bit of a different way. I’m coming out to go hard and finish the fight, but be more aware of the punches while I’m looking to finish. That is and forever will be my mentality in this sport.”

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UFC 150: Awesome Fan-Made Frankie Edgar vs. Benson Henderson II Trailer

A good number of fight fans are familiar with the work of Nick the Face by now, as he is consistently able to produce intriguing homemade trailers for big fights. UFC 150 is no exception. The trailer details the first meeting between Frankie …

A good number of fight fans are familiar with the work of Nick the Face by now, as he is consistently able to produce intriguing homemade trailers for big fights. UFC 150 is no exception. 

The trailer details the first meeting between Frankie Edgar and Benson Henderson at UFC 144, where Edgar won a unanimous decision, capturing the UFC lightweight title. 

Both fighters also give a brief analysis of how they thought the fight went. Not surprisingly, both men felt they did enough to win. 

UFC 150 marks “The Answer’s” third rematch in a row, after BJ Penn and Gray Maynard occupied his 2010 and 2011 schedules respectively. 

Meanwhile, “Smooth” is on a four-fight win steak, impressively earning victories in 14 of his past 15 battles inside the cage.

The only man to defeat Henderson during that stretch is Anthony Pettis, who won the WEC lightweight title from “Bendo” at WEC 53 in Dec. 2010. The bout is infamous for Pettis landing his flashy “Showtime Kick,” where Pettis catapulted himself off the cage before delivering a brutal kick to Henderson’s face. 

Recent history aside, Edgar and Henderson are two guys the fans can count on to always bring a great fight, and Saturday at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado, they will do just that.

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UFC 150 Fight Card: Donald Cerrone vs. Melvin Guillard Head-to-Toe Breakdown

UFC 150 goes down this Saturday, August 11 from the Pepsi Center in beautiful Denver, Colorado, one of the crown jewels of the wild American west. So it’s fitting, then, that the co-main event features two of the biggest gunslingers in the lightweight …

UFC 150 goes down this Saturday, August 11 from the Pepsi Center in beautiful Denver, Colorado, one of the crown jewels of the wild American west. So it’s fitting, then, that the co-main event features two of the biggest gunslingers in the lightweight division: Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone and Melvin “The Young Assassin” Guillard.

They should bolt a pair of those swinging saloon gates onto the cage door for the occasion. Replace Josh Rosenthal with Lee Marvin. These are the kinds of touches that will really help set the mood for a matchup with all the makings of a good, old-fashioned shootout.

In the unlikely event this wasn’t enough hardcore fight information for you, what follows is a head-to-toe breakdown of Cerrone and Guillard. With a Western theme, of course.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 150 Fight Card: Info and Predictions for Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar

After a thrilling UFC on Fox 4 card last weekend, Dana White and Co. are wasting no time in bringing another slate of exciting fights to the Octagon. UFC 150 is set to take place in Denver, Colorado, on Saturday night, and it’s headlined by one o…

After a thrilling UFC on Fox 4 card last weekend, Dana White and Co. are wasting no time in bringing another slate of exciting fights to the Octagon.

UFC 150 is set to take place in Denver, Colorado, on Saturday night, and it’s headlined by one of the most anticipated rematches of the year in Benson Henderson’s first lightweight title defense against former champion Frankie Edgar.

“Smooth” won the belt off of Edgar with a close decision win over “The Answer” in Japan during February’s UFC 144 main event.

Now looking to earn his belt back, Edgar will face just his third opponent in his last six fights and look to extend his winning streak in immediate rematches to three.

In the co-main event, former teammates Donald Cerrone and Melvin Guillard will look to claw their way back into the lightweight title picture after recent setbacks.

Cerrone was riding a six-fight winning streak over a high quality group of opponents heading into his UFC 141 fight against Nate Diaz, but unfortunately for “Cowboy”, he had no answer for Diaz’s potent boxing. He’s since gotten back on track with a win in May, but he’s still a big name away from entering the title picture again.

That big name that Cerrone is looking for could very well be Melvin Guillard.

Guillard was also on a long winning streak heading into the second half of 2011, but consecutive submission losses to Joe Lauzon and Jim Miller sent “The Young Assassin” out of the title scene as well.

With two bouts that are pivotal to the UFC’s near future and a card full of tough matchups, UFC 150 has the potential to deliver some of the most entertaining action of the year so far.

Begin Slideshow

UFC “Quick Break”: Benson Henderson vs. Frankie Edgar

Whether you just have a short downtime during work, or don’t want a lengthy breakdown, these “Quick Breaks” are for you. “Quick Breaks” are short breakdowns of upcoming fights. In a summed-up focus of strengths, weaknesses and variables; th…

Whether you just have a short downtime during work, or don’t want a lengthy breakdown, these “Quick Breaks” are for you. “Quick Breaks” are short breakdowns of upcoming fights. In a summed-up focus of strengths, weaknesses and variables; this will analyze what could happen in the fight, and end with this writer’s prediction. 

The UFC will return to the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado to put on UFC 150. Headlining the night will be a highly-anticipated rematch between the former UFC lightweight champion, and the man that took the belt away from him. Prelims will air on Facebook at 7:30 PM EST, followed by FX prelims at 8:00 PM EST that will lead into the normal 10:00 PM EST PPV. 

In the blue corner you have the former champ, Frankie Edgar. “The Answer”, come Saturday night, will have participated in the last six championship fights at lightweight, and hopes to get his belt back. After losing a decision and his title, Edgar feels he was dealt an injustice, and hopes to definitively put away his opponent. Edgar’s speed, movement and heart are what have brought the kid from New Jersey such success, and he will need it if he hopes on reclaiming the throne.

In the red corner you have the current champ, Benson Henderson. “Smooth” has been on a tear since arriving in the UFC, and his four-fight winning streak has rewarded him with UFC gold. His Taekwondo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu have served him well, and made even his decision-won fights exciting. He is determined to show that the first fight wasn’t a fluke, and that the up-kick from the first match wasn’t the only thing he had going for him.

If one thing can be said about both fighters, it is that they are both hard men to put away. Frankie Edgar has shown perseverance through taking beatings and being on the edge of defeat. Like Edgar, Benson Henderson has shown that he is a hard man to finish, and shows resilience to submissions and strikes.

This fight should be a war. Both men will likely respect the other’s skills and start off testing some waters. Once the second round comes, we will see who has learned the most from their last meeting. Because of the striking advantage of Henderson and the consistent damage Edgar seems to always fall victim to, the current champ may very well walk away with his first title defense.

Prediction: Benson Henderson wins via TKO in the second or third round. 

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‘UFC 150: Henderson vs. Edgar 2? — Extended Video Preview

(Props: YouTube.com/UFC)

Frankie Edgar is the UFC’s official king of fighting the same guy back-to-back. He did it in 2010 with BJ Penn, in 2011 with Gray Maynard, and now he’s heading into fight #2 against Ben Henderson, the Philippians-quoting WEC standout who bullrushed the UFC and out-pointed four consecutive opponents to win the lightweight belt. (In case anybody cares, Randy Couture is at #2 on the immediate rematch leaderboard thanks to his rivalries with Pedro Rizzo and Vitor Belfort; then there’s a handful of guys who have had one immediate rematch, and that’s it. It’s a pretty short list.)

What makes the rematch at UFC 150 different for Edgar, of course, is that he won’t be a defending champion this time. Though he fought his ass off against Bendo at UFC 144, the numbers simply weren’t on his side. (Plus, he ate that face-shattering upkick at a moment when he really needed to maintain his momentum.) Ben Henderson is just as iron-chinned, aggressive, and hard-working as Edgar, so maybe the biggest advantage in the matchup is the fact that Henderson is a large lightweight, and Edgar isn’t. Will this be the fight that finally convinces Frankie to seek his fortune at featherweight? Or will he reclaim his belt with another unbelievable display of heart?


(Props: YouTube.com/UFC)

Frankie Edgar is the UFC’s official king of fighting the same guy back-to-back. He did it in 2010 with BJ Penn, in 2011 with Gray Maynard, and now he’s heading into fight #2 against Ben Henderson, the Philippians-quoting WEC standout who bullrushed the UFC and out-pointed four consecutive opponents to win the lightweight belt. (In case anybody cares, Randy Couture is at #2 on the immediate rematch leaderboard thanks to his rivalries with Pedro Rizzo and Vitor Belfort; then there’s a handful of guys who have had one immediate rematch, and that’s it. It’s a pretty short list.)

What makes the rematch at UFC 150 different for Edgar, of course, is that he won’t be a defending champion this time. Though he fought his ass off against Bendo at UFC 144, the numbers simply weren’t on his side. (Plus, he ate that face-shattering upkick at a moment when he really needed to maintain his momentum.) Ben Henderson is just as iron-chinned, aggressive, and hard-working as Edgar, so maybe the biggest advantage in the matchup is the fact that Henderson is a large lightweight, and Edgar isn’t. Will this be the fight that finally convinces Frankie to seek his fortune at featherweight? Or will he reclaim his belt with another unbelievable display of heart?

Later in the video, Jake Shields discusses his return to middleweight, following a welterweight run in the UFC that never quite left the ground. He’ll be facing Ed Herman, whose quiet comeback includes three consecutive stoppage victories, two in the first round. You’d have to call Shields the favorite here, but Herman has been surprising people lately, and he knows how much a win over Shields would do for him. By the way, only nine fights are currently confirmed for the card, which makes it the lightest lineup in recent memory. UFC 150 goes down Saturday, August 11th, at the Pepsi Center in Denver.