UFC 173 Results: What’s Keeping Dan Henderson Coming Back for More?

Dan Henderson oozes a special breed of toughness inside the UFC Octagon. 
At UFC 173 against Daniel Cormier, Henderson was beaten, battered and broken before succumbing to a rear-naked choke in the fight’s final frame. 
He was tossed on his h…

Dan Henderson oozes a special breed of toughness inside the UFC Octagon. 

At UFC 173 against Daniel Cormier, Henderson was beaten, battered and broken before succumbing to a rear-naked choke in the fight’s final frame. 

He was tossed on his head

He was punched and elbowed in the jaw. 

He was choked unconscious

And he got up, dusted himself off and cracked jokes in his post-fight interview with Joe Rogan

That’s a little nuts, ladies and gentlemen, and it’s only one example of many that showcases Henderson’s composure under fire inside the cage. 

At this point, though, one has to wonder when enough is enough for Henderson. It’s clear that his own mind won’t let him stop—his comments in the aforementioned post-fight interview asserted as much. 

Rogan pointed him in a direction that would have made it easy to say “I think this is it. Thank you for everything,” but that thought never crossed Hendo‘s mind. 

“I’m not done yet. I’m still going to compete,” Hendo replied when asked about his future. 

Of course that’s what he said.

Hendo is a competitor. He knows nothing but competing, nothing but excellence in combat. 

Even before he began his career as a professional mixed martial artist in 1997, he was competing in wrestling tournaments, winning high school state championships and later representing the U.S. in the Olympics. 

Dan Henderson placed in the California State Wrestling Championships in 1987 and 1988, friends. There are several UFC fighters who weren’t even alive then.

His sister, Selanee Henderson, is a professional golfer. There’s something in that family’s genetic pool that makes them intense competitors capable of competing at the highest levels in whatever they decide to do.

So, to fully understand Henderson and his undying resolve as a fighter, you have to understand that this is what he does, what he knows and what he loves. 

He’s been beaten or beaten up in each of his last eight fights, yet he’s emerged the victor in four of them. His devastating power and (until recently) impenetrable chin were enough to keep him in any fight, and they are enough to keep him thinking he needs to push onward toward his next challenge. 

He keeps coming back for more. 

It’s that competitive fire again. 

At 43 years old, Henderson remains in his athletic prime at heart. He’s played a role in some of the sport’s most epic brawls throughout his 17-year professional career and only recently started to consistently come out on the wrong end of them. 

It’s clear that his body is older, that his physical skills are no longer what they once were. He’s slow and plodding, a one-trick pony looking for the big knockout and the big knockout only. 

That doesn’t work in today’s UFC, but don’t tell Hendo that. 

He won’t listen, anyway. He knows only dishing and receiving punches.

Cormier wrecked him in every possible way at UFC 173, and Hendo reacted with a smile, a joke and a look to his future fights just seconds later. 

For better or worse, that’s Dan Henderson. 

He’s an old-school fighter barely treading water in a new-school game, but as long as his head’s above water, he considers himself Michael Phelps. 

And that’s just perfect. This story will play itself out but on Hendo‘s terms and Hendo‘s terms only. 

Whatever keeps him going is in his blood, and no amount of criticism or failure is going to change that. 

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Duane Ludwig May Continue to Work with Team Alpha Male

As T.J. Dillashaw placed his hands on his waist at UFC 173, patting the golden belt that hung there as a symbol of ultimate success, Duane “Bang” Ludwig stood just a few feet behind, choking back tears and applauding his pupil. 
Ludwig became the …

As T.J. Dillashaw placed his hands on his waist at UFC 173, patting the golden belt that hung there as a symbol of ultimate success, Duane “Bang” Ludwig stood just a few feet behind, choking back tears and applauding his pupil. 

Ludwig became the head coach of Dillashaw’s camp, Team Alpha Male, back in December 2012, and his teachings fell on attentive ears. 

The primarily wrestling-based roster developed stand-up skills at an alarming rate under Ludwig, and four fighters—Urijah Faber, Chad Mendes, Joseph Benavidez and Dillashaw—earned title shots thanks to their rapid improvements. 

This is why it was so strange when it was announced in March that the team would be accepting applications for a new head coach and part ways with Ludwig in May. 

Now, May is here, and Dillashaw’s bantamweight title fight with Renan Barao is over, ending in a fifth-round TKO victory for the Team Alpha Male product. 

According to the previous news, this is where Ludwig says goodbye and disappears into the Rocky Mountain sunset. 

Or maybe not. 

A recent interview from Bloody Elbow’s Steph Daniels contends that Ludwig will continue to work with Team Alpha Male fighters in the future, most notably Dillashaw and lightweight Danny Castillo. 

In the interview, Ludwig says: 

Any of the guys from that camp that need me, I’ll always be there for them. All of them. It’s not like I’m leaving the team, I’m just opening my business out here, like an extension of the team…Obviously I will always make the time for T.J. and Danny and a few others, but my business and family come first right now.

Throughout the rest of the interview, Ludwig repeatedly professes his love for Team Alpha Male and its stable of fighters. It’s clear that he does not want to move on completely, that the “split” is really just a break for now. 

After Dillashaw’s sensational performance against Barao at UFC 173, this is excellent news for the new champ and his teammates. Ludwig clearly changed the perception of Team Alpha Male’s fighters, and he developed them into more well-rounded, dangerous combatants. 

Despite Ludwig taking some time to start his own gym in Colorado, Team Alpha Male can (and probably will) still benefit from his lessons. 

From the sounds of his interview with Daniels, he’s very open to maintaining relationships with the fighters and, despite the initial reports, is not planning a total split.

For the new and improved Dillashaw and company, that’s a relief, and it’s a fact that potentially spells trouble for the rest of the lighter-weight divisions moving forward. 

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Jamie Varner’s Foot and 4 Freakish Displays of Toughness from UFC 173

MMA fighters are not normal people. 
They’re wired differently. They’re tougher. Crazier, even. 
At UFC 173, this unnatural toughness was on full display during the night’s main card, as almost every fight featured something that left the ave…

MMA fighters are not normal people. 

They’re wired differently. They’re tougher. Crazier, even. 

At UFC 173, this unnatural toughness was on full display during the night’s main card, as almost every fight featured something that left the average male viewer cowering in a corner, contemplating his own existence and wondering just how tough that “Mom” tattoo really makes him.

Sit down, settle in, grab a beer if it helps you feel a little more masculine and click on to recap these insane moments of grit and perseverance from UFC 173.

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Renan Barao’s Coach Wants Immediate Rematch with Dillashaw in Brazil

Renan Barao’s head coach, Andre Pederneiras, wants an immediate rematch with TJ Dillashaw…in Brazil. 
According to MMA Fighting’s Guilherme Cruz, the Nova Uniao trainer and coach recently appeared on the radio show No Mundo da Luta, where he sai…

Renan Barao‘s head coach, Andre Pederneiras, wants an immediate rematch with TJ Dillashaw…in Brazil. 

According to MMA Fighting’s Guilherme Cruz, the Nova Uniao trainer and coach recently appeared on the radio show No Mundo da Luta, where he said that he’s targeting a second scrap with the newly minted bantamweight king at UFC 179 in Rio de Janeiro

We’re asking for an immediate rematch. It’s fair, and we’re looking a way to do it…It can’t happen in less than five or six months, but I think that’s how long T.J. is going to be out. Everybody wants to see another fight between them, since it was the fight of the night.

Pederneiras even did his part to hype the rematch on air, questioning Dillashaw‘s manhood and not-so-subtly inferring that the new champ would be afraid to take this hypothetical fight. 

Let’s see (if) these guys are man enough to fight Barao in his house,” Pederneiras said.

Even in the sport of MMA, where illogical fights are booked so long as they can generate some interest, this makes no sense.

For starters, Dillashaw demolished Barao from the first second of the first round until the finish in the fifth round, a one-sided massacre unlike anything we’ve seen from a challenger since Cain Velasquez dethroned Junior dos Santos at UFC 155. 

This was not a fluke victory or an early one-punch knockout; this was Dillashaw completely outclassing the champion wherever the fight went. 

Barao should not receive an immediate rematch just because he’s Renan Barao. If he had stood toe-to-toe with Dillashaw and dropped a controversial split decision, then we can talk. As it is, though, Barao owns no claim to a rematch after his performance at UFC 173

Secondly, why Brazil? Why should the champion feel the need to prove his manliness by fighting in the challenger’s home country? You lose badly and then ask for a rematch on your home turf? 

As fun and wild as it would be, that makes no sense. 

Finally, we have Raphael Assuncao, the Brazilian bantamweight stud who had to decline the fight with Barao at UFC 173 due to injury. 

Dillashaw was not even supposed to fight for the title; that was Assuncao‘s fight to take. The injury bug is a feisty beast, though, and Assuncao politely turned down his shot at the 135-pound strap, gifting Dillashaw the opportunity of a lifetime. 

For his part, Assuncao is on a six-fight winning streak, and he’s the last man to defeat Dillashaw inside the Octagon, doing so by split decision in October 2013 at UFC Fight Night: Maia vs. Shields.

He’s obviously next in line, and the rematch injects a nice dose of intrigue to the future showdown. 

Oh, and Assuncao probably shouldn’t expect to receive this fight in Brazil.

That’s just not how it works.  

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Will UFC 173 Force the UFC to Learn Its Lesson About Promoting Fighters?


(Photo via Getty)

By Matt Saccaro

Regarding Renan Barao and the bantamweight division, the UFC had a promotion problem. Barao was one of the sport’s greatest fighters, yet he couldn’t fill a bar showing the PPV if they gave away free food and free beer.

Fans didn’t care about Barao, and there was nothing the UFC could do to change that. While Barao’s inability to speak English, rugged good looks, and total apathy regarding the salesman part of being a prize fighter certainly didn’t make promoting him easy, building Barao was still the UFC’s job. And they continuously failed.

MMA Junkie’s Ben Fowlkes analyzed this issue in the days before UFC 173 [Editor’s note: Hilariously, Dana White grilled Fowlkes for the article but admitted to not reading it…]:


(Photo via Getty)

By Matt Saccaro

The UFC had a promotion problem with Renan Barao. He was one of the sport’s greatest fighters, yet he couldn’t fill a bar showing the PPV if they gave away free food and free beer.

Fans didn’t care about Barao, and there was nothing the UFC could do to change that. While Barao’s inability to speak English, rugged good looks, and total apathy regarding the salesman aspect of being a prize fighter certainly didn’t make promoting him easy, building Barao was still the UFC’s job. And they continuously failed.

MMA Junkie’s Ben Fowlkes analyzed this issue in the days before UFC 173 [Editor’s note: Hilariously, Dana White grilled Fowlkes for the article but admitted to not reading it…]:

First Barao was a “monster.” Then he was a “killer.” Now he’s “the pound-for-pound best fighter in the world,” according to White, and just in case you aren’t buying that, he’ll go ahead and bury you with stats. Because nothing gets fans fired up for a title fight quite like math.

It’s hard to blame the UFC too much. On paper, Barao should be a superstar. His unbeaten streak is legitimately impressive, even if the first few years of it came against regional nobodies, and even if White apparently felt the need to fudge some of those numbers when touting Barao’s stats (“The kid hasn’t lost a fight in 35 fights,” said White, which isn’t exactly true, since Barao is 32-1 according to Sherdog and 28-1 according to MMA.tv).

But if Barao’s struggle to go big time tells us anything, it might be that skill doesn’t sell as much as we’d like to pretend it does. Not by itself, anyway. Not if it comes wrapped up in the package of a 135-pound fighter who doesn’t speak much English, doesn’t have much in the way of an identifiable personality, and – let’s just be real here – looks a little bit goofy.

Leading up to UFC 173, The Washington Post ran a story about the UFC. Renan Barao’s name wasn’t mentioned once. Instead, the article was a thinly veiled hagiography of Dana White. The Renan Barao situation, in addition to the above, was also the result of promoting the brand and the figurehead over the fighters. The question most casual fans asked during fight week was “Who the fuck is Renan Barao?”

Furthermore, the “this guy is a pound-for-pound monster, buy our shit” line has been trotted out far too often lately. According to MMA Owl’s Mike Fagan, Dana White—and the UFC’s promotional efforts by extension—have touted as many as five pound-for-pound kings in the last year. Exaggerations lose selling power as they become more common.

But the UFC got lucky last night. Instead of a champion with zero marketability thanks to the language barrier and a lemur-like face, the UFC now has TJ Dillashaw to work with—a conventionally attractive American who won the title via complete domination. Hopefully the UFC has learned its lesson, and will promote Dillashaw as something other than a great fighter, because it has been proven time and time again that greatness alone doesn’t sell.

UFC 173: Matches to Make for the Entire Fight Card

Heading into UFC 173, Renan Barao was on his way to becoming the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world. Following the fight card, Barao is no longer the UFC bantamweight champion.
A massive underdog, Dillashaw dominated the Brazilian from start to …

Heading into UFC 173, Renan Barao was on his way to becoming the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world. Following the fight card, Barao is no longer the UFC bantamweight champion.

A massive underdog, Dillashaw dominated the Brazilian from start to finish Saturday. After knocking Barao down in the opening round, he cruised into the fifth round with a massive lead. Nonetheless, he kept the pressure on and finished Barao with strikes in the final stanza.

Who will be the first fighter to challenge Dillashaw? Could it be an immediate rematch with Barao, or might it be a rematch with Raphael Assuncao, who defeated Dillashaw only seven months ago?

Here are the matches that should be made for all the competitors on the UFC 173 fight card.

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