UFC 181 Results: Recapping the Fight Night Bonuses

UFC 181 delivered the action we were promised, and four different fighters walked out of the event with an extra $50,000 in performance bonuses.
We will get the bonuses in just a second, but let’s recap the two main event fights first.
Robbie Lawler ca…

UFC 181 delivered the action we were promised, and four different fighters walked out of the event with an extra $50,000 in performance bonuses.

We will get the bonuses in just a second, but let’s recap the two main event fights first.

Robbie Lawler capped off a remarkable career comeback with a split-decision win over Johny Hendricks to claim the UFC welterweight championship. His former training partner and a former UFC welterweight champion himself, Matt Hughes, was there to put the title around his waist.

In the co-main event, Anthony Pettis defeated Gilbert Melendez with a surprising guillotine in the second round.

Of the four main event fighters, only one would earn a bonus check. The other three fighters were all a part of the UFC 181 preliminary card. Let’s take a gander at the winners of the bonus money in Vegas. Also, per UFC on Fox’s Twitter account:

 

Fight of the Night: Sergio Pettis vs. Matt Hobar

These two bantamweights put on a show in the second fight of the evening.

Hobar put Pettis on the mat in the first exchange of the fight. Pettis was not in much danger of being finished as he stayed active, but Hobar was able to score more points. When the fight got back to the feet, Hobar was quick to land a takedown.

Pettis had some offense in the first round to make it close, but Hobar‘s early drop of Pettis and takedowns later in the round helped put him out front early.

The younger brother of Anthony Pettis dropped Hobar in the second round with a bodyshot, but he couldn’t finish. Once back on the feet, Pettis continued to hit Hobar.

One of Pettis‘ kicks was caught, and the remainder of the second frame was spent with Pettis searching for a triangle choke.

The decisive third round was Pettis‘. He connected on far more punches and kicks, and he avoided the takedowns of Hobar. He was able to do enough on the judge’s scorecards to take the final frame and the victory.

Hobar put on a nice show with Pettis, and the $50,000 payday will help take the sting out of the loss.

 

Performance of the Night: Josh Samman

Coming into the fight, a lot was talked about regarding Samman‘s personal tragedies during the past year. He was an emotional favorite, but he was taking on the talented The Ultimate Fighter winner Eddie Gordon.

Gordon’s wrestling and top control was much the story for the first round and some of the second. Samman was not taking too much damage, although it was not beneficial to score points on the scorecards.

In the second round, Gordon was stood up for being inactive. Samman and Gordon had a brief exchange on the feet, and then Samman landed a brutal walk-away head-kick knockout. Gordon collapsed to the mat unconscious, and Samman picked up a big win.

It was a kick that could find itself on a Knockout of the Year shortlist.

 

Performance of the Night: Anthony Pettis

The lightweight champion retained his gold and picked up a bonus for the guillotine choke. If Pettis was competing against other submission finishes on the night, the other considerations had to go to Raquel Pennington, Urijah Faber and Tony Ferguson.

Pennington perhaps had the most aesthetically pleasing submission finish, as her bulldog choke left Ashlee Evans-Smith face-first on the mat. But it would be Pettis‘ guillotine that trumped it in the eyes of UFC officials.

Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Snowden offered praise for Pettis:

Part of the reason has to be level of competition. We rarely see submission finishes in title bouts, and Pettis has done it in both his last two title tilts. Submitting high-level fighters like Melendez is rare, and even rarer is to do it with a guillotine.

Pettis is known for his kicks and knockout ability, but his submission offense is underrated. Submitting Henderson and Melendez back-to-back is an incredible achievement. He nabbed $50,000 for his impressive second-round submission.

It was a good night with a good amount of finishes and exciting action. UFC 181 lived up to the hype.

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Hendricks vs. Lawler 2: What We Learned from the Welterweight Title Fight

UFC 181 hosted a rematch of one of the best welterweight fights in the promotion’s history, and while the results weren’t quite as electric the second time around, Johny “Bigg Rigg” Hendricks and the ultimately victorious “Ruthless” Robbie Lawler put o…

UFC 181 hosted a rematch of one of the best welterweight fights in the promotion’s history, and while the results weren’t quite as electric the second time around, Johny “Bigg Rigg” Hendricks and the ultimately victorious “Ruthless” Robbie Lawler put on a solid show inside the Octagon. 

In the first 60 seconds of the fight, Lawler was possessed. He was out for blood. He swung crisp hooks and flying knees, he pushed forward and would not ease up on the throttle until Hendricks was unconscious.

Unfortunately for him, Hendricks withstood the early barrage, hung tough and returned fire with some solid strikes and a late takedown to end the round. 

From there, the champ took over. 

In Rounds 2 through 5, Hendricks proved too much for Ruthless, taking over with his combinations, leg kicks and wrestling and showcasing his worth to the judges cageside. Save the final 30 seconds of the fight, when Lawler entered full-on berserker mode again, Hendricks was the aggressor and he controlled the action inside the cage. 

But guess what, friends! Judges in MMA aren’t perfect.

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

We’ll remember the decision! 

Robbie Lawler won a split decision (48-47 on one card, 49-46 on another) over Johny Hendricks, capturing the UFC welterweight title and finalizing his improbable and incredible ascent to the top of the 170-pound division. 

In July of 2012, Lawler lost to Lorenz Larkin in Strikeforce, via lopsided unanimous decision, and his career looked all but done. 

Now he’s the UFC’s welterweight king. 

This sport is crazy, and UFC 181’s main event highlighted that fact. Fights are unpredictable. The fighters themselves sometimes traverse unpredictable career paths. 

And judges are unpredictable too. A scorecard of 48-47 for Lawler is shaky to me (but passable), but 49-46? Nope. No way. 

Hendricks seemed to clearly win Round 2, Round 3 and Round 4 (and possibly Round 1), but here we are. Lawler is the champion, and it’s still really cool to see him with that golden symbol of victory strapped around his waist.

MMA, ladies and gentleman. Just when you think you know this sport, you get a night like this. 

 

What We Learned About Hendricks

Johny Hendricks showcased an evolved stand-up game in his rematch with Lawler. 

In Round 2, Hendricks started to piece together nice combinations he ended with hard leg kicks, and his striking looked more fluid and diverse overall. 

Add in his established wrestling attack—he scored five takedowns in the first four rounds, compared to just two total takedowns during their UFC 171 affair—and Hendricks is obviously a well-rounded, high-level mixed martial artist.

We already knew that, but we saw a slight upgrade over his previous self at UFC 181. 

 

What We Learned About Lawler

You can’t count out Lawler. You just can’t. 

If you told me (or any MMA fan/critic/analyst) in 2012 that Ruthless would be the UFC’s welterweight champion in December of 2014, you’d be greeted with a laugh and perhaps a smack in the face. 

That’s nonsense. That just wouldn’t happen.

But it did. 

Lawler stayed in the fight, avoided Hendricks’ most powerful strikes and poured it out in bursts to overwhelm Hendricks for 30 to 60 seconds at a time, getting the crowd involved and revving up the pulses of fans nationwide.

We already knew Lawler was tough, we already knew he was a fierce competitor and we already knew he was a legitimate welterweight contender.

Tonight, though, we learned Lawler is a champion. He finally did it. 

 

What’s Next for Hendricks? 

A trilogy fight with Lawler wouldn’t be unreasonable, given the nature of this decision, but I don’t see it happening. 

Hendricks’ run at the top wasn’t long enough—this was his first title defense—and the welterweight division is only getting more and more confusing and stacked by the day. 

Instead of matching up Hendricks with Lawler again, send him back down the ladder and give him the winner of the UFC Fight Night 60 main event between Matt Brown and Tarec Saffiedine. 

It’s rare for the UFC to match up a fighter coming off a loss with a fighter coming off a win, but Hendricks’ stock isn’t plummeting by any means, and the winner of Brown vs. Saffiedine won’t have a claim for the title and need at least one more win to capture a shot at UFC gold.

Keep the division moving and let one of them provewithout questionthey deserve the title shot. 

 

What’s Next for Lawler? 

Barring a Hendricks trilogy, Rory MacDonald is next for Lawler. 

The fight has already been announced (h/t MMAjunkie.com) and still makes sense. Canadian superstar MacDonald earned his shot at the UFC title in what will be a rematch with Lawler. 

MacDonald previously lost to Lawler at UFC 167 in November of 2013, but he’s won three straight fights since then and, as UFC 181 showed us, rematches don’t always produce identical results. 

It’s fixing to be a great fight in the UFC’s welterweight division, and the 25-year-old TriStar Gym product might just slam the cover on Lawler’s Cinderella story before we even get to the second chapter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 181: The Good, Bad and Strange from Las Vegas

Any time there is a UFC title on the line, serious business is sure to follow. Furthermore, when two divisional straps go up for grabs on the same card, a powerful front of chaos is likely to roll through. There were two championship bouts topping…

Any time there is a UFC title on the line, serious business is sure to follow. Furthermore, when two divisional straps go up for grabs on the same card, a powerful front of chaos is likely to roll through. There were two championship bouts topping the lineup at UFC 181 on Saturday night, and both were of the highly anticipated variety.

The main event showcased a title tilt in the 170-pound ranks as champion Johny Hendricks and resurgent contender Robbie Lawler stepped in for their rematch. Their initial go-round at UFC 171 back in March was a five-round war for the ages, as Bigg Rigg edged out the veteran powerhouse to claim the vacant welterweight title via split decision on the judges’ scorecards. 

While Hendricks spent the next eight months rehabilitating a torn bicep suffered in his first bout with Lawler, Ruthless would jump back into the fray looking for another title shot. He dispatched fellow slugger Jake Ellenberger via knockout at UFC 173 in May and then outlasted “The Immortal” Matt Brown in a 25-minute free-for-all two months later in San Jose. With back-to-back victories—and the fashion in which he claimed them—the American Top Team product earned another shot at Hendricks and championship gold at UFC 181.

That said, the former two-time NCAA Division I national champion wrestler would not only be making his long-awaited return to action on Saturday night, but the rematch with Lawler would also represent his first attempt at defending the welterweight title. Hendricks wants to have a long reign over the 170-pound fold, and a victory over the resilient knockout artist would be the perfect way to kick things off.

With their first tussle bringing the proverbial noise in every measurable sense, their rematch at UFC 181 had big shoes to fill. And things started out that way. 

From the opening bell Lawler came out like a man possessed as he launched power punches and kicks in the champion’s direction, which forced Hendricks to stay on the defensive. Yet, while Lawler was the aggressor, Hendricks still managed to get key takedowns at crucial moments to swing the momentum in his favor. By the fourth round, the aggressive Lawler was gone, and the frustrated veteran did everything he could as he tried to land the home run shot.

Nevertheless, Lawler never gave up hope, and with the clock ticking down, the veteran powerhouse unleashed a frenzied attack, battering Hendricks with punches and kicks until the final bell sounded. And when the scorecards were read this time around, it was Lawler who took the split-decision victory to become the new champion of the welterweight division.

The lightweight title would also be up for grabs at UFC 181, as Anthony Pettis returned from a 17-month layoff to face perennial contender Gilbert Melendez in the co-main event.

Showtime has been an absolute monster as of late and came into his bout with El Nino on the strength of three consecutive finishes over top-ranked opposition, including the likes of Joe Lauzon, Donald Cerrone and Benson Henderson. The Milwaukee native’s bout with Smooth ultimately produced the lightweight title as he submitted the MMA Lab representative with a slick armbar in the first round at UFC 164 in August of 2013.

Yet, a knee injury and corrective surgery kept the champion on the sidelines for a lengthy stint, and he was eager to return to action on Saturday night. That said, Melendez was equally as hungry to get back into the Octagon and make a bid for the 155-pound belt that had eluded him since crossing over from Strikeforce in early 2013. The Skrap Pack leader was narrowly edged out by Henderson in his first title shot under the UFC banner and was determined not to let the opportunity to slip through his fingers once again.

The fight was figured to be a high-octane affair, and that’s exactly what it was for as long as it lasted. Melendez jumped on Pettis from the opening bell and remained in the champion’s face, throwing heavy shots and diving in for takedowns. Yet, while Melendez’s game plan gave him the edge in the first round, Pettis found his groove in the second. The Duke Roufus-trained fighter landed a stiff counter shot that stunned Melendez near the cage, and with his opponent hurt, Pettis pounced to lock on the fight-ending guillotine choke.

It was a great showing for both men, but the victory marked Pettis‘ reign as the undisputed king of the lightweight division. It was a good night of fights from the Mandalay Bay, and let’s take a look at the good, bad and strange from UFC 181 in Las Vegas.

 

The Good

While “Ruthless” is Robbie Lawler‘s official nickname, “Resurgent” may be more appropriate at the current time.

After spending years away from the UFC and being on the brink of becoming a cautionary tale of potential unfulfilled, the heavy-handed slugger re-emerged onto the UFC scene in 2013 as a man on a mission. The 32-year-old steamrolled his first three opponents en route to earning a shot at the vacant welterweight title against  Hendricks at UFC 171 back in March.

Lawler would come out on the business end of a split decision that night in Dallas, but he was determined to get back into title contention and get his hands on UFC gold.

That opportunity came on Saturday night in his long-awaited rematch with Hendricks at UFC 181, and from the opening bell, there was no doubt he was prepared to put it all on the line against Bigg Rigg. That said, much like their first fight, Hendricks took used his superior wrestling to stall and frustrate the American Top Team powerhouse. Yet, whereas Hendricks ultimately pulled out the win in their first meeting in the fifth and final round, Lawler wasn‘t going to be denied on Saturday night.

He stuffed each of Hendricks’ takedowns and punished the champion to the head and body with elbows and hammerfists. Then, with the clock running down, the perennial contender unleashed a berserk-style attack that sent Hendricks reeling from his power until the final bell sounded. With the fight clearly a close-fought affair, the judges’ decision was once again going to dictate who won the fight, and this time around it was Lawler with his hand raised. 

While the decision is controversial and will be debated across the MMA community for weeks to come, the end result of Lawler becoming champion puts the finishing touch on one of the greatest resurgences in MMA history.

Ten years ago he was the next big thing. Five years ago he was all but finished. Saturday night at UFC 181, Robbie Lawler became the UFC welterweight champion. That’s a crazy ride any way you cut it.

There is a proverbial ceiling every athlete eventually finds in their career, but Anthony Pettis is nowhere near finding where his boundaries are.

Long before he became the UFC lightweight champion, the Milwaukee native showed flashes of greatness inside the cage, as he racked up victories and climbed toward the top of the competitive mix at 155 pounds. Yet, there comes a time when every prospect either cashes in to become a contender or folds, and Pettis has done nothing but hit his mark time and time again, and the 27-year-old has continued to round out his all-around skill set every step of the way.

Showtime has always been a versatile and dangerous striker, but once he added the ground game to complement his dynamic stand-up attack, the sky was going to be the limit. And that’s where things currently stand with the undisputed lightweight champion.

After steamrolling a cast of top-ranked opponents that included Cerrone and Henderson, the Roufusport representative made his inaugural attempt to defend the strap when he stepped into the Octagon to face Gilbert Melendez at UFC 181. While the two fighters couldn’t be further apart from a stylistic standpoint, Pettis came into the bout confident he could handle anything the hard-charging former Strikeforce champion could throw his way.

And while Melendez was able to score and control the action in the opening round, Pettis found his groove in the second round and started to cut angles on El Nino. He eventually caught Melendez with a straight shot on the counter and locked on a fight-ending guillotine when the Skrap Pack leader attempted to take a sloppy shot. The result was Pettis‘ second consecutive finish via submission and further proof that the talented young champion is only getting better.

And this is where things get interesting for Pettis. While the Wisconsin native has already built an impressive resume, he truly has the opportunity to make a run at being the most dominant champion in the history of the lightweight division. It’s certainly a possibility for Pettis to accomplish, and there doesn’t seem to be much at the present time that isn’t within his reach. 

On the flip side, while Melendez came up short once again on his quest to become the UFC lightweight champion, the former longtime Strikeforce titleholder gave the new king hell for as long as he could.

Travis Browne is a fighter who has carried high expectations since he first debuted under the UFC banner back in 2010. While the Hawaiian powerhouse has suffered setbacks along the way, he’s also shown a level of skill that has led some to believe he can be a contender to the heavyweight crown.

Following his loss to Fabricio Werdum back in April, Hapa needed a victory over Brendan Schaub on Saturday night to keep those future title hopes alive. Fortunately for Browne, he proved too much for Big Brown to handle and pounded out the victory with big shots on the canvas. 

With the win, the 32-year-old striker has now found victory in four of his past five showings and will most certainly draw one of the division’s best in his next outing.

Todd Duffee was once considered to be the hottest young prospect in the heavyweight ranks when he debuted with a record-setting seven-second knockout of Tim Hague back in 2009. Less than a year later he was cut from the UFC and floating in career limbo.

While he would spend the next two years battling health issues and attempting to get his career back on track, Duffee came into his bout with Anthony Hamilton at UFC 181 determined to make that happen. And that’s exactly what he did when the Indiana native blasted the Freight Train with a big shot in the opening stages of the first round. 

The lightweight division is one of the most talent-stacked collectives under the UFC banner, and Tony Ferguson is starting to make some real progress toward a top-10 ranking. El Cucuy had won three consecutive bouts coming into his scrap with Abel Trujillo at UFC 181 and was looking to take another big step toward breaking through to the next level by defeating Killa on Saturday night.

While the Team Blackzilians fighter came out throwing bombs that put Ferguson on the deck early, The Ultimate Fighter Season 13 winner hung tough and kept applying the pressure. Trujillo eventually faded, and Ferguson locked in the fight-ending rear-naked choke to secure the victory and notch his fourth straight win in the process.

Typically, time away from the Octagon causes ring rust to some degree, but Josh Samman showed zero signs of that in his bout against Eddie Gordon. While the two TUF alumni spent the opening round trading heavy shots and pressing the action in grappling exchanges, it was in the second round where Samman stamped his most impressive moment to date as a mixed martial artist. Just as Truck stepped in to attack, Samman unloaded and landed a left head kick that blasted the Serra-Longo representative into oblivion. It was a brutal shot from the Floridian that will make the highlight-reel loop for years to come. 

As cliche as it sounds, every second counts inside the Octagon, and Raquel Pennington provided the latest example of this on Saturday night. After a rock em’, sock em’ opening frame where her opponent Ashlee Evans-Smith busted her open with elbows and punches, it appeared Rocky was on her way to losing the first round. Yet, The Ultimate Fighter alum proved to be quick on her toes as she caught Evans-Smith in a nasty bulldog choke in the final seconds of the round. And when the bell sounded and the referee pulled the two fighters apart, Evans-Smith was out cold on the canvas. As a result, Pennington picked up her second victory in her past three outings.

Despite getting off to a slow start where he was rocked by a big shot from Matt Hobar, talented prospect Sergio Pettis rebounded in strong fashion and settled in to do his thing in the second round. Once the Phenom found his rhythm, he peppered Hobar with punches and kicks en route to picking up the unanimous-decision victory, which his third successful showing in four appearances under the UFC banner.

Nevertheless, in his post-fight interviews with the media on hand at the Mandalay Bay, Pettis suggested this may be his final fight as a bantamweight, as he’s strongly considering making the drop down to compete in the flyweight division.

There wasn‘t anything pretty about Clay Collard’s second UFC fight, but the scrappy featherweight got the job done against Alex White to kick off the action at UFC 181. While both fighters had moments of success throughout the three-round tilt, it was Collard who had the gas tank to outlast the hard-hitting Missouri native to pick up his first victory inside the Octagon.

 

The Bad

There are going to be some rough roads ahead for Schaub.

Whereas The Ultimate Fighter Season 10 finalist once seemed poised to be a rising new talent in the heavyweight ranks, the past three years haven’t been all too kind to the fighter commonly referred to as Big Brown. The former football player turned mixed martial artist carried a four-fight winning streak into his bout with Antonio Nogueira at UFC 134—a bout he was heavily favored to win—but a stunning knockout loss to the MMA legend brought his momentum to an abrupt halt.

Nevertheless, crazy things happen in MMA, and any fighter can be defeated on a given night, and the TUF alum’s next fight against Ben Rothwell at UFC 145 was supposed to be the bout where he shook off his loss in Brazil and got back on track. Yet, Schaub would once again stumble and suffered a knockout loss to Big Ben in the first round of their tilt in Atlanta.

Schaub would go on to pick up wins in his next two fights, and once again talk of him becoming a potential contender started to pop up around the MMA community, until a split-decision loss to former champion Andrei Arlovski once again stopped his progression. As controversial as the setback was, it was one Schaub couldn’t afford, and that put a heavy amount of pressure on his shoulders going into his scrap with Browne at UFC 181 on Saturday night.

Hapa was also coming off a loss in his most recent showing, and the bout featured two one-time prospects who desperately needed to make good in Las Vegas. Unfortunately for Schaub, the rangy Hawaiian established the upper hand in the early going and held that position until he pounded out the finish late in the opening round. Browne rocked Schaub with an uppercut as the Colorado native moved in to strike, and he was unable to get his wits about him before the referee stepped in to stop the fight.

While back-to-back losses won’t cost Schaub his spot on the UFC roster, four setbacks in his past six outings won’t do him any favors.

There are going to be plenty of readers who will jump on the comment section and rage how Hendricks won his rematch with Lawler at UFC 181. Bigg Rigg seemed to be getting the better of the exchanges in the middle rounds and used his wrestling to control the fight at crucial moments, and he could have easily been given Rounds 2, 3 and 4. But I’m not going to debate these things in this column because Lawler‘s victory means we will most likely get a trilogy fight between these two warriors.

I’ll take that any way I can get it.

 

The Strange

By far the weirdest thing to happen on Saturday night occurred outside of the Octagon when Joe Rogan interviewed former WWE champion CM Punk.

Not only was it strange to see the play-by-play staple sharing microphone time with a professional wrestler, but when Punk (real name Phillip Brooks) announced he would no longer be participating in the scripted form of combat sports and would be testing his skills inside the Octagon things, jumped up into an entirely new level of wackiness. 

Punk isn’t the first professional wrestler to cross over into mixed martial arts, but unlike Brock Lesnar or Bobby Lashley, he doesn’t have a background in combat sports to fall back on. He does train jiu-jitsu with the legendary Gracie family, but jumping into the fray on the sport’s biggest stage at 36 years old seems like quite the risk.

I wish I had a better way to describe this situation, or cared to for that fact, but Punk signing with the UFC is one of the biggest pieces of news to come out of UFC 181.

Moving on…. 

Urijah Faber has notched many impressive statistics throughout his storied career, but perhaps the most impressive is that The California Kid has never lost a bout where a title wasn‘t on the line. Unfortunately for Francisco Rivera, that trend continued on Saturday night.

While the 33-year-old Californian gave the former longstanding WEC featherweight champion a tough scrap in the opening frame, the tides changed in a big way when Faber caught Cisco with a straight right hand and then forced Rivera to tap with a rear-naked choke. That said, the post-fight replay showed it wasn‘t a punch that staggered Rivera but an inadvertent eye poke that brought about the beginning of the end.

With the win, Faber has now won back-to-back bouts and six of his last seven showings in the bantamweight division. With those types of numbers, he should be drawing close to yet another title opportunity, but with his good friend and teammate T.J. Dillashaw currently holding the crown, and the Sacramento native already getting three championship opportunities since 2011, it will most likely be some time before Faber gets another crack at UFC gold.

Then again, he has such a high level of name recognition, the UFC has plenty of options to keep him busy. The promotion could slot him in fan-friendly tilts to headline smaller cards or match him up in catchweight bouts against other fighters with solid name recognition. If Faber isn’t going to be in a title hunt, then the UFC needs to keep him relevant, and having him fight No. 11-ranked opponents is not the way to get that done.

Corey Anderson stormed through the tournament to win the 19th season of The Ultimate Fighter and scored a big knockout finish over Matt Van Buren to win the coveted six-figure contract at the TUF 19 Finale back in July. The Rockford, Illinois, native continued his impressive run when he defeated short-notice replacement Justin Jones on the preliminary portion of the card in a bout that not only further showcased his punching power but his ever-improving cardio as well.

Nevertheless, while Anderson possesses talent as a mixed martial artist, he also has one of the worst nicknames to come along in recent memory.

In an individual sport such as MMA, originality is a good route to travel, but “Beastin’ 25/8” is proof that Anderson may have traveled too far down said path. Then again, he’s winning fights, so it is quite possible he is actually living up to his nickname. His victory over Jones was not only his second official win inside the Octagon but kept his undefeated record intact in the process. 

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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UFC 181 Results: Grades for Every Main Card Fighter

Perhaps the hottest UFC card of the year went down on Saturday night in Las Vegas, as UFC 181 offered up a pair of title fights and a series of wild finishes beginning on the prelims and rolling into the pay-per-view portion of the evening.
The title f…

Perhaps the hottest UFC card of the year went down on Saturday night in Las Vegas, as UFC 181 offered up a pair of title fights and a series of wild finishes beginning on the prelims and rolling into the pay-per-view portion of the evening.

The title fights split for the champions, as Johny Hendricks lost his gold to Robbie Lawler in the main event, and Anthony Pettis bettered Gilbert Melendez only moments beforehand.

Overall, it was a solid night of action both on paper and in practice. Here are the grades for those who made it happen.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 181: Anthony Pettis Makes Up for Lost Time, Subs Gilbert Melendez in 2nd

Like riding a bike.
For nearly seven minutes on Saturday, it appeared Anthony Pettis was going to have trouble shaking off the rust. Then—for just a few seconds—the returning lightweight champion was his old, brilliant self again, and the f…

Like riding a bike.

For nearly seven minutes on Saturday, it appeared Anthony Pettis was going to have trouble shaking off the rust. Then—for just a few seconds—the returning lightweight champion was his old, brilliant self again, and the fight was over.

Pettis became the first man ever to finish No. 1 contender Gilbert Melendez at UFC 181, snatching a guillotine choke from thin air and forcing Melendez to tap out a few ticks shy of two minutes into the second round. As they raised his hand and wrapped the title around his waist, it suddenly felt as though he’d never left.

“It’s been 15 months. A long layoff,” Pettis told UFC color commentator Joe Rogan in the cage moments later. “It was a tough last year, but I reminded everybody who I am. I’m the champ for a reason—king of the hottest division in the UFC.”

It was undoubtedly an excruciating year-and-a-half off for Pettis, as the UFC lightweight champion rehabbed and recuperated from knee surgery. Since coming to the UFC in 2011 as the last reigning WEC champion, he’s spent extended periods on the shelf.

This week, UFC president Dana White said he felt all Pettis would have to do to claim a spot among the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world would be stay healthy. In his return to the cage, Pettis appeared fit as a fiddle—and looked every bit the part of the young, exciting superstar the fight company hopes he can become.

Early on, it seemed Melendez might succeed in making their co-main event bout a grinding, protracted affair. He clinched Pettis against the fence from the opening, nicking him with short knees and attempting to drag him to the mat.

Pettis periodically broke free and fired off some of his flashy offense—a spinning kick here, a running knee there—but for a time Melendez managed to corral him against the chain link when he wanted to do it.

In the second, though, Pettis edged free long enough to sting Melendez with a punch and force him into an ill-advised takedown attempt. As he stuffed it, Melendez tried to scramble, and Pettis locked up the choke with an abrupt, frightening quickness. He rolled to top position and Melendez—a longstanding black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Cesar Gracie—was forced to tap.

“He’s a fast, slick youngster, man,” Melendez told Rogan. “He made me feel a little old today with his speed. But he knocked me pretty good and I just took an ugly shot. There was a lot of chaos in there, and he capitalized.”

It was also Melendez’s first fight since October 2013. Ten months ago, he seemed on the verge of walking away from the UFC in favor of a contract offer from Bellator MMA. To get him to stay, it’s believed the UFC made him a handsome new offer, including a coaching gig opposite Pettis on Season 20 of The Ultimate Fighter as well as Saturday’s title shot.

Counting his controversial split-decision loss to Benson Henderson last April, Melendez’s has now twice come up short in recent championship opportunities. He’s also just 1-2 in the UFC so far. That could make his future path through the stacked 155-pound division unclear, though the terms of his new deal dictate he’ll be fighting mostly on pay-per-view and being handsomely compensated for it for the foreseeable future.

For Pettis, the win marked back-to-back submission victories over consensus Top Five lightweights, not to mention four consecutive stoppages. He took the title from old WEC foe Henderson in August 2013 before his latest injury forced him back to the injured reserve. Trent Reinsmith expressed optimism that if Pettis can “stay healthy,” his upside is “immeasurable”: 

What’s next for him now remains to be seen. There is certainly no shortage of contenders for him at 155 pounds, though he was also recently linked to a superfight against featherweight champion Jose Aldo.

Now that he is healthy, it appears he may be on the verge of tapping into the considerable potential he’s flashed during six previous UFC appearances. So long as he’s able to avoid future delays, he’ll be a perfect fit for a starring role in the fight company’s important 2015 schedule.

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Gilbert Melendez vs. Anthony Pettis: What We Learned from the Title Fight

After nearly a year of waiting for it to go down, UFC 181 allowed Anthony Pettis and Gilbert Melendez to settle their score in the Octagon. The two spent time coaching The Ultimate Fighter 20 and promoting their bout for most of 2014, but they finally …

After nearly a year of waiting for it to go down, UFC 181 allowed Anthony Pettis and Gilbert Melendez to settle their score in the Octagon. The two spent time coaching The Ultimate Fighter 20 and promoting their bout for most of 2014, but they finally met on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Pettis got the better of Melendez with a slick guillotine, putting an end to the rivalry for the time being. Melendez heads back to the drawing board, while Pettis gets to continue his path as the face of the UFC’s 155-pound division.

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

The finishing instincts of Pettis.

He spent most of the bout pressed against the cage and sucking air while Melendez grounded him to dust. Then when the only opportunity for offense on the night presented itself, he snatched up the choke and scored the tapout.

It’s the type of thing that’s becoming commonplace for the young champion and is making people realize that he’s way more than a face on a Wheaties box.

 

What We Learned About Gilbert Melendez

That for all his toughness and skill—of which he has plenty and is perhaps underrated to a criminal degree in that regard—he may not get another chance to hoist a UFC belt over his head. He was the best Strikeforce had to offer and a champion in WEC, but it doesn’t look likely that he’ll get to complete the trifecta.

He’s 32 and has lost on two separate occasions in UFC title bouts now. So unless he looks into a drop to featherweight, he’s likely destined to flesh out cards as an exciting addition instead of fighting solely with an eye on another title shot.

 

What We Learned About Anthony Pettis

That he’s 100 percent for real. Sure, he gets hurt sometimes. He goes missing while he rehabs. And you don’t get to see him as much as you might want to. But when he’s out there in that cage, there might not be anyone who does it better.

He’s exciting and marketable, and if he can get some momentum in his performances, there’s nothing stopping him from being the biggest star on the roster. There’s also no clear way that anyone at lightweight can beat him. He has no obvious flaws in his game that he hasn’t shored up over the past couple of years, so it seems like the only limits on his potential are those he’ll put on himself.

 

What’s Next for Melendez

Once he gets done with Benson Henderson next month—win or lose—there’d be a lot to like about Eddie Alvarez meeting up with Melendez sometime in the spring.

 

What’s Next for Pettis

There isn’t really a clear challenger for Pettis right now. There’s more of a collection of guys trying to lay their claim. Either Khabib Nurmagomedov or the winner of Rafael dos Anjos vs. Nate Diaz might be on tap, though.

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder.

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