On Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Jon Jones could make beating Daniel Cormier look easy. At this point, it’s hard to be shocked by Bones’ brilliance. However, Cormier is an undefeated, highly motivated wrestling genius with excellent box…
On Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Jon Jones could make beating Daniel Cormier look easy. At this point, it’s hard to be shocked by Bones’ brilliance. However, Cormier is an undefeated, highly motivated wrestling genius with excellent boxing skills.
Jones has faced tough fighters before, but Cormier brings a different skill set to the Octagon.
Per Odds Shark, Jones is the 25-52 favorite to win. The reigning and defending UFC light heavyweight champion will come through victorious as long as he does the following things.
Keep His Cool
The buildup for this fight has been filled with more seemingly genuine hatred than any I can remember. These guys really seem to dislike one another, and it goes beyond simply selling a fight.
Because of the emotion involved, Jones must make sure his temper and obsession with humiliating Cormier doesn’t leave him open to attacks and bad habits. Jones talks about the pressure of fighting an opponent you don’t like in the interview below with UFC.com’s Matt Parrino.
Cormier has the strength and striking ability to put Jones in peril if the champion gets too comfortable.
Use Length
Per Fight Metric, Jones is five inches taller and has a 12-inch reach advantage over Cormier. Normally, the champion is a master at utilizing his length advantage. He has masterful spatial awareness and must use this gift against Cormier.
Staying just far away enough from attacks, but close enough to tag Cormier with kicks and elbows, is key. Jones did this effectively against Rashad Evans when he easily defeated him in April 2012.
If he fights tall and smart against Cormier, the result will be the same.
Avoid the Takedown
In his career, Jones has stopped 97 percent of the takedowns attempted against him. If he is going to beat Cormier, he’ll need to continue his nearly impenetrable takedown defense.
Cormier is one of the sport’s best wrestlers, and he’ll be vicious in the ground-and-pound if he gets Jones in a compromising position.
To win, Jones needs to keep the fight standing, or maintain top control if the fight does go to the mat.
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On the list of main event fights UFC could put together, Jon Jones defending the light heavyweight championship against Daniel Cormier would be right at the top. The two stars will finally lock horns at UFC 182 on Saturday night. Jones is a contro…
On the list of main event fights UFC could put together, Jon Jones defending the light heavyweight championship against Daniel Cormier would be right at the top. The two stars will finally lock horns at UFC 182 on Saturday night.
Jones is a controversial superstar with an ego to fill the Grand Canyon, while Cormier is the budding star looking to make a name for himself with the world’s biggest mixed martial arts promotion.
There’s certainly no love between the two fighters, as fans have seen dating back to the build for their originally scheduled bout in September and embedded in the video below, via MMAWeekly.com:
Given the way Jones has acted toward Cormier, as well as his arrogance over the years, fans have made him the fighter they love to hate. Cormier noted at the weigh-in on Friday he’s become the most popular fighter in the world because of his opponent, via Kevin Iole of Yahoo Sports:
Last April, Jones told Marc Raimondi of FoxSports.com that he didn’t want to go full heel because he didn’t “want to quite accept that role” and he wants “to be the good guy.”
In the same piece, Jones’ manager Malki Kawa admitted to cluing his fighter in on some of the best heels in professional wrestling history:
I’ve shown him The Rock clips from the WWE when he turned heel. I showed him ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin against the authority or going against Vince McMahon and him maybe one day against [UFC president] Dana [White] type of [stuff].
…
He doesn’t want to be a heel, but he’s not going to be phony for anyone. So if that means what he believes or says is going to turn people off, he’s going to say it regardless.
Whether Jones has turned a corner on the heel role or note in the last eight months, he’s not going to be the fan-favorite on Saturday night in Las Vegas.
Jones doesn’t need to be liked by everyone to retain his title, which seems to be the consensus from analysts around the web.
Dan Downes of UFC.com predicts a slow start for Jones against Cormier before he kicks it in gear during the second round:
Television cameras may catch Jon Jones off-guard, but Daniel Cormier won’t. Cormier has KO power, but I don’t see how he gets inside Jones’s reach. Even when he can generate offense, Cormier falls out of his stance. Heavyweights didn’t have the speed to take advantage of his miscues and neither did Cummins or Henderson. Jon Jones will make him pay for it. As Cormier loads up, Jones will slide out and counter with kicks, knees, and/or elbows. Jones will take damage because he’ll want to “prove a point” by out-wrestling Cormier, but he’ll eventually come to his senses and win by second-round TKO.
It’s no secret that Jones’ long limbs and reach give him a decided advantage over everyone in the sport. The champion has a reach of 84″, compared to 72″ for Cormier, which former UFC fighter Michael Guymon noted makes it difficult for the challenger even in training:
Elias Cepeda of FoxSports.com also believes that Jones will walk away with a victory but expects a much closer fight that ends at the judges’ table:
Cormier will have to be as quick against Jones as he was against heavyweight opponents, in order to press the champ backwards with prudent aggression. Jones largely backs straight up when attacked, instead of angling out.
If Cormier can hit angles on Jones and press him backwards, the champ will open himself up to takedowns and strikes.
If Cormier were four inches taller, we’d pick him to upset the champ. As is, he still stands a great chance of beating Jones.
Cormier is a standout wrestler who won’t be intimidated by Jones’ ability to work opponents to the ground. He’s proved to be a powerful striker, dating back to his time fighting as a heavyweight in Strikeforce, but the 35-year-old will have a hard time getting to Jones because of the reach difference.
Jones’ versatility is what makes him so lethal. He can attack opponents on the ground or standing up, showing no real weakness in either area. He can go from defense to offense in the blink of an eye. When you have so many ways to win a fight, it’s hard to think an upset is in store.
The new year is just three days old, but it’s probably safe to say UFC 182 will be one of the most anticipated MMA events in 2015.
Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier is the obvious headliner. The former, the light heavyweight champ who is considered by…
The new year is just three days old, but it’s probably safe to say UFC 182 will be one of the most anticipated MMA events in 2015.
Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier is the obvious headliner. The former, the light heavyweight champ who is considered by many as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the sport. The latter, an undefeated monster with the talent to change the hierarchy of the division. Two heated rivals with bad blood between them.
Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter put it simply:
Of course, the rest of the card isn’t so bad, either. Donald Cerrone vs. Myles Jury is a compelling co-main event, Hector Lombard may be fighting for a shot at Rory MacDonald and there are several other fights that should be very entertaining.
Let’s take a look at everything you need to know.
UFC 182 Schedule, Viewing Info
Note: Check here for all the ways to watch, via UFC.com
UFC 182 Predictions
Main Event Preview
A case could easily be made for either Jones or DC, as both are extremely versatile and can win in a variety of ways.
With the champ, it’s all about his length. He has a historic 12-inch reach advantage over the challenger, and as he has done with so many other opponents, he could potentially use that to create separation, avoid takedowns and slowly pick apart Cormier with jabs and kicks.
However, there is much more than just his rare blend of size and athletic ability. If he wants, Jones doesn’t mind taking the fight to the canvas. And he plans on doing exactly that against Cormier on Saturday night, via MMA Fighting’s Shaun Al-Shatti:
I will try to wrestle Daniel Cormier. I definitely plan on making him work extremely hard for any takedowns he’s going for, and I’m definitely going to be looking for takedowns myself. I’m more than capable of taking him down, and I believe in my top game. So I’ll definitely look to attack Daniel at his strengths, and weaknesses.
Considering Cormier‘s wrestling prowess, that’s a dangerous proposition. DC is a former Olympic wrestler who won bronze at the 2007 World Championships and gold at the 2003 Pan American Games. He is a physical specimen, and many will remember his last performance when he threw Dan Henderson around the Octagon like a rag doll at UFC 173 in May.
Even against a fighter of Jones’ caliber, Cormier has the immense talent and strength to win a round or two.
Ultimately, though, the champ is too long, too intelligent, too creative and too athletic. He’ll once again walk away from the Octagon with the belt over his shoulder.
Bad blood. It’s so often sold in MMA that it’s become a cliche.
To have the UFC tell it, nearly every guy on the roster hates every other guy and they’re ready to beat them into a living death at the drop of a hat.
But every now and t…
Bad blood. It’s so often sold in MMA that it’s become a cliche.
To have the UFC tell it, nearly every guy on the roster hates every other guy and they’re ready to beat them into a living death at the drop of a hat.
But every now and then one of those blood feuds comes along and, buddy, you better believe it’s real. It’s as real as it gets, if you will.
It goes beyond the usual promotional bluster of balding, middle-aged men in the closing moments of a pre-show and enters into the realm of the historic. It spills into a world where unsanctioned brawls and multiple pre-fight specials are produced, where people examine every step a man took to become embroiled in such a feud and ponder every step he’ll take when it’s over.
And when the final horn sounds and one guy’s hand is raised, there’s no mistaking it is over.
Unarmed combat will have that effect on someone; one of you is the better man and the other has to deal with it. It was proven on the basest level of humanity, where everything else was stripped away and it was two guys just fighting, and it all came out.
Jon Jones knows that going into UFC 182. You best believe Daniel Cormier does too.
Anyone who has been around this sport long enough has seen it happen time and again, this storied history of men who hate each other in the only sport on Earth where one can truly do something about it.
The earliest blood feud the UFC could promote was perhaps that of Royce Gracie and Ken Shamrock. Shamrock was a supremely confident, musclebound shoot fighter at a time when mixed martial artists were anything but mixed and were damn proud of it, while Gracie’s jiu-jitsu might as well have been a mystical power for how well understood it was in 1993. When the two met it led to some hostility.
Gracie choked Shamrock out, Shamrock offered up a kind of phantom tap and Gracie decided to leave no doubt by holding the choke a little longer. The two had words after the fact. That was at UFC 1, and some two years later the two met in a hotly anticipated (though highly unsatisfying) superfight rematch at UFC 5. It ended in a draw.
It was a long time before legitimate beef existed in the UFC again, at least to the point it was saleable to a larger audience. It’s pretty difficult to promote John McCain crusading against an entire sport in any meaningful way that can draw on pay-per-view.
Then Tito Ortiz showed up, and all of a sudden the UFC had more feuds than it had events on which to place the payoff bouts.
He had fights with Guy Mezger that were rich in hate-filled promotion before moving onto Frank Shamrock, and then onto Frank’s brother Ken. Ortiz’s best work could be boiled down to an overarching distaste for Shamrock’s famed Lion’s Den fight camp, the stuff dreams are made of in the fight game. It was a chance to continually line up opponents with similar name value or backgrounds and let the rivalry take on a life of its own.
Ortiz split the bouts with Mezger and lost to Frank, before trucking Ken Shamrock on three separate occasions. He was in his prime for much of that time and had one foot in the door of his Lion’s Den grudge while stepping into a room that contained another: Chuck Liddell.
Liddell was a former training partner who was rapidly rising through the light heavyweight division, but whom Ortiz had claimed was too good a pal to ever fight. Liddell saw it differently and the two found their way into the cage together after the type of protracted verbal battle that could only ever be born of a soured friendship.
Liddell obliterated Ortiz in just over five minutes, scorching him with one of the most iconic finishing sequences the sport has ever seen. They would rematch a couple of years later and, though it took a little longer, the result was the same. Liddell was now in his prime and would not be denied, ruthlessly wailing away on an Ortiz who hadn’t lost since their first meeting, putting an end to any debates over who was the better of the two.
Blood feuds were less prominent in the UFC for a few years after that. The evolution of the sport saw things shift more from hate-fueled warfare into competitive rivalries where simply being a better martial artist was enough. People loved the action regardless, so the spectacle of personal rivalry was less important.
However once Brock Lesnar entered the picture and was fortunate enough to meet up with Frank Mir, things changed. The fires of genuine bad blood were stoked again, and the sport had its first proper feud since Liddell and Ortiz.
Mir was tapped as Lesnar’s introduction to the UFC, and the 1-0 former WWE star seemed happy enough to meet the challenge. Their first bout saw him overwhelming Mir with ground-and-pound before succumbing to a crafty leglock, the exact type of thing a proud, hypercompetitive individual like Lesnar would never let go of without a chance for redemption.
He got it a little over a year later, when he was a UFC champion and Mir was challenging. In one of the more violent displays of offense from inside half-guard MMA has ever seen, Lesnar pounded Mir’s face for a round-and-a-half before the bout was stopped. He then gave one of the most radical, intense post-fight speeches in combat sports history while Mir was left to slip off into the night with a face that resembled the Toxic Avenger.
Nearly a year after the fact, Mir was still bitterly proclaiming he’d like to see his nemesis die in the Octagon. Some five years later, Lesnar is looking at returning to MMA after another pro wrestling stint and any reasonable expectation of his abilities would surely include a trilogy bout against Mir.
In the time since the best blood feuds of the 2000s, some modern rivalries have been born but seem to lack the sheer irresistibility of those that came beforehand. Rampage Jackson and Rashad Evans came closest, building their bout and their disdain by stewing as coaches on The Ultimate Fighter and getting to the point a genuine dislike had been fostered. They sold a million pay-per-views together even in spite of an ill-timed move of the payoff battle, which truly speaks to the magnitude of their quarrel.
Anderson Silva and ChaelSonnen got pretty far on Sonnen’s ability to fabricate heat, Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate didn’t like each other and Nick Diaz and Georges St-Pierre did well on the challenger’s hostility towards the machine of MMA and its most pristine champion.
Still, each had an element of feeling manufactured. There was volatility there, but it was coming as much from a desire to get paid or perhaps get Twitter followers as it was from any type of raw hatred that would exist outside of the world of prizefighting.
However now, with Jones and Cormier, the bad blood that exists is palpable. It’s true. It exists in a space that harkens back to the early days of the sport or the boom period that happened only a few years ago.
It’s had a press conference brawl, top secret private exchanges, exchanges thought to be private but that were quickly made public and all manners of insult and nastiness. It’s impossible not to think Jones and Cormier would fight the same in an alley, at a birthday party, on the moon or in the Octagon.
They outright hate each other.
It’s real in a way the UFC could never hope to concoct and doesn’t often get the chance to replicate. These are historic, generational feuds that come around very rarely between men in the process of defining what it means to be the best at a given time.
UFC 182 is providing the next bout in that lineage, one that will be recorded a little further on Saturday night in Las Vegas.
That which has come before it has given reason to expect something memorable, something that will influence the course of this young sport as it enters a new year and as it extends into the years ahead.
Enjoy that it’s upon us. It could be a while before you see it again.
This just in, UFC 182 headliners Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier do not like one another at all, no sirree. Don’t believe it? Well, UFC President Dana White has a bit of photographic evidence for you, which you can check out here (be warned, the lang…
This just in, UFC 182 headliners Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier do not like one another at all, no sirree. Don’t believe it? Well, UFC President Dana White has a bit of photographic evidence for you, which you can check out here (be warned, the language is NSFW). The video was shot at the UFC 182 fighters’ meeting, a gathering that takes place after the weigh-ins for each event.
While much of the shouting is inaudible, Jones can be heard yelling “why did you hide your best? Why don’t you hydrate, bro? Hydrate and check him out.” Cormier shouts back, “why don’t you shut the [expletive] up, [expletive]!” With Jones retorting, “eat some food bro, you sound delusional…your mind is not right.”
How did the argument come about? How did it conclude? That wasn’t captured, but it is par for the proverbial course when it comes to this event. Jones and Cormier have made their gripes with one another known on multiple occasions this week, and not a media function nor gathering related to UFC 182 has passed without some manner of incident between the two light heavyweights.
The fighters were involved in an infamous brawl in August to promote their at-the-time-UFC 178 bout, which earned them hefty fines from the Nevada Athletic Commission. While things died down when the tilt was delayed due to an injury suffered by Jones, the two had words after a particularly heated staredown. Not long after, both men and their entourages had an angry exchange backstage which was captured by former UFC fighter Tyson Griffin and posted to Instagram (which you can see here and here, and once again, NSFW language). Immediately before the fighters’ meeting, the two had an odd, but disappointingly uneventful, staredown at the weigh-ins.
The two will finally get the chance to settle their differences Saturday night at UFC 182. Keep an eye on Bleacher Report for our coverage of the event.
Jon Jones, Daniel Cormier, and the rest of the fighters competing on tomorrow’s UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier card are set to hit the scales in just a few minutes from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. With any luck, a fight will break out that we’ll all totally love but act like we’re ashamed about later. Not that any incident that may or may not occur between Jones and Cormier tonight will top Mirko Cro Cop’s fracas with Kazuyuki Fujita at Inoki Bom. That shove was straight vicious, son. Like, whatever lies between “hospital” and “cemetery” on the Cro Cop scale of vicious. Mortuary vicious.
What was I talking about again? Oh right, the weigh-ins. Joins us after the jump for the fastest UFC 182 weigh-ins results on the web.
Jon Jones, Daniel Cormier, and the rest of the fighters competing on tomorrow’s UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier card are set to hit the scales in just a few minutes from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. With any luck, a fight will break out that we’ll all totally love but act like we’re ashamed about later. Not that any incident that may or may not occur between Jones and Cormier tonight will top Mirko Cro Cop’s fracas with Kazuyuki Fujita at Inoki Bom. That shove was straight vicious, son. Like, whatever lies between “hospital” and “cemetery” on the Cro Cop scale of vicious. Mortuary vicious.
What was I talking about again? Oh right, the weigh-ins. Joins us after the jump for the fastest UFC 182 weigh-ins results on the web.
Main Card (PPV, 10 PM ET)
-Jon Jones (205) vs. Daniel Cormier (205)
-Donald Cerrone (155.5) vs. Myles Jury (155.5)
-Nate Marquardt (185.5) vs. Brad Tavares (185)
-Kyoji Horiguchi (125) vs. Louis Gaudinot (125)
-Hector Lombard (170.5) vs. Josh Burkman (171)
Preliminary Card (FS1, 8 PM ET)
-Danny Castillo (156) vs. Paul Felder (156)
-Marcus Brimage (136) vs. Cody Garbrandt (135.5)
-Shawn Jordan (261) vs. Jared Cannonier (235)
-Evan Dunham (155.5) vs. Rodrigo Damm (156)
Preliminary Card (Fight Pass, 7 PM ET)
-Omari Akhmedov (170.5) vs. Mats Nilsson (171)
-Alexis Dufresne (138*) vs. Marion Reneau (135.5)
*Dufresne will not re-weigh, but will be fined 20% of her purse. Considering there was no mention of the fact that she missed weight, we’re guessing this was some sort of pre-arranged agreement.