Ronda Rousey: ‘I’d Like to Fight Again on New Year’s’

Ronda Rousey faces a stiff test on Saturday, July 5 at UFC 175 when she goes up against Alexis Davis, but the UFC women’s bantamweight champion is already planning her next fight. 
“I’d like to fight again on New Year’s and take a little break in …

Ronda Rousey faces a stiff test on Saturday, July 5 at UFC 175 when she goes up against Alexis Davis, but the UFC women’s bantamweight champion is already planning her next fight. 

“I’d like to fight again on New Year’s and take a little break in between,” Rousey said during a UFC 175 pre-fight media conference call. “But the UFC, they know that if there’s an emergency or if they need me, I’ll step up.” 

So far in her UFC career, which began in February 2013, Rousey has fought three times, defeating Liz Carmouche, Miesha Tate and, most recently, Sara McMann

While the turnaround between her UFC 168 matchup with Tate and her UFC 170 bout with McMann was less than two months, Rousey previously faced a 10-month layoff between her UFC debut against Carmouche and her sophomore appearance in December 2013. 

Rowdy did not enjoy the effect this layoff had on her body and her performance. 

“I got offered a way later fight date [for this fight], but after fighting Miesha and seeing how ring rust did affect me, I know that I will be a better fighter at the end of the year if I fight in the summer,” Rousey said. 

To help combat this problem further, Rousey said she’s always in the gym working, even right after fights. It’s something she can’t resist, and it’s a routine that she feels she needs in order to stay sharp and polished as a mixed martial artist. 

“I don’t really do that well with down time, so I’m always in the gym regardless,” Rousey said. “A lot of fighters like to have their fight and then they go and chillax, but I get in trouble for being back in the gym like two days after a fight. … That high after a win is what I enjoy the most, not sitting around and resting.” 

Now, Rousey is set to face Davis, a challenger the champ called the “most well-rounded fighter” she’s faced during the conference call. Holding black belts in both Japanese and Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Davis is known for her prowess on the ground, but she’s developing the rest of her game at a rapid pace, and Rousey has taken notice. 

“The greatest challenge is that whatever tools that she [Davis] does have, I know that she will use them in the most intelligent way possible,” Rousey said. “And with her being so well-rounded, there are a lot of tools to be aware of.” 

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Can Chris Weidman Silence His Critics with a Win over Lyoto Machida?

With his first anniversary as UFC middleweight champion approaching, it sounds as though Chris Weidman has made peace with never getting the credit he deserves.
It’s hard to believe anyone would doubt him leading up to his UFC 175 showdown with L…

With his first anniversary as UFC middleweight champion approaching, it sounds as though Chris Weidman has made peace with never getting the credit he deserves.

It’s hard to believe anyone would doubt him leading up to his UFC 175 showdown with Lyoto Machida—a fight exactly 364 days removed from the first time Weidman toppled Anderson Silva and took a hammer to our delicate sensibilities—yet some fans remain unimpressed.

There was enough weirdness during his two 2013 victories over Silva that those people looking for a reason not to invest in Weidman haven’t. In certain circles, the “fluke” tag still lingers around him like the scent of bad cologne in a New Jersey nightclub.

Surely, though, if the 30-year-old titleholder stomps past Machida in impressive fashion on Saturday, his detractors will start cutting him some slack. Right?

Actually, Weidman expects not but contends it doesn’t bother him either way.

“One thing I’ve kind of realized is no matter how many times I win, stay undefeated or who I beat, I’m always going to have critics and doubters out there,” he recently told CBS Radio’s The Morning Show. “So, my ultimate motivating factor can’t be to prove those guys wrong, because they’ll never (quit).”

This is a classically Weidman way of looking at things. While dispatching an increasingly difficult gauntlet of opponents during his undefeated three-year run in the Octagon, he’s made a practice of not sweating the small stuff.

Or, for that matter, seeming to think about too much at all besides the task at hand.

Now 7-0 in the UFC, with five stoppage wins and consecutive victories over the greatest fighter of all time, it’s impossible to find much to criticize. So why have some been so slow to embrace him?

Some of it must be personality. The guy’s not exactly a media dynamo. He’s not going to light your interview segment on fire or give you the sort of glib sound bites that make headlines sing. Regarding his character, he’s not going to give you much at all.

But inside the cage, he’s been a bit of a revelation. Though he still lacks some experience (at just 11-0 overall), his athleticism and well-rounded skills are undeniable. Weidman may be the ideal wrestler for the 21st century MMA world, possessing a potent submission arsenal and competent ground-and-pound to go along with his slick takedowns. As his 73 percent career finishing rate attests, he doesn’t want to just drag his foes into his domain but stop them once they get there.

His coaches at the Serra/Longo fight team told us he was going to be UFC champion before he even set foot in the organization. Still, a lot of people didn’t buy it last July, when he became the first man to capitalize on Silva’s taunting-as-psychological-warfare strategy, knocking the previously unassailable champion out in the second round.

Excuses were made, op-eds written and a hasty rematch scheduled for five-and-a-half months later at UFC 168. Again Weidman encountered a lot of snickering and sideways glances, but this time he crafted an even more haunting victory. After dominating the first round, he checked a low kick early in the second that caused Silva to suffer a gruesome broken leg.

That rematch topped one million pay-per-view buys, but in its aftermath, the story was Silva’s injury, not Weidman’s success. Fans who’d been unwilling to give him his due after UFC 162 still appeared reluctant, though Silva’s long recovery and Weidman’s back-to-back victories quelled any serious calls for a third fight.

Even now, you don’t have to turn over too many rocks to find people who’ll tell you he got lucky in both bouts. Weidman may be the champion, but there remains a segment of the fight-savvy public that believes he still needs to prove himself.

To that end, Machida could fit the bill perfectly.

The former light heavyweight champion was once regarded among the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world. His career at 205 pounds evaporated after a short run with the title back in 2009—and along with it, much of the cachet he enjoyed as arguably the Octagon’s most difficult riddle.

Since dropping to middleweight last year, however, the old magic has been back for Machida. He’s strolled through wins over Mark Munoz and Gegard Mousasi and provided a controversy-free replacement as No. 1 contender when Vitor Belfort once again got crosswise with the rules.

Exactly how good The Dragon can be at this weight is still something of a mystery headed into UFC 175, though Weidman will be a 2-1 favorite, according to BestFightOdds.com. One of the champ’s principal trainers recently told Ariel Helwani’s The MMA Hour he expects nothing but more classic Weidman.

“I think Weidman is going to do what he always does,” striking coach Ray Longo said. “He’s going to get in that ring, he’s going to go forward, and he’s going to impose his will on Machida. He’s going to make Machida fight his game, and he’s probably just going to end up crushing the guy.”

Perhaps this sounds like a strange thing to say about a guy who already has the belt, but the mere fact many people still doubt him means this will be a big win for Weidman.

If he can stop Machida from dancing circles around him, then the whispers about chance knockouts and freak injuries must necessarily fall away. There simply won’t be much left for his critics to pick on anymore, at least not as it relates to his bell-to-bell performances.

Weidman will never light up the media like peers Jon Jones or Ronda Rousey, and it’s a long shot that he’ll enjoy the longevity of a Silva or Georges St-Pierre.

Make no mistake, though: Luck has had nothing to do with his success.

Because he’s apparently been granted the serenity to accept the things he cannot change, Weidman says he doesn’t care that some fans may never recognize him as the No. 1 middleweight on the planet and that his wins over Silva might always be shortchanged as flukes.

If he adds another stoppage win over Machida, however, here’s hoping the rest of us have the wisdom to know the difference.

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Gamblers Beware: Ronda Rousey is Currently a 20-1 Favorite (!!) Over Alexis Davis at UFC 175


(Cheer up, Ronda, you got this in the bag. Photo via Teckler)

There haven’t been many of us buzzing about Ronda Rousey‘s co-main event title fight with Alexis Davis at UFC 175 this weekend, if only because it is the least competitive fight to be booked since Bunny, B. vs. the Bull. How the UFC has managed to avoid marketing Davis as “Ronda Rousey’s toughest test to date” despite this is anyone’s guess, but as ESPN’s Brett Okamoto recently pointed out, Vegas bookies are giving Rousey almost an unprecedented edge here. Take a look for yourself

Not Bonnar vs. Silva. Not McKenzie vs. Mendes. Not Cro Cop vs. Sanchez. None of these squash matches hold a candle to the slaughter that Rousey vs. Davis is primed to be. For Christ’s sake, that barista who fought Daniel Cormier was given 12-to-1 odds, and he accepted the fight on less than a week’s notice.

But rather than fall back on the old standby of how fights like Rousey vs. Davis are a clear sign of the UFC’s rapidly dissolving product, I’ve instead opted to compile a list of things more likely to happen than a Davis win on Saturday…


(Cheer up, Ronda, you got this in the bag. Photo via Teckler)

There haven’t been many of us buzzing about Ronda Rousey‘s co-main event title fight with Alexis Davis at UFC 175 this weekend, if only because it is the least competitive fight to be booked since Bunny, B. vs. the Bull. How the UFC has managed to avoid marketing Davis as “Ronda Rousey’s toughest test to date” despite this is anyone’s guess, but as ESPN’s Brett Okamoto recently pointed out, Vegas bookies are giving Rousey almost an unprecedented edge here. Take a look for yourself

Not Bonnar vs. Silva. Not McKenzie vs. Mendes. Not Cro Cop vs. Sanchez. None of these squash matches hold a candle to the slaughter that Rousey vs. Davis is primed to be. For Christ’s sake, that barista who fought Daniel Cormier was given 12-to-1 odds, and he accepted the fight on less than a week’s notice.

But rather than fall back on the old standby of how fights like Rousey vs. Davis are a clear sign of the UFC’s rapidly dissolving product, I’ve instead opted to compile a list of things more likely to happen than a Davis win on Saturday…

-Chael Sonnen talking his way out of his latest drug test failure
-Dana White reading the articles he criticizes
UFC 176 doing more than 500k buys
The Ultimate Fighter becoming a ratings juggernaut
-Roy Nelson: Weight-Watchers spokesman
-Nick Diaz: NY Times best-seller
-Jon Jones: Fan Favorite
-The American government being successfully toppled by Sri Lanka
-The New York Mets *ever* winning another World Series
-Farrah Abraham EGOTing
-Death by terrorist attack
-Death by falling coconut
-Death by chocolate
Step Up: All In living up to expectations
-Being struck by lightning. Twice. On the same day. While indoors.
Planet of the Apes becoming a reality
Terminator becoming a reality
-Oscar Pistorius being found innocent of murder
ALIENS
-Peace in Egypt
-A former President being mauled to death by a circus lion in a convenience store
-CagePotato being unbanned by the UFC

So…anyone down to throw in on a Machida-Davis-Caceres parlay with me? #WeekofDanga

J. Jones

Chris Weidman vs. Lyoto Machida: Full Head-to-Toe Breakdown

As one of the best weekends of the year, there’s no better way to cap off celebrating our nation’s independence than to sit down with some friends and family and watch two of the best middleweights in the world go to war.
In a fight that will pin an un…

As one of the best weekends of the year, there’s no better way to cap off celebrating our nation’s independence than to sit down with some friends and family and watch two of the best middleweights in the world go to war.

In a fight that will pin an undefeated champion against arguably the best counter striker this sport has ever seen, Chris Weidman will finally get a chance to showcase his skills in a title fight not opposite Anderson Silva.

Instead, The All-American will try to defeat Brazilian jigsaw puzzle Lyoto Machida any way possible.

That’s much easier said than done, but Weidman certainly encompasses the well-rounded game to once again prove he’s the best 185-pound fighter on the planet.

Here’s a full head-to-toe breakdown gauging the advantages of each man as they set to lock horns on July 5. 

Begin Slideshow

Can Returning Heavyweight Stefan Struve Be a Top 5 Heavyweight?

Stefan Struve, the No. 12-ranked contender in the heavyweight division, will return to action on Saturday after a health scare.
The 7-footer is coming back after more than a year. He was sidelined with a leaking aortic valve (via MMAFighting.com. …

Stefan Struve, the No. 12-ranked contender in the heavyweight division, will return to action on Saturday after a health scare.

The 7-footer is coming back after more than a year. He was sidelined with a leaking aortic valve (via MMAFighting.com. He takes on Matt Mitrione in an attempt to become a feel good story and begin working his way back up the UFC rankings.

The question is: Can he become a top-five level fighter?

I believe so.

Let’s start with his skills. Struve is a talented grappler who has developed his striking. His jiu-jitsu is good with his long limbs being a valuable asset. His striking has evolved, and he has shown the ability to utilize his reach effectively.

Struve has four submissions inside the Octagon to his credit, but his most notable win to date is a TKO victory over Stipe Miocic. Since losing that fight to Struve, Miocic has reeled off three straight wins and is currently ranked as the No. 6 contender in the division.

The biggest reason Struve can make his way up the heavyweight ladder and re-institute himself as a top contender is that the division lacks depth.

Fighters who are well past their prime and are on skids are still ranked in the top 15. Frank Mir, Alistair Overeem and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira still have a presence in the rankings. Only Nogueira is ranked below Struve. Josh Barnett is ranked as the No. 5 contender.

It is not an indictment that the division is weak but that it is stagnant with the same fighters of yesteryear.

If Struve can return with a win against Mitrione, it will put him back in the win column and make him a winner of five of his last six bouts. It would be hard to deny he is a top-10 heavyweight even with a year away from the sport.

With a thin division, it provides fighters with a quicker path up the rankings, and they can shift dramatically with topnotch performances.

Struve is still only 26 years of age. He is a young fighter that has been developing his skills. His five years as a UFC fighter may make it seem like he is an aging veteran, but he is not. There is still a lot of upside for the rangy fighter.

If the heavyweight division was littered with athletes like featherweight and lightweight, it may be harder for Struve to crack the top five, but many fighters in the division are lumbering heavy-hitters with not much more to offer. Struve is an athlete that can make noise.

If Struve hopes to make a run, he will have to show it on Saturday.

How does he look following the health scare, and how much have his skills sharpened while he was away? Those are the two biggest questions for Struve to answer at UFC 175. If he is able to put Mitrione away efficiently, he will re-open the eyes of the voters.

Can Struve make a run up the ladder? Absolutely he can.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Can Returning Heavyweight Stefan Struve Be a Top 5 Heavyweight?

Stefan Struve, the No. 12-ranked contender in the heavyweight division, will return to action on Saturday after a health scare.
The 7-footer is coming back after more than a year. He was sidelined with a leaking aortic valve (via MMAFighting.com. …

Stefan Struve, the No. 12-ranked contender in the heavyweight division, will return to action on Saturday after a health scare.

The 7-footer is coming back after more than a year. He was sidelined with a leaking aortic valve (via MMAFighting.com. He takes on Matt Mitrione in an attempt to become a feel good story and begin working his way back up the UFC rankings.

The question is: Can he become a top-five level fighter?

I believe so.

Let’s start with his skills. Struve is a talented grappler who has developed his striking. His jiu-jitsu is good with his long limbs being a valuable asset. His striking has evolved, and he has shown the ability to utilize his reach effectively.

Struve has four submissions inside the Octagon to his credit, but his most notable win to date is a TKO victory over Stipe Miocic. Since losing that fight to Struve, Miocic has reeled off three straight wins and is currently ranked as the No. 6 contender in the division.

The biggest reason Struve can make his way up the heavyweight ladder and re-institute himself as a top contender is that the division lacks depth.

Fighters who are well past their prime and are on skids are still ranked in the top 15. Frank Mir, Alistair Overeem and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira still have a presence in the rankings. Only Nogueira is ranked below Struve. Josh Barnett is ranked as the No. 5 contender.

It is not an indictment that the division is weak but that it is stagnant with the same fighters of yesteryear.

If Struve can return with a win against Mitrione, it will put him back in the win column and make him a winner of five of his last six bouts. It would be hard to deny he is a top-10 heavyweight even with a year away from the sport.

With a thin division, it provides fighters with a quicker path up the rankings, and they can shift dramatically with topnotch performances.

Struve is still only 26 years of age. He is a young fighter that has been developing his skills. His five years as a UFC fighter may make it seem like he is an aging veteran, but he is not. There is still a lot of upside for the rangy fighter.

If the heavyweight division was littered with athletes like featherweight and lightweight, it may be harder for Struve to crack the top five, but many fighters in the division are lumbering heavy-hitters with not much more to offer. Struve is an athlete that can make noise.

If Struve hopes to make a run, he will have to show it on Saturday.

How does he look following the health scare, and how much have his skills sharpened while he was away? Those are the two biggest questions for Struve to answer at UFC 175. If he is able to put Mitrione away efficiently, he will re-open the eyes of the voters.

Can Struve make a run up the ladder? Absolutely he can.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com