UFC 156 Results: Power Ranking the Preliminary Card Fights

UFC 156 started off with the free prelims, which are meant to entice fans to order their pay-per-view.It’s safe to say that the UFC may have earned some extra buys following the prelims.Almost every fight on the prelims was exciting. The fights were cl…

UFC 156 started off with the free prelims, which are meant to entice fans to order their pay-per-view.

It’s safe to say that the UFC may have earned some extra buys following the prelims.

Almost every fight on the prelims was exciting. The fights were closely contested and had fans all over out of their seats cheering for the action.

Here are the power rankings of the preliminary card.

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UFC 156: Aldo vs. Edgar — Main Card Results & Commentary


(“The name’s Frankie. I fight dudes twice.” Photo via MMAFighting)

Tonight at UFC 156 in Las Vegas, Jose Aldo goes for his fourth-consecutive UFC featherweight title defense, while former lightweight champ Frankie Edgar attempts to become the third fighter in UFC history to pick up a belt in two different weight classes. And that’s just the cherry on top of a stacked Super Bowl Eve card, which is loaded with big names and high stakes from start to finish.

Also on the menu: Alistair Overeem returns from suspension to clinch his heavyweight title shot with a win over Antonio Silva, while a victory for Rashad Evans over Lil’ Nog could set him up for a middleweight title fight against Anderson Silva for some reason. Plus, Jon Fitch and Demian Maia look to continue their recent surges in the welterweight division, while Joseph Benavidez and Ian McCall square off at flyweight because honestly, who else are those guys going to fight?

Round-by-round results from the Aldo vs. Edgar pay-per-view card will be stacking up after the jump beginning at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT, courtesy of George “Bigfoot” Shunick. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please toss your own thoughts into the comments section.


(“The name’s Frankie. I fight dudes twice.” Photo via MMAFighting)

Tonight at UFC 156 in Las Vegas, Jose Aldo goes for his fourth-consecutive UFC featherweight title defense, while former lightweight champ Frankie Edgar attempts to become the third fighter in UFC history to pick up a belt in two different weight classes. And that’s just the cherry on top of a stacked Super Bowl Eve card, which is loaded with big names and high stakes from start to finish.

Also on the menu: Alistair Overeem returns from suspension to clinch his heavyweight title shot with a win over Antonio Silva, while a victory for Rashad Evans over Lil’ Nog could set him up for a middleweight title fight against Anderson Silva for some reason. Plus, Jon Fitch and Demian Maia look to continue their recent surges in the welterweight division, while Joseph Benavidez and Ian McCall square off at flyweight because honestly, who else are those guys going to fight?

Round-by-round results from the Aldo vs. Edgar pay-per-view card will be stacking up after the jump beginning at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT, courtesy of George “Bigfoot” Shunick. Refresh the page every few minutes for all the latest, and please toss your own thoughts into the comments section.

OK, Potato Nation, welcome to the live chat. I’m not sure who came up with my nickname, but rest assured, I am more eloquent than cro-magnum Brazilians with gigantism. We’ve seen some impressive action thus far, but it should pale for what is about to come. (Side note: have we seen impressive fights so far? I’ve been on a road trip to North Carolina for most of the day, so I haven’t actually seen any of the fights. I’ll just assume they went well.) Fitch-Maia. Silva-’Reem. Evans-Lil Nog. Edgar-Aldo. Let me repeat that one. Edgar-Aldo. This is a legitimate super fight, folks. Hopefully my shitty Hilton internet service holds up so I can deliver to you, dear reader, a play by play worthy of the magnitude tonight holds.

OK, checked the results. The fights seem like they’ve been pretty good. I feel better about my baseless assumption now. Also, some predictions: Benavidez over McCall by decision, Fitch over Maia by decision or (gasp) late TKO, Overeem over Bigfoot by TKO, Evans by decision over Nogueira, and… Edgar over Aldo by decision. I think Jose will wear down over the course of the fight, and Edgar will take the last three rounds. Of course, being a Frankie Edgar fight with historically poor officials, there’s no guarantee the decision rendered will be just. We’ll see.

RIPPING IT INTO PIECES. UFC 156 has begun. Also, I hate Stemm. It comes with the territory, I guess. And by “it,” I mean shitty nu metal.

Ian McCall vs. Joseph Benavidez

If facial hair had any impact on the outcome of the fight, not only would Ian McCall absolutely destroy Joe Benavidez tonight but he would sit atop any pound-for-pound list this sport has. (Tiki Ghosn would be ranked dead last.) Unfortunately for him, that’s not how things work. Still, he’s an excellent fighter. I think Benavidez is better, but this – like all the flyweight fights – should be a barn-burner.

Round 1

Mazzagatti reffing this. Gets booed. Fighters touch gloves… aaaaaaaand my (PAID FOR) stream craps out. Well, this sucks. The action picks up with 3:30 left in the fight. McCall lands a hard combo, but Benavidez hurts him with a counter! High kick from Joe blocked. McCall getting his feet under him. Accidental low blow by Benavidez. Fight resumes, Benavidez still in control. Nice left right hook by McCall, who is slowly finding his range. Low kick Benavidez. McCall tags Benavidez with a right. Benavidez is cut. Lands a strong body kick. Round ends, 10-9 Benavidez, as far as I can tell.

Round 2

Apparently a headbutt was what caused Beanvidez’ cut. Second round begins, Benavidez takes the center. McCall tries to catch a kick but doesn’t get it. Jab by Benavidez, then a body shot. High kick from McCall blocked. They exchange with nothing of significance landing. Benavidez missing overhand rights. Body kick by McCall. Benavidez really looking for the overhand right, but so far hasn’t hit anything with it. Ducks under a big hook from McCall, takes the center of the Octagon. Uppercut by Benavidez, now working against the fence. They break. Beanvidez is throwing hard punches but not really landing anything. McCall, however, hasn’t landed much either. Benavidez counters a low kick. Nice right jab by McCall. Benavidez goes to the body. Benavidez slips, McCall tries to take his back, but Benavidez gets half-guard. Now McCall has his back! Benavidez scrambles, but McCall still maintains control, working ground and pound now. Benavidez stands, McCall lands a knee from a body clinch. Round ends, 10-9 McCall.

Round 3

McCall’s corner tells him that Benavidez has nothing off his back. They touch gloves. Big right hand by Benavidez! Doesn’t knock McCall down, but he felt it. Benavidez stuffs McCall’s shot, and lands an elbow. They separate. Body kick from Benavidez. Leg kick drops McCall, who was going for a kick of his own. McCall back up, Benavidez looks for a superman punch and misses. Nice right hook from McCall. Benavidez getting sloppy again, but lands a short right. Nice body kick by Benavidez, followed by a left. McCall perfectly times a takedown and almost passes to side control, but Benavidez stands up. Big body kick from Benavidez. They exchange low kicks. McCall lands another kick, but Benavidez returns fire with a combination. Low kick from Benavidez, followed by a combination. McCall lands a right, but misses a takedown. They exchange in the center of the octagon. Another body kick from Benavidez, who stuffs another takedown. The round ends, 10-9 Benavidez. Time to go to the judges…

Aaaaaand, it’s unanimous. 29-28 on all three scorecards for Benavidez. The right call. McCall collapses in despair, and Benavidez reaffirms his title intentions to the crowd. Goldberg mentions that the “stars” are in attendance tonight, and then proceeds to mention the tight end of the Jacksonville Jaguars. Most people in Jacksonville don’t know who the Jaguars tight end is. Just saying.

Jon Fitch vs. Demian Maia

Stoked for this fight. Hoping for a ground war. Better not get a stand up farce. Either’s in the cards. Speaking emphatically. Deal. I like Demian Maia, but coming out to Linkin Park? -100, sir. Conversely, Jon Fitch coming out to Johnny Cash? +100. Also, Fitch’s walkout shirt of a man fighting a bear? +100. Jon Fitch is winning the points game, people. Dominating it. Time to step your games up.

Round 1

Maia immediately shoots. He gets it. Transitions to the back. Fitch stands, and Maia is playing the role of backpack. Maia punching, now going for an RNC. Works the body, goes back for a choke. Fitch defending, elbows Maia’s thigh. Maia going for the choke, but Fitch slowly but surely defends himself. Maia leaves the back, tries to drag Fitch to the ground. He does, but Fitch stands again. They’re clinching against the fence, and Fitch grabs the fence to stop a takedown. He goes down, and Maia throws knees to Fitch’s thigh. Maia throwing strikes from the back as Fitch is kneeling. Maia works the body as the round ends. 10-9, arguably 10-8, Maia.

Round 2

Fitch lands a kick. Then a low kick. Then another. Maia with a right. Fitch returns fire. Maia gets a single, and tries to pass to side control. Fitch stands, however. Counter right by Fitch, but Maia clinches and takes Fitch down. He has one hook on Fitch’s back. Maia gets the other hook in. Maia working for a choke, but Fitch is still defending. Maia working ground and pound. Maia’s got the choke! Fitch somehow survives. Maia still working ground and pound. Dominant performance on the ground from Maia thus far. He’s been utilizing the body triangle to remain on Fitch’s back since he took him down. Fitch continues to defend, but he has no answer for Maia’s positional control. Round ends, again, 10-9 or 10-8 Maia.

Round 3

Crazy Bob Cook tells Fitch, in no uncertain terms, he needs to finish Maia on the feet. Fitch throws a kick, Maia clinches and pushes Fitch into the fence. Fitch defending the takedown as best he can. Now they’re clinched against the fence. Fitch goes down to one knee, and Maia takes his back almost instantly. Fitch finally gets out, but Maia immediately shoots. Fitch can’t get Maia off him, but Fitch goes for a guillotine. Maia drops to half guard, Fitch with a big elbow. Fitch works the body, but Maia stands and pushes Fitch into the fence. Fitch escapes, but Maia is relentless. He gets another takedown. This is exceptional. Maia ends the round in mount. His round and a clean sweep. Did not see this one coming. Maia looks absolutely dominant at 170.

Maia wins 30-27 on all scorecards. Some people in the crowd boo, because some people in the crowd are xenophobic douchebags.

Alistair Overeem vs. Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva

Two things can happen here; Overeem will knockout Bigfoot, or Bigfoot will drag The Reem down and batter him into oblivion. The former is much more likely, but let’s not forget that Overeem is historically a bit of a front-runner. Still, much of that was before “horse meat” entered his life. Should be violent.

Round 1

Props to Joe Rogan to mentioning Overeem’s physique change has “[raised] a lot of eyebrows.” Goldberg immediately changes the subject. Overeem looks pretty confident standing across the ring. Fight starts, no glove touch. (Duh.) Silva misses a low kick. Jab by Overeem. Left to the body, and they clinch against the cage. They break. Jab by Overeem. Left to the body by Overeem and they clinch again. Overeem measuring Bigfoot for a knee. Another right hand from Overeem followed by a knee. Bigfoot works some short body punches from the fence. Silva misses a kick, tries to clinch, but Overeem turns him around effortlessly. Overeem working some knees, but none are seriously hurting Bigfoot. Big knee from Overeem following a right. Overeem’s hands are at his waist. Big low kick from Overeem. Silva returns fire. Overeem tosses Silva around in the clinch. Now working knees to the thighs. Knee to the body from Overeem. Overeem slips and counters with an uppercut. Round ends, 10-9 Reem.

Round 2

Bigfoot’s coaches sound way too optimistic heading into the second. Nice leg kick from Silva, but good counter jab from Overeem. They trade rights and Overeem tosses Silva to the ground. Herb Dean implores them to work 10 seconds after Overeem lands a takedown. Patience, Herb. Bigfoot lands serious elbows from the bottom in side control. Overeem now in Bigfoot’s open guard. Overeem punishing Silva now. Serious shots from the top that echo throughout the octagon. Bigfoot’s guard fails to threaten Overeem, who continues to land big shots to the body. More big shots, now Overeem passes to half guard. Back to full, Overeem stands. Herb Dean stands them up. Overeem misses an overhand. Big right by Silva! Overeem is undeterred. They trade hard jabs at the end. 10-9 Overeem.

Round 3

Big knee from Overeem. Bigfoot LANDS! He’s swarming him!!! Overeem is HURT! HE’S OUT!!!! OVEREEM IS OUT!! WOW!!!!!!!

Bigfoot ran up to a downed Overeem and shouted something at him. It all started from a right hand when Overeem tried to slip. Bigfoot followed with a head kick, then a big uppercut, then unloaded with a monster combination. Wow. Frontrunner for comeback of the year. Wow.

Wow. So, if we’ve learned anything, I guess it’s this; you can put on all the muscle you want, but if you’ve got the chin of a light-heavyweight, well, you’re stuck with that. Wonder what’s going to happen to the heavyweight title picture if Daniel Cormier gets past Frank Mir and refuses to fight Cain.

Rashad Evans vs. Antonio Rogerio “Minotoro” Nogueira

Um, yeah, so this fight is happening. Not really a lot to say about this; it’s designed to put Evans over for either another shot at Jones or a shot at Anderson Silva. He’ll probably look pretty good, because he’s better in all facets of MMA – save jiu-jitsu – than Nogueira. And, frankly, Lil Nog isn’t as good on the ground as his big brother. Unless he manages to hurt Evans and quickly follow up on the ground, I don’t see him taking this.

Round 1

Evans with a very wide stance. Lands a body kick. Staying just out of range of Nogueira. Faking shots. There’s little action and the croud is getting impatient. Evans throws a high kick that’s blocked. Nog lands a jab. Another jab. Then a straight left. Nogueira seems to be the superior boxer thus far. Another strong jab from Nog. Now a left. Rashad lands a big right hand. Staggers Nogueira, but nothing more. Evans lands a takedown, and punches Nogueira as the latter stands. They break. They exchange glancing crosses. Rashad lands a right. Goes for a head kick, to no avail. Close round. 10-9 Rashad, but I wouldn’t complain about a 10-10.

Round 2

Jab from Nogueira. A left misses. Rashad lands a solid inside leg kick. Lands a right after a level change. Nogueira rushes in and lands a couple shots. Then a left. Rashad lands a right. Now an inside leg kick. Nogueira lands a straight left and avoids Evans’ rush. Denies Evans a takedown. Nogueira lands another combination. Now a left to the body. Another. Nogueira is beginning to take control, although it’s not overt. He’s clearly the aggressor though. Lands another left. Rashad lands a combination, punctuated by a strong right. Nogueira lands a body kick, and then a jab. Another jab, but Evans almost takes Nogueira down. Nog escapes and lands a combination. Rashad lands a big uppercut. Body kick from Nog, followed by a combination as Evans circles. Evans misses a cross. Evans goes for a high kick, but it’s blocked. Round ends, 10-9 Nogueira.

Round 3

Right to body by Evans. Nogueira throws a combination. Evans returns. Neither lands much. Jab from Nog. Lunging right from Evans lands. But thus far, not a terribly eventful fight. Jab from Nogueira again. It seems to be the only consistent offense in this fight. Nogueira accidentally takes a finger to the eye and the fight is halted. Yves Lavigne calls for the doctor. The doctor asks him if he can continue, Nog obviously says yes. Great job, doc. Fight resumes, Nog lands a solid left. Rashad just seems bewildered right now. He shoots for a takedown, but it’s telegraphed. Nogueira lands another jab. Nogueira lands more lefts. Rashad lands a jab, but Nogueira responds. Evans can’t land a takedown because he can’t get close enough to Nogueira before he shoots. Nogueira still landing more than Rashad. Evans lands a solid right, and they trade from the clinch until the bell. 10-9 Nogueira, but really, no one won this one.

29-28 across the board for Nogueira. The right call, which at least makes this fight slightly less unbearable. OK, let’s get to Edgar-Aldo already…

Frankie Edgar vs. Jose Aldo

This fight is actually happening, Potato Nation. I’m not going to say anything else. Just enjoy the moment.

Round 1

Jose Aldo is 26. That never ceases to astound me. FIGHT TIME. They touch gloves. Edgar with a low kick. Edgar moving well. Aldo lands a body kick, but Edgar was circling away. Edgar circling towards Aldo’s right leg though. Edgar lands an inside leg kick. Aldo having trouble finding Edgar, but his defense is solid as well. Uppercut from Aldo, but Edgar returns fire. Nice jab from Aldo. Another one. Very strong. Aldo is beginning to find his timing. He coutners a low kick with a cross. Another one. Aldo is taking charge. Jab glances Edgar. Edgar misses a low kick. Another jab from Aldo. Nice right from Edgar. Another jab from Aldo. Edgar having trouble closing the distance. Edgar lands a right backing up. They exchange jabs. Edgar’s nose is bloodied. Another jab from Aldo. More punches as he moves backwards. BIG leg kick from Aldo. Edgar lands a cross. Another leg kick. Jesus those sound painful. Round ends, 10-9 Aldo.

Round 2

Edgar lands, but his leg is already swollen. Nice right from Aldo, thena  jab. Frankie returns fire with a right. Jab from Aldo misses. Edgar is beginning to adjust to Aldo’s jab. Frankie lands a leg kick. Shoots for a half hearted single. Body kick Edgar. They exchange in the center. Nice jab from Aldo, who stuffs another takedown. BIG leg kick staggers Edgar. Edgar fires back with a right. Another leg kick, which takes out Edgar’s leg. Both fighters land. Another leg kick. Aldo has figured out a weakness and he’s exploiting it. Nice right from Edgar. Edgar lands a combination and avoids a flying knee, pushing Aldo into the fence. They separate. Aldo lands a kick, but Edgar catches it, lands a right and takes him down. Aldo stands up though. Edgar lands a jab. Aldo is beginning to tire. Frankie keeps up the pressure and lands a right. Two jabs from Aldo. Aldo misses a spinning kick and Edgar lands a hook. Round ends, 10-9 Aldo, but Edgar has the momentum.

Round 3

Edgar eats a kick, takes Aldo down, but Aldo pops right back up. Edgar with a low kick. Nice right by Aldo. Edgar backing Aldo up though. Misses an overhand right. A right from Aldo is blocked. They exchange. Front kick from Aldo barely misses knocking Edgar out. Edgar’s nose may be broken, though. Aldo lands a counter hook. They size each other up, and Edgar lands a kick to the body. Aldo with a jab. Aldo using his circling to avoid Edgar’s rushes. Leg kick from Edgar. Another. Another. Left hook from Aldo. Nice combo from Edgar, who catches a kick and answers with his own. Nice uppercut from Edgar. Big right hand from Edgar. Leg kick from Aldo misses. Aldo tosses Edgar’s takedown attempt off. Nice right hand from Frankie. Inside leg kick from Edgar. Nice kick from Edgar. Round ends… 10-9 Edgar?

Round 4

Can Edgar maintain this momentum? Nice right from Edgar. Inside leg kick from Edgar. Nice right. Another leg kick from Edgar. Inside leg kick from Edgar. Spinning back kick from Aldo lands. Aldo lands a leg kick, but eats a couple punches. High kick from Edgar is blocked. Edgar backing Aldo down. Edgar misses a spinning back kick of his own. Edgar’s movemnt is flustering Aldo. Goes for a takedown, fails, but lands punches on the separation. Edgar lands an uppercut. Aldo lands a jab. Left hook from both fighters. Leg kick from Edgar. Combination from Edgar. Edgar SLAMS Aldo down, but Aldo stands. Now they clinch against the fence, Edgar kneeing Aldo, who is trying to break Edgar’s grip. They break. Leg kick Edgar. Combination from Edgar. Fakes a takedown and throw s a combination. Lands a cross. Round ends, 10-9 Edgar.

Round 5

Round starts. Both circle. Edgar backs him up with jabs, but none land. Low kick Edgar. Both land as Edgar jumps in. Aldo barely misses a flying knee. Lands a jab though. Another nice jab. Nice right hand from Edgar. Spinning back kick is blocked by Aldo. Nice jab from Edgar, but Aldo lands a counter left. Edgar doesn’t get a takedown, but lands a knee. Both men miss. Left hook from Edgar. Low kick Edgar. Another one. Nice right from Aldo. Frankie pressuring now, lands a nice knee. Lands a good combination. A jab. Throws a high kick. Another inside leg kick. They exchange crosses. Left hook Edgar. Good combo from Edgar. Edgar with ANOTHER combo. Nice hook. Almost lands a headkick. Both men exchange crosses. Aldo lands a crazy superman punch off the fence, but it’s too little too late for the round. 10-9 Edgar.

Oh great, another Frankie Edgar title fight, another close decision. I had Aldo winning the first two, Edgar winning the last two, and the third round is… close. I gave it to Frankie, but I don’t feel confident in it. Anyway, we go to the judges…

49-46, 49-46, 48-47, all for Aldo. I can see the 48-47. But 49-46? God, I hate MMA judges. Anyway, Jose Aldo says stuff, including that he’s not moving to lightweight just yet. Edgar says other stuff, and congratulates Aldo. Alright, that’s the end of things. Overall, a good, and surprising, night of fights. Thanks for joining, Potato Nation.

Preliminary card results:
– Evan Dunham def. Gleison Tibau via split-decision (29-28 x 2, 28-29)
– Tyron Woodley def. Jay Hieron via KO, 0:36 of round 1
– Bobby Green def. Jacob Volkmann via submission (rear-naked choke), 4:25 of round 3
– Isaac Vallie-Flagg def. Yves Edwards via split-decision (29-28 x 2, 28-29)
– Dustin Kimura def. Chico Camus via submission (rear-naked choke), 1:50 of round 3
– Francisco Rivera def. Edwin Figueroa via TKO, 4:20 of round 2

UFC 156: What We Learned from Yves Edwards vs. Isaac Vallie-Flagg

Strikeforce import Isaac Vallie-Flagg was welcomed to the UFC Saturday night by Yves Edwards, a longtime veteran who won his last fight. This bout represented Vallie-Flagg’s new school against Edwards’ old school.Would there be a changing of the guard …

Strikeforce import Isaac Vallie-Flagg was welcomed to the UFC Saturday night by Yves Edwards, a longtime veteran who won his last fight. This bout represented Vallie-Flagg’s new school against Edwards’ old school.

Would there be a changing of the guard with this fight?

We would find out, as Vallie-Flagg beat Edwards via split decision in a close fight that could have been won by either man.

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

There was nothing memorable about the fight; one thing really doesn’t stick out. The fact that the fight was so competitive and close is something we’ll remember. We also now know that Vallie-Flagg is a legit lightweight from Strikeforce.

 

What We Learned About Isaac Vallie-Flagg

He is tough and aggressive. His aggressive style is likely what won the judges over, but he is also very skilled. This is not surprising since he is a Greg Jackson product.

 

What We Learned About Yves Edwards

That old dog can still hunt. He gassed out toward the end of the fight, but he is still as dangerous as ever. He almost won the fight on the ground in the second round but ran out of time. The decision could have easily gone his way.

 

What’s Next for Vallie-Flagg

I think Vallie-Flagg could take on a top-25 opponent. Maybe a fight with Myles Jury or Ross Pearson would be a fun next bout. 

 

What’s Next for Edwards

This loss isn’t a huge blemish for him. That said, he needs to get back in the win column. A bout against Mac Danzig would be a good challenge that could get him back in the mix with a win.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jose Aldo vs. Frankie Edgar: Last-Minute Betting Guide to UFC 156 Main Event

If you miss Jose Aldo vs. Frankie Edgar, there’s a good chance you’ll miss out on the fight of the year. These two are going to put on a show when they close out UFC 156.Those who want to add a little intrigue to an already awesome matchup have the opt…

If you miss Jose Aldo vs. Frankie Edgar, there’s a good chance you’ll miss out on the fight of the year. These two are going to put on a show when they close out UFC 156.

Those who want to add a little intrigue to an already awesome matchup have the option of doing so with a variety of wagering options from the good folks at Bovada

The Las Vegas-based site is offering the traditional money line on the fight but also offers more specific prop bets for the title fight. Here’s a look at some of the most intriguing options along with the latest odds from Bovada.

 

Money Line: Jose Aldo (-170), Frankie Edgar (+140)

This is the closest line on the main card, and it should bear that out when these two are in the Octagon.

On paper this is about as close a fight as you can get. The slight edge in the line comes from the fact that Aldo is the champion and Edgar is the challenger. 

This is the most straightforward way to bet on this fight. If you think you know beyond the shadow of a doubt who will win, this is probably the best way to make your money. 

 

Method of Victory

Bovada allows you to wager on who will win and in what fashion. The site sets odds for nearly every possible outcome. These are the ones with the best value.

Aldo Wins in First Round (5/1)

If you’re a firm believer in Aldo, this is a good bet to make. He’s shown the ability to put opponents away in the first round. If he shocks Edgar with his power early on, 5/1 is a nice payout. 

 

Edgar Wins by Decision (+250)

Edgar by decision pays out about half as well as Aldo in the first round, but it’s much more likely to happen. Edgar will look to use his excellent cardio and could take the fight in the later rounds. If Edgar pulls off the upset, it’s most likely going to be by decision. This could be the best value on the whole card.

 

Over/Under: 4.5 Rounds

Over: -155

Under: +110

Essentially, this boils down to whether the fight goes to decision or not. If Edgar’s past is any indication, we’ll have to rely on the judges to sort this out. He’s been to a decision 11 times in 19 career fights including five of his last six. 

Aldo is always capable of landing a flash-knockout blow, but he’s been to a decision in two of his last three fights. It would certainly appear this one is destined to go the distance. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Duke Roufus, the Roufusport Fight Club and the Power of Quality over Quantity

By now, the MMA world should know about Duke Roufus, the head of the Roufusport Fight Club. Why would anyone want to know about Roufus? For starters, one cannot talk about the elite of the sport in 2013 without the mention of Roufus, who helped fi…

By now, the MMA world should know about Duke Roufus, the head of the Roufusport Fight Club. 

Why would anyone want to know about Roufus? For starters, one cannot talk about the elite of the sport in 2013 without the mention of Roufus, who helped fighters such as Anthony Pettis, Alan Belcher and Chico “King” Camus, among others, develop into the fighters MMA fans enjoy watching today.

In what Roufus described as a “transition year” in speaking to B/R MMA, he noted what most fans widely recognized. Anthony defeated Joe Lauzon at UFC 144, but he battled injuries throughout the year while Anthony’s brother, Sergio, came into 2012 with an unblemished 2-0 pro record and left 2012 with an unblemished 6-0 record.

Additionally, Bellator welterweight champion Ben Askren shows consistency in winning performances, and Camus, who fights at UFC 156 tonight against Dustin Kimura, defeated Dustin Pague in his UFC debut at UFC 150.

Of course, injuries to Erik Koch prevented him from two scheduled dates with UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo, and Belcher beat Rousimar Palhares but dropped a decision at UFC 155 to Yushin Okami. However, this small club in Milwaukee still delivered much of the memories that made 2012 enjoyable.

“We’ve put two guys in the World Series of Fighting,” Roufus said, “We have another guy in the RFA, so I’m pretty happy with our small club. We don’t have the hugest training camp, but we are a quality over quantity-type group.”

Look at the quality of the wins received by the camp’s fighters, and few will argue against the fact, especially when they take into consideration the way the camp performed recently at UFC on Fox 6.

Krauss‘ technical striking pulled him to a unanimous decision against Mike Stumpf in a preliminary bout that saw the debut of the “flying Panzer punch,” which Roufus coined the superman-uppercut that many witnessed live on FX. The manner in which “Showtime” handled the challenge of Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone should go without saying.

However, the moments after Koch’s loss to Ricardo Lamas stand out, not only because it served as the only loss on the Roufusport front, but because of what happened after the bout.

“The hardest thing I’ve ever had to do as a coach was Saturday night,” Roufus said. “I had to leave Erik in the cage bleeding while running back to make sure Anthony was ready to take on Cerrone…it was a traumatic experience for me. I had to go back in the locker room and be very confident for Anthony…we had a good cry about it.”

Speaking of Anthony now means speaking about UFC on Fox 7, as Anthony will get the winner of UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson vs. former Strikeforce champion Gilbert Melendez. Roufus will say with no hesitation that he would look forward to the fight Anthony already fought, meaning the rematch with Henderson.

At UFC on Fox 6, though, the rematch with Henderson and the rematch with Melendez remained on the shelf temporarily, as Anthony looked to settle a score with Cerrone after months of trash talk culminated inside the Octagon, where Pettis finished Cerrone with a liver kick and a series of punches.

Roufus knows Anthony well enough to know what Anthony encountered growing up, however, so Cerrone‘s loss to Anthony came as the result of “barking up the wrong tree,” so to speak.

“[Cowboy] trying to talk trash to him is like those same gangsters that used to talk trash to [Anthony] in his own neighborhood.”

As Roufus said in quoting Bane’s words to Batman about being molded in the dark, Anthony and Camus found themselves molded in the darkness of the lifestyles surrounding their neighborhood before they ever stepped in the cage. 

Now, despite the win over Pague and despite his story, few know about Camus, despite his win over Pague. But while Roufus won’t ask anyone to see what Camus saw before Anthony brought him to Roufusport, he did enjoy how Camus evolved from a tough guy living the street life into a martial artist living the cage life.

“I couldn’t believe the maturity in his first fight,” Roufus said of Camus’s first outing. “He didn’t let the first-time jitters get to him.”

As time grew on and Camus gained more experience, “The King” only continued to evolve into an under-the-radar bantamweight who wanted to make his name known throughout the sport, and he gets the opportunity to continue that evolution against Kimura.

Kimura did miss weight and will fight Camus at a catchweight, but Roufus did not shy away from echoing many of the expectations from people looking forward to Kimura‘s debut.

“A tough Hawaiian, man,” Roufus said, “You’d think with all that nice weather, they’d be chilled out. Those boys are ready to scrap constantly.”

Roufus never hesitates in standing behind his boys, all of whom help play their part in making Roufusport one of the premier camps to watch year in and year out. With Belcher remaining in that very category, nobody should forget about him also.

After all, he did expose what happens when Palhares cannot find the heel hook, and while he hit a rough patch against Okami, the person he had in mind to fight next mirrored the man Roufus wanted to see Belcher fight next.

“Bisping,” Roufus said, referring to The Ultimate Fighter 3 light heavyweight winner Michael Bisping, who, ironically, faces Belcher in UFC 159’s co-headliner later this year.

Nobody should need an explanation for this choice, especially if they followed the UFC middleweight title scene in 2012. Until losing to Vitor Belfort earlier this year, Bisping pleaded his case toward a title shot, while Belcher did the same. And then the two middleweights eventually took verbal jabs at each other while fans wondered when the two would collide.

“He’s a guy with a big mouth,” Roufus said, “and he needs to get it shut.”

Whether or not Belcher accomplishes that task remains a question, but on paper, the fight promises to bring forth a culmination of one of the more intense rivalries of this year. With Roufus at the head, Belcher can definitely do his dirt in putting the final verdict in his favorite so he can once again creep into talks of a showdown with the UFC middleweight champion.

At the end of the day, few can fuel that desire like Roufus.

“One thing I teach several of my guys is ‘What’s your why?’; why are you doing this? Are you doing this to just fight or are you doing this to become a champion? I’ve pushed all my guys to become a champion…I love what I do, but for these guys, I see an opportunity for endgame.

“Ben’s expecting his first daughter. Anthony has his daughter; they support their families and they’ve been able to support their families’ lives through their career…you have to go out there and want to be the best. That’s the only way you’re going to get any reward in this sport.”

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UFC 156: Fighters Who Have Much to Prove in Saturday’s Slate

All fighters think they something to prove and use that as motivation, but a select few at UFC 156 are squarely on the hot seat. Jose Aldo and Frankie Edgar headline the fighting exhibition at the Mandalay Bay, and rightfully so. Both fighters have ear…

All fighters think they something to prove and use that as motivation, but a select few at UFC 156 are squarely on the hot seat.

Jose Aldo and Frankie Edgar headline the fighting exhibition at the Mandalay Bay, and rightfully so. Both fighters have earned their place at the top of the event card, while the names below them still have much to prove.

Of all of the players on the main card, here are the three that will have a chip on their shoulder in Las Vegas.

Alistair Overeem

“The Reem” will be in his first fight since being suspended for a banned substance.

A year and a half ago it was Overeem who was the next-in-line to face Junior Dos Santos for the heavyweight title. Now he makes his return to the octagon after testing positive for testosterone; ironically, he will face Antonio Silva also known as “Big Foot”.

With a win over Brock Lesnar, no one doubts “The Reem’s” resume, but he needs a current accomplishment to satisfy doubters.

Rashad Evans

Evans has only been defeated twice, but in his most recent bout he was defeated by former teammate Jon Jones.

Fast forward ten months later and Evans is primed for a rebound win over Antonio Rogerio Nogueira. He’ll rely on his always-dependable hands and grappling prowess.

If Evans were to lose, the 33-year-old will be in the worst rut in his career. He can reverse the hate with a win over his older opponent.

Joseph Benavidez and Ian McCall

Benavidez and McCall both need a win to stay in the flyweight title race and will have to duel it out for that right.

Both men couldn’t outlast Demetrious Johnson last year and now will have to prove themselves for another shot at the title. Benavidez’s UFC chops are in question as well, as he comes from the WEC’s bantamweight division to take on McCall.

Only one fighter will get back on their feet in the octagon. The other will not be happy to be in Las Vegas.

 

Mike Shiekman is a Breaking News Writer for Bleacher Report.

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