UFC 155 Aftermath: Bloodbaths & Guts


Photo courtesy of Getty Images.

By Elias Cepeda

With a somewhat forgettable year thankfully coming to an end, UFC 155 looked to excite fans, promote contenders and get everybody ready for a new year. This card did exactly that. Not to reach into our bag of clichés so early into the aftermath, but UFC 155 really sent 2012 out with a bang, and set the bar high for upcoming cards in 2013.

With as many solid fights as took place Saturday in Las Vegas at UFC 155, Jim Miller and Joe Lauzon’s three round battle was recognized by the UFC brass as the Fight of The Night and each man earned an extra $65,000 for their effort. The lightweight contenders should also be in consideration for Fight of The Year lists everywhere.

If it is, Lauzon will be competing with himself for his incredible fight last August against Jamie Varner. JLau may have lost the decision against Miller on the judge’s score cards, two rounds to one, but deserves credit for coming back from being bullied, beaten and bloodied badly in the first round by Miller in the first round and finishing stronger in the final two rounds.

On the strength of his aggressiveness and multiple submission attempts to close out the second and third rounds, this writer believes that a very reasonable judge could have scored the bout Lauzon’s way instead of Miller’s. As it stands, both men were impressive in their own ways and, *reaches back into the bag of applicable clichés* there simply were no “losers” in this one.

Miller has always shown excellent boxing skills but he may have been sharper than ever before against Lauzon in the first and second rounds, scoring almost at will with shots to the body and head, as well as knocking Joe down repeatedly with a nasty inside leg kick. His dirty boxing from the clinch was masterful, using punches, knees and elbows to hurt and cut open Lauzon over and again.


Photo courtesy of Getty Images.

By Elias Cepeda

With a somewhat forgettable year thankfully coming to an end, UFC 155 looked to excite fans, promote contenders and get everybody ready for a new year. This card did exactly that. Not to reach into our bag of clichés so early into the aftermath, but UFC 155 really sent 2012 out with a bang, and set the bar high for upcoming cards in 2013.

With as many solid fights as took place Saturday in Las Vegas at UFC 155, Jim Miller and Joe Lauzon’s three round battle was recognized by the UFC brass as the Fight of The Night and each man earned an extra $65,000 for their effort. The lightweight contenders should also be in consideration for Fight of The Year lists everywhere.

If it is, Lauzon will be competing with himself for his incredible fight last August against Jamie Varner. JLau may have lost the decision against Miller on the judge’s score cards, two rounds to one, but deserves credit for coming back from being bullied, beaten and bloodied badly in the first round by Miller in the first round and finishing stronger in the final two rounds.

On the strength of his aggressiveness and multiple submission attempts to close out the second and third rounds, this writer believes that a very reasonable judge could have scored the bout Lauzon’s way instead of Miller’s. As it stands, both men were impressive in their own ways and, *reaches back into the bag of applicable clichés* there simply were no “losers” in this one.

Miller has always shown excellent boxing skills but he may have been sharper than ever before against Lauzon in the first and second rounds, scoring almost at will with shots to the body and head, as well as knocking Joe down repeatedly with a nasty inside leg kick. His dirty boxing from the clinch was masterful, using punches, knees and elbows to hurt and cut open Lauzon over and again.

For his part, Lauzon looked to be on his way out of the fight early on but somehow not only managed to survive, but thrive and turn the tide back in his favor multiple times with knees and submission holds despite bleeding like a stuck pig. Lauzon was cut in at least three places on his head by Miller and wore a crimson mask for most of the fight. On his facebook page, the Massachusets fighter shared a photo with fans of his bruised and stiched up (to the tune of 40) face.

The old knock on Lauzon for tiring late in fights should finally be retired. Both men look ready to continue to fight the division’s other elite. Lauzon, of course, has hit a speed bump and may have to move back a spot or two. Miller, as long as he’s healthy, should get another top opponent as soon as possible to give him another chance to move towards a title shot.

More than just a big uppercut  – Dos Santos shows heart of a champion in defeat

Junior Dos Santos could not threaten in the late rounds to the same level that Lauzon did but he also, and perhaps even more improbably, managed to go the distance and survive after nearly being knocked out in the first round. For five rounds Cain Velasquez knocked around and took down Dos Santos en route to winning back the UFC heavyweight title that he lost a little over a year ago to Dos Santos.

Despite looking to be out on his feet from the early minutes, Dos Santos never stopped moving, never stopped swinging and demonstrated almost unbelievable conditioning and mental fortitude. Despite being knocked silly time and again from clean shots to the chin and temple from Velasquez, and being dragged to the ground time and again, Dos Santos refused to stay down. He fought to the end and promised to be back for what an almost inevitable rubber match at some point between the two champions.

Cain out-paced, grappled and struck Dos Santos with a ballsy strategy that relied on complete faith in his own conditioning level. We’ve heard for years about how Velasquez out-worked light and welterweights in the gym but we’ve rarely had to see him go the distance and show his supposed inhumane conditioning.

In the main event at UFC 155 Cain showed what all the gym-buzz was about. Velasquez used everything in his arsenal from the opening bell, from punches, kicks, knees to diving for take downs ceaselessly, and continued to until the final one. After Dos Santos quickly got back to his feet after Cain’s first successful take down in the opening stanza and then Velasquez began missing follow up low single leg attempts from far away, it appeared that the Chicano fighter might be on his way to getting frustrated by the then-champ.

However it soon became clear that Velasquez was simply employing a strategy set on tiring out the larger-muscled Brazilian from the onset. Cain’s low single leg attempts from far away were not so much about landing the take down as not letting Dos Santos rest at any point while managing to stay low and out of the way of his counter upper cuts.

As Dos Santos huffed and puffed in the first round and then began eating more and more shots on the feet, including a huge over hand right from Cain, it was evident that the Velasquez strategy was paying dividends.

Still, the now two-time champion had to stay clear of Dos Santos’ power for five rounds. Even when “Cigano” had his hands at his sides and ate huge shots to the chin against the fence, he followed up with wild but hard punches, one at a time, to the body and head of Velasquez. Cain got hit with plenty, but his Toltec stone statue-like head managed to hold up to Dos Santos’ power this time around.

From the sound of Dos Santos’ voice in his post-fight interview, he injured his jaw badly. His head was also badly bruised and swollen, no doubt outward evidence of concussions suffered internally. As such, and because Velasquez won so dominantly, an immediate rematch is out of the question.

That said, however, two exciting fights from this rivalry have left each man with one win a piece. There is no doubt that should both stay healthy and winning enough, that they will face one another at least one more time.

Fans can’t be upset with that. Well, maybe the Vegas crowd that inexplicably booed Dos Santos after his courageous effort could be, but other than those ignorant parasites, no fans could be upset with a third fight.

The only question is who Velasquez will fight next. If his teammate Daniel Cormier keeps on winning as he enters the UFC, he couldn’t be far off from deserving a title shot. The two have said they don’t want to fight one another but Dana White has a way of making these things happen.

Fight of the Night went to Jim Miller vs. Joe Lauzon, Submission of the Night went to John Moraga, who kicked off the preliminary card by choking out Chris Cariaso, and Knockout of the Night went to Todd Duffee, who scored a first round TKO (Caveman Seizure) over Phil De Fries.

Full Results:

Main Card:

Cain Velasquez def. Junior Dos Santos via Unanimous Decision
Jim Miller def. Joe Lauzon via Unanimous Decision
Costa Philippou def. Tim Boetsch via TKO (punches), 2:11 of Round Three
Yushin Okami def. Alan Belcher via Unanimous Decision
Derek Brunson def. Chris Leben via Unanimous Decision

Preliminary Card

Eddie Wineland def. Brad Pickett via Split-Decision
Erik Perez def. Byron Bloodworth via TKO (punches), 3:50 of Round One
Jamie Varner def. Melvin Guillard via Split-Decision
Myles Jury def. Michael Johnson via Unanimous Decision
Todd Duffee def. Phil De Fries via TKO (punches), 2:04 of Round One
Max Holloway def. Leonard Garcia via Split-Decision
John Moraga def. Chris Cariaso via Submission (arm-in guillotine choke), 1:11 of Round Three

Dos Santos vs Velasquez 2: 4 Legitimate Contenders for the Heavyweight Title

One of the most interesting things about the UFC heavyweight division is the perceived gap between the top of the food chain and everyone else.Right now, the title picture seems to revolve solely around Cain Velasquez, Junior dos Santos and Alistair Ov…

One of the most interesting things about the UFC heavyweight division is the perceived gap between the top of the food chain and everyone else.

Right now, the title picture seems to revolve solely around Cain Velasquez, Junior dos Santos and Alistair Overeem. As it stands, those three men dominated the division for the last handful of years.

But are other fighters in the rankings being overlooked?

That’s a question we can’t answer until the halfway point of the next year, as no less than eight top heavyweights will be competing to round out the division. Until then, here’s a look at the most legitimate contenders to the UFC title right now.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 155 Results: What’s Next for Alan Belcher at Middleweight?

For the second time in two fights, Alan Belcher was thoroughly dominated by Yushin Okami in a unanimous decision loss.That defeat comes at a particularly bad time for Belcher, killing what could have been an impressive five-win streak in the suddenly f…

For the second time in two fights, Alan Belcher was thoroughly dominated by Yushin Okami in a unanimous decision loss.

That defeat comes at a particularly bad time for Belcher, killing what could have been an impressive five-win streak in the suddenly flexible UFC middleweight division.

Maybe he wasn’t remotely close to challenging the likes of Anderson Silva or Michael Bisping, but Belcher likely sniffed his last whiff of elite competition for a while on Saturday. Barring any breakout victories, there’s also not likely going to be any title talks for the next year or two.

So where does “The Talent” go from here?

At this point, the only way to go is up.

Even though Belcher lost at UFC 155, he’s still on the right side of 30 years old and has a little over a year to quietly rack up another winning streak.

Conventional wisdom says that Belcher could spend 2013 playing gatekeeper status to the division’s “Top 10” group, where he could rack up some wins fighting equally-skilled UFC opponents or the upcoming influx of Strikeforce middleweights.

Optimally, a fight with Chris Leben or Mark Munoz seems like the best option.

Both Leben and Munoz are coming off losses, and they have enough name value to make a fight with Belcher a solid addition to the main card of an FX, Fuel TV or PPV card.

However, Belcher could also upset a big-name middleweight coming off a loss.

In a few months, the losers of Bisping vs. Vitor Belfort and Brian Stann vs. Wanderlei Silva will likely need game opponents, while Rich Franklin also needs a tune-up fight. Belcher more than fits the bill, as he’s still a tough test for anyone in the division.

Either way, Belcher‘s only option is another winning streak.

Recovering lost ground will be his best move right now, and with a little luck, Belcher might even be able to get himself another four-fight winning streak before he eventually runs up against some even stiffer competition next year.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dana White Rips UFC 155 Judging: ‘It Kills My Business’

When Dana White tells fighters to not leave it in the hands of the judges, he really means it.MMA judging has been a running joke in the sport for years now. The joke continued to add some new punchlines at UFC 155, and White expressed to MMA Fighting …

When Dana White tells fighters to not leave it in the hands of the judges, he really means it.

MMA judging has been a running joke in the sport for years now. The joke continued to add some new punchlines at UFC 155, and White expressed to MMA Fighting that he wasn’t happy with how the judges were scoring the fights, especially the Melvin Guillard-Jamie Varner bout.

“30-27 Guillard. It’s unacceptable. It’s a joke.” White said. “It’s literally a joke. Seriously, the athletic commission must want to dig a f—in’ hole and bury themselves when someone says 30-27 Guillard. They should want to dig a hole and bury themselves.”

Two of the ringside judges scored the contest 30-27 for Varner while one scored it 30-27 for Guillard. The result will officially be a split decision, but it’s hard for anyone watching that fight to believe it shouldn’t have been an unanimous decision.

Although White didn’t mention it in this particular article, there was also a bizarre decision earlier on the prelims that I’m sure he’s not happy about either. Max Holloway was awarded a split-decision victory over Leonard Garcia despite Garcia having been the aggressor and having landedd more significant strikes.

Although regular MMA fans simply sit back and laugh at how some of the scorecards are read, White is concerned about how fans will react to the awful decisions. He used Manny Pacquiao’s split decision loss against Timothy Bradley earlier this year as an example.

“It kills my business,” White said. “Manny Pacquiao lost a f****** decision in that fight, and what happens is, the first thing you think is, and I hate Bob Arum, I can’t stand that f****** guy. He didn’t fix that fight. He had nothing to do with it. I’d love to sit here and b**** and say ‘Bob Arum rigged it and he did this’. He didn’t.

“It’s decisions like this and the 30-27 Guillard tonight that just, it does kill you. People think that it’s us. A lot of people aren’t educated on the fact that the Nevada state athletic commission actually picks these people and allows them to keep judging fights.”

Both fighters and fans have teased the idea of hiring ex-fighters as judges for events or at the very least requiring better training on how to score MMA bouts. After last night I expect those people to voice their opinions even more loudly than before.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dos Santos vs. Velasquez: What to Expect from Each Fighter in Potential Rematch

Cain Velasquez left not even a shred of doubt at UFC 155 on Saturday night when he manhandled Junior dos Santos for five rounds and 25 minutes en route to the UFC Heavyweight Championship.Velasquez won a unanimous decision over dos Santos (50-45, 50-44…

Cain Velasquez left not even a shred of doubt at UFC 155 on Saturday night when he manhandled Junior dos Santos for five rounds and 25 minutes en route to the UFC Heavyweight Championship.

Velasquez won a unanimous decision over dos Santos (50-45, 50-44, 50-43), evening the rivalry at one victory apiece. 

With a third fight seemingly inevitable, considering the two men are arguably the best the division has to offer right now, let’s take an early look at Velasquez-Dos Santos III, and break down what fans can expect if the champ and the challenger meet again inside the Octagon.

 

Cain Velasquez

The heavyweight champion proved he is worthy of holding the belt on Saturday night, setting the tone from the opening horn, and going on to absolutely dominate his Brazilian foe. 

Although fans should expect to see the same inspired Velasquez in a third go-around with dos Santos, know that he won’t have the advantage of fighting from the underdog-like challenger role like he did at UFC 155. Still, his takedown power is tremendous and I’d give him the obvious advantage in another lengthy clash with dos Santos.

Velasquez has the athleticism and endurance to maintain an aggressive pace for as long as the fight lasts, and that asset makes him the most lethal heavyweight on the planet, hands down.

With Velasquez motivated to successfully defend his title belt the second time around, the 30-year-old would be every bit as fired up as he was Saturday night in Vegas.

Let’s put it this way: In a rematch, I like Velasquez again.

 

Junior dos Santos

Like Velasquez at UFC 155, fans should anticipate a more aggressive Junior dos Santos. The Brazilian came out flat on Saturday night, and it cost him. Velasquez was able to seize the momentum early and by the second round, the beating dos Santos had taken during the first round had his legs ready to collapse from under him.

Expect to see a fiery Cigano, a fighter similar to the one we saw in the first fight in November 2011. 

In my eyes, dos Santos would have to soar out of the gates once again and earn a quick knockout in order to survive Velasquez. I don’t like his chances going up against the champion over the course of five rounds.

His odds increase of course if he can keep the fight standing, but I’m not sure he can do that. Therefore, look for Junior dos Santos to come out swinging and with better pace (much like what we saw against Velasquez the first time), aiming to knockout his rival for a second time for the title.

 

Follow Bleacher Report Featured Columnist Patrick Clarke on Twitter. 

Follow _Pat_Clarke on Twitter

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Junior Dos Santos vs. Cain Velasquez: Cigano Doesn’t Deserve Rematch with Champ

After what we witnessed at UFC 155, Junior dos Santos doesn’t deserve a rematch with Cain Velasquez.He’ll probably get one, of course. Not only is it what the fans want, but a third edition of this developing rivalry would be incredibly lucrative for a…

After what we witnessed at UFC 155, Junior dos Santos doesn’t deserve a rematch with Cain Velasquez.

He’ll probably get one, of course. Not only is it what the fans want, but a third edition of this developing rivalry would be incredibly lucrative for all parties involved, none more important than UFC President Dana White.

If there’s money to be made and publicity to be gained, you can be sure that he’d be leading the charge for a rematch to take place.

But simply based on the action inside the octagon last night, Dos Santos doesn’t deserve to grapple with Velasquez anymore.

Dos Santos was dominated by Velasquez, never leading on any of the judges’ scorecards.

From the massive overhand right that dropped Dos Santos towards the end of the first round, Velasquez was able to dictate much of the match.

He looked tentative from the onset, never mounting any substantial offensive attack.

While Dos Santos was able to land a few big punches, he chose to try and fight from a distance to defend against Velasquez’ takedown attempts. That strategy didn’t work, and Dos Santos failed to adapt.

Dos Santos was unable to keep the fight upright, continually being taken to the mat, and, while he was able to get back up most of the time, he was taking tremendous abuse as Velazquez dominated the former champion in every facet of the ground game.

Perhaps the former champion was dreaming of a bout against Alistair Overeem, who couldn’t help himself and had to have some fun at Dos Santos’ expense during the fight (via Twitter): 

Whatever the reason, Dos Santos looked totally unprepared and uninterested in this fight.

While it’s admirable that Dos Santos was able to take a beating and keep getting up, being able to take a beating doesn’t make you a world-class fighter.

It makes you tough as nails for sure, but nothing more.

Velasquez was so thoroughly impressive—and Dos Santos so thoroughly disappointing— that it makes you wonder why Dos Santos would even want to tussle with the new champion for a third time.

Junior dos Santos proved two things last night—that Cain Velasquez is on another level than he is as a fighter—and that his first victory over Velasquez really was nothing but a fluke.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com