Brock Lesnar Call-out Shows Alistair Overeem Still Not in Tune with UFC Audience

We’ve known for years that Alistair Overeem marches to the beat of his own electronic dance music.
For a dozen fights immediately preceding his arrival in the UFC, he walked a relatively solitary path, absconding with the Strikeforce heavyweight …

We’ve known for years that Alistair Overeem marches to the beat of his own electronic dance music.

For a dozen fights immediately preceding his arrival in the UFC, he walked a relatively solitary path, absconding with the Strikeforce heavyweight title to flit between promotions in Europe and Asia.

At times he appeared aloof—as if he could take or leave his MMA career—mixing in the occasional kickboxing tourney and always being more concerned with the bottom line than his place in the sport.

Even now that he’s an Octagon mainstay, Overeem doesn’t seem to get it.

Case in point: Saturday night’s UFC 169, where he capped an important victory over Frank Mir by calling out a 36-year-old professional wrestler he personally battered into retirement two years ago.

“I heard there’s word that Brock Lesnar is coming back to the UFC,” Overeem told Joe Rogan inside the cage, via Yahoo Sports. “Well, I’ll be here waiting for him.”

So, yeah, that was strange.

Though he tried to explain himself during an appearance on Monday’s episode of The MMA Hour (h/t MMA Fighting), the Lesnar call-out struck a discordant note with onlookers. It was nonsensical, maybe even a bit mean-spirited and weirdly typical from a guy who’s always insisted on plotting his own unorthodox course.

Above all else, it was a reminder that Overeem still isn’t on the same page with the rest of the sport.

It’s telling that, after earning his first win in the Octagon since 2011, his first thought wasn’t to say he was coming for UFC champion Cain Velasquez.

He didn’t think to call out former titlist Junior dos Santos, whom Overeem was scheduled to fight at UFC 160 before a positive drug test put him on ice.

He didn’t even invoke the names Fabricio Werdum or Travis Browne, who have fought him before and will battle each other for No. 1 contender status in April.

No, his first thought was to passively challenge a guy who doesn’t work for the company to a fight that will never happen. A fight that—even if the seas did part for Lesnar’s return—would make them both a few bucks but would do nothing for “The Reem’s” stature in the heavyweight division.

It was the kind of thing that could only stem from a desire to mix an easy victory with an enormous payday, and Dana White squelched it immediately at the post-fight press conference.

“Brock Lesnar is not coming back,” White said, via Fox Sports. “Brock Lesnar is not fighting.”

Call it the latest piece of evidence that Overeem isn’t exactly in tune with the UFC, either.

The organization has bent over backward to fashion him into a legitimate, relevant No. 1 contender, giving him second, third and fourth chances after his positive PEDs test and back-to-back losses.

A fighter with less upside—especially one earning an estimated $285,000 to $400,000 per fight—might have found himself out of work a while ago. Yet the fight company still gives the impression that it would like nothing more than for Overeem to slug his way back into contention.

With each passing performance, however, it appears like the fearsome competitor who won 11 fights in a row from 2007-2011 might not be coming back.

White deemed Saturday’s wipeout of Mir “crappy” in an interview with Fox Sports 1 (via Bloody Elbow), and as Overeem’s Herculean physique has faded in the wake of his bust for elevated levels of testosterone, so too has his killer instinct.

At 33 years old, the picture of Overeem today may be of a once-terrifying heavyweight in decline.

Fans and UFC brass would no doubt like to see him fully engaged in the process, reverting to previous form and inflicting remorseless violence on the competition. Instead he’s slumping his way to victories over fading stars like Mir and calling out guys who haven’t been active MMA fighters since the end of 2011.

His next fight will be a big one and likely designed to get him back in the thick of the title picture—think JDS or Stipe Miocic as an opponent.

Like the Mir bout, it will also be a must-win.

If Overeem means to replant his flag among the heavyweight elite, he’ll need to show the promotion he still has the skills to do impressive things to the top contenders.

To win back the fans, he’ll have to show them that his head is still in the game.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 169: A Lesson in Appreciation


(Photo via Getty.)

By Thomas Anderson

“We also do cut-glass sherry decanters complete with six glasses on a silver-plated tray that your butler can serve you drinks on, all for £4.95. People say, ‘How can you sell this for such a low price?’ I say, ‘Because it’s total crap!'”

These were the famous words of business mogul Gerald Ratner at a 1991 institute of directors meeting. At the time he was the self-made owner of one of the world’s richest jewellery companies. By 1992 he had been deposed by his board of directors and the firm had all but collapsed.

Branding and image are everything in business; the quality of the product is second to the perception of that product. Ratner knew this only too well; he had built his entire business model on observations he had made as a boy in London’s street markets. It wasn’t the stall owners with the juiciest fruit and the freshest fish that dominated the sales; it was the ones with the loudest voices and the most tempting offers, the charming patter and the natural rapport. Yet in his folly he insulted not only his own products but the people who bought them. He laughed in the faces of those who made him rich and expected them to carry on filling his pockets. He thought he could play them for fools forever, but the man in the street is not so easily mocked and very soon Ratner was doomed.

Dana White’s words after UFC 169 and after a number of recent events brought this cautionary tale clearly to mind. Alistair Overeem’s clinical and ruthless domination of former champion Frank Mir led to a lopsided and well deserved decision win. He out struck Mir 139-5 in total strikes and 67-3 in significant strikes. When asked his opinion at the post-fight scrum White described the performance as ‘crappy.’ Not quite ‘total crap’ but well on the way.


(Photo via Getty.)

By Thomas Anderson

“We also do cut-glass sherry decanters complete with six glasses on a silver-plated tray that your butler can serve you drinks on, all for £4.95. People say, ‘How can you sell this for such a low price?’ I say, ‘Because it’s total crap!’”

These were the famous words of business mogul Gerald Ratner at a 1991 institute of directors meeting. At the time he was the self-made owner of one of the world’s richest jewellery companies. By 1992 he had been deposed by his board of directors and the firm had all but collapsed.

Branding and image are everything in business; the quality of the product is second to the perception of that product. Ratner knew this only too well; he had built his entire business model on observations he had made as a boy in London’s street markets. It wasn’t the stall owners with the juiciest fruit and the freshest fish that dominated the sales; it was the ones with the loudest voices and the most tempting offers, the charming patter and the natural rapport. Yet in his folly he insulted not only his own products but the people who bought them. He laughed in the faces of those who made him rich and expected them to carry on filling his pockets. He thought he could play them for fools forever, but the man in the street is not so easily mocked and very soon Ratner was doomed.

Dana White’s words after UFC 169 and after a number of recent events brought this cautionary tale clearly to mind. Alistair Overeem’s clinical and ruthless domination of former champion Frank Mir led to a lopsided and well deserved decision win. He out struck Mir 139-5 in total strikes and 67-3 in significant strikes. When asked his opinion at the post-fight scrum White described the performance as ‘crappy.’ Not quite ‘total crap’ but well on the way.

He proceeded to call the event ‘a catastrophe with a cherry on top.’ He went on to criticise featherweight champion Jose Aldo’s dominant title defence, stating bitterly that ‘“When you talk about being the pound-for-pound best in the world, you can’t go five rounds with guys that it looks like you can defeat them in the second round.” The fact that his opponent Ricardo Llamas was still throwing with venom and eating Aldo’s famously vicious leg kicks like cookie dough at the close of round two seems to have escaped the boss’ notice.

The night ended with the still underrated (not to mention grossly underpaid) Renan Barao starching Urijah Faber with the second best right hand of the night and following up with a series of partially blocked hammer fists that led to an early stoppage. The main issue of discussion here rests understandably with the referee’s decision, (I discuss this controversy in a short article below) but could White summon a single word of praise for Barao’s blistering performance? The closest he came was to say that the champion had been screwed by the referee and so had his opponent.

White has ridden to huge success and notoriety, if not always popularity, on the back of an abrasive personality that acts as a refreshing antithesis to the hands off approach taken by most corporate presidents. However, there is a difference between telling it how it is and completely wiping your own ass with a pay per view that thousands of people have just coughed up $50 to watch.

The show itself was admittedly something of a turn off to the casual MMA fan who may have watched the event at a bar hoping for blood, guts and glory. However, it is not those people who bring in actual PPV buys. This falls to the true fans that are willing to part with the cash they have set aside for their weekend in order to see the greatest fighters in the world show their skills.

Just as real NFL fans do not expect Peyton Manning to throw a touchdown pass every time he touches the football, real MMA fans do not expect Diego Sanchez vs. Gilbert Melendez every time they watch a fight. We understand that events like UFC 169 happen; when you make close fights sometimes they are cagey and when the title is on the line the champion will often play it safe in order to keep the gold. We understood that Overeem was on a two fight losing streak and we weren’t apoplectic with rage when he chose not to hurl haymakers in the closing minutes of a fight where he was clearly ahead; one only has to see what Abel Trujillo was able to do to Varner earlier in the night to see why. We even understand that referees make mistakes in PPV main events. However, what I find hard to stomach is the President of the UFC making me feel like the proud new owner of a Ratner and Co. sherry decanter; an oblivious fool blithely handing over handfuls of dough for a product that not even he has faith in.

Unlike Ratner’s feted speech I don’t think White’s words will have too great an impact. Aldo will move up to lightweight and find himself pushed much harder by larger and stronger fighters, Overeem will be matched against someone in his own league and Herb Dean will probably put in a series of faultless performances that make his stoppage blunder a distant memory. As for the ten fights that went to a decision, they should be seen as mere unhappy coincidence rather than a catastrophe.

White will continue to reign as the UFC’s dictator in chief and his scolding words and brazen tweets will reap their share of praise and controversy across the MMA world. Somewhere though, many somewheres in fact, someone is listening to White’s words, looking at their paycheck and making the decision never to pay again.

Gross Photo of the Day: Nick Catone Apparently Replaced His Knee With a Grapefruit Prior to UFC 169 Win


(Photo via Catone’s twitter.)

Testosterone replacement therapy may be one of the primary go-tos among fighters looking to gain an edge over their competition these days, but there’s another equally insidious, ever-expanding method of chicanery being utilized by cheaters far and wide that makes TRT look like a dinosaur technology. I’m talking of course, about MMA fighters smuggling food beneath their skin.

Yes, much like boxers have been caught with metal-plated gloves, more and more MMA fighters are being busted for Culinary Subepidermal Contraband, or hoarding food items beneath the skin, to apparently gain an advantage in the cage. Following his fight with Stipe Miocic at UFC on FOX 10, Gabriel Gonzaga was caught with a stack of oatmeal cookies stuffed into his hand, and just earlier today, middleweight Nick Catone posted the above photo to his Twitter account.

As you can clearly see, Catone, who has struggled with injuries for the majority of his career, replaced his left knee with a grapefruit (or possibly a cantaloupe) at some point prior to his split decision win over Tom Watson at UFC 169 last weekend and is now gloating about it with the above photo, sarcastically adding “Happy to get my hand raised tonight. Unfortunately I’m stuck in a terrible hospital in Newark with a torn ACL.”

Right, Mr. Catone. Tell me more about this “torn ACL” you speak of. A middle finger to the sport of MMA if I’ve ever seen one before.

CagePotato currently has its crack team of top scientists investigating what the possible benefits of CSC are, exactly, and we will update you once they finish pouring liquids from beakers into other beakers. In the mean time, watch your back, Catone. We’re onto you. (*gives Jack Byrnes “watching you” gesture*)

J. Jones


(Photo via Catone’s twitter.)

Testosterone replacement therapy may be one of the primary go-tos among fighters looking to gain an edge over their competition these days, but there’s another equally insidious, ever-expanding method of chicanery being utilized by cheaters far and wide that makes TRT look like a dinosaur technology. I’m talking of course, about MMA fighters smuggling food beneath their skin.

Yes, much like boxers have been caught with metal-plated gloves, more and more MMA fighters are being busted for Culinary Subepidermal Contraband, or hoarding food items beneath the skin, to apparently gain an advantage in the cage. Following his fight with Stipe Miocic at UFC on FOX 10, Gabriel Gonzaga was caught with a stack of oatmeal cookies stuffed into his hand, and just earlier today, middleweight Nick Catone posted the above photo to his Twitter account.

As you can clearly see, Catone, who has struggled with injuries for the majority of his career, replaced his left knee with a grapefruit (or possibly a cantaloupe) at some point prior to his split decision win over Tom Watson at UFC 169 last weekend and is now gloating about it with the above photo, sarcastically adding “Happy to get my hand raised tonight. Unfortunately I’m stuck in a terrible hospital in Newark with a torn ACL.”

Right, Mr. Catone. Tell me more about this “torn ACL” you speak of. A middle finger to the sport of MMA if I’ve ever seen one before.

CagePotato currently has its crack team of top scientists investigating what the possible benefits of CSC are, exactly, and we will update you once they finish pouring liquids from beakers into other beakers. In the mean time, watch your back, Catone. We’re onto you. (*gives Jack Byrnes “watching you” gesture*)

J. Jones

UFC 169 Salaries: Alistair Overeem Craps His Way to $400K, Aldo, Mir, Faber and Trujillo Also Clear Six Figures


(“What are you doing out there, Alistair? Quit playing around and put a *real* hurting on this guy!” Photo via Getty.)

The official salaries for UFC 169 were released earlier today, and despite being panned by 100% of Dana Whites across the globe, Alistair Overeem and Jose Aldo managed to walk away with the two highest salaries of the evening, banking $407,143 and $240,000, respectively. In a slight departure from what we have come to expect, three other fighters also cleared six figures at UFC 169, although in the case of Abe Trujillo, it was thanks greatly in part to the pair of “end of the night” bonuses he picked up for his second round KO of Jamie Varner to open up the main card.

The full list of salaries for UFC 169 is below, so follow us after the jump and take a gander, then entertain us as we yell at a wall.

Alistair Overeem: $407,143 ($285,714 to show, $121,429 win bonus)
Jose Aldo: $240,000 ($120,000 to show, $120,000 win bonus)


(“What are you doing out there, Alistair? Quit playing around and put a *real* hurting on this guy!” Photo via Getty.)

The official salaries for UFC 169 were released earlier today, and despite being panned by 100% of Dana Whites across the globe, Alistair Overeem and Jose Aldo managed to walk away with the two highest salaries of the evening, banking $407,143 and $240,000, respectively. In a slight departure from what we have come to expect, three other fighters also cleared six figures at UFC 169, although in the case of Abe/ Trujillo, it was thanks greatly in part to the pair of “end of the night” bonuses he picked up for his second round KO of Jamie Varner to open up the main card.

The full list of salaries for UFC 169 is below, so follow us after the jump and take a gander, then entertain us as we yell at a wall.

Alistair Overeem: $407,143 ($285,714 to show, $121,429 win bonus)
Jose Aldo: $240,000 ($120,000 to show, $120,000 win bonus)
Frank Mir: $200,000
Abel Trujillo: $145,000 ($10,000 to show, $10,000 win bonus, $75,000 FOTN bonus, $50,000 KOTN bonus)
Urijah Faber: $100,000
Jamie Varner: $92,000 ($17,000 to show, $75,000 FOTN bonus)
Nick Catone: $26,000 ($13,000 to show, $13,000 win bonus)
Chris Cariaso: $24,000 ($12,000 to show, $12,000 win bonus)
Renan Barao: $22,000 ($11,000 to show, $11,000 win bonus)
Ali Bagautinov: $20,000 ($10,000 to show, $10,000 win bonus)
Al Iaquinta: $20,000 ($10,000 to show, $10,000 win bonus)
Alan Patrick: $16,000 ($8,000 to show, $8,000 win bonus)
Clint Hester: $16,000 ($8,000 to show, $8,000 win bonus)
Rashid Magomedov: $16,000 ($8,000 to show, $8,000 win bonus)
Neil Magny: $16,000 ($8,000 to show, $8,000 win bonus)

John Makdessi: $12,000
Ricardo Lamas: $10,000
John Lineker: $8,000
Danny Martinez: $8,000
Tom Watson: $8,000
Kevin Lee: $8,000
Andy Enz: $8,000
Tony Martin: $8,000
Gasan Umalatov: $8,000

Per usual, we should inform you that these figures are absent of any undisclosed locker room bonuses, training fees, etc.

Underpaid: Once you realize that former WEC lightweight champ Jamie Varner only makes 17k to show after 11 years in the game, you start to understand why he’s so willing to put it all on the line, even if it means walking face first into his opponent’s fists, to secure an “end of the night” bonus. We’re not saying he’s underpaid per se, considering he’s dropped 3 out of his past 4 fights, we’re just saying that it sucks to see how undervalued he is.

Who else? Let’s scan down the list here an-RENAN BARAO ONLY MADE 22K R U SRS BRO?! RICARDO LAMAS MADE 10K TO FIGHT FOR A TITLE?!! GAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!

Overpaid: 

J. Jones

Jon Jones Wants Celebrity Boxing Match with George Zimmerman

Add UFC light heavyweight champ Jon Jones’ name to the growing list of celebrities hoping for an opportunity to punch George Zimmerman in the face.
Zimmerman recently revealed to RadarOnline.com that he plans on competing in a “celebrity bo…

Add UFC light heavyweight champ Jon Jones’ name to the growing list of celebrities hoping for an opportunity to punch George Zimmerman in the face.

Zimmerman recently revealed to RadarOnline.com that he plans on competing in a “celebrity boxing match” in March.

In a post on Twitter, Jones said that he would have “gladly” taken the fight if it didn’t interfere with training for his upcoming title bout with Glover Teixeira.

Zimmerman is widely recognized for the death and fatal shooting of 17-year-old high school student Trayvon Martin. He was acquitted after standing trial and pleading not guilty to murder by reason of self-defense.

In the exclusive interview with Radar, Zimmerman claims boxing was a hobby he had “prior to the incident” as a means for accomplishing his weight-loss goals. After mulling over the idea of actually competing with a friend, he was introduced to celebrity boxing promoter Damon Feldman.

The two came to an agreement on a March 1 bout that will air exclusively online and through pay-per-view. According to Zimmerman, all of his cash earnings will be donated to charity.

Several notable names have popped up in the last few days as potential opponents, including rap superstars Kanye West, The Game and DMX.

“I don’t have a preference [on opponent] as long as it goes to charity, doesn’t matter to me. Hopefully someone that won’t hurt me too bad!” Zimmerman told Radar.

Luckily for Zimmerman, Jones will be busy training for his April 26 bout with Teixeira.

An average Joe taking on a professional fighter and world champion in a glorified sparring match wouldn’t have been a pretty sight anyway.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Rankings for Each Weight Division Following UFC 169

At UFC 169, Jose Aldo picked up his sixth consecutive UFC title defense by beating Ricardo Lamas.
That tied him with light heavyweight champion Jon Jones for the most successful championship defenses during a current UFC title reign. Considering his do…

At UFC 169, Jose Aldo picked up his sixth consecutive UFC title defense by beating Ricardo Lamas.

That tied him with light heavyweight champion Jon Jones for the most successful championship defenses during a current UFC title reign. Considering his dominance in the featherweight class dates back to his WEC days, Aldo could be considered the top pound-for-pound fighter in MMA.

Was beating Lamas on Saturday enough to vault the Brazilian above Jones?

With UFC 169 in the books and UFC Fight Night 36 ahead, here are the latest official UFC rankings.

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