The UFC President says Werdum-Hunt winner could be new UFC champ if Velasquez isn’t back by early 2015.
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The UFC President says Werdum-Hunt winner could be new UFC champ if Velasquez isn’t back by early 2015.
Continue Reading Archives: Cain Velasquez Could Be Stripped Of UFC HW Championship (2014) at MMA News.
The UFC President says Werdum-Hunt winner could be new UFC champ if Velasquez isn’t back by early 2015.
Continue Reading Archives: Cain Velasquez Could Be Stripped Of UFC HW Championship (2014) at MMA News.
Don’t bother showing up to UFC 188, Fabricio Werdum.
You have no chance. Cain Velasquez is going to kill you. Even if you make it to the fifth round, Velasquez is going to beat you up worse than he did Junior dos Santos.
Those are not my words. T…
Don’t bother showing up to UFC 188, Fabricio Werdum.
You have no chance. Cain Velasquez is going to kill you. Even if you make it to the fifth round, Velasquez is going to beat you up worse than he did Junior dos Santos.
Those are not my words. They belong to Velasquez’s head coach Javier Mendez. Mendez has been quite acerbic in the lead up to UFC 188, which features a heavyweight unification title fight between his main man Velasquez and interim champion Fabricio Werdum.
Just for fun, let’s let some of the quotes stand on their own (spread across the two articles linked to above):
“He’s [Cain] gonna kill him [Werdum].”
“Werdum’s not going to be able to handle the intensity”
“Werdum has no chance. Cain’s gonna do what he wants to do with him.”
“By saying a zero chance, it’s not an actual statement. “I’m saying he [Werdum] has little chance.
“He’s [Cain] going to win every round. He’s either going to stop him or give him the beating of his life.”
“He’s never going to make…if [Werdum] makes five rounds, he’s going to get beat up worse than JDS. I tell you that, I say that, and it will happen.”
If that weren’t enough, Mendez specified that Werdum isn’t on the same level as JDS.
“I’ll never forget how great of a fighter JDS is, and I’m sorry — Fabricio is good, I don’t take that away from him, he’s really good — but he’s not JDS. And there’s no one out there that’s at the level of JDS. There isn’t.”
JDS is, of course, Junior dos Santos, the lone man to hold a win over Velasquez. Dos Santos knocked the current heavyweight champ out back in 2011 on the first UFC on Fox fight card. Velasquez went on to get his revenge in the rematch and trilogy, pummeling JDS over the course of nearly 10 full rounds.
Mendez did say that Werdum’s best chance is a knockout or a submission. That he can’t win a decision. That nobody can beat Velasquez in a decision.
And that very well may be true. Luckily for Werdum, he’s been doing a pretty good job as of late beating guys by knockout or submission. He was the first man to submit the great Fedor Emelianenko. Most recently, he leveled Mark Hunt with a flying knee to claim the interim heavyweight belt.
But there is only one Cain Velasquez. He’s the cardio machine. He sets a relentless pace inside the cage that we’ve never seen from a fighter before. The only round Velasquez ever lost came courtesy of a perfectly placed punch from dos Santos.
He’s also been on the sidelines for 20 months.
Injury after injury has kept him from defending his belt. It got so bad that the last time he pulled out of a fight, at UFC 180 in Mexico City last November, the UFC put Mark Hunt in for him against Fabricio Werdum and made it an interim title fight. UFC President Dana White went as far as to say Velasquez could be stripped of his belt outright if he didn’t come back and defend it in a proper time frame.
Werdum, for his part, is doing everything he can to give himself an edge over the cardio king. He set up his camp in Mexico City 35 days before the fight. He’ll certainly be ready for the city’s punishing elevation.
Speaking to Guilherme Cruz of MMAFighting.com, Werdum said he expects Velasquez to be “100 percent physically, but not 100 percent mentally.” He added:
I expect a different win. I want to surprise the entire world one more time, especially the doubters. It won’t be easy, though. In a perfect world, I see him trying to take me down. I land a front kick to the body or his face, or I submit him quickly after he takes me down. In a more realistic scenario, I see him gassing after three or four rounds. People will be surprised. They are used to watching Velasquez with that non-stop rhythm, but he’s not used with high-altitude and hasn’t fought in two years. We’ll see.
Werdum, who himself has dropped a little trash talk into the ether, told Bleacher Report’s Hunter Homistek that his belt is the real one (due to Velasquez’s inactivity).
All of this sets up to make for a great heavyweight fight. MMA fans haven’t had a heavyweight fight to anticipate this much since perhaps the rematch between Velasquez and dos Santos back in December 2012 at UFC 155.
Even the one and only Stone Cold Steve Austin thinks Cain Velasquez is still the baddest man on the planet. The champ will get a chance to prove that still holds true this weekend when he looks to unify the belt against the incredibly confident Fabricio Werdum.
Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com
(Pretending that Mighty Mouse wasn’t headlining the card may have been a brilliant marketing strategy — but it wasn’t enough to make UFC 178 a success.)
Reddit user thisisdanitis passes along the latest UFC pay-per-view buyrate estimates from Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer newsletter, which provide more proof that the UFC’s PPV business just ain’t what it used to be. Here we go…
UFC 178 (Johnson-Cariaso, Cerrone-Alvarez, McGregor-Poirier): 205,000 buys
UFC 179 (Aldo vs. Mendes): 160,000-200,000 buys
UFC 180 (Werdum vs. Hunt): 185,000-200,000 buys
UFC 181 (Hendricks vs. Lawler, Pettis vs. Melendez): 380,000 (This is an early number and may change somewhat based on late reporting cable systems.)
The UFC 178 estimate is the most surprising to me, because the event was so highly anticipated among hardcore MMA fans as a “stacked” card with Event of the Year potential, and it still barely broke 200k. Of course, casual fans only look at the main event, and Demetrious Johnson is basically the worst PPV draw on the roster.
It’s almost as surprising that UFC 180 performed as well as it did, considering that the card had no stars outside of the main event. And 380,000 buys for UFC 181 is very good, relatively speaking. That’s like the equivalent of 650,000 buys in 2009.
(Pretending that Mighty Mouse wasn’t headlining the card may have been a brilliant marketing strategy — but it wasn’t enough to make UFC 178 a success.)
Reddit user thisisdanitis passes along the latest UFC pay-per-view buyrate estimates from Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer newsletter, which provide more proof that the UFC’s PPV business just ain’t what it used to be. Here we go…
UFC 178 (Johnson-Cariaso, Cerrone-Alvarez, McGregor-Poirier): 205,000 buys
UFC 179 (Aldo vs. Mendes): 160,000-200,000 buys
UFC 180 (Werdum vs. Hunt): 185,000-200,000 buys
UFC 181 (Hendricks vs. Lawler, Pettis vs. Melendez): 380,000 (This is an early number and may change somewhat based on late reporting cable systems.)
The UFC 178 estimate is the most surprising to me, because the event was so highly anticipated among hardcore MMA fans as a “stacked” card with Event of the Year potential, and it still barely broke 200k. Of course, casual fans only look at the main event, and Demetrious Johnson is basically the worst PPV draw on the roster.
It’s almost as surprising that UFC 180 performed as well as it did, considering that the card had no stars outside of the main event. And 380,000 buys for UFC 181 is very good, relatively speaking. That’s like the equivalent of 650,000 buys in 2009.
The UFC’s next three PPVs should pull the promotion’s buyrates out of the garbage, at least. UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier and UFC 183: Silva vs. Diaz have massive main events (but thin supporting cards), and UFC 184 features the double title-fight punch of Weidman vs. Belfort and Rousey vs. Zingano. So where will the buyrates for those cards end up? And if more than one of them falls below 500k, will the UFC just give up and focus its business on novelty barbecue equipment?
UFC owners would probably bristle at the suggestion they even occupy the same universe as their counterparts over at Bellator MMA.
Actually, the bristling is obvious pretty much every time the topic comes up.
“I don’t give a s–t what Bell…
Actually, the bristling is obvious pretty much every time the topic comes up.
“I don’t give a s–t what Bellator’s doing or what’s going on with them,” UFC President Dana White said five months ago—via MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn—as the two rivals prepared to put on competing shows at Connecticut casinos on Sept. 5. “It’s not like Bellator is some organization you have to look out for. Let’s be honest here.”
White’s demand for honesty is rational and well put. He’s right. So far, Bellator hasn’t been on the UFC’s level. Not close. Not yet.
Still, it was impossible not to notice that Bellator 131 actually played fairly well juxtaposed opposite UFC 180 last Saturday. The smaller company’s new-look stage, smart mix of nostalgia (Stephan Bonnar vs. Tito Ortiz) and relevant action (Michael Chandler vs. Will Brooks) as well as the fact it aired for free on SpikeTV made it an appealing alternative to plunking down $55 for the UFC’s 42nd event of the year.
The action was hit-and-miss, but the production much improved and as of Tuesday morning, the ratings were fairly staggering. Bellator 131 averaged 1.2 million viewers and peaked at 2 million during its Bonner-Ortiz main event, according to a press release. Those numbers reportedly made it not just the most-watched MMA event of the jam-packed weekend, but the most-watched cable MMA event of the entire year.
The overall impression is that Bellator and new CEO Scott Coker are coming on strong for 2015, and it could be closer than a lot of people think to stealing some of the spotlight from the UFC.
If pressed on the topic, UFC bosses would likely point to the 20,000 fans who reportedly turned out for UFC 180 in Mexico City. They would no doubt invoke the 47 live events their company will pull off this year and remind us of an expanding, worldwide brand, which made pit stops all over the globe—Sweden, Australia, Brazil, China—during 2014.
All valid points, though the whole story is a bit more topsy-turvy. We all know this hasn’t been a banner year for the UFC. By most accounts, pay-per-view numbers were down across the board, and the only thing that outnumbered cries of oversaturation were injuries to many of the organization’s top stars.
On Monday, the UFC held a gala press event to announce all 45 events on next year’s schedule. It will include 13 PPVs, four on the Fox Network, 18 on Fox Sports 1 and 10 on its own digital subscription service.
It’s going to be a lot—again—and Bellator obviously can’t come close to matching it, either in scope or pure ambition.
The question is, does it have to? Would it even want to?
One of the ingenious things about Bellator’s upcoming 2015 slate is that it actually plans to scale back its menu of live shows. The company will move away from the weekly Friday night time slot it held down on Spike during the last few years, in favor of doing just one event each month.
It is, frankly, a wonderful idea—one that will better suit its relatively shallow roster of fighters and allow Bellator to better advertise and better stock each of its broadcasts. Once a month, it will sail in on the breeze, with a fun little fight card featuring a handful of fighters we sort of recognize.
Oh yeah, and it will be free, assuming you already have basic cable.
Meanwhile, the UFC confirmed this week it will only continue to test the limits of our attention spans, not to mention our bank accounts.
If you were already feeling a bit fatigued, tuning in to the ironically named “The Time is Now” press conference on Monday likely didn’t help. Sitting through the barrage of tired nu-metal music on the event’s live stream, hearing Jon Anik’s bombastic introduction and then White’s admittance that the big announcement it had promised wasn’t coming, only served to reinforce how one-note the company’s product has become.
Occasionally, it appears that the UFC only knows one way to sell a fight—with shouting and loud, increasingly dated music. That’s fine if you only do 20 events a year, but when you’re charged with promoting a fight card basically every weekend, it becomes tediously, painfully obvious.
What the UFC could really use right now—besides a more Spartan calendar—is a complete top-to-bottom change in its art direction. New music, new posters, new graphics, an altogether new feel to its promotional efforts. But so far, it seems unwilling to recognize that.
Bellator, on the other hand, just experienced significant regime change and with it, perhaps a whole new lease on life. It promises to attack 2015 with a whole new product, at exactly the moment the MMA industry sorely needs one.
If nothing else, Saturday night’s action demonstrated Bellator’s willingness to evolve. All-around improved production values were highlighted by its new Jumbotron stage set. It was a little bit pro-wrestling, and some of the entrances felt a bit too contrived, but at least it felt fresh, at least it felt new.
Bellator’s 2015 slate begins on Jan. 16, with the first of three events all featuring title fights. The stretch will be highlighted by its Feb. 27 “British Invasion” show, co-headlined by Paul Daley vs. Douglas Lima and Emanuel Newton taking on Liam McGeary. On March 27, Joe Warren will defend his bantamweight crown against Marcos Galvao.
During the same stretch, the UFC will promote nine events, and the fights it has announced for early next year so far look unspeakably awesome. If it can hold them together, the chance for a turnaround seems good.
Yet, even with a UFC rebound, Bellator’s future looks bright. It hasn’t caught the UFC. It might never catch the UFC. But America’s second-largest MMA promotion has finally found the right leadership, an identity and a niche in the marketplace.
Along the way, it will face continued obstacles. As it squeezes every drop of promotional firepower from its cadre of aging former UFC stars, it will have to forge its own new, relevant draws. It will have to sustain its momentum and continue to build a product its parent company at Viacom is interested in supporting.
But the outlook for next year is clear: Once a month, it will put on fun, free fights that—with some shrewd marketing—could seem like a breath of fresh air in an otherwise never-changing landscape.
And while we’re being honest, let’s admit it: Anymore, that could be all it takes to make Bellator the kind of organization you do, in fact, have to look out for.
Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com
At UFC 180, the heavyweight division crowned a new interim champion, Fabricio Werdum.
Knocked down and unable to threaten Mark Hunt on the ground during the opening round, Werdum didn’t look great early on. However, the Brazilian turned things around s…
At UFC 180, the heavyweight division crowned a new interim champion, Fabricio Werdum.
Knocked down and unable to threaten Mark Hunt on the ground during the opening round, Werdum didn’t look great early on. However, the Brazilian turned things around suddenly with a flying knee in the second stanza. The strike floored Hunt, who could not recover before the bout was stopped.
Werdum has solidified his spot right behind fellow champion Cain Velasquez on the heavyweight ladder. However, was his victory on Saturday enough to earn him a spot in the pound-for-pound rankings?
Here are the latest official UFC rankings, via UFC.com, which are voted on by various members of the MMA media.
Kelvin Gastelum’s storybook ride from last pick of The Ultimate Fighter: Team Jones vs. Team Sonnen to top-10 welterweight became a stark reality on December 15. The TUF 17 winner submitted Jake Ellenberger at the end of their first round co-main …
Kelvin Gastelum‘s storybook ride from last pick of The Ultimate Fighter: Team Jones vs. Team Sonnen to top-10 welterweight became a stark reality on December 15. The TUF 17 winner submitted Jake Ellenberger at the end of their first round co-main event spot at UFC 180.
The No. 11 ranked Gastelum took on the seventh-ranked UFC welterweight in a fight that was set to prove one of two things. Either Gastelum was going to solidify himself as a top-10 welterweight contender, or Ellenberger was going to silence critics and put the breaks on the rising prospect. What happened was nothing short of astonishing. The 23-year-old Gastelum finished The Juggernaut with a rear-naked choke in the closing seconds of the first frame, after a takedown and subsequent scramble.
Gastelum, a winner of four straight, was in trouble late, but brilliantly reversed the position and quickly took the back of the reeling Ellenberger. The Mexican fighter put on a great display of jiu-jitsu, but that wasn’t the only highlight. After it appeared that Ellenberger was getting the best of him striking-wise, Gastelum landed a critical takedown and was able to land a few powerful shots.
With the win over Ellenberger, Gastelum enters the top-10 of the 170-pound division and will require another elite test. Here are five potential opponents for the rising welterweight. For the purposes of this list, bouts were ranked based on their likelihood of occurring.