Alex Caceres Not Worried about Being Overlooked at UFC 175

UFC bantamweight Alex “Bruce Leeroy” Caceres faces the biggest test of his career at UFC 175, taking on former WEC featherweight champion Urijah Faber in the night’s featured preliminary bout. The fight will give him the opportunity t…

UFC bantamweight Alex “Bruce LeeroyCaceres faces the biggest test of his career at UFC 175, taking on former WEC featherweight champion Urijah Faber in the night’s featured preliminary bout. The fight will give him the opportunity to establish himself as one of the best 135-pound fighters in the sport.

Faber has defeated half of the current Top 10 on the UFC.com rankings, and Caceres understands that some people may be looking past him. Caceres had this to say about his upcoming fight:

“I’m always being a little overlooked going into any fight.  With my lifestyle choices, I’m a standout character. People know who I am, and they enjoy watching my fights, but I’m not a mainstream person. I’m not really out there for those kinds of reasons, for fame, glitz, glamour and glory. I simply enjoy performing these actions. Whether I’m in front of a crowd doing it, or if I’m in a hole-in-the-wall gym, it makes no difference to me, and I’m going to be happy doing it.”

He doesn’t concern himself with trying to hype his fights the way some other fighters do. He is simply here to ply his trade, and would rather communicate through his art, saying:

“You don’t see me that much out there promoting myself, and taking selfies and getting out there and saying ‘Hey, look at me, I’m the best.’ I don’t necessarily believe in all that. I’m a very simple person. I’m just a human being that does martial arts, and when I get in there I’ll do it to the best of my ability.”

“It’s not a competition between me and the other person; if anything it’s just a competition with myself. I’m trying to beat myself to see if I’m better than who I am and see if I can achieve a higher level in this playing field.”

“Bruce Leeroy” is known for his relaxed fighting style, and he is one of the more calm and complacent fighters when he’s on his way to the cage. He attributes that to his understanding of the true nature of a fight, saying:

“The way I look at it, there are only two people inside the cage, and somebody has to lose. I don’t think there is any shame in losing inside the UFC cage, inside that Octagon. Just getting there is a feat by itself. And then to beat someone who has trained for you, and is a top athlete—whoever wins is the better man that night and only that night. You always have a lifetime to get back into it and do it again, and transform yourself and get better. You can’t expect to win all the time. There are only two people in there, and one of them has to lose.”

Caceres does not fight to appease the cageside judges. In fact, when he heard his cornermen saying that he had only 30 seconds left in the final round of his fight with Sergio Pettis, his initial thought was not that he needs to find a way to win; instead, it was that he only had 30 seconds left to do what he loves and that he better make the most of that time.  

His entertaining style comes from his lack of fear or stress leading up to his fights. His goal is to achieve new heights through his martial arts skills, and being able to go in and compete and truly perform to his potential matters more than actually winning.

“I try to go in there with an empty mind and a full heart, so I don’t hesitate on the actions that I want to perform. I’m not going to hold back because I’m afraid of losing. I just want to do what I do and do it to the best of my abilities. I know with that attitude and that motivation, it will most likely lead me to victory, even though it’s not my main concern. It’s kind of like people who take life too seriously. You can’t get out alive, so you might as well just live.”

 

Mike Wellman is a contributor for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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Ronda Rousey: I Can Beat Any Woman in a Pure Jiu-Jitsu Scenario

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is unbeaten inside the cage (9-0, all finishes) and is a former Olympic bronze medalist in Judo, so it makes sense that she would be confident in her fighting abilities. 
However, during this week’s a…

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is unbeaten inside the cage (9-0, all finishes) and is a former Olympic bronze medalist in Judo, so it makes sense that she would be confident in her fighting abilities. 

However, during this week’s appearance on Damon Martin’s The Great MMA Debate podcast, the “Rowdy” one made a bold proclamation that she could take any girl in a pure Jiu-Jitsu scenario (transcription per MMA Fighting):

It’s definitely an interesting new challenge [fighting BJJ black belt Alexis Davis at UFC 175]. One thing that I couldn’t stand when I was just watching MMA and coming from Judo was all these people talking about how the Jiu Jitsu people would beat any Judo player. It was such a stereotype that I thought, and still think, that I could beat any girl in the world, any weight division, gi or no-gi, black belt and in any ruleset they want, in just pure Jiu Jitsu.

Rousey has only faced one competitor who could truly be considered an elite grappler, and that was Sara McMann at UFC 170 in February. 

McMann, an Olympic silver medalist in wrestling, did not ever see the fight hit the mat, though, as she lost by (somewhat controversial) TKO just 66 seconds into the championship bout. 

Davis (16-5, seven submissions) brings a completely different game to the table than McMann, as she has a very competent guard and excels at taking the back and locking up the rear-naked choke. 

Also a solid muay thai striker, Davis enters the July 5 title tilt on the strength of a five-fight win streak, most recently defeating Jessica “Evil” Eye at UFC 170 in February. 

Additionally, one of her victims during that 23-month span was Rousey‘s friend/training partner Shayna Baszler, whom she choked unconscious with a rear-naked choke in January of last year in a bout contested under the Invicta banner.

Will Rousey pull out another emphatic win at UFC 175 or will Davis finally be able to offer the champ a real challenge that will push her to the brink?

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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Ray Longo: Chris Weidman’s Repaired Knees Won’t Matter Against Lyoto Machida

For the first time in two years, Chris Weidman will enter the Octagon against somebody not named Anderson Silva. 
The middleweight champion was originally scheduled to take on the surging Vitor Belfort at UFC 173. Elevated testosterone levels from…

For the first time in two years, Chris Weidman will enter the Octagon against somebody not named Anderson Silva

The middleweight champion was originally scheduled to take on the surging Vitor Belfort at UFC 173. Elevated testosterone levels from Belfort and surgery on both of Weidman’s knees changed all of that. 

Now slated to make his second title defense as the UFC middleweight king, Weidman will take his surgically repaired knees into the Octagon against Lyoto Machida on July 5 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas for UFC 175.

Considering Weidman only had surgery in April, much of the MMA community was left wondering whether or not Weidman would be able to recover in time for his fight against The Dragon.

Weidman initially called his surgeries a success. He posted this photo on his Instagram profile after the surgery:

Weidman’s long-time trainer Ray Longo wasn’t as quick to claim victory with Weidman’s surgeries, telling Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour:

As a trainer, I expected him, as far as I was told, to fly off the table and everything would be great. But he did have some pain in his knees maybe a week longer than I thought. When you’re in a fight, that week seems like it’s, you know, 18 years. 

Middleweight champion or not, Weidman needs to be healthy against a rejuvenated Machida. 

After a flash knockout and checking a leg kick against the former pound-for-pound best, Weidman’s wafer-thin, asterisk-ridden credibility as the champion would only dilapidate in losing to Machida. A dominant victory after two knee surgeries would placate any doubts and propel the 30-year-old Weidman into the same sentences as UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo

Now, just two weeks before his title fight, Longo explained to Helwani he thinks his fighter is going to be just fine. 

He’s going to do it. Again, it did sound, I think, worse than it was and if anybody can do it, Weidman is the guy to do it. I think he’s dealt with adversity his whole life. You know, we have to trust in the doctors at that point and they said it wouldn’t be an issue. It started off a little rough, but I’ll tell you this, he rounded the corner. His knees feel great and he’s ready to go.

It may be difficult to tell if Longo is speaking truths or simply speaking in support of his fighter. Videos like the one below might help prove that Weidman will, in fact, be ready for his fight in July.

 

 

Kristian Ibarra is a Featured Columnist at Bleacher Report. He also serves as the sports editor at San Diego State University’s student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. Follow him on Twitter at @Kristian_Ibarra for all things MMA. 

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UFC 175 Debacle Shows Surprise Testing Is Still Best Weapon in War Against PEDs

Last week’s Nevada State Athletic Commission meeting didn’t quite turn out to be the star-studded circus we all expected.
Unfortunately, even this card was subject to change. At one point, it was thought that Chael Sonnen, Vitor Belfort and…

Last week’s Nevada State Athletic Commission meeting didn’t quite turn out to be the star-studded circus we all expected.

Unfortunately, even this card was subject to change.

At one point, it was thought that Chael Sonnen, Vitor Belfort and Wanderlei Silva might all appear—forced to face the music for a variety of drug-related infractions. In the end, Belfort got bumped, Sonnen attended briefly via phone and only Silva showed up in person to take his medicine (pun fully intended).

Officials issued Sonnen a temporary suspension and put Silva off until later, and so the most anticipated local committee meeting in MMA history fizzled—just like the idea that any combination of this terrible trio might actually fight at UFC 175 next month.

Still, the NSAC didn’t let the occasion slip by without delivering a message.

“I think it’s been well known that this commission has made an effort to eradicate unarmed combat of any illegal drugs or unauthorized drugs…” chairman Francisco Aguilar told Silva near the end of the meeting. “This (random testing) is going to be part of the norm.”

Aguilar’s comments didn’t elicit a standing ovation from those in attendance—the meeting was already more than an hour-and-a-half old—but they were certainly applause-worthy.

If there is one takeaway from the comedy of errors that has befallen the UFC 175 card, it’s that the NSAC’s newly aggressive surprise drug-testing program really works. In fact, without comprehensive, industry-wide Olympic-style testing on the horizon, it may be the best weapon MMA has in its war against performance-enhancing drugs.

It’s long been theorized that the traditional testing conducted by many state athletic commissions merely turns the screening process into a cat-and-mouse game for drug cheats. When users know exactly when and where they’re going to be tested, they can cycle off their drug regimens in time to pass.

The NSAC has taken things to the next level, turning up unannounced on fighters’ doorsteps and at their gyms to test them when they least expect it. As a result, a few of them are actually getting caught—sometimes in hilarious fashion.

This much was clear from testimony given last Tuesday by the NSAC sample collector who was sent to test Silva in Las Vegas in May. In painstaking, blow-by-blow detail he recounted for the commission how Silva and his wife both submitted incorrect cellphone numbers and—when he did finally get hold of them—tried in vain to reschedule the test.

As if they didn’t understand that the surprise nature of it was sort of the point.

Ultimately, Silva snuck out the back door of his gym to get away and in result has taken the brunt of the public humiliation during recent weeks, though his tactics weren’t that different from those employed by Belfort or Sonnen.

When Belfort was caught by a drug test back in February, his lawyer declared the results “irrelevant,” per Ariel Helwani of MMAFighting.com, and the fighter refused to release them until his hand was forced months later. Once Sonnen knew the jig was up, he abruptly retired and handled the aftermath of his positive test as if it all was just confusing bureaucratic red tape.

No amount of legal wrangling or public relations squirming, however, can totally eradicate the cold hard facts: All three of these guys failed, tripped up by the NSAC’s new surprise testing regimen.

Sonnen popped positive for two banned substances he said were meant to aid his transition off testosterone replacement therapy. Belfort had sky-high levels of testosterone when testers tracked him down as he prepared to attend the World MMA Awards. Silva said he was taking diuretics for a wrist injury, but we’ll never know for sure, and his non-compliance makes him just as guilty as the other two.

Perhaps the saddest and most telling aspect in all of this is that Silva and Sonnen both claimed this was the first time in their combined 92 bouts and 35 years of experience that they’d ever been subjected to unannounced drug tests. As for Belfort? Dana White told the media that the UFC was “testing the s–t” out of the embattled middleweight, but the first time he was given an out-of-the-blue third-party drug screening, he flunked.

Silva’s lawyer, Ross Goodman, told the NSAC his client was “surprised” by the random test and added: “It was the first time in his career where something like this (happened), out of competition, somebody showed up at his gym (to test him).”

Sonnen’s lament was similar.

“This was out of competition testing,” he told broadcast partner Kenny Florian during the live version of his retirement announcement on UFC Tonight (even though the test he failed was of the solidly in-competition variety). “This has never happened before to me.”

And thus, progress.

Had they merely been subjected to regularly scheduled fight-week testing, Silva, Sonnen and Belfort might all have gotten away with it. They might’ve cruised into UFC 175, fought, collected their various financial bonuses and cruised out, the public none the wiser that they were gaming the system.

Instead, each man now faces an uncertain future. We don’t yet know exactly what sort of suspensions will be leveled against them—and in Sonnen’s case, it may not matter anymore—but at least now there will be some consequences. At least now fans know what they were up to when they thought no one was looking.

It’s a shame that most state athletic commissions lack the funding and the resources to follow the NSAC’s lead. So long as the UFC continues to do a fair number of shows at home in Nevada, though, at least we know fighters like Silva, Sonnen and Belfort will be subjected to increased scrutiny.

These guys don’t like surprises.

It’s good to see the NSAC doing a better job of keeping them on their toes.

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Ranking the Remaining 2014 UFC Title Fights

Even without pay-per-view penchants Anderson Silva or Georges St-Pierre, the greatest MMA promotion on the face of the planet found a way to give its fans several memorable title bouts through the first half of 2014.
Whether it was TJ Dillashaw’s…

Even without pay-per-view penchants Anderson Silva or Georges St-Pierre, the greatest MMA promotion on the face of the planet found a way to give its fans several memorable title bouts through the first half of 2014.

Whether it was TJ Dillashaw’s dismantling of reigning bantamweight champion Renan Barao at UFC 173, the back and forth battle between Johny Hendricks and Robbie Lawler for the vacant welterweight strap at UFC 171, or Demetrious Johnson’s dominant, but routinely underappreciated, performance against Ali Bagautinov at UFC 174, the UFC has put on its fair share of jaw-dropping moments.

With six months left in the calendar year, Dana White and friends are looking to expand upon their already relatively successful year without either of the promotion’s biggest pay-per-view draws. 

All of these fights garner the world’s attention, but only some of them will likely quench the thirst they’ve created within the MMA community.

Read on to see how the remaining 2014 UFC title fights stack up against each other.

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Dana White on Wanderlei: ‘There’s No Way in Hell [the NSAC] Are Letting Him Off’

With all the commotion Chael Sonnen caused this week, the Nevada State Athletic Commission hasn’t forgotten about Wanderlei Silva—and UFC President Dana White sure knows it. 
At a media press conference on Thursday, White explained that he d…

With all the commotion Chael Sonnen caused this week, the Nevada State Athletic Commission hasn’t forgotten about Wanderlei Silvaand UFC President Dana White sure knows it. 

At a media press conference on Thursday, White explained that he doesn’t expect the NSAC‘s June 17 hearing to go well for Wanderlei Silva, who has been asked to appear after refusing a random drug test last month, per MMA Fighting

“I think the Wanderlei story is not going to end well … When you get caught taking performance enhancing drugs you’re gone for a year, or whatever the suspension is, but it’s never good. I think, and I honestly know nothing about what’s going to happen, but I would have to say they’re probably going to make a serious example out of Wanderlei … “There’s no way in hell [the NSAC] are letting him off,” said White. “No way in hell. They are going to bury Wanderlei Silva. In my humble opinion. They’re going to bury him.”

In a YouTube video released shortly after he was removed from UFC 175, which was supposed to pit him in a grudge match against Sonnen, “The Axe Murderer” insisted his issues with the NSAC came about due to a language barrier. 

White wasn’t buying into that excuse, simply stating “you don’t walk out on a drug test, especially in Nevada” at the same media scrum. 

After Sonnen‘s removal from the card due to failing a random drug test for two anti-estrogenic drugs, per ESPN, Silva expressed an interest in re-entering the mix against Vitor Belfort

While that seemed like little more than a pipe dream at first, it is now a complete impossibility since “The Phenom” has officially been pulled from the UFC’s annual Fourth of July weekend event, per MMA Junkie.

The Brazilian brawler will also never get the chance to settle the score with Sonnen inside the cage either, since “The American Gangster” announced his retirement from mixed martial arts on Wednesday. 

Silva has not fought since March of last year, a vintage knockout of former WEC light heavyweight champ Brian Stann, and is just 4-5 inside the Octagon since coming over from PRIDE in August 2007.

Will the NSAC, under the lead of new Executive Director Bob Bennett, indeed make an example of Silva or will he walk away with a slap on the wrist on Tuesday?

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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