UFC 168: Predicting the Fight Night Bonus Winners

Anderson Silva has as many performance bonuses as any fighter in UFC history. At UFC 168, “The Spider” will try to break his tie with Joe Lauzon by picking up another fight night bonus in a middleweight championship bout with Chris Weidman.
Reclaiming …

Anderson Silva has as many performance bonuses as any fighter in UFC history. At UFC 168, “The Spider” will try to break his tie with Joe Lauzon by picking up another fight night bonus in a middleweight championship bout with Chris Weidman.

Reclaiming the bonus record will be secondary to Silva on Saturday, though.

Much more important to the Brazilian will be regaining his 185-pound crown. In July, he was dethroned by Weidman, who became the first fighter to ever defeat the MMA legend inside the Octagon.

While the focus will be on the results at UFC 168, here is a look at which fighters are most likely to earn performance bonuses over the weekend. 

 

Fight of the Night

Prediction: Chris Leben vs. Uriah Hall

Although Chris Leben may be in the twilight of his MMA career, he still brings the same brawling attitude that has earned him Fight of the Night honors on two occasions.

Finding himself on the wrong end of split decisions in his first two official UFC appearances, Uriah Hall has not been as entertaining. Still, his preference to stand makes him an ideal opponent for Leben, who will trade with anyone.

In his long UFC career, Leben has only been knocked out three times. With one of those stoppages coming between rounds due to obstructed vision, he owns one of the best chins in UFC history.

Should he stay standing against a knockout artist like Hall, Leben could make things interesting. The veteran might not be as technical as The Ultimate Fighter runner-up, but Leben will bring the fight to Hall and either go out on his shield or add another Fight of the Night bonus to his collection.

Other Candidates: Chris Weidman vs. Anderson Silva, Ronda Rousey vs. Miesha Tate, Dustin Poirier vs. Diego Brandao

 

Knockout of the Night

Prediction: Anderson Silva

While Weidman knocked out Silva in their first meeting, many still feel that the Brazilian is the better striker in this matchup.

The Spider has always taunted opponents and carried his hands low. It’s become part of his fighting style, but he went overboard at UFC 162 and got clipped with a left hook. Before being floored in that showing, Silva was beginning to find his rhythm and started landing heavy leg kicks.

If he focuses more on attacking than messing with Weidman‘s head this time around, Silva is capable of extending his UFC record for Knockout of the Night awards. 

Other Candidates: Chris Weidman, Travis Browne, Siyar Bahadurzada

 

Submission of the Night

Prediction: Ronda Rousey

Following their coaching stints on TUF 18, Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate will meet in a rematch for the UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship.

The last time that they met inside a cage, “Rowdy” mangled Tate’s arm to claim the Strikeforce strap. It was one of seven first-round submission wins in Rousey‘s pro MMA career.

While Tate can work all she wants on stopping Rowdy’s dangerous armbar, “Cupcake” knew it was coming the first time around and still had no answer. There’s no reason to believe another training camp full of defending armbars will save her from Rousey‘s expertise at catching foes in the submission hold.

Other Candidates: Chris Weidman, Josh Barnett, Jim Miller

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UFC 168: 5 Reasons to Watch

The UFC plans on closing 2013 with a boom. That is evident with how stacked UFC 168 is from top to bottom.
The card is headlined by a pair of title fights that are rematches. Chris Weidman looks to defend his title against all-time great Anderson Silva…

The UFC plans on closing 2013 with a boom. That is evident with how stacked UFC 168 is from top to bottom.

The card is headlined by a pair of title fights that are rematches. Chris Weidman looks to defend his title against all-time great Anderson Silva after scoring one of the biggest upsets in UFC history, while Ronda Rousey looks to defend her UFC title against rival Miesha Tate.

If you need a reason to watch UFC 168 (which I doubt you do), I’ll do you even better; I’ll give you five of them.

Despite the fact that the UFC raised the pay-per-view price by five dollars for this event, UFC 168 is worth watching on Saturday, and here are five reasons why.

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UFC 168: Anderson Silva and the Lofty Expectation of Greatness

The name Anderson Silva evokes a plethora of thoughts.
From a legendary montage of highlight-reel knockouts where he dispatched a mixture of the best fighters across the MMA landscape in epic fashion, to his seemingly never-ending championshi…

The name Anderson Silva evokes a plethora of thoughts.

From a legendary montage of highlight-reel knockouts where he dispatched a mixture of the best fighters across the MMA landscape in epic fashion, to his seemingly never-ending championship run as king of the UFC middleweight division, the Brazilian striker has given fans a long, hard gaze at what greatness in mixed martial arts can look like.

Gifted with a unique blend of speed, power and precision, when Silva has operated at his very best, the action that has unfolded has been a sight to behold. The results and success produced from his work inside the cage created a mystique—that when mixed with his free-flowing unpredictable style—put the majority of his opponents in the loss column before they ever stepped foot inside the Octagon.

But as fighters and other high-profile athletes rise higher into the public conscious, the pedestal they are placed upon can elevate to places far beyond the point where connection is possible. When greatness becomes the expectation, it becomes easy to forget the person involved is still a human being. Granted, a supremely talented and athletically gifted one, but a human being nonetheless.

When the inevitable loss or poor performance does come to pass, the fall becomes a storyline unto itself.

In Silva’s case, that setback came on July 6 at UFC 162, when underdog Chris Weidman shocked the world by dethroning the pound-for-pound great via second-round knockout. Where past challengers have gotten caught up in Silva’s ability to draw them into his fight, the Ray Longo-trained fighter kept his composure and turned the MMA world on its ear with a perfectly placed left hand.

In the immediate aftermath of the loss, Silva seemed in agreement—if not relieved by the passing of the torch. He told the crowd in attendance at the MGM Grand to embrace their new champion and that it was Weidman‘s turn to rule the division. Furthermore, he seemed to bristle at UFC president Dana White‘s talk of a rematch at the post-fight press conference.

When the 38-year-old walked off the dais that night in Las Vegas, it was uncertain if he would ever fight again. Nevertheless, it only took a handful of days before the former middleweight champion signed on for the rematch, and the fight world has been waiting in anticipation ever since.

On Saturday night at UFC 168, the waiting will come to an end when Silva and Weidman square off once more in what has been billed as the “biggest fight in MMA history.”

While a lot was riding on their first meeting, the stakes are at an all-time high in this second go-around, as “The Spider” will look to regain a title that he held for seven years. And even though a multitude of storylines will dominate the build-up to the fight, only Silva knows what his motivation for the rematch truly is.

On the other hand, regardless of whether he’s coming in as the champion or challenger, he is Anderson Silva. That name carries the expectation of greatness and brings a unique amount of pressure to the man who carries it.

“There is a lot of that involved,” Silva told Bleacher Report in regard to hovering elements that surround his fights. “People create a lot of expectancy around what they see and what they want to see. When they don’t see what they are expecting, they become a little bit frustrated. It is certainly something that exists. It is something that happens, but I believe it’s completely normal.” 

Regardless of what happens on Saturday night, he will have a legacy that will endure the test of time the same as the great competitors in other major sports. He’s come from humble beginnings in Curitiba, Brazil to forge a legendary career on the sport’s biggest platform, and the journey has been nothing short of remarkable.

While only he knows how much longer he’ll continue to love the sport, it was his passion for the art of fighting that set his storied career in motion. 

“My first inspiration was definitely Bruce Lee, but martial arts in general made me fall in love with fighting,” Silva said about his early days in the sport. “Anything that revolves around that discipline is what made me want to do it. Especially around the time I started in this sport because there weren’t a lot of guys competing at the top levels of the sport.”

With so much on the line at UFC 168 and so many achievements behind him, the man regarded as “the greatest fighter of all time” will find himself at an interesting crossroads. A victory will push his mythical status further, while a loss will bolster talk that his days of greatness are over; however, the legend will most likely keep his smile intact and his love for life going strong, whatever may come.

“Of course!” Silva laughed when asked if his point of view on his career will remain the same regardless of the outcome of his rematch with Weidman. “Of course it will.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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Anderson Silva: ‘Spider Claus’ Hands out Gifts Before UFC 168

Despite the magnitude of his rematch with Chris Weidman on Saturday at UFC 168, former middleweight king Anderson Silva still has time to celebrate this joyous time of year.
In a recent YouTube video courtesy of Fox Sports that was originally repo…

Despite the magnitude of his rematch with Chris Weidman on Saturday at UFC 168, former middleweight king Anderson Silva still has time to celebrate this joyous time of year.

In a recent YouTube video courtesy of Fox Sports that was originally reported by MMA Underground, “The Spider” did his best Santa Claus impression by handing out much-needed gifts to notable UFC superstars, including Weidman.

There’s nothing like a little fun before a fight. Watch and enjoy. Merry Christmas!

 

For more UFC/UFC 168 news and coverage,

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Searching for the “Real” Ronda Rousey


(TUF has made the public hate Ronda Rousey. But she is who she is. / Photo via Getty)

By Brian J. D’Souza

Being a woman in combat sports presents unique challenges when it comes to audience perception. For Ronda Rousey, the fairy tale-esque origin story of her being an American Olympian with tragedy in her childhood catapulted her into the spotlight as a mainstream media darling. But as quickly as she was built up as the newest UFC star, her coaching position on The Ultimate Fighter has torn her down from the pedestal of adulation.

This all raises the question — who is the real Ronda Rousey? Is she a spoiled brat who overruns boundaries because she feels entitled to preferential treatment? Or was she manipulated into losing her cool on the Ultimate Fighter set, with the results being slickly edited to paint her in the worst light possible?

CagePotato’s Elias Cepeda attributed Ronda’s athletic success to her crazy attitude, writing “Ronda Rousey hasn’t met anyone meaner or madder and that’s a big reason why she’s the champ.” However, the truth can’t be so simple when nice guys like Lennox Lewis and Georges St-Pierre have utterly dominated their competition throughout their respective eras.

Doing media in the lead-up to her rematch with Miesha Tate at UFC 168, Rousey was in fine form recently, riffing lines to FightHubTV that could be penned by whoever writes Chael Sonnen’s politically incorrect jokes.

How long ago was it that Kim Kardashian had dicks in her mouth and now she’s selling my little sister shoes?” she said at one point, trotting out some old material to the delight of the reporters in the room.

Talking to AnnMaria De Mars, Ronda’s mother, I thought I’d uncover some hidden clues to unlocking or understanding Ronda’s personality. The idiom of the apple not falling far from the tree has been used to compare the 1984 world judo champion to her daughter who placed second at the 2007 world championships and earned a bronze at the 2008 Olympic games.

“People are sometimes offended by Ronda because she does not fit how they think she should act,” wrote AnnMaria on her blog about Ronda’s stint on TUF. “At Ronda’s age, given the same degree of provocation, I would have punched out a few people, hit someone with a chair, told everyone to fuck off and walked out.”


(TUF has made the public hate Ronda Rousey. But she is who she is. / Photo via Getty)

By Brian J. D’Souza

Being a woman in combat sports presents unique challenges when it comes to audience perception. For Ronda Rousey, the fairy tale-esque origin story of her being an American Olympian with tragedy in her childhood catapulted her into the spotlight as a mainstream media darling. But as quickly as she was built up as the newest UFC star, her coaching position on The Ultimate Fighter has torn her down from the pedestal of adulation.

This all raises the question — who is the real Ronda Rousey? Is she a spoiled brat who overruns boundaries because she feels entitled to preferential treatment? Or was she manipulated into losing her cool on the Ultimate Fighter set, with the results being slickly edited to paint her in the worst light possible?

CagePotato’s Elias Cepeda attributed Ronda’s athletic success to her crazy attitude, writing “Ronda Rousey hasn’t met anyone meaner or madder and that’s a big reason why she’s the champ.” However, the truth can’t be so simple when nice guys like Lennox Lewis and Georges St-Pierre have utterly dominated their competition throughout their respective eras.

Doing media in the lead-up to her rematch with Miesha Tate at UFC 168, Rousey was in fine form recently, riffing lines to FightHubTV that could be penned by whoever writes Chael Sonnen’s politically incorrect jokes.

How long ago was it that Kim Kardashian had dicks in her mouth and now she’s selling my little sister shoes?” she said at one point, trotting out some old material to the delight of the reporters in the room.

Talking to AnnMaria De Mars, Ronda’s mother, I thought I’d uncover some hidden clues to unlocking or understanding Ronda’s personality. The idiom of the apple not falling far from the tree has been used to compare the 1984 world judo champion to her daughter who placed second at the 2007 world championships and earned a bronze at the 2008 Olympic games.

“People are sometimes offended by Ronda because she does not fit how they think she should act,” wrote AnnMaria on her blog about Ronda’s stint on TUF. “At Ronda’s age, given the same degree of provocation, I would have punched out a few people, hit someone with a chair, told everyone to fuck off and walked out.”

Far from the out-of-control attitude one might perceive from her writing, AnnMaria De Mars comes across as a sensitive, polite and hyper-intelligent woman. She’s an overachiever across the board who has earned a PhD, runs a group of technology companies and co-authored a book (Winning On the Ground). If she has a flaw that’s rubbed off onto Ronda, it’s her hypercompetitive attitude and an overbearing sense of right and wrong that splintered Ronda into a rebellious spirit.

In a blog that appeared on The Telegraph, Ronda recalled breaking three bones in her foot jumping a 12-foot fence while cutting class at the age of 15. AnnMaria was out of town at the time, but she sent her daughter to Northern California to compete in a fierce rival’s tournament without a coach.

“You hurt yourself skipping class, you don’t get any sympathy from me,” says AnnMaria, who learned of the extent of her daughter’s injuries after the fact.

The pressure from AnnMaria might have made Ronda angry at the time, but in the long run, AnnMaria rationalized that it made her a stronger competitor because it would help her deal with the hostile environments that athletes so often find themselves in on the international judo circuit.

“I see so many people in life who are held back because they don’t believe they can do something,” says AnnMaria. “You learn not to give yourself excuses.”

There’s still no telling what kind of emotional impact AnnMaria’s authoritative parenting style had on Ronda. Demanding oneself to do things better and better with each successive attempt has a way of cultivating insecurities side-by-side with confidence.

There are only superficial parallels to sports dads who pushed their sons too hard, like Marv Marinovich and his troubled son Todd Marinovich or Roy Jones Sr. and his ultra-talented son Roy Jones Jr. In those two cases, Marv and Roy Sr. expected their sons to fulfill what they couldn’t by making it to the big time of the NFL and professional boxing, respectively.

“I was against judo, I was against MMA, so I’m batting zero on this,” says AnnMaria.

After the Olympics, Ronda had a free ride to attend any of the top 500 private universities in the US thanks to her mother’s job at the University of Southern California. Her decision to make a foray into professional fighting had her mother scratching her head, to say the least.

“I told her ‘That’s the stupidest thing I ever heard. There’s no money in it.’”

Ronda proved her mother wrong, first by winning the Strikeforce bantamweight title and then by becoming the first women’s champion in the UFC. Beyond her skills in the Octagon, Ronda has an even more impressive record of giving back to the community: giving judo clinics for charity, being an advocate of a positive body image for women, and even helping facilitate the donation of rice for the World Food Program.

Ronda’s flaw is purely a matter of perception — she’s easily disturbed and oversells what the audience needs to judge for themselves. Maybe Miesha Tate isn’t a great coach. Maybe Ronda’s team needed her to console them in defeat backstage instead of her giving an interview after the TUF 18 finale. But in MMA, fans want to see an athlete who seems grateful to appear before them, like when Georges St-Pierre got down on his knees to beg for a title shot after beating Sean Sherk at UFC 56.

Georges St-Pierre had an excellent mental game that he never got enough credit for throughout his storied career. No matter how hard BJ Penn pushed him before their rematch at UFC 94 — even going so far as saying he would kill St-Pierre — GSP was unperturbed, and responded by saying that he liked BJ Penn.

“He can say whatever he wants. A lot of people can talk – it’s easy to talk, but it’s harder to walk the walk,” St-Pierre told me.

After all, the two truest things in combat sports are that everyone loves a winner and a fighter is only as good as their last performance. On December 28th, Ronda doesn’t have to concern herself with the opinions of fans, pundits or fellow-fighters. She only has to drag Miesha Tate into deep waters and slap on her signature armbar in order to exorcise the ghosts of her Ultimate Fighter experience.

While we can say anything we want about Ronda Rousey as a person, her wins will define everything that we can say about her career as a fighter.

***

Brian J. D’Souza is the author of the recently published book Pound for Pound: The Modern Gladiators of Mixed Martial Arts. You can check out an excerpt right here.

Chris Weidman ‘Doesn’t Care’ Which Anderson Silva Shows Up at UFC 168

Most of the juiciest talk leading up to UFC 168 has had nothing to do with middleweight champion Chris Weidman.
As usual, the industry at large remains in the thrall of Anderson Silva.
We’ve puzzled over Silva’s monosyllabic answers to medi…

Most of the juiciest talk leading up to UFC 168 has had nothing to do with middleweight champion Chris Weidman.

As usual, the industry at large remains in the thrall of Anderson Silva.

We’ve puzzled over Silva’s monosyllabic answers to media inquiries and what they could possibly tell us about his motives, his future and his mindset.

We’ve openly speculated which version of the former champion will show up to Saturday’s hotly anticipated rematch.

Everybody wants to know whether we’ll see a return to the energized, focused version of Silva who terrified the 185-pound division for a dozen years, or if—once again—we’ll get the dancing, taunting fool who messed around and got himself unceremoniously knocked out in July at UFC 162.

Well, everybody except Chris Weidman.

He doesn’t give a damn.

“To be honest, I don’t really care,” says the 29-year-old New Yorker, who, after 10 professional fights and less than half a year as champion, already shrugs off questions like a world-weary veteran. “I don’t care what he does, it doesn’t matter. Hands down, hands up, handstands, butt-scooting, it doesn’t matter.”

If that sounds like the trite, superficial jibber-jabber of a professional athlete preparing for competition, well, it probably is.

On the other hand, it also gives you a penetrating glimpse into the secret of Weidman’s success.

By the time he steps in the cage this weekend, it’ll be nearly six months since he landed the left hook that turned the MMA world on its ear, and while Weidman hasn’t been totally ignored as champion, he hasn’t exactly been celebrated, either.

Media types and hardcore fans have had trouble connecting with him as a personality, and they are still reluctant to view him as the best in the world. The former, because he’s a man of few words; the latter, because the circumstances of his victory over Silva have led some to reject him as a one-hit wonder

Weidman, though? He seems unperturbed.

He couldn’t care less that few people are talking about him. He doesn’t care that on the eve of their second fight he’s the underdog again and that Silva has received the lion’s share of the attention.

No, it’s not exciting—it’s downright boring, if you listen to the criticism of his short tenure as titlist thus far—but this is the attitude of a man who wins.

For the rest of us, it’s fine to wonder aloud if his first meeting with Silva was sort of a fluke. It’s OK to dismiss his KO of the previously untouchable, unbeatable champion as cagefighting’s answer to a Doug Flutie Hail Mary.

For the man who wins, however, that thought never enters his mind. As far as Weidman and his closest advisors are concerned, they went into UFC 162 with a game plan—fully prepared for the champion’s antics—and emerged with a victory.

Nothing freakish about it.

“Does it bother me?” Weidman says, when asked if it gets under his skin that people so carelessly write off his championship victory. “No, not really. It’s about what I expected.”

As for the million-dollar question of the week: Whether Silva will prove to have learned his lesson at UFC 168, or whether he’ll once again try to dance his way to victory, Weidman is also playing it steady and cool.

“It’s what he’s been doing for years, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all,” he says. “In fact, I’m going to say he definitely does it. Especially because he might think that I’m thinking that he’s not going to do it.”

During the run-up to the first fight, most of the questions and naysaying about Weidman concerned his inexperience. He was unbeaten in nine outings (five of them in the UFC), and for years his camp had been saying he’d be champion someday, but conventional wisdom said he wouldn’t be ready for Silva.

As it turned out, he didn’t shrink from the bright lights of his first UFC title shot.

He didn’t overthink the fact he was in there with the longtime best in the world.

He didn’t get psyched out when Silva started mocking him, when the champion turned his palms up and barked trash-talk or when he did a fake shimmy, pretending to be hurt by a right hand early in the second round.

Instead of being in awe of the great man, Weidman stepped up and punched him in the face.

That’s the attitude of the man who wins. If you’re looking for a snapshot of who he is as a person and as a fighter, that’s your highlight, right there.

 

Chad Dundas is a lead writer for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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