On October 19, 2013, at UFC 166 in Houston, Texas, Junior dos Santos will attempt to reclaim his title and become a two-time UFC heavyweight champion. At UFC 155, former heavyweight champion dos Santos lost his championship title in a one-sided beating…
On October 19, 2013, at UFC 166 in Houston, Texas, Junior dos Santos will attempt to reclaim his title and become a two-time UFC heavyweight champion. At UFC 155, former heavyweight champion dos Santos lost his championship title in a one-sided beating at the hands of his archrival, Cain Velasquez.
Considering the five-round thrashing given by Velasquez during their last encounter, there are a great number of questions that surround dos Santos. UFC 166 will answer many of these questions, as the world of mixed martial arts bears witness to one of the most heated trilogies in combat sports history.
Cain Velasquez is the most dominant heavyweight on the planet.
Lofty though that distinction may be, it fails to capture just how good the UFC heavyweight champion is.
Given his relatively small size for a heavyweight, one could argue that Velasquez sh…
Cain Velasquez is the most dominant heavyweight on the planet.
Lofty though that distinction may be, it fails to capture just how good the UFC heavyweight champion is.
Given his relatively small size for a heavyweight, one could argue that Velasquez should be breathing the same air as Jon Jones and Georges St-Pierre in the pound-for-pound rankings.
Yet still questions remain for Velasquez, particularly when placed within the context of a rubber match with Junior dos Santos, the only man to best him.
Read on for three important questions we have about the heavyweight champion ahead of UFC 166.
UFC heavyweight contender Fabricio Werdum has been chomping at the bit to get a shot at UFC gold ever since submitting Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC on FUEL 10 in June.
Based on a recent interview with Fight Hub TV, it seems clear that “Vai Cav…
UFC heavyweight contender Fabricio Werdum has been chomping at the bit to get a shot at UFC gold ever since submitting Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC on FUEL 10 in June.
Based on a recent interview with Fight Hub TV, it seems clear that “Vai Cavalo” has his sights set on current champion Cain Velasquez, who has a rubber match with Junior dos Santos headlining UFC 166 this Saturday.
“I want the belt, but Cain Velasquez is a good fight for me because he takes down guys, and if he takes me down, I’m finishing him,” Werdum said, admitting that a matchup with the former two-time NCAA Division I All-American would be ideal.
While Velasquez was awarded his black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu earlier this month, Werdum, a second-degree black belt in BJJ, is regarded as one of the best grapplers in the world.
Werdum, a 10-time gold medalist in top-tier gi and no-gi BJJ competitions before entering MMA, has submitted the likes of Nogueira, Alistair Overeem and Fedor Emelianenko inside the cage. Since making his return to the Octagon, the Brazilian native has put together three straight dominant performances against Roy Nelson, Mike Russow and Nogueira.
According to the UFC’s official rankings, Werdum is the No. 3 heavyweight fighter in the world.
Meanwhile, Velasquez’s only loss in 13 professional fights came against Dos Santos at the inaugural UFC on FOX event in November 2011, as he was knocked out early in the first round.
However, it didn’t take the American Kickboxing Academy staple long to earn his rematch with “Cigano” at UFC 155 last December, and he dominated his Brazilian counterpart for five rounds.
The two elite heavyweights look to settle their score this weekend, while Werdum anxiously awaits a matchup with the winner.
Werdum has already squared off with Dos Santos, suffering a brutal uppercut knockout early into their UFC 90 encounter back in October 2008, so a JDS victory this weekend could hurt Werdum’s chances at a title shot.
Would Werdum’s impeccable submission skills be too much for Velasquez to handle, or would the champion’s cardio, wrestling and ground-and-pound be enough to wear his Brazilian counterpart down?
JohnHeinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA Editor for eDraft.com.
Junior dos Santos nearly lost his opportunity to break a tie with heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez at UFC 166 on Saturday.
During the UFC 166 open workouts on Wednesday, Dos Santos revealed to MMAJunkie.com and assembled media that he’d require…
Junior dos Santos nearly lost his opportunity to break a tie with heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez at UFC 166 on Saturday.
During the UFC 166 open workouts on Wednesday, Dos Santos revealed to MMAJunkie.com and assembled media that he’d required three stitches for a facial laceration only three weeks ago.
“It was in the training (camp), and it was accidental,” Dos Santos said. “I’m OK already. I’m 100 percent already.”
Dos Santos will be able to go this weekend, sparing UFC officials from having to do some late scrambling in order to save a UFC 166 fight card that features the Brazilian in a heavyweight championship match. Nonetheless, a cut suffered only one month prior to a fight of this magnitude, especially above the eye, has to be concerning to Dos Santos and his team.
The stitches have been removed, but a noticeable scar remains above Dos Santos’ right eyebrow.
With a cut so recently healed, there is potential for the laceration to be opened again during competition. Facing an opponent like Velasquez, who turned Antonio Silva into a bloody mess at UFC 146, those chances are only increased.
In all other facets, Dos Santos appeared in prime condition on Wednesday. The former champion looked fit and ready while hitting pads during the open workouts.
Still, Dos Santos’ cut has become something worth paying attention to on Saturday.
Should Velasquez open that wound back up at UFC 166, Dos Santos will be dealing with one more obstacle he doesn’t need in his quest to reclaim the heavyweight championship.
At UFC 155, Velasquez alone proved difficult enough for Dos Santos to deal with. Adding vision problems due to draining blood could drive a dagger into Dos Santos’ UFC 166 title hopes.
It appears Roy Nelson has already defeated Daniel Cormier in one aspect of their upcoming grudge match at UFC 166, as his signature beard will be in full effect this Saturday night in Houston.
“Big Country’s” facial hair became a target of the undefeat…
It appears Roy Nelson has already defeated Daniel Cormier in one aspect of their upcoming grudge match at UFC 166, as his signature beard will be in full effect this Saturday night in Houston.
“Big Country’s” facial hair became a target of the undefeated former-Olympian-turned-mixed martial artist, Cormier, who filed a complaint with the Texas Athletic Commission requesting the former TUF winner be forced to shave or trim his beard before their co-main event tilt this weekend.
The 34-year-old Louisiana native cited a bit of gamesmanship in his attempt to throw Nelson off in the pregame buildup, but those efforts have been stamped out.
On Wednesday night’s edition of UFC Tonight on Fox Sports 1, Ariel Helwani reported Nelson will not be forced to shave or trim his beard due to the athletic commission not regulating such matters. Cormier had filed an official complaint, but with the issue not falling under a category the governing body covers, the commission has no grounds to impose action on Nelson.
Bleacher Report reached out to the bearded heavyweight to get his thoughts on the matter. To no great surprise, the scrappy veteran was indifferent to the entire situation as he refused to feed into the distraction and put his focus on more important matters, such as the hospitalization of his trainer Jeff Mayweather.
“Some times there are situations where people have to listen, but I had more important things on my mind,” Nelson said. “I had the worst camp of my career for this fight. I was more worried about Jeff Mayweather’s health and him being in the hospital than Daniel and his bull crap. I’m a people person.”
Nelson and Cormier have been trading barbs for the past several months, with each fighter landing jabs via interviews and social media.
The 37-year-old knockout artist publicly poked the former Oklahoma State wrestling standout for apparently turning down a potential matchup back in June—a charge Cormier deemed out of context, and the bout passed him by due to an injury he was dealing with at the time.
While Cormier couldn’t sign on the dotted line to face Nelson back in the summer and was eyeing a drop down to light heavyweight, the situation provided the motivation for “D.C.” to stick around the heavyweight ranks for one more go.
Nelson and Cormier will settle their differences on Saturday night at UFC 166 in a highly anticipated heavyweight showdown.
****Story updated with Roy Nelson’s reaction to the Texas Athletic Commission’s decision not to intervene.
Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.
Anyone who witnessed Cain Velasquez’s dismantling of Junior dos Santos in their second bout will surely understand that Dos Santos has a tough task ahead of him at UFC 166.
Velasquez is relentless, a trait that is rare and troubling at any weight class…
Anyone who witnessed Cain Velasquez’s dismantling of Junior dos Santos in their second bout will surely understand that Dos Santos has a tough task ahead of him at UFC 166.
Velasquez is relentless, a trait that is rare and troubling at any weight class but even more so at heavyweight.
Where Dos Santos is a measured and methodical fighter who takes time to find his openings, Velasquez is a bulldozer who simply drives into his opponents without respite for the duration of a fight. They wilt and shell up or he finishes them.
Despite being considered an extremely well-rounded heavyweight, however, Velasquez’s modusoperandi is no mystery, nor does he hide his intentions in a deep bag of tricks. Almost invariably Velasquez will come in with a jab, move, then come in with a jab and a right hand before ducking for his opponent’s hips.
Simple, right? Certainly not simple to deal with.
The Standard Velasquez Set Up
You needn’t think far back to remember Erick Silva being starched by Dong Hyun Kim. Talented strikers make defensive sacrifices to deal with great takedown artists. Dos Santos, like Silva, keeps his non-punching hand low in order to block his opponent from getting to his hips.
After shucking off a few takedowns in the opening round of his return bout against Velasquez, Dos Santos was looking to counter whenever possible but kept his defensive hand low. Attempted uppercuts resulted in him getting cracked with an overhand, just as Alexander Gustafsson’s long uppercuts often do.
The overhand or any sort of arcing right works remarkably as a gap closer because unlike the jab it does not maintain distance; instead the overhand serves to collapse distance.
“Jab and shoot” has long since become outdated because the two movements are contradictory. A good jab serves to keep distance, a shot is about getting deep on the opponent’s hips. “Jab and shoot” basically ensures a fighter has to go through the longest possible distance to get to his opponent’s hips.
The overhand, however, is a shorter-range punch. It is accompanied by necessity with a dip forward and to the left, providing its own head movement. Teaching wrestlers to move their head well enough to avoid getting hit by more experienced strikers is tough. Velasquez still comes in jabbing with his chin up and gets caught with counter jabs a good deal of the time, but anyone becomes a harder man to hit during an overhand.
The second important point about the overhand or most rear-handed punches is that it is a damn hard punch. Anyone can throw a right hand hard with some practice. Consequently it serves as a double threat. A wrestler is no longer just a wrestler. If a fighter tries to defend the wrestler’s go-to strategy by stuffing the shot, his hands leave his guard and he can have the boom lowered on him by the overhand.
Countering The Set Up
One of the key problems that Dos Santos faced in his last match with Velasquez was dealing with the level change off of this overhand. Dos Santos, flustered by Velasquez’s pressure and takedown attempts, wound up trying to counter every jab that Velasquez threw with a jab of his own. This is all good, but he was attempting to do so on the retreat.
A retreating jab is not a power punch, but a setup punch. The rear foot is moving back and so is the body weight. It is an arm punch designed to blind or lift the head in hopes of planting the rear foot, pushing off of it and cracking the blinded opponent with a hard right hand. A retreating jab is not a good counter on its own.
A master of using a blinding jab to hide a counter right hand was Jersey Joe Walcott. By now, many of you will know him as one of my favourite fighters, and that’s because he was as savvy as they come.
Walcott was a master of drawing better boxers onto his right hand. He was the ultimate anti-technician—the better a boxer Walcott‘s opponent was, the worse Walcott made him look. Teofilo Stevenson was also great at blinding oncoming opponents with the jab and landing a long right hand.
Dos Santos wasn’t looking for the right hand, however. He was landing single jabs while backing up and this left him wide open for the overhand that Velasquez threw after his jabs, and then left him stunned as Velasquez changed levels and went for his hips. Junior was providing openings in his guard, with none of the benefits that good punches usually give to offset these risks.
In Velasquez’s basic jab, overhand, level change, Dos Santos has several good opportunities to counter, but should he open himself up at any point he leaves himself exposed to hard blows and a takedown. Basically, with Velasquez using the same set up over and over, Dos Santos has three main opportunities to counter.
Blind with the same counter jab, but follow it with a right hand before Velasquez can follow with his own.
Counter the right hand.
Counter the level change.
Countering the right hand of course means catching the right hand first. Attempting a direct counter with the left hand low is just suicide. Both Dos Santos and Antonio Silva attempted to counter Velasquez with a right uppercut simultaneous to his dipping right hand; both got hit and Antonio Silva got knocked out.
As good a boxer as Junior is by MMA standards (clear your head of any nonsense about him having anything for the Klitschko brothers), I doubt we will see him shoulder rolling Velasquez’s right hand and coming back with a counter right uppercut or straight. That could work a treat here, but Junior just isn’t the shoulder rolling type.
Very few good boxers can land a counter jab, drop their hand and shoulder roll into a right-hand counter. James Toney and Floyd Mayweather are excellent at this, but even most fighters who are good at shoulder rolling cannot do it so well off of a counter jab.
Countering the level change is perhaps a better idea. Doing so with the uppercut, again, would be ill advised as evidenced by Bigfoot and JDS in the above frames. What Dos Santos could do, now that he has shown he is willing to kick, is use his knees more effectively.
Nothing keeps a wrestler off his game as well a knee shooting up to meet him each time he attempts a takedown. The idea that Junior is going to avoid all takedowns is pretty optimistic, near delusional.
Assuming he has been training to get back up from the ground, it might be worth trying to catch Velasquez coming in and fight his way back up. This could be preferable to Junior exhausting himself and getting hit as he tries to stop takedowns.
The king of the intercepting knee was Joachim “Hellboy” Hansen. If you haven’t heard of him, he’s probably one of the best lightweights to have ever competed in MMA and for certain one of the most exciting. In between regular suplexes, helicopter armbars and rolling back takes, he had some of the meanest knees against ducking opponents in the game.
Having seen him knock out CaolUno, MasakatsuImanari and LuizAzeredo each with a knee strike as they ducked, trying to shoot on Hansen was always a terrifying prospect.
Hansen essentially accepted that he would have to play guard at some point and so opted to get off his best strike as his opponent lunged toward it with their face, presumably reasoning, “If I end up in guard, at least he’ll think twice about shooting again when I get up.” But in Norsk.
Using one’s knee strike to punish takedown attempts also carries less of the danger of eating a punch that a counter uppercut does. The fighter’s head may still be protected with his elbows and forearms.
Ring Craft
This is a constant feature of my analyses but it is a crucial one. Ring craft is the be-all and end-all of fighting, because if a fighter never hits a wall, he can move freely indefinitely. Junior Dos Santos is not nearly as good at navigating the Octagon as he is at landing pot shots in the centre of it.
I have previously likened Dos Santos’ boxing style to fencing, being more in and out on a line than one based on lateral movement. When Dos Santos retreats, he often does so straight backwards until he feels the fence, then begins to circle.
This meant that against Cain Velasquez and Mark Hunt, Dos Santos ended up circling out into left hooks along the fence when he had no ground through which to retreat. Dos Santos has a great chin on him, but if I were placing bets on how he will eventually get knocked out, getting trapped along the fence would be a close second to getting hit with his hands down.
This fact alone makes Velasquez a nightmare matchup for Dos Santos. Dos Santos hates the fence and Velaquez adores it. Any time Velasquez can get Junior along the fence and threaten even a lackadaisical takedown, he can get Junior’s hands away from his face and start roughing him up with punches all over again.
Now, retreat is an extremely useful tool against Velasquez. His hyperactive offense should leave holes to counter through, but then all he uses it for is getting on top of his opponents. If his opponents are simply shuffling back jabbing, he can walk them down then swarm in on them.
It is rare that I praise Cheick Kongo’s hands, but he beautifully demonstrated the art of getting Velasquez to overextend. Stand in front of Velasquez and it’s jab, right hand, shot, but if you can get him chasing, he opens himself up more.
Kongo flicked his lead hand in front of Velasquez’s eyes while retreating. He did a bad job of staying off the fence, but he did an excellent job of drawing Velasquez forward, blinding with the lead hand and then following with the right as he retreated.
Cain Velasquez, with his aggression and porous defense, seems to be a tailor-made opponent for back-step punching.
I spoke earlier about how the retreating jab is not a power counter, but back-step punches—which are rarely practiced much in traditional boxing—can prove to be true power counters while on the retreat. Essentially instead of jabbing as he retreats, a fighter shifts his lead foot to his rear, changing stances, while extending what started as his lead arm.
This creates distance and a barrier through which the opponent cannot pass in the form of the extended left arm, braced by the retreating left leg as it touches down. Against an aggressive fighter this works a treat. The back-step punch should always be followed with a second back-step punch.
In boxing form, the rear foot moves back and the lead foot moves back into a stance with it. Back-step punches are thrown by retreating with whichever side one is punching with.
It is not necessary to step back into a southpaw stance, only to bring the left foot back underneath the fighter before he kicks the right foot out behind him. This method provides a faster retreat than would otherwise be possible, coupled with a hard right hand as the opponent chases.
The left straight keeps an opponent on the end of the reach, blinds him and lines him up perfectly for a back step into orthodox stance and a hard right hand. A few guys have been really good at this, and none of them have been what you would call orthodox boxers.
Muhammad Ali, Anderson Silva, FedorEmelianenko, sometimes Chuck Liddell and frequently Igor Vovchanchyn, to name a few. Back-step punching has an interesting history and serves extremely well in avoiding standing toe to toe against an aggressive fighter.
A good boxer must be able to move backwards, but so few can punch well while retreating.
Conclusions
Junior dos Santos will have to fight off takedowns and he must be able to get up from the floor. If Velasquez doesn’t get caught up in fighting on the feet or put off by his first takedown getting stuffed, it is very difficult to see a turn of events where Dos Santos can stop shot after shot, never going to the floor.
His life is going to be hard; he is going to have to work in short windows on the feet when Velasquez isn’t chest to chest with him, and in their last meeting this caused him to take ill-thought-out shots and get hit more than he normally would.
It is in Dos Santos’ interest to make this into the kind of fight he likes, because Velasquez damn sure isn’t going to give it to him. Velasquez knows not to stand around and play silly beggars with Dos Santos; he knows that he needs to be up in Junior’s face from the first bell until the referee separates them.
It is Dos Santos’ job to make sure that doesn’t happen. Even periods when little is happening give an advantage to Junior dos Santos in this bout. Velasquez is known as the whirling dervish, the hive of activity. When an active fighter is in an inactive round, he appears ineffective and judges can often perceive him to be losing an even round.
Of course winning points this way is not a guaranteed victory. Dos Santos should be doing what LyotoMachida and Anderson Silva do so well, limiting exchanges. When he lands, he lands with power. He doesn’t land with volume. Prolonged exchanges are Velasquez’s wheelhouse and he can duck into a takedown whenever one occurs.
Getting a cushion of a round or two by avoiding action and pot-shotting might well be a better plan than simply looking for the knockout from bell to bell, but as long as Junior is hitting hard and getting away, he has a good chance.
The harder Junior makes Velasquez work to force an engagement, the more chance he has of hitting Velasquez clean with a counter.
Aggression does leave holes and they do exist in Velasquez’s aggression, but distance and a chase is necessary to bring those holes out. Dos Santos would do far better executing a Machida strategy of running three times and intercepting with a right straight once than he would attempting to counter with a body jab or hook, or throw a jab while backing away each time Velasquez comes in.
The flaws are there. Velasquez does leave himself exposed, but at the same time he has heavy hands, elite wrestling and a pace that cannot be matched. Dos Santos has the tools and the power; it’s whether he can understand the difference between worthless counters and priceless ones that will decide how this fight plays out.
Pick up Jack’s eBooks Advanced Striking and Elementary Striking from his blog, Fights Gone By.