UFC 180: Early Predictions for Werdum vs. Hunt Main Event

When UFC 180 comes to an end, we will see an interim UFC heavyweight champion for the fourth time in the division’s history. The question is, who will keep the belt warm until the return of champion Cain Velasquez affords the interim champion the oppor…

When UFC 180 comes to an end, we will see an interim UFC heavyweight champion for the fourth time in the division’s history. The question is, who will keep the belt warm until the return of champion Cain Velasquez affords the interim champion the opportunity to become the undisputed champion? 

Fabricio Werdum has certainly earned his way to this spot. The 37-year-old Brazilian has gone 4-0 in his second stint with the UFC and holds wins over heavyweight notables Roy Nelson, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Travis Browne in that stretch. 

Mark Hunt, meanwhile, is 1-1-1 in his last three UFC bouts, although it should be noted that the draw with Antonio Silva was changed to a no-contest on Silva’s record due to a failed drug test, according to MMA Junkie.

With 14 of their 21 collective wins coming by way of finish, this is a title fight you won’t want to miss. Here’s when and where you can catch all of the action.

 

When: Saturday, Nov. 15

Start Time: Fight Pass Prelims at 7 p.m. ET; Fox Sports 1 Prelims at 8 p.m. ET; Main Card PPV at 10 p.m. ET

Where: Arena Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico

Live Stream: UFC.tv

Odds via Odds Shark as of Sunday, Nov. 9 at 11:30 p.m. ET.

 

Fight Preview

Stylistically, it doesn’t get more interesting than this one. This is a classic slugger vs. grappler matchup, and the winner will be the fighter who can keep the fight where he wants it. 

In Hunt’s case, that means keeping the fight right where it starts—standing. The Super Samoan is a knockout artist with the one-punch power to put the belt around his waist at any moment if Werdum loses focus for even a split second. 

Hunt’s power was on full display in his last bout against Roy Nelson. Taking on one of the toughest fighters in the division, Hunt handed Big Country his first knockout loss since 2008. By contrast, Vai Cavalo wasn’t able to put Nelson away, despite landing 91 significant strikes in three rounds, per FightMetric

For Werdum, his goal should be to take this fight to the mat. The jiu-jitsu black belt is one of the best submission artists in the division and is facing an opponent who has historically been weak at defending submissions. Hunt has picked up six of his eight losses by way of submission. 

Here’s a look at the statistical breakdown of these two fighters:

 

Prediction

As a man who has fought both Hunt and Werdum, Alistair Overeem has insight few others can provide. In an interview with Submission Radio, via Jamie Penick of MMATorch, the Demolition Man gave Werdum the slight edge despite a strength advantage for Hunt:

You know, at the heavyweight division it can go either way… Hunt is an exceptional fighter, but Fabricio has been showing great skill in his last several fights. It can go either way. That being said, I give Fabricio a slight advantage, but Hunt, Hunt is no easy [fight]. I fought him back in 2008. He’s the strongest guy I’ve ever fought. You know if you get hit [by Mark], you’ve got a problem.

It’s difficult to disagree with Overeem’s assessment. Werdum is the more skilled fighter overall. He has learned to utilize his length in the striking game. His ground game is far superior to Hunt’s, and he has more ways to win this fight. 

It’s important to acknowledge that Hunt’s strength and power can be game-changers, though. The former K-1 combatant isn’t easy to take down and can end the fight with one punch at any time. 

However, as the old adage goes, technique beats strength. Despite all of Hunt’s strength, few fighters possess better technique than Vai Cavalo. That should be the difference in this bout. Werdum will wear Hunt down early and submit him in the later rounds. 

Werdum via fourth-round submission.

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Fabricio Werdum vs. Mark Hunt: A Full Head-to-Toe Breakdown

Times are tough for the top mixed martial arts promotion on the planet. While it once planned to bring the undisputed baddest man on the planet to the very soil into which his family roots are entrenched, an unfortunate knee injury took a highly antici…

Times are tough for the top mixed martial arts promotion on the planet. While it once planned to bring the undisputed baddest man on the planet to the very soil into which his family roots are entrenched, an unfortunate knee injury took a highly anticipated heavyweight championship bout and effectively morphed it into a shell of its former self. 

Don’t get me wrong—this is undoubtedly a phenomenal opportunity for Mark Hunt, Cain Velasquez’s replacement. He’ll look to shatter all former expectations placed upon him and his old 5-7 professional record by having Dana White wrap a shiny interim title around his waist in the heart of Mexico. 

But improving his record to 11-8-1 won’t come without breaking a sweat. He’ll have to get past surging heavyweight title contender Fabricio Werdum, who’s authored a four-fight winning streak since finding his way back under the bright lights of the UFC. 

Scroll along as we provide a head-to-toe breakdown and explain which of the two fighters holds the upper hand in striking, grappling and wrestling. 

Begin Slideshow

UFC Fight Night 55, 56 Results: Burning Questions Heading into UFC 180

UFC Fight Nights 55 and 56 are in the books. The results are as follows:
Fight Night 55

Luke Rockhold def. Michael Bisping, submission (Round 2, 0:57) 
Al Iaquinta def. Ross Pearson, TKO (Round 2, 1:39)
Robert Whittaker def. Clint Hester, TK…

UFC Fight Nights 55 and 56 are in the books. The results are as follows:

Fight Night 55

  • Luke Rockhold def. Michael Bisping, submission (Round 2, 0:57) 
  • Al Iaquinta def. Ross Pearson, TKO (Round 2, 1:39)
  • Robert Whittaker def. Clint Hester, TKO (Round 2, 2:43)
  • Soa Palelei def. Walt Harris, TKO (Round 2, 4:49)
  • Jake Matthews def. Vagner Rocha, submission (Round 2, 1:52)
  • Anthony Perosh def. Guto Inocente, submission (Round 1, 3:46)
  • Sam Alvey def. Dylan Andrews, knockout (Round 1, 2:16)
  • Louis Smolka def. Richie Vaculik, TKO (Round 3, 0:18)
  • Chris Clements def. Vik Grujic, TKO (Round 1, 3:06)
  • Daniel Kelly def. Luke Zachrich, submission (Round 1, 4:27)
  • Marcus Brimage def. Jumabieke Tuerxun, knockout (Round 1, 2:58)

 

Fight Night 56

  • Ovince Saint Preux def. Mauricio Rua, knockout (Round 1, 0:31)
  • Ian McCall vs. John Lineker—Cancelled
  • Warlley Alves def. Alan Jouban, unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Claudio Silva def. Leon Edwards, split decision (28-29, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Dhiego Lima def. Jorge Oliveira, unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Juliana Lima def. Nina Ansaroff, unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Diego Rivas def. Rodolfo Rubio, unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Caio Magalhaes def. Trevor Smith, knockout (Round 1, 0:31)
  • Leandro Silva def. Charlie Brenneman, submission (Round 1, 4:15)
  • Thomas Almeida def. Tim Gorman, unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
  • Colby Covington def. Wagner Silva, submission (Round 3, 3:26)

Next up? UFC 180.

While the card has been dealt blow after blow with (deep breath) Norman Parke, Erik Perez, Joe Lauzon, Diego Sanchez and, of course, Cain Velasquez being sidelined…it still has Mark Hunt and Fabricio Werdum, and that’s just awesome. 

So what questions are key entering UFC 180? Find out right here!

Begin Slideshow

Mark Hunt: I Throw Punches ‘And There Goes Your F—Ing Black Belt’

Upcoming UFC interim heavyweight title challenger Mark Hunt is known for having cinder blocks for hands, but many pundits wonder if he’ll be able to deal with Fabricio Werdum’s dangerous submission game. 
During an interview with Submission Radio,…

Upcoming UFC interim heavyweight title challenger Mark Hunt is known for having cinder blocks for hands, but many pundits wonder if he’ll be able to deal with Fabricio Werdum‘s dangerous submission game. 

During an interview with Submission Radio, “The Super Samoan” explained his submission defense is simply a good striking offense. 

Well everyone’s a world class ground fighter until they get a punch to the face. So that’s how I deal with all these ground fighters like everyone else. I hit ’em in the head and there goes your f—ing black belt…I know his game will be to push the pace to try and get me tried, to try and shoot the takedown so I’m on the ground, you know what I mean? It’s the same thing. If he tries to stand and bang, well then good for me. 

After an abysmal 0-6 run inside the cage between July 2006 and September 2010, Hunt staged a career resurgence, compiling a 5-1-1 record since then. 

Hunt most recently had his punching power on full display when he knocked out the typically iron-chinned Roy Nelson at UFC Fight Night 52 in September. 

His only loss since September 2010 was when he got knocked out by former UFC heavyweight champion Junior dos Santos at UFC 160 in May of last year. 

As for Werdum, a decorated Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, he has compiled a solid 4-0 mark since returning to the Octagon in February 2012. 

During that 20-month span, “Vai Cavalo” has defeated Nelson, Mike Russow, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Travis Browne. 

Werdum was originally supposed to fight UFC heavyweight champ Cain Velasquez for the strap at UFC 180 next Saturday, but Velasquez withdrew from the bout about two weeks ago due to a knee injury, per UFC.com

As a result, Hunt will fill in for Werdum at the November 15 pay-per-view and they will battle for an interim championship belt. 

 

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

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Cain Velasquez and Mark Hunt Are the Reason UFC History Is Written in Pencil

In mixed martial arts we have a bad tendency to write our narratives in stone, preferring pen even in the early stages of a fighter’s career when a pencil would probably be a better choice. Oft-injured UFC champion Cain Velasquez is the perfect example…

In mixed martial arts we have a bad tendency to write our narratives in stone, preferring pen even in the early stages of a fighter’s career when a pencil would probably be a better choice. Oft-injured UFC champion Cain Velasquez is the perfect example. 

It seemed likely that Velasquez would become the best heavyweight fighter of all time. He ran through living legend Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira like an out-of-control bus, finished champion Brock Lesnar with a flurry of punches and put the kind of sustained hurting on poor Junior dos Santos that you might only see once in a lifetime. 

Every tool was there—work ethic, athleticism, will and a multitude of skill. It felt right to proclaim him the greatest of all time. So, collectively, many did, leapfrogging Nogueira, Randy Couture and even the great Fedor Emelianenko in a rush to glory.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the Hall of Fame. First, Cain’s rotator cuff gave out on him, not once, but twice. His knee, seemingly, has followed suit, forcing him to withdraw from his UFC 180 defense against Fabricio Werdum on November 15 in Mexico City.

In eight years as a professional, his body has held up long enough to get through just 14 prizefights. It’s a minor tragedy. 

Velasquez, when history is written, might end up being a “what might have been story,” a fighter with the potential, but not the longevity, for immortality, Gale Sayers rather than Walter Payton. 

Conversely, just as we’re too quick to crown kings, we’re too fast on the trigger when it’s time to proclaim a fighter’s career has run its course. MMA is a sport of instant hot takes. No one simply loses. They are exposed. A fighter doesn’t get knocked out. His glass jaw is revealed. We build them, sometimes it seems, simply to knock them back to Earth.

Here the example is Mark Hunt, the man who will step into Velasquez’s shoes and fight Werdum for the interim championship. The former K-1 kickboxing champion was such a non-entity when Zuffa bought the Pride Fighting Championships that the UFC brass wanted to buy him out of his contract rather than fly him in to fight. 

I told him, ‘Look man, we’ll pay you what we owe you for the rest of the contract and go ahead and do your thing,'” UFC President Dana White told Yahoo’s Kevin Iole. “But he got so mad when I said that. ‘[Expletive] you! [Expletive] you! I’m not doing that. I’m fighting.'” And look at him. It turns out that in the long run, he was right and we were wrong. He’s earned 10 times what he’d have made if we’d just paid him off and here he is fighting for the title.”

And, here’s the thing—who could blame White for not wanting anything to do with him? Already 36 years old, Hunt was coming off five consecutive losses, including defeats at the hands of middleweights Melvin Manhoef and Gegard Mousasi. These weren’t just any losses either. For the most part, even against men he massively outweighed, he never even looked competitive.

For Hunt, MMA was a work in progress when Zuffa came calling. His kickboxing reputation made him an attractive target for MMA promoters who didn‘t exactly provide him a sensible progression or an opportunity to get his feet wet in the new sport, matching him first with Olympic gold medalist Hidehiko Yoshida and following the judoka with a series of the sport’s very best.

“I was offered $250,000 for my first fight with PRIDE. I didn’t know what the sport was, I just wanted a different challenge,” Hunt told New Zealand’s 2on4 Sports. “I said these ground fighters are mud, they’re idiots. Like girls rolling around. But I got taught a big, big lesson.”

Despite his lackluster resume, Hunt talked his way into the UFC. Triumph, unfortunately, was not immediate. The road to championship glory started with another speed bump. His first UFC fight, too, was typical Hunt. Scheduled in an untelevised prelim, the legendary striker was forced to jerk the curtain at UFC 119 in an embarrassing loss to Sean McCorkle, a better internet troll than he was a fighter.

Hunt was forced to submit to a straight armbar, the kind of submission hold that isn’t supposed to work in professional mixed martial arts. Against Hunt, however, it was all too effective, ending his night in just over a minute.

Something happened, however, on the path to oblivion. In his next fight, the last guaranteed on the contract the UFC inherited, he knocked out Brock Lesnar‘s training partner, Chris Tuchscherer, earning himself a reprieve. A decision over Ben Rothwell and a knockout of Cheick Kongo followed and then a shot for the ages—a walk-away knockout win over Stefan Struve.

After the fight everyone was amused, but not everyone was sold. Bloody Elbow’s T.P. Grant applauded Hunt, but said the big man should stay far away from a top contender:

Mark Hunt and Stefan Struve put on one of the best bad fights of all time. From Hunt pulling mount to Struve going for an armbar without the arm, it was a giggle-fest on top of being a fun, back and forth fight. Hunt deserves a chance against a real contender, but it won’t end well for him. I’d rather see him continue to have entertaining scraps with mid-level heavyweights.

No one, however, is laughing now. An epic battle with former title challenger Antonio Silva assured that, the kind of back-and-forth display that reminds you just how perilous stepping into the cage can truly be. That fight, a draw, made Hunt a serious contender for the first time. A knockout of Roy Nelson affirmed it.

And now, without warning, the unthinkable is here. Hunt, just 5-6 when he forced his way into the UFC, has gone 5-2-1 in the world’s greatest fight promotion. And, though he accepted an offer from Dana White earlier this week at over 300 pounds, though he hasn’t trained in weeks, though the fight will take place far from home and thousands of feet above sea level, Hunt is ready to write a final chapter in his modern fairy tale.

“There’s not enough time to have a camp, but there’s no way I’m going to turn down an opportunity like this,” he told ESPN’s Brett Okamoto. “I wasn’t even meant to be here anyways. I’m not supposed to be here, you know what I mean? But in my mind I’m supposed to be here and here I am.

“This is what I’m supposed to do and I believe the hard work has paid off. Of course, I want to go in the first round and try to knock his face off. Hopefully, I can knock him out before the second round. We’ll see what happens.”

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Yep, Now Diego Sanchez Is Injured and Out of UFC 180


(Photo via Getty)

Due to a knee injury suffered on Tuesday, UFC lightweight Diego Sanchez has withdrawn from his highly-anticipated bout against Norman Parke Joe Lauzon TBA at UFC 180: Werdum vs. Hunt, the accursed Mexico City card scheduled for November 15th that has already lost one Mexican poster-boy in Cain Velasquez. The UFC confirmed Sanchez’s withdrawal this evening, adding that the event’s main card will now include a bout between Edgar “Not Leonard” Garcia and Hector “Not Lombard” Urbina.

Okay, so maybe there’s a bright side. But still…is it too late to move this damn card north to San Diego or something? Because at the moment, the biggest Mexican star on the lineup is Kelvin Gastelum, for God’s sake. Bad times.


(Photo via Getty)

Due to a knee injury suffered on Tuesday, UFC lightweight Diego Sanchez has withdrawn from his highly-anticipated bout against Norman Parke Joe Lauzon TBA at UFC 180: Werdum vs. Hunt, the accursed Mexico City card scheduled for November 15th that has already lost one Mexican poster-boy in Cain Velasquez. The UFC confirmed Sanchez’s withdrawal this evening, adding that the event’s main card will now include a bout between Edgar “Not Leonard” Garcia and Hector “Not Lombard” Urbina.

Okay, so maybe there’s a bright side. But still…is it too late to move this damn card north to San Diego or something? Because at the moment, the biggest Mexican star on the lineup is Kelvin Gastelum, for God’s sake. Bad times.