Cut Man Says Charles Oliveira Injured Knee Warming up Backstage Before UFC 152


(On the topic of painful leg injuries…)

We all saw lightweight Charles Oliveira get dropped and finished by Cub Swanson Saturday night at UFC 152. What we didn’t see, according to cut man Jacob “Stitch” Duran, was Oliveira injure his knee just before fighting Swanson while warming up in the locker room.

“I do know that in preparation for going out there, warming up, he twisted his knee,” Duran told MMA Junkie.

Duran also said that Oliveira needed assistance walking up the steps into the Octagon to fight Swanson. Junkie could not immediately reach Oliveira or representatives of the fighter but pointed out that “medical suspensions made public…on the Association of Boxing Commission’s official record keeper, mixedmartialarts.com, stated that Oliveira has drawn an indefinite term and needs a CT scan or MRI to be cleared to fight.”


(On the topic of painful leg injuries…)

We all saw lightweight Charles Oliveira get dropped and finished by Cub Swanson Saturday night at UFC 152. What we didn’t see, according to cut man Jacob “Stitch” Duran, was Oliveira injure his knee just before fighting Swanson while warming up in the locker room.

“I do know that in preparation for going out there, warming up, he twisted his knee,” Duran told MMA Junkie.

Duran also said that Oliveira needed assistance walking up the steps into the Octagon to fight Swanson. Junkie could not immediately reach Oliveira or representatives of the fighter but pointed out that “medical suspensions made public…on the Association of Boxing Commission’s official record keeper, mixedmartialarts.com, stated that Oliveira has drawn an indefinite term and needs a CT scan or MRI to be cleared to fight.”

We don’t yet know if that is because of head trauma sustained in the fight from the KO loss, this knee injury that “Stitch” says happened or both. If he did jack his knee up just moments before fighting, Oliveira deserves credit for not even mentioning it as an excuse thus far.

As for freak, last-minute injuries, Junkie correctly points out that these things sometimes happen in MMA. “Several fighters have injured themselves just prior to fights. In one infamous incident, former UFC heavyweight champ Kevin Randleman slipped on a pipe backstage prior to a fight with Pedro Rizzo at UFC 24 and knocked himself unconscious, which prompted officials to cancel the fight. UFC Hall of Famer Ken Shamrock was pulled from a fight with Kevin ‘Kimbo Slice‘ Ferguson at ‘EliteXC: Heat when he sustained a cut over his eye while grappling with a training partner on the day of the event,” they wrote.

Bonus OG ‘tater points to you if you have been watching MMA long enough to remember the bizzare announcement over the telecast at UFC 24 where Randleman’s slapstick moment postponed a title fight. Thank goodness the UFC has come far along enough where pipes are no longer just splayed across the floor of locker rooms and walk ways at their events.

Elias Cepeda

Jon Jones Has No Honor and It Doesn’t Matter One Bit

At a certain point, complaints about Jon Jones can veer into ridiculous territory.Despite being so young and relatively new to the game, the pound-for-pound prodigy remains an incredibly hated figure in the world of mixed martial arts—especially …

At a certain point, complaints about Jon Jones can veer into ridiculous territory.

Despite being so young and relatively new to the game, the pound-for-pound prodigy remains an incredibly hated figure in the world of mixed martial arts—especially to beaten opponents who have previously admitted his greatness.

Even Quinton Jackson, despite having already run a short feud with Jones, couldn’t help dragging the champion’s image through the dirt with a puzzling quip during the MMA Hour:

“Vitor took the fight on short notice, and this is how you respect him, by kicking his knee backwards and stuff like that? He’s supposed to be a man of God. You can injure somebody, you can sever their career. You can mess people up for life kicking their knee back like that and he does it repeatedly, over and over. To me that has no honor. I take a lot of honor in fighting. He has no honor. He’s fake. I don’t agree with his fighting style. I think I can beat Jon Jones. I know I can beat him. Jon Jones is the type of guy you have to fight twice.”

Of all the things that other fighters can say about Jon Jones, this is probably one that rings the most false, and at worst, sounds like sour grapes.

Although it’s true that Jones’ cringe-worthy tactic—sharp push kicks to the knees and lower thighs—is incredibly difficult to watch, it’s far from dishonorable.

As Chael P. Sonnen would say, when two men enter the Octagon, they’re in a fight. No matter how many rules an MMA promotion can enforce and how much you want to dress it up, it’s disingenuous and hypocritical to pretend otherwise.

Besides, if it’s not against the rules and it gives him an edge, why should Jones be concerned about snapping someone’s knee?

Call it a shot in the dark, but what really seems to be the problem is that no light heavyweight has figured out a way to counter Jones’ kicking arsenal. After all, these things only seem cheap to other fighters if they don’t have an answer to it.

Hell, that’s the same reason many “stand and bang” guys hate getting matched up against wrestlers. To them, takedowns and smothering ground control are cheap and cowardly.

From his signature kicks to his sharp elbows, Jon Jones is being pragmatic about the way he fights and using his natural gifts in the most advantageous way possible.

If you think it’s dangerous and should be a foul-worthy offense, that’s one thing. But in a sport where men and women can break limbs and outright cripple each other, no MMA athlete should even try to pretend that Jones needs “honor” in the way he fights.

[McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist and FightFans Radio writer. His work has appeared in GamePro, Macworld, & PC World. Talk with him on Twitter.]

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 152 Results: Memorable Quotes and Images from Jones vs. Belfort Fight Card

If you slept on UFC 152 for any reason at all, you missed out. I understand many fans were pissed off at Jon Jones, but you know what, if you based your decision to not watch the fight card on your personal opinion of the man who was fighting on the to…

If you slept on UFC 152 for any reason at all, you missed out. I understand many fans were pissed off at Jon Jones, but you know what, if you based your decision to not watch the fight card on your personal opinion of the man who was fighting on the top of the card, you made the wrong call. 

UFC 152 was an exciting event. Sure, there were some slower moments, but, by and large, it was well worth the time, effort and cash to see. There were upsets, crazy finishes and a champ showing that he can work his way through adversity. Everything that would make an MMA fight card great took place inside the Air Canada Centre on Sept. 22.

What follows are memorable images and quotes from and about each of the fights on the UFC 152 fight card, and seriously, if you skipped this one, you made a mistake.

 

 

*all quotes provided by the UFC or gathered firsthand

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UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Jon Jones Is Beyond the Realm of Rational Thought

UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones has been something of a divisive figure ever since his hype train left the station in the winter of 2009-10. After the UFC 151-cancellation-turned-organizational-nightmare and yet another successful defense…

UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones has been something of a divisive figure ever since his hype train left the station in the winter of 2009-10. After the UFC 151-cancellation-turned-organizational-nightmare and yet another successful defense of his title at UFC 152, however, the reactionary world around Bones can no longer be described as one of reason.

Shoot, it’s not even clinging to a semblance of objectivity.

Instead, it is one of insanity driven by bias.

Jon Jones has become the Bill Clinton of the mixed-martial-arts universe—hero or goat with nothing in between and neither side making much of an effort to remain tethered to reality.

Either Bones is invincible or he’s a phony bum.

His tougher-than-expected victory at UFC 152 over undersized challenger Vitor Belfort either proved that his vulnerabilities have been exposed and will be exploited by legitimate competition or that nobody can beat the 25-year-old champion.

The truth, as is usually the case, can be found in between.

First, let’s dispense with the obvious—the scrap with Belfort, in which the Brazilian challenger snapped on a tight armbar in the first round that had Jon slamming his adversary around the canvas in sheer panic, did not prove that the 205-pound kingpin can be defeated.

To make that argument shows extreme MMA naivete, whether sincere or intentional to facilitate a lazy angle.

As any fight fan worth his or her six-ounce gloves will tell you, every fighter can be defeated on a given night. Nobody is unbeatable. That is the lesson taught by the Ryo Chonans, Matt Serras and Chael Sonnens of the sport.

But let’s pretend all this “not invincible” talk is hyperbole, that “not invincible” is just a figure of speech used to mean “he’s not as dominant as we thought.”

Even from that angle, how can anyone make the argument, point to UFC 152 as evidence and hope to retain credibility?

Let me get this straight—Jones survived a brutal submission by a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt in which his limb was bent at an ugly and unnatural angle, then went on to win by stoppage despite an obvious injury, and that proves he’s vulnerable?!?!

Look, Belfort is not Demian Maia.

He’s a noted striker for a reason—it’s his preferred means of attack and he’s very good at it, as his 14 knockouts in 21 career wins indicate. But Vitor is not a chump when it comes to the art of submissions, having received his black belt from the legendary Carlson Gracie.

The 35-year-old has grappling game.

Make no mistake; Belfort knew exactly what he was doing when he was wrenching the champion’s arm. I can’t vouch for his technique since I’m no BJJ practitioner, but I’ve seen enough of them to know Vitor didn’t make any glaring errors. Furthermore, I’ve got to assume any technical deficiency had to do with the monstrosity he was trying to make concede, as opposed to incompetence on Vitor‘s part.

And let’s not forget that timing wasn’t on Jones’ side.

The sub attempt came so early in the opening round that neither gladiator had yet worked up a lather that would’ve made the hold more difficult to maintain. All in all, Jon was in a precarious position.

An observation validated by the revelation that Bones didn’t escape the armbar unscathed.

Whether he suffered nerve damage to his bicep is neither here nor there. The key takeaway is that the armbar did its job. It inflicted some measure of carnage on its victim and left him at a disadvantage for the rest of the back-and-forth.

What it didn’t do was break said victim’s arm, and that’s really the most important lesson learned from the entire battle.

In order to defeat Jon Jones, you will have to knock him out or dole out such grievous bodily injury that someone else will stop the fight. Neither sounds like an easy task.

So add that considerable weapon to Jones’ already bristling arsenal.

Of course, we’ve reached the point where the other side, the pro-Jones people, start taking leave of their good senses.

Because the aforementioned lessons still hold: Nobody in mixed martial arts is unbeatable.

Fedor Emelianenko is the closest thing I’ve seen to invincible in a cage (or its proxy), and we all know how that turned out.

Anderson Silva is undefeated in 15 trips to the Octagon, but he has four losses on his resume and almost wore a fifth at UFC 117 in Oakland.

Cain Velasquez was supposed to have a constitution that would make him impervious to defeat at heavyweight…until current UFC heavyweight champion Junior Dos Santos blasted him in 64 seconds.

Yes, Jones has incredible athleticism. Yes, Jones has a freakish 84.5-inch reach that is the closest thing to a trump card as you’ll find in the sport. Yes, Jones actually has that you-must-destroy-me-to-beat-me mentality that virtually every warrior claims to have, but so few do. Yes, Jones seems to have a natural gift for MMA—a fluid, accurate striker with a competent submission game and an excellent wrestling base who fights intellectually (i.e. to a game plan).

Yes, Bones appears to be as mentally tough as he is physically.

I repeat, he is not invincible.

It won’t be easy and I wouldn’t bet on it happening anytime soon, but the man is human and that means Jon Jones can be beaten.

Now, will he be beaten?

Well, that’s a different question and a more interesting one.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

[VIDEO] Ed O’Neill a.k.a. Al Bundy and The Gracies Breakdown Vitor Belfort’s “Nearacle” Armbar


(O’Neill, seen here earning his brown belt the hard way.)

Until Ron Swanson graced the small screen with his mustachioed, government busting, breakfast food-loving presence, Al Bundy was considered to be far and away the manliest man ever created in the history of television, bar none. Perhaps in an attempt to live up to his character’s Polk High legendary athlete status, portraying actor Ed O’Neill took up BJJ some 22 years ago and received his black belt under Rorion Gracie in 2007. An avid MMA fan, we’ve seen O’Neill talk shop with such legends as Chuck Liddell on Fox Sports’ Barfly, but recently, he decided to join Ryron and Rener Gracie for one of their infamous Gracie Breakdowns to discuss and demonstrate Vitor Belfort’s near miracle (or the shortened “nearacle” as we’ve dubbed it) armbar of Jon Jones in the first round of their fight at UFC 152.

And we gotta say, Bundy O’Neill definitely knows his stuff. His assertion that Jones may actually welcome wrist control from the guard as a way of setting up an elbow strike is an incredibly astute observation to make and one I hadn’t personally considered when dissecting Jones’ game, so a kudos is in order for the Emmy-nominated star of Modern Family. Although Vitor has admitted to easing off the armbar when he heard Jones’ arm pop, the Gracies believe that had Jones not attempted to slam his way out of the armbar, Belfort would have never even come close to pulling it off in the first place. We know Jones claimed that he needed to embrace his Jiu-Jitsu a little more after the fight, and perhaps moments like this confirm that, but the fact that the champ was able to submit a black belt like Belfort with a picture perfect Americana shows that he surely knows a thing or two about the ground game when he needs to.

Check out the full video, which also breaks down Jones’ fight-winning Americana, after the jump.


(O’Neill, seen here earning his brown belt the hard way.)

Until Ron Swanson graced the small screen with his mustachioed, government busting, breakfast food-loving presence, Al Bundy was considered to be far and away the manliest man ever created in the history of television, bar none. Perhaps in an attempt to live up to his character’s Polk High legendary athlete status, portraying actor Ed O’Neill took up BJJ some 22 years ago and received his black belt under Rorion Gracie in 2007. An avid MMA fan, we’ve seen O’Neill talk shop with such legends as Chuck Liddell on Fox Sports’ Barfly, but recently, he decided to join Ryron and Rener Gracie for one of their infamous Gracie Breakdowns to discuss and demonstrate Vitor Belfort’s near miracle (or the shortened “nearacle” as we’ve dubbed it) armbar of Jon Jones in the first round of their fight at UFC 152.

And we gotta say, Bundy O’Neill definitely knows his stuff. His assertion that Jones may actually welcome wrist control from the guard as a way of setting up an elbow strike is an incredibly astute observation to make and one I hadn’t personally considered when dissecting Jones’ game, so a kudos is in order for the Emmy-nominated star of Modern Family. Although Vitor has admitted to easing off the armbar when he heard Jones’ arm pop, the Gracies believe that had Jones not attempted to slam his way out of the armbar, Belfort would have never even come close to pulling it off in the first place. We know Jones claimed that he needed to embrace his Jiu-Jitsu a little more after the fight, and perhaps moments like this confirm that, but the fact that the champ was able to submit a black belt like Belfort with a picture perfect Americana shows that he surely knows a thing or two about the ground game when he needs to.

Check out the full video, which also breaks down Jones’ fight-winning Americana, below.

OK, Potato Nation, O’Neill vs. Seagal in a no holds barred fight to the death: Who takes it?

J. Jones

Jones vs Belfort: Jones vs Belfort: Questions We Still Have About Vitor Belfort

Depending on who you ask, Vitor Belfort is either an elite member of the MMA world or a fictitious creature fabricated by the UFC’s marketing department. There is a big gap in the middle, which is where many of us find ourselves.Regardless of which sid…

Depending on who you ask, Vitor Belfort is either an elite member of the MMA world or a fictitious creature fabricated by the UFC’s marketing department. There is a big gap in the middle, which is where many of us find ourselves.

Regardless of which side of the fence you are on, Belfort nearly dethroned Jon Jones on Saturday night with a lightning-fast armbar that left the champion in agony. The move was fully executed, and Jones admitted that he was unwilling to tap out, but expected his arm to break.

Ultimately, Belfort came up short after Jones was able to escape the hold, but he earned the respect of the world and proved his many doubters to be a little foolish.

Even after an admirable performance, we still have some questions about The Phenom.

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