Across the UFC, there are many great fighters. Fans know every detail about them and their fighting styles.They are given credit as great fighters who put on exciting matches for the fans. They know how to win. In the UFC today there is another group o…
Across the UFC, there are many great fighters. Fans know every detail about them and their fighting styles.
They are given credit as great fighters who put on exciting matches for the fans. They know how to win. In the UFC today there is another group of fighters as well. The fighters that go out and win fights, but seemingly never receive credit.
There are many of those fighters in the UFC today. No matter what they do, they don’t receive the same credit and admiration as some of their peers.
My list will explore exactly who some of those fighters are. Enjoy!
Starting at UFC 152 on September 22, the UFC will bring you four straight weeks of MMA action that is certain to dazzle the audience.Many fans question if they will saturate the market, but I think this is a good thing. Of the four MMA events, only two…
Starting at UFC 152 on September 22, the UFC will bring you four straight weeks of MMA action that is certain to dazzle the audience.
Many fans question if they will saturate the market, but I think this is a good thing. Of the four MMA events, only two are pay-per-view, while there are two on free TV (FX and Fuel TV).
There are all sorts of great fights that will take place in the next four weeks. We will see three titles challenged, as the light heavyweight, flyweight and featherweight title will be contested.
As stated, the first-ever flyweight champion will be crowned, effectively making history. It will be an exciting clash between Joseph Benavidez and Demetrious Johnson, pitting speed against speed.
Jon Jones will defend his title for the first time since his single-handed cancellation of UFC 151. He will face regular middleweight Vitor Belfort in an interesting 205-lb affair.
UFC 152, in general, will be great. American hero Brian Stann will face British villain Michael Bisping in what will be a great battle of rival-nation fighters.
Matt Hamill and Vinny Magalhaes make their awaited returns to Toronto. Cub Swanson will meet Charles Oliveira in a race to the top of the featherweight division.
Moving on to the next event on Fuel TV, the event I am most looking forward to, we have a night of exciting fights in England.
The headliner is a heavyweight clash between Stefan Struve and Stipe Miocic. That fight should be dynamite, as both men always bring their best.
A ton of new faces will make their UFC debuts, as Tom Watson, Jimi Manuwa and Gunnar Nelson, among others, will look to get their UFC careers off to a good start.
In general, the fans in England should see a great card. I cannot wait to wake up that morning and start watching the fights live.
Then, we will go to FX the next weekend. Though the card lacks “star power,” there are a number of fights that will be great for earning fans.
Surging heavyweight Travis Browne meets stiff test Antonio Silva in the headliner. A win for Browne would put him into contention.
Jake Ellenberger meets Jay Hieron in a rematch of a fight from earlier in their careers. Hieron took the first fight, but Ellenberger is much improved.
Finally, UFC 153 in Brazil is one of the most attractive cards on paper for the near future. It is headlined by a superfight between Frankie Edgar and Jose Aldo, with this fight being Edgar’s first featherweight affair.
Rampage Jackson, Erick Silva and Gabriel Gonzaga, among others, will also grace the card, making that card a must-see.
In conclusion, if you are a fight fan, the coming weeks will be exciting. There has been a long layoff since the last card, so many fans are anxious and ready.
Attitude is everything, or so the saying goes, and if there is one fighter in the UFC that is positively brimming with attitude it would be Michael Bisping, winner of season three of The Ultimate Fighter. Since winning the TUF crown, “The C…
Attitude is everything, or so the saying goes, and if there is one fighter in the UFC that is positively brimming with attitude it would be Michael Bisping, winner of season three of The Ultimate Fighter.
Since winning the TUF crown, “The Count” has put together a record of 11-4 and found himself firmly ensconced among the top ten fighters in the UFC’s middleweight division. However, the first thing that pops into one’s head when they hear the name Michael Bispingisn’t his victories or his standing in the 185-pound division, it’s the brutal knockout that he suffered at the hands of Dan Henderson at UFC 100.
The knockout punch was devastating, a perfectly placed right hand to the chin that left Bisping falling to his back unconscious. However, Henderson was not content to walk away from the supine Bisping, as he followed the knockout blow with a diving right to the jaw of his downed opponent, adding an exclamation point to the violent stoppage.
The ending to the fight remains one of the top “oh sh**t” moments in the history of the UFC, a knockout that is burned into the mind of every fan that has ever witnessed it. It’s also a fight that Bisping has been unable to forget, perhaps because fans seem to find great joy in reminding him of the loss,
“Without a shadow of a doubt, the fight that I want to have again is Dan Henderson,” Bisping told Jon Anik in a recent edition of Fuel TV’s UFC Ultimate Insider. “That’s the one that haunts me, that’s the one that still, I go to my Twitter every day and there’s people, ‘hey Bisping, check this out’ and I click on it and it’s a picture of me getting knocked out.”
Bisping is slated to face Brian Stann on September 19 when the UFC heads to Toronto for UFC 152. Bisping has been very vocal in informing anyone that will listen that he believes a win against Stann should earn him a shot at UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva, but is that a fight that will move the needle for MMA fans or Silva?
At this point Silva seems interested in only competing in big fights, and I just don’t see Bisping being one of those big fights. Sure he has a nice name and will pull some fans, but with a potential Silva versus Georges St-Pierre fight being bandied about for some time in 2013, it’s likely that Bisping may never get a shot at UFC gold.
And while Bisping may not be a fan of that fact, it wouldn’t bother me all that much if that fight never happened.
A much more intriguing bout would be a rematch between Bisping and Henderson. The timing would be right for this fight no matter the outcome of Bisping’s upcoming fight with Stann. Henderson is currently on the mend from an MCL injury that forced him from a scheduled fight against Jon Jones on the subsequently scrapped UFC 151 card, and with Bisping fighting on September 22, the fight may be worth considering.
One sticking point may be the fact that Henderson has said he is not all that interested in fighting at middleweight again as the weight cut is not something he enjoys. That sticking point could be overcome by making the fight at catchweight, don’t forget when Bisping won TUF he fought at light heavyweight.
Some will counter that Henderson should get his missed shot at Jones, but by the time Henderson is ready to fight again the light heavyweight landscape may look a bit different than it does today. I know it’s a long shot, but Jones could fall to VitorBelfort at UFC 152.
Not only that, but Alexander Gustafsson may see his stock rise if he is able to soundly defeat Mauricio Rua in December and let’s not forget ChaelSonnen will also face Forrest Griffin in December. Oh yeah, and then there is LyotoMachida hanging around out there without a current fight. In short, there are a lot of moving parts to consider in the UFC’s light heavyweight division.
Henderson versus Bisping would be a an easy sell for the UFC, the two did not like each other at all while coaching opposite teams during the U.S. versus U.K season of TUF and both fighters have a strong base of support. It may not be the grudge match it was in 2009, but both fighters would have more than a win on their record on the line in a rematch.
Bisping has been lobbying for this rematch for quite a while. It may be time to make it happen.
Jonathan Dwight Jones is the UFC’s Light Heavyweight Champion and top three pound for pound in the world. He owns the records for longest reach and youngest champion in UFC History. Jones has been virtually unstoppable since he burst on the scen…
Jonathan Dwight Jones is the UFC’s Light Heavyweight Champion and top three pound for pound in the world. He owns the records for longest reach and youngest champion in UFC History.
Jones has been virtually unstoppable since he burst on the scene on two weeks notice against undefeated Andre Gusmaoat UFC 87. From that day till now the only thing to defeat him is the 12/6 elbow rule.
However we all know that no one is unbeatable. So what are Jon’s strengths, weaknesses and vulnerabilities? And what is the way to possibly break “Bones”?
Jon “Bones” Jones has rarely had the support of the MMA fanbase, but when he takes on Vitor Belfort at UFC 152, he will likely receive the kind of hostile reception not witnessed since the Iron Sheik was Camel Clutching all things red, whit…
Jon “Bones” Jones has rarely had the support of the MMA fanbase, but when he takes on VitorBelfort at UFC 152, he will likely receive the kind of hostile reception not witnessed since the Iron Sheik was Camel Clutching all things red, white and blue in the early 1980s.
This article would have been a little more challenging had I decided to write it a few weeks ago, but things change quickly in the world of mixed martial arts.
In the time it took to hold a conference call, Jon Jones went from bankable commodity to public enemy No.1 in the eyes of many fans, and his fickle employer.
It goes without saying, then, that the current light heavyweight king will not be adopting the role of babyface when he takes to the cage in a couple of weeks.
In addition to “Bones’” calamitous exploits outside of the Octagon, he will be facing a sentimental favourite in VitorBelfort. The Brazilian has enjoyed a stellar career, thrilling fans with his blinding hand speed.
One could argue that the former heavyweight tournament champion has already seen his best days go by, but sports fans generally love an underdog—and Belfort is most certainly that.
Indeed, the TUF Brazil coach is listed at between +550 and +650 by some oddsmakers, while Jones is a prohibitive favourite at -900.
Undoubtedly, the fans at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto will rally behind the outmatched Belfort, adopting him as their champion, in the hope that he will defend their honour against the “card-murdering” Jones—or so Dana White would have us believe.
Will it make a difference to the outcome of the fight? Probably not, but at least the storyline adds another dimension to a fight that is otherwise void of intrigue.
Some people watch sports to cheer their favorites along. Others to mercilessly boo athletes they’ve come to despise. It’s become the American way.If you are one of those people, this new series of articles is for you. What follows is fodder for your me…
Some people watch sports to cheer their favorites along. Others to mercilessly boo athletes they’ve come to despise. It’s become the American way.
If you are one of those people, this new series of articles is for you. What follows is fodder for your messageboard posts or forays into the comments. Do you know you hate Vitor Belfort, but can’t say exactly why? Allow me to help.
This isn’t about Vitor the person. He may be a wonderful man, a community treasure who makes lives around him better by his mere presence. That’s real life stuff and this isn’t about the real Vitor Belfort at all. This is about his cypher—a construct, a media creation who follows him everywhere he goes. This is about the power of the media, the big lie, about how lies become truth if you just repeat them loudly enough.
The media Belfort is a fraud. He’s has been mythologized to the point of incoherence, but it’s important to remember—Belfort isn’t who they say he is. There is no “old” Vitor Belfort. There’s just Vitor Belfort, a fighter who has failed over and over again whenever the going got tough.
Don’t get it twisted. Belfort is a perfectly serviceable fighter, a solid pro who can compete at the highest levels of the sport. And if that was how he was portrayed, I’d have no problem with him or his cronies. But it’s not. He’s presented as a legend, his failures white washed, his handful of successes magnified 100 times. A thousand. A billion.
Belfort, like Ken Shamrock before him, was exactly what comic books and late-night action movies taught us a fighter was supposed to look like. In short, he was prettier than your girlfriend: a six-pack of abs attached to the chiseled face of your garden-variety Greek god, and 230 solid pounds of muscle with a mean glare and two sledgehammer fists.
Don’t let the fast hands fool you. They’re just a smokescreen behind which fans and promoters hid their vaguely homoerotic love. You know Vitor Belfort’s name today because of his giant, water-logged, steroid-enhanced muscles. There is no other reason. Vitor was a pretty boy, all alone in a sea of fat biker types and wrestlers like Dan Severn, who looked like your slightly gone-to-pot uncle.
The old “Vitor” you hear announcers talk about, the one long-time fans genuflect upon whenever they get a chance to reminisce? He’s not real. That reputation was built on the bloated carcasses of David “Tank” Abbott and Scott Ferrozzo, two knuckleheads who combined to tip the scales at 600 pounds-plus.
Have you seen the video of these two goofballs rolling around in someone’s backyard recently? Embarrassing, right? Well, that’s not really all that different than what their fights looked like in their UFC “prime.” On such, the Vitor Belfort myth was constructed.
The UFC planned to build the sport around him. That’s how keenly his impact was felt. He was the star of the future, the modern fighter, the ultimate expression of mixed martial arts. If you think I’m exaggerating, go back and watch him in his prime, or more importantly, listen to the announcers build him into a deity. The UFC was in the Belfort business back in 1997, and business was looking good.
Unfortunately for the UFC and Belfort fanatics, he ran into a red, white and blue brick wall by the name of Randy Couture, a former Olympian and Army soldier who was led to the cage like a lamb to the slaughter.
If you took a look at the two men, just a glance in either direction, like you were about to cross the street, you wouldn’t think twice about the outcome. Belfort was jacked, to the point even artist Rob Liefeld, a guy who literally invented muscles to add to the human form in his Image Comics heyday, was like, “Dude, that doesn’t even look real.”
Couture, even then, looked old. Balding and kind of sad looking, with perpetual bags under his eyes, he appeared to be nothing more than a punching bag. He was one of those man-sized bags with one unique attribute—a pulse.
Then, the unthinkable: The punching bag punched back. Belfort looked shocked when it happened, like the idea of someone fighting back had never crossed his mind. “This man is hitting me,” his terror-filled eyes seemed to say. “But that cannot be. Doesn’t he know I’m Vitor Belfort?”
If that had been it for Belfort, had he sunk into what would become of career of high-level mediocrity, things would be fine. He’d be a veteran I could respect. He would know his place in the hierarchy. There would be no delusions of grandeur, no aura built around the average.
Instead, he had to go and knock out Wanderlei Silva.
You know, Silva? The Axe Murderer. The scariest man in all of MMA. A man who haunted the dreams of Japanese fans during his Pride heyday, part man and part unquenchable monster, out only for the blood of the nation’s native pro wrestlers. Silva was the scariest man in a sport built on scary men. And Vitor Belfort knocked him out in just seconds, catching him with a punch and then following the retreating Silva across the cage, peppering his face with punch after punch, the speed and dexterity remarkable to behold.
It was an incredible moment, though one time would show what was a little bit of a fluke. But it was enough. With that series of punches, and with every subsequent Silva win, the myth of Vitor Belfort grew.
It wasn’t his accomplishments that fed it, mind you. It was Silva’s success that buoyed Belfort. The fighter himself was outclassed by Kazushi Sakuraba, Chuck Liddell, Couture. That didn’t matter.
The potential he showed in those few magical moments carried the idea of Vitor Belfort forward. They spoke of potential, harkening back to the days he was mercilessly beating guys like Jon Hess. If he could do that to Silva, that ubiquitous highlight seemed to say, he could do it to anybody.
The new UFC was just as enamored with Belfort as the old one had been. UFC owner Lorenzo Fertitta is said to be a huge fan, suckered in like many before by the Belfort mystique. Perhaps that explains why Belfort was gifted a title shot against the great Couture just one fight after losing to Liddell?
Apparently, a win over journeyman Marvin Eastman was enough to put Belfort right back into “the mix,” and Belfort made the most of it. Or, at least, his glove did. For Belfort, it was another fortuitous moment, life once again going his way.
The edge of his aforementioned glove caught Couture’s eyelid in the opening moments of the fight. Couture’s eyelid was sliced to shreds. Belfort’s hand was raised. An equipment malfunction that wrote Belfort’s name in the history books. You can see it right there on Wikipedia. You can hear it every time Bruce Buffer announces him in the cage:
“Foooooormer UFC Light Heavyweight champion….”
What a crock. Couture handled him easily in a rematch, once again proving himself a better man. Belfort was a champion in name only, just keeping the title warm for the real boss. They may have strapped a title belt around his waist, but he was never the champ. What followed proved it—Belfort lost five of his next seven, unable to keep up when matched with the cream of the crop.
In 2006, the inevitable finally happened. Vitor Belfort, the poster boy for chemical enhancement, was caught using steroids. He ignored the penalty laid down by the Nevada Athletic Commission, taking his talents to London instead of sitting nine months out.
When he made his return, he kept to California, or to rogue commission states like Texas, where his wild west style wasn’t as frowned upon. For his title shot against Anderson Silva in 2011, he was finally welcomed back to Nevada, all forgiven apparently when there was a title fight coming to town.
Again, it was a title shot that felt more like a gift. Belfort had fought just twice at middleweight before coming back to the UFC for a catchweight fight with Rich Franklin. He flagrantly pounded Franklin out with punches to the back of the head before, voila, there he was in the main event. As he had time and time again, Belfort failed to step up to the moment. Instead, Silva made him a perpetual highlight, kicking him squarely in the face with a technique he claimed to have learned from actor Steven Seagal of all people.
And now, history is repeating itself. Once more, Belfort finds himself with the opportunity of a lifetime. Despite not having fought a scheduled bout at light heavyweight since 2007, he is somehow challenging for the world title.
Can anyone beat light heavyweight champion Jon Jones? If someone could, it would be the old Vitor. Too bad he’s not real. Instead, we’ll watch Jones obliterate Belfort in epic fashion. And I’ll be smiling the whole time. It will be another nail in the coffin, another step closer to putting to rest the myth of Vitor Belfort.